Waking up in Paris...

I wake early. The double doors are slight ajar, room for the wind to whistle through and cool us in the Parisienne July. Nothing but a white linen sheet across us. This room – I wonder how many things it has been in its time. An important office, no doubt. A secret rendezvous spot, perhaps? A frustrated writer’s den? The apartment of an artist’s muse? It has elements of them all.

I slowly swivel my legs out of the bed and place my toes quietly on the floor. He sleeps too peacefully to disturb, the sheet draped only across one leg exposing his chest to the early morning air. I wrap a cotton towel around myself and go to the windows. Below us, Paris is ever so slowly waking up.

I peek the doors open to stand on the balcony. The view is unmatchable. Below me is the renowned Champs-Elysees. Paris has partied last night and now the workers are tidying away the remnants of the night before. The cobbled streets are swept, shop keepers are washing their windows. I can hear someone whistling in the distance. Somehow, even the whistling has a French accent.

In front of me, across the divide, are rows of French balconies attached to Haussmann style buildings. Cream render, wrought iron twists and turns, window frames like artists’ borders. Just behind this view peaks the Eiffel tower. He’s stopped twinkling for now. Maybe He too is waking up – a big day of attention ahead.

I walk to the edge of the balcony and place a hand on the stone railing. The ledge is cool to the touch, a refreshing feeling from the air that has already begun to warm the morning. I peer around the corner of the balcony and see the Arc de Triomphe to my left. Beautifully poised to bookend the street.  Standing vigil, tall amongst the sky line. Cars warming up their horns for the roundabout.

I breathe deeply.

This apartment is a dream. The thing of French novels inspired by French Jazz.

A big day of sight-seeing ahead of me, I turn and sneak back inside. There is always more to see in Paris. A stone unturned, a wine untasted, a gallery untouched.

A visit to the Rodin Museum is in order. I’ve heard so much about the Thinker but we’ve never been properly introduced. The macarons at La Durée await, a river cruise with a picnic along the Siene, some obligatory people watching under a blood-red awning, hot chocolate at Angelina’s and a stroll down Rue de Rivoli.

With the sun not yet quite out, I stow away back under the covers just as he stirs and throws an arm lazily around me.

“What time is it?” he grumbles, peering at me through one sleepy eye.

“Too early. Go back to sleep for a bit,” I reply, curling back under the covers to wake up again in an hour or two with the rest of the city.

One Year On... the Emerald Isle

On this day last year, we left our little Ireland home and boy how much and how little can change in a year, huh? I miss it as much as I did yesterday and as the the day we left.

All of last year, it was our job to show people around the Emerald Isle. I was able to go and stand where I stood at 19 years old and scattered my grandfathers very Irish ashes, and take my Mum there too. We went to Trad Music on Sunday nights at McSorley’s and strolled Grafton Street on Monday mornings. We had house parties with a multiculturalism that would give the UN a run for its money. Ranelagh, Dublin became our home. It really was a dream come true and I am the luckiest gal in the world for getting to do it all with the hunk I’ve spent 932 days travelling the world with…

A year on, I still want to say thank you to Ireland for having us. It won’t be too long till we see you again. And thank you to Ev for being the person whose hand I hold at take off and landing, my hostel bunk buddy, my apartment hunting housemate, my road trip pal (realistically chauffeur) and for being my BIG love. It’s been so much sweeter with you by my side.

To all the adventures still to come and to all the memories that fill my head and phone, here’s to following our dreams, to calling it out when we aren’t and to making sure we keep living the lives that are meant for us. Where do you think you’ll be this time next year? Somewhere like where I’ve been looks pretty good to me…

xxx

LD