Sunday, April 22, 2007

Sarko on top


LePen rally 2003



When we lived in Paris, our apartment in the 7th arrondissement (district) was practically next door to the French Ministry of Interior. In addition to several political manifestations, we witnessed many comings and goings of the Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy. Once we even came face to face...or should I say face to chest (his face, my chest, since he is rather short).

At that time (2003) I wrote to my family back in the States, that I just met the next President of the 5th Republic.

Fast forward to April 22, 2007. M.Sarkozy, the Conservative candidate garnished the most votes in the first round of the Presidential Elections in France. Whether he will win the second round in May (against the Socialist Ségolène Royal) and whether he will prove a worthy President, only time will tell.

But I just love bragging to everyone "I told you so!" ;-)

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Flying


at the canoe park in FL
Do you remember your first bike? When you first learned how to ride? When they finally let go of your seat and you flew solo? The utter terror...and total exhilaration?

It was my 6th birthday. My grandma took me to a bike store and let me pick the bluest, the shinest, the coolest looking bicycle they had (at least in my 6-year old opinion ;-).
My older brother taught me how to ride - it took less than half an hour - and I was flying up and down our hilly neighborhood. Do you remember that feeling of absolute power and freedom? I don't think I ever felt like that again...

"Every time I see an adult on a bicycle I no longer despair for the future of the human race."
H.G. Wells

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Secret Garden


4 shades of bougainvillea around our Florida home


When I was growing up in Northern Europe and then in Northern US, I dreamed of living one day in a warm paradise, full of sunlight, azure skies and balmy waters. I had no vision of the house itself but one thing I knew for sure - there would be an abundance of cascading bougainvillea all over my garden.

You know "The Secret" Oprah is talking about? The philosophy that claims "that we create our own circumstances by the choices we make in life. And the choices we make are fueled by our thoughts—which means our thoughts are the most powerful things we have here on earth. So if you really want something, you have to visualize it".

Well, at least in one aspect of my life, The Secret has worked - there is bougainvillea in 4 vibrant colors (salmon, red, burgundy and purple) cascading around my place...

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Donovan


Donovan in front of Napoleon's tomb in Paris


I found this piece cleaning out my Word files. I wrote it in 2002 BB (before blog) and Donovan passed in 2006, but her birthday is coming up, so in memoriam to my baby, here it is:

A (French) dog’s tale.
By Donovan (as dictated to Isabella)

Let’s get is straight from the start – it was not my idea to come here. I was quite happy in Michigan chasing chipmunks and stealing my pal's, Ras toys; I like messing with his head. But then The Couple I take care of, the alpha female and the omega male, came back from one of their hunting trips (They always smell of food when They come home!) and started cooing how much I’d like Paris. Of course They left out the part about the hellish plane ride, but I’ll spare you the sorry details – let’s just say They’ve been making up for it ever since.

But truth be told – I LOVE PARIS! I am basically a very social creature and love to be with people and here The Couple takes me everywhere they go. Sometimes They overdo it and drag me from one end of town to the other and that’s when I collapse the moment we get home and refuse to go out again for the rest of the day. I’m pooped.

But you would be too, with my routine. I sleep next to Their bed – one night by Her side, the next by His (it drives Them crazy, how I know who’s turn it is) and wake Them up precisely at 6:42 each morning. They grumble and complain, but I know what’s best for Them – we are not in Paris to sleep our time away! So I get my breakfast (love that French “
Royal Canine” – it has much more fat and therefore flavor than my usual fare) and then I take the Male for a walk. We visit many neat places like the Champs de Mars gardens in front of the Eiffel and the promenade gardens in front of Les Invalides (I tried several times to poop on the Napoleon’s tomb, but the Male does not let me – you’d think that guy was an emperor or something). I meet many of the regulars there and we sniff butts until it’s time for the bakery to open. That’s when we pick-up this hot, very aromatic bread of the day (the alpha tells us which one – a baguette, batard, un demi, ancien, pain) and come home for Their breakfast. Then our visitors come – some smell of new furniture and some carry tool chests, no matter, for me it just means one more pair of hands to be petted with.

Most days after breakfast we go shopping. I tolerate department stores, because I hang out with Them, I suffer through grocery stores because They make me lie down next to the cashiers and wait for Them (thank God for the female customers who stop by to pet me and speak in those sexy tongues) but mostly I love marchés and the kind vendors who throw me their scraps. Then, all being tired and hungry, we stop at a café – and you’d be surprised how many tasty morsels you can find under the table. I also get some of Their leftovers and let me tell you – French food rocks!

In the afternoon, The Couple ventures out on their own (hopefully I have trained Them well and They’ll be able to look after each other) and I take a long nap on Their bed, which is strictly forbidden, but I’ve been doing it for ages (I think the alpha is getting wise to it, but the omega hasn’t gotten a clue, as usual…).

