This Side of the Lens (A Year in French) One American's perspective of living in France

September 24, 2008

Return to French

Filed under: En Route,Thoughts — Tags: , , — Swami-G @ 9:11 am
th12

Logan's Run?

I know some of you may be thinking that this shot doesn’t look like San Francisco international airport.  To you I say, you are correct.  This shot is of someone else’s plane looking out the window towards the Las Vegas strip.

The night before I left the U.S. I drove to my friend Hans’ house in Oakland so that in the morning I would have less of a drive into the city.  I left sometime after 5am so I wouldn’t run into a wall of traffic and the drive to the rental car building took 25 minutes, so I was in good shape.  The rental people there are very efficient and I was finished dropping off the car before I was able to get all my belongings out of the trunk.  Tired and cold I wandered along with the rest of the crowd toward the automated tram car that would deliver us to our intended terminal.

Something I failed to mention in the previous post is that I’m flying standby.  While this has been relatively easy so far, today there is something different in the air. Nobody is saying it, but something is definitely up.  Did I step in shit on the way in? No (I look to confirm.)  Even though I’m being polite and patient, the people behind the counter are short with customers, and are not being communicative with me.  After the plane has left the gate, the woman begrudgingly speaks to me.  She tells me that my luggage and I did not make that flight to Philadelphia (NSS) and that we would have to wait for the next flight.  When I asked about my luggage she informed me that it would not get on the plane without me because that was the policy.  OK, time to kill time.  Since I was still tired I sat down put on my headphones and did my best to zone out, but not too much because I didn’t want to miss my name being called.  I noticed the gate filling up as the time got closer to my flight and I noticed the announcement for first class customers, and the announcement for the various sections of the plane, but I didn’t hear my name.  I knew that since I was sitting 15 feet from the counter that they knew I was there, and since they didn’t seem too enthusiastic about answering questions I’d just wait and see.  Sure enough the plane left and they didn’t say a thing to me until I went back to the counter and asked what the next step would be.  They weren’t sure and I should sit back down until they called me, was my answer.  Now I’m starting to get nervous about catching my flight to Paris later in the day, so I attempt to schedule a flight with another airline just in case.  This is difficult without a U.S. mobile phone and SFO is not one of the ‘nice’ airports that offers its customers free wifi to make their lives easier when traveling.  Just about the time that I have figured out what my other flight options might be, I was called to the counter.  Great. . . well the good news was they were going to put me on a flight to Las Vegas.  The bad news was that my bag went on to Philadelphia with out.  Whoops, someone didn’t know the policy.  OK, off to Las Vegas, not too bad, and there is a flight to Philadelphia that looks like I will most likely get on it.

th11

Trash TV (nothing personal)

I couldn’t leave the Las Vegas airport unless they told me there were no more flights, so I killed time.  And more time.  Eventually I was fortunate and got on a flight to Philadelphia.  There was no chance of connecting with my flight to Paris at this point, so I was resigned to deal with the situation the best I could.

When I got to Philadelphia I walked from one terminal to the next trying to figure out where my luggage would have come in, since I was not on the same flight.  Eventually I found the luggage counter where they hold your bag if you don’t pick it up off the carousel in time and I was kindly informed that they were unable to tell me where my bag was because it was an international flight and it would be held in a customs holding area.  When I asked if it went to Paris without me, I was told that the bag was not allowed to go to Paris without me because of customs regulations and that it would be held for me and only put on the plane if I was on it too. OK, but my toiletries are in my suitcase so… I was handed an official airline toiletry bag and pointed toward the door.

th8

échelle to paradis?