The only negative to living here are the many demonstrations in our neighborhood. With all the ministries and foreign embassies around, there’s a protest or two each week (mostly calling for social reforms), but they’re sure loud about it – megaphones, singing, and firecrackers. I’m not fond of all that noise, but The Couple tells me to get used to it, cause “
we’re not in Kansas anymore, Toto”, whoever he is.

After my dinner, it’s time for another walk, mostly along the river, where all the tourists take our pictures as the “
typical Parisians out strolling with their dog”. This makes My Couple hysterical. Sometimes we visit our friends and their cat, Piper, who’s very fat and any kind of dog and cat routine like chasing, is out of the question. So basically, we just lie there, staring at each other, trying to guess how much each weighs. Once in a while I manage to sneak into their kitchen and eat some cat food which makes all of Them very mad – what’s the big deal, the cat could stand to loose some pounds.

Well, aside from about a half an hour or so of playtime (it makes Them so happy when I play fetch with them, so I keep doing it) that is my day in a nutshell. Not bad, huh? They keep warning me that all of that might change once They start Their school and other activities (They’re already volunteering at some place called WICE –
www.wice-paris.org), but the simple truth remains – I’m a Parisian at heart and will always love it here! I finally understand why our Michigan neighbors were saying before we left there – “aaaah, to be Isabella’s dog…”

Sunday, December 31, 2006

Souvenirs


Polish choinka



Well, the holidays came and went, leaving a path of red wine spots on the white carpet and an expanded waistline.

2007 started off a little less funky now that the Godfather of Soul is dead. And speaking of dead, December has been the bloodiest month for our soldiers in Iraq.

All of this makes it rather petty for me to wallow as I usually do this time of year. Christmas holidays always leave me a bit depressed, no matter how hard I try to make merry. It is the child in me that misses those early Wigilias in
Poland with the family that no longer is here to share it with me.

(photo -Marek and I in Poland)


Those memories have a life of their own and I can't suppress them. I can still smell the glue used on the homemade gold paper chain that we strung over the fresh fir. I can taste the leftover batter from the babka bowl I was allowed to lick. I can hear the steady banter and occasional bursts of laughter from the adults at the table. I can see the faces of all the loved ones, although they are fading with the years...




Peter and I have made Christmas our own - we kept some Polish traditions, added some French ones (from our years spent in Paris) and Americanized it all. But between sharing the oplatek, tasting our canard à l'orange and listening to "White Christmas" I still get this deep longing to go home for the holidays, just one last time...

Friday, December 29, 2006

Early bird...

Please click to enlarge. Great Blue Heron.

...gets the worm, or in this case, a minnow. (Can you see the fish wiggle in the bird's beak and splash and cause circles on the water's surface?)
So, are you up yet? Then I can yell out loud (those of you with a hangover, please cover your ears):

Bonne Anne 2007 - Szczesliwego Nowego Roku - Feliz Ano Nuevo!

"A happy New Year!
Grant that I
May bring no tear to any eye
When this New Year in time shall end
Let it be said I've played the friend,
Have lived and loved and labored here,
And made of it a happy year."
Edgar A. Guest

Tuesday, December 26, 2006

The movie

our den in Florida

On Christmas Eve, after we banished Peter into the bedroom to witness the Giants getting slaughtered, Justine and I settled in to watch a tape of "The Talented Mr. Ripley".

This was not the first time we saw this movie, but enough time has elapsed for us to have a fairly fresh take on it. Just a few minutes into the movie we started questioning Tom's (played by Matt Damion) motives for his actions. Was it an impulse to assume Dickie's (Jude Law) identity on his passage to Italy or was it a premeditated act? Was Tom corrupted by the moneyed society enough to kill or was he really in love with Dickie and killed him in a fit of passion after being bluntly rejected? Did his homosexuality manifest itself for the first time in Italy or was he always gay? Will he continue his killing spree to protect his double identity indefinitely?
The questions multiplied and we explored several moral dilemmas and the "cause and effect" issue the movie presented. Nothing really was resolved and that night I slept rather fitfully.
The next morning I googled the author of the novel upon which the movie was based - Patricia Highsmith - and the fog lifted drastically. The novelist was herself born into a privileged and dysfunctional family and developed an interest in human psychosis at an early age. She also carried on numerous lesbian affairs. In addition to the murderously "Talented Mr Ripley" whose saga she continued in four other novels, she also penned one of my favorite stories "Strangers on a Train", which was adapted by Hitchcock into a film noir.
Ms. Highsmith fascinates me for her macabre views so vividly expressed ahead of her time, in the early 50's, and I would have loved to pick her (disturbed) brain, alas she passed in 1995.
As it is, I will now visit my local library and check-out as many of her 29 works as they stock.