I am a fairly seasoned traveler, so I knew the score.  Having left for SFO before 6am I had finally reached Philadelphia at 11:45 pm and after the luggage hunt I was now in search of a hotel after midnight.  Hardly fair considering they always charge you for a full day, but I was exhausted and willing to spring for the soft bed over the plastic airport chairs that discourage lying down.  The courtesy phone did not have number buttons, you know the one with pictures on one side (informing illiterate people of who they could expect might answer) and a cold steel button on the other side that would initiate the call?  Well this was a welcome accommodation at that hour, however, for what ever reason the picture and the associated steel button no longer seemed to be in any way related.  Somebody must have reprogrammed the buttons, but was not equipped or willing to replace the pictures.  So there I was hitting hotel pictures and getting taxi dispatch, hitting taxi dispatch and getting car rental, and hitting car rental and getting limousine service.  WTF?  Eventually I got a hotel desk, and even though I was never able to understand the name of the hotel, I did find the shuttle bus and was dropped off in front of the hotel.  Whew… now to sleep.  I asked when check out was, and then told reception to let me sleep undisturbed until checkout time.  (Why not try to get on the clock, and might as well make the best of it, right?)  There were no ladders there, I just thought the picture would fit some how.  OK, the next day I bathed and prepped myself for the continuation of my journey.  My flight from PHL to CDG didn’t leave ’til the afternoon, but I was taking no chances.  I reported early at my gate, and then started wasting time.  Reading, listening to podcasts, playing solitaire, whatever.  This time I did make the flight and all was good.  You see the flight is set up so that you get going, have dinner, watch a movie, go to sleep and wake up in the morning just before you land in Paris.  This way you are rested and back on the european clock.  Well it’s nice in theory anyway.

I arrived on time in Paris and after the wonderful wait in line to show my passport to people that look as if they couldn’t care less, I made my way to the luggage carousel.  There is always a certain level of anxiety involved with waiting for your luggage to appear on the carousel, and being that the last time I saw my luggage was two days earlier this time was definitely no different.  I waited from the first bag to last bag and mine was apparently not amongst them.  Ah sh!t, I’ve been here before, but never in a country that doesn’t speak-a-da-english.  Again I went off in search of the luggage desk and when I finally found it and handed over my claim ticket, the man disappeared and re-emerged 3 minutes later with my bag.  I was so relieved I just took the bag and headed off towards the inner-terminal tram.  I made my way to the TGV station and waited my turn in line.  On my way to the TGV ticket counter I called Christine and asked what the best course of action might be, since she was in Avignon for the day and was unable to pick me up at the station in Aix-en-Provence.  We agreed that I would try to get to Avignon and meet up with her before she left instead of getting to Aix and making other arrangements.

When my turn came up, I asked for a ticket to Avignon, and the gentleman assisting me told me that if I hurried (oh goody) there was a train going to Avignon in 4 minutes.  He also kindly added that if I missed that train to come back and he would fix the ticket for another train.  I did make the train, and except for a slight delay for a train change in Lyon I made it to Avignon.  Next I needed to find Christine, so I got a taxi to take me over to where they park the tour busses.  Done and Done.  After leaving at 5:30 am thursday morning I was now in Avignon at 4pm Saturday afternoon.  The tour bus driver was also accommodating and agreed to drop us off about 1 km from our house so that we didn’t have to take another bus home.  So at about 7pm we arrived back at our house and I began to unload, oh and unpack too.  This is when I discovered that when my bag went to Paris without me (I know against policy and apparently beyond the control of customs) my luggage had been ransacked and the employee in charge of luggage in Paris had decided to gift himself a new portable hard drive out of my bag.  He/she also decided that they should listen to my iPod stereo while stuck on after hours duty, because the remote was slipped into a different pocket and the batteries were half dead.  I lodged a report with the airline, but what can you really do?  The hard drive that I bought for Claude was now part of the employee benefit program.   Oh well.  I’m not suggesting that everybody who travels to Europe stuff all there belongings into the overhead bins (like the WONDERFUL people that fly Southwest) just that if its small and valuable, you may want to have it with you.

Take care everyone.

th2

August 23, 2008

Paris Pulpeuse

Filed under: Thoughts — Tags: , — Swami-G @ 9:11 am

here ducky, ducky, ducky. . .

Moving the blog forward may mean, at times, just writing to write.  The main picture doesn’t reflect any historical architecture or stunning panorama, but rather an attitude in France.  While Americans are familiar with the Victoria Secret catalog, or the slightly sleazier Fredericks of Hollywood catalog, lingerie and/or sexy under garments do not often cross over into the every day media/advertising world.  Here in France, lingerie stores seem to be as abundant as liquor stores are in the poorest American neighborhoods.  We all know “sex sells,” but it doesn’t carry the same charge when it is acceptable to be blatant and, by our standards, over the line.  This picture is not a good example of anything over-the-line by any means.  It is just a hint, and one I saw in different forms around Paris that caused me to take this picture.  While it is generally acceptable to throw some healthy sex appeal into an advertisement, sometimes people can be offended by the wrong association or stretching a term too far.  Take for instance the word pulpeuse that appears in the title of this blog entry.  From what I gather pulpeuse means pulp or fleshy and can be used to describe a woman as hot or ‘edible.’  The Orangina company decided to use the word in their ad campaign.  Since their juice has pulp they have used the word play to sell their orange juice as sexy.  Many of these posters have been scribbled over with various other expressions.  Here is an example:

Here is an example of the “public” response to the Orangina ad:

Like I said, sometimes you just have to write to get the blog moving forward.  I’ve also found, that one shouldn’t be too self-critical while working on the ‘blog’ as one can loose several lines of text, and find themselves floundering with nothing to say and with no clear direction.

OK, that said, I’m sure you get the drift.  I’m going to go now.  I want to get you all caught up with the French experience, so please be sure to sign up for the Gallery (yes that is a link to the gallery of which I speak) so that you can see all the photos I have put out there to share with you all.  If you feel like it, send me an email, leave comments on the blog or the gallery or the website.  

Take care,

-G

Here is an example of their television ad:

August 21, 2008

Aix-Patriot

Filed under: Thoughts — Tags: , — Swami-G @ 9:07 am

 

Water is both the source and history of Aix-en-Provence

Water is both the source and history of Aix-en-Provence

OK, OK.  I’m well aware that just about every article on Aix-en-Provence has a picture of this fountain and even this particular cherub figure, so please no comments about how unoriginal I am.  At least I had the artistic vision to include the speed limit sign in the background, which I noticed nobody else had the cajones to put in their photos.  To be honest I was making a panoramic photo…alright, no I wasn’t.  I was trying not to get hit and still get a shot of the fountain without a bus or other object in the foreground and I didn’t focus enough on the background.  But enough self-critique on the photo.  I was hoping to put out a few more blog entries and get myself caught up before my trip back to the states, but that isn’t going to happen today.  Instead I thought I would post this little entry to remind all of you slackers that you need to go to the GALLERY and sign up if you haven’t already.  I’m posting lots of photos there for you all to see and even some old archive photos are making their way to relevant categories.  Once you sign up for the Gallery, I will authenticate your request and give you access to the content.  You are encouraged, though not required, to post some of your own pictures to the gallery.  You are also requested to rate and comment on the photos if you feel moved to do so.

On the personal front, I am heading back to the states to pick up my furry one, attend to some business at the French consulate and see some of my clients.  I should be in town for about a week, and if given the chance (by proximity) I’d like to see many of you.  If you are not on my route (Philadelphia, Chicago, Portland, Ashland, Chico, Santa Rosa, Rohnert Park, Petaluma, San Francisco, East Bay Area) then I am sorry, there probably won’t be any time to see you unless you can schedule to meet me in one of those destinations at the time that I will be there.  I would love to spend more time sharing photos and various other observations, but the clock is ticking and I have to get ready for my Looooooooooong journey which begins tomorrow morning (French time) and ends tomorrow night (Pacific standard time.)  Ouch.  Which will make it roughly 23 hours of travel.  I do hope I can sleep some of that time for my minds sake.  I will check in with you soon, and hopefully get caught up… (Just so you know I’m posting the photo dates with the blog entries so that I keep a consistant time line with my pictures. So the today, tomorrow etc… well that’s hard to tell.)  So write me an email, sign up for the Gallery and take care of yourselves.  

Ciao,

-Graham

August 13, 2008

Nothing like the fires in Cali

Filed under: Thoughts — Tags: , , — Swami-G @ 10:22 am

A fire burns off on the outskirts of Aix-en-Provence

I hope I never told anyone I was some sort of professional blogger.  As clearly, you can see, I am not.  I find myself again in the position of trying to play catch-up with real life events.  I was only eight days ahead of my last blog entry when I made it, but the time seems to fly by and next thing you know, two house guests later and I’m behind again.  Maybe really behind, though I don’t know if I’ll drop any clues just yet.  I’m using my photo library to keep track of events and keep myself chronologically oriented in the blog, so when I saw this photo I thought it looked like an easy way to post a short update.  For one thing, I only took one picture on this day, so there was no need to upload a bunch of photos, pick the best and describe them to you, or to recall the events surrounding them.  The photo in this post was taken from my bike on the way out of town when I noticed the plume of smoke trailing across the sky.  Apparently the weather here is a lot like California (though somewhat warmer) and fires are a problem with all the dry grass in the surrounding hills.  OK, that said…I do have a bit of news I wanted to bring your attention to that will likely be appearing in future posts, so you should all get signed up.  I know.  I hate to do it, but I think I’m asking you to sign up for yet one more on-line thing-a-mabob.  I couple of you signed up to be able to reply to my blog posts, and I thank you for that.  One of you even commented on one of the posts.   Thank you Katy for taking the time.  

What I have done is created a photo gallery on my web server so that I could share photos with you all, and hopefully, maybe, possibly you too could share photos with me and the other users of the gallery.  Doesn’t that sound like fun?  Sure I’ve noticed that some of you prefer Picasa, Flickr etc…, but with this gallery you are first and foremost only sharing with members that I have approved and if you wish, you can choose to only share your albums with other members in the gallery that you approve.  So what do you say?  Are you willing to share?  I am willing to share, but recently it has become increasingly apparent that in order to share some of my photos and not have them lifted by google or other sites and spread across the internet without my knowledge or consent, I will have to put up barriers.  Instead of putting a big copyright symbol in the middle of my photos which make them less attractive, I thought this small barrier would make more sense.    So would you please join me at the Larger Purpose Gallery.  The URL for the gallery is http://gallery.largerpurpose.com in case you would rather cut and paste the link.  Your registration requests will be processed a.s.a.p. so please allow some time for me to get to them.  This is not a blanket registration system where any email request is processed by the server.

There are some pictures up there now, though I plan to add more from the archives as I get a chance.  I hope you all are well, and I hope you continue to return to the blog (and the Gallery) from time to time.  Thank you,

-Graham

August 8, 2008

Acclimation

Filed under: Thoughts — Tags: , , , , — Swami-G @ 11:07 am

 

I liked the lines. . .

I liked the lines. . .

This is the first picture I took in Aix-en-Provence since arriving here, at our new home in France.  The weather has been very hot and we have both been rather stressed out.  Christine has been overwhelmed by the amount of work there is and I have been doing what I can to help out, as well as wrangling with my own problems, both mental and physical.  Physically, my feet have swollen to strange proportions and my head/stomach seem to play alternating tricks on me as I acclimate to the climate/region.  Mentally, because I still have to figure out what going on with my dog, my house, my life etc. . .

I suppose I should have had photos of the house ready for a virtual tour, but it’s been difficult just finding time to address the day to day necessities, much less the creative stuff.  Take the experience of picking up our trunks in Marseille for instance.  Christine and I packed up some things and took them to San Francisco to have them shipped over.  We thought that is would be a more cost effective method of sending our winter cloths and heavy items.  Not including our personal labor and expense in getting the items to San Francisco, the total cost to ship our stuff to Marseille was $530.00 dollars.  That wasn’t all that much stuff, but we figured it still saved money because of the weight, so we said O.K. and shipped it.  Once here in Marseille, we learned that is would cost $412.00 to pick up our items, which were now essentially held captive.   Let this be a warning to you.  If you can make the shipping company give you a “not to exceed” guarantee of the cost to pick up your stuff.  Otherwise the crooks at the port have absolutely no problem looking you in the eye and charging whatever they want.  I even watched the guy behind the desk sit there and manipulate the numbers until they matched the fax we had received from the office.  Which brings me to the experience of getting our stuff.  I’m sorry I don’t have any pictures, but it was a trying experience by itself without taking any photos.  On the fax we received we were given a street address and instructions that it was a cash/cashiers cheque only business.  The first problem came when the TomTom indicated that it could show us the street, but when it came to street numbers we were on our own.  Previously I had only experienced this in gated housing communities, but OK you get us to the street and we’ll read the numbers.  We did find the number, but it was not on the side of an office building, but at the gate to an office park.  After wandering around and looking stupid for a bit, I suggested we climb a flight of stairs that I had seen others going up.  Sure enough, written in marker felt on a small piece of scratch paper taped to the door was the sign “Con-freight.”  Once inside the dirty hallway, we were greeted by suspecting glances and mumbled half-hearted “Bon jours.”  Luckily Christine had a man’s name handy, so we were eventually directed to an office with three people sitting at folding tables in front of some beat looking Dell computers.  Being that I understand limited portions of the French language, I am usually struck by how many words are needed to convey and receive simple ideas and answers.  What should have been something like” hello, we are here to pay for and pickup our items.  Here are the required forms and money. . .”  and “. . . could you please let us know where we have to go and what we need to pick up are things.”  Somehow turns into 45 minutes of cascading vowels punctuated by many ‘uuuuhs’ and ‘aaaahs’ that almost seem like people are making things up as they go along.  “This is how much you need to pay, this is where you need to go and here is a map to assist you.” (would have been sufficient in english) Alright everyone’s got their own bureaucracy to deal with, but we hadn’t even got to customs yet.  Once the sing song had ended, we left the office with two pieces of paper that roughly looked like mapquest maps, but here in France Michelin (yes the tire company) is so huge that it controls all that stuff.   Both maps gave approximate start and stop locations, but this time street numbers were not part of the information.  Like before, the TomTom could get us close, but it was up to us to scan for relevant building signs.

Well, after some confusion and ending up in what appeared to be an abandoned factory, we figured out that we had chosen the wrong Michelin map and had ended up close to the warehouse where we would eventually pick up our belongings, but we had not yet cleared ourselves through customs, so first things first.  Christine had trouble getting the TomTom lined up with our destination so I pulled over and entered the address myself.  BIG MISTAKE!!  I say this because I am clearly not tuned into addresses here and I chose to tell the TomTom to take us to the district in Marseille, not the street.  Remember, there was no street address, so I looked at the thing that had a number in front of it and used that instead.  I’m glad no one was seriously hurt in the course of our detour.  As we got to watch, first hand, how European thugs navigate a narrow busy city street.  You see, I was stopped behind a car that had double parked and I was waiting for an opening in the flow of opposing traffic to pass the car.  While waiting for a large dump truck to pass, I was confused why this large dump truck was stopped.  That’s when I noticed that someone behind us was trying to pass the rest of us waiting our turn.  A small little car, no bigger than ours, had managed to intimidate a dump truck into waiting so I waited with a WTF look on my face.  This angry young man smashed into the double parked car and just pushed it until he was able to get past the dump truck.  I know he left the bumper scratched up and broke the rearview mirror during this exchange.  The woman that double parked got back just in time to see the excitement, though I had mixed feelings about whether or not she deserved this kind of treatment.  We managed to get past her car only to catch up to the thugs who had now double parked their car.  The mood was quickly growing sour and having Susan (TomTom) announce that we had reached our destination felt like a bad sign.  We pulled over and Christine tried her hand at the navigation instructions.

We ended up going back through the same neighborhood, this time on the way to the freeway.  So after a 10 minute ride downtown we got to the street we wanted to be on, and started hunting for the Customs building.  After pulling into the correct parking lot, but the wrong side of the building, we ended up walking around and waiting in a stark hallway with ominous worn counters in front of the sliding windows.  Luckily, Christine came equipped with all sorts of forms, notarized and in triplicate.  The first gentleman seemed to indicate that this appeared to be in order and went off to do the rubber stamp thing.  Or so I thought.   Even though the paper work was in order, Christine said the two men were talking whether or not to detain us.  What fun 😉  A hint to those of you that may find yourself in this position. . . go right before lunch.  Not too close that you end up waiting through lunch (lunches here are 2+ hours,) but in our situation I think the men didn’t want to screw up their lunch schedule so they just stamped the form and sent us on our way.  So back to the abandoned factory we went.  At least we had been here once before so it felt a little familiar, instead of a film set for some Hollywood FBI serial killer flick.  What we didn’t know was where we were supposed to go in this complex.  I wish I had some photos to show you just what kind of nightmare we had ended up in.  Some expletives later, we decided to call the “office” and get a clearer idea of where we were supposed to go.  Over the phone, our instructions were simply to go to the end and find some IMM.  Apparently, IMM was the abbreviation of the company that formerly occupied the abandoned factory, so driving to “the end” resulted in us asking some forklift operator who indeed indicated that we were in the right place and that we should go to the office.   The office was not clearly marked, but by walking to the back of the warehouse we found a cage with another piece of paper taped to the metal with IMM written in pen.  OK.  So after handing over the papers we received from the office and the forms from the customs office we received a stamped piece of paper that we were told to give to a forklift operator that would retrieve our stuff.  At this point we were hectic, just hoping that we could get our stuff before the lunch break.   Although we were both ready to strangle someone, we waited patiently with a distinct look of desperation on our faces.  Eventually, an operator took our sheet and reappeared with our belongings still wrapped up on a palette, which he deposited next to our car leaving us to figure out how to take it apart and make it fit into our little car.  A few more expletives later, we had the car loaded and were following TomTom back to our little house in Aix-en-Provence.  

Well, I hope that wasn’t too much information.  Maybe some of you will be able to use this information to your benefit.  Until next time. . .cheers 🙂

-G

July 31, 2008

Objective Parallax

Filed under: Thoughts — Swami-G @ 9:43 am

Just so there is no confusion, her furriness has not gone up to the great pasture in the sky.  The last post, which inadvertently brought tears to Christine’s eyes, was an attempt at catharsis.  Something to help me process my feelings about my dog.  You may have read that my sister, bless her heart, had agreed to dog sit the furry one while Christine and I are in France (see Pack Mentality.)  Somewhat ironically, the day we arrived in Aix-en-Provence I received a letter from my sister saying that the extra dog (my dog) was just too much, and my sister would not be able to keep her.  In the letter my sister indicated that she could continue to look after the dog until September, when she would be traveling to California, and could make arrangements to drop the dog off somewhere; to be arranged later on.  

This came as difficult news to hear.  First, Christine and I had leased an apartment that does not take pets.  We were under the impression that we would not have a pet in France.  Second, our situation in France is vastly different than it was in the United States.  Large vehicles and driving everywhere you go are just not that common place or practical.  At a minimum Christine is required to go to Paris throughout the year as part of her job requirements, making hotel acquisition with me and an 80lb dog that much more difficult.  

To make a much longer story shorter, if any of you know of a good temporary home for my girl please email me and share this information.  I will need to come back to the United States, so arrangements can be made to pickup and deliver the dog.  The best place for her would be a house that has a fenced in yard (dog proof) where she can hang out and feel secure.  She also likes to lie on her bed in a safe feeling spot inside, so access to both areas for her is a definite plus.  This whole process is really an emotional drain.  Struggling with the possibilities and the implications has wiped me out.  I really don’t feel as though I’m thinking straight.  Hopefully this finds a prompt and amicable resolution.

-G

July 30, 2008

A dog can express more with its tail in seconds,

Filed under: Thoughts — Swami-G @ 5:08 pm

. . .than its owner can express with a tongue in hours.  (Author unknown)

Words are a palette

Reflections of reality

Grouped in approximation

They coalesce illusion

by degree

or in fraction

You are in our hearts

in our thoughts

and our prayers.

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