Categories
Travel Stories

The City That Calls to Me

Why is it that everyone wants to write about Paris? That artists, both from Hemingway and the Fitzgeralds to Jay Z, flock to the area? Is it the artistic glamour that is found all over the city? The calm that washes over you as you sit in café, sipping a café au lait, people watching or gazing out into the Seine from your perch on the banks? The awe felt at the dedication to keeping history preserved and integrated into daily life (even if that preservation pays off in millions of tourist dollars pouring in) with their apartments from the 1500’s?

Or, maybe it’s the fashion, the alcohol, the food, the undertones of glitz and glamour in this city. There’s something about Paris: you can be in the dirtiest part town and see someone dressed impeccably well and feel that they are well-read and well-versed in life’s affairs.  It’s the idea that anyone can look beautiful in Paris, no matter the budget.

A Parisian woman can save for years to buy her first Chanel bag, channeling an inner beauty with her black cigarette pants, loafers, white blouse, her hair slightly a mess and no make-up (save for maybe a little mascara or a bit of rouge). Her look is simple, most likely cheap (minus that Chanel bag) with a lot of her items bought at the Monoprix down the street, and yet, it’s an iconic look. A look that millions of women all over the world will spend thousands of dollars trying to replicate. But, replicating something pure and beautiful is never possible.


The fashion and understated glamour is an undercurrent running through Paris, but for those who have been there, you know it’s more than that. It’s a decadent lifestyle that seems to take little effort. The tiny, cramped apartments are more than just a funny story to tell friends back home, more than that stereotypical lifestyle that is so prominent in movies. It’s part of the yearning for something more than just material, more than large homes and clutter.

Living in a minuscule apartment while owning Louis Vuitton, Dior, or Chanel is something of a Parisian right.  Spending liberally on high quality items, be them cheeses, chocolates, wines, or clothing is always the right move with Parisians. It’s always the desire that is important, the need for the purest form, the creativity unleashed in every mundane aspect of the city; you’re always dressing for lifestyle in Paris, never for comfort and ease.

The most splendid apartments are large and baroque in their finishings with gilded gold throughout, but they’re not of the monstrous mansions you will find in L.A. or the many-leveled marbled apartments in New York. Even the most decadent things in Paris are simple.


So, that’s it, right? Artists, although they may not all admit it to themselves, love the decadence. Why else would you sit in front of a computer, a notebook, or a typewriter, banging out the ideas in your head? There’s something so egotistical about being a writer, an artist, that it’s nearly comical. We say we hate the spotlight, we’d rather be on the sidelines, and when it comes to showcasing our work we can be as shy as a preschooler on her first day. But, the glamour of life gets to us. The royalties come in, the attention is doted upon us, the drinking until 4am isn’t just to survive anymore – it’s to celebrate.

What is more decadent than putting your thoughts onto any type of medium, bringing a little bit of you, piece by piece, into the spotlight and thrusting it into viewers faces – making them wonder over which character is the true novelist, what part of the painting is the artist, and if that song is the beginning or end of a great love felt by the singer.


When I look out my window I see trees. Trees and the great expanse of a prairie horizon. There is no glitz and glamour out here; instead, I find myself the most attentive to my actions and the most calm and meditative when in nature. There’s something soothing about being amongst living things that have lived for millions of years, surviving each and every type of apocalyptic problem. Growing back after the atrocities and becoming even stronger. The freshness to the air leaves a crisp feeling both inside and out.

But, the sound of the Parisian streets beats in my heart, the laughter, chatter and tinkling of cups and plates in a café coarse through my bloodstream. The city calls to me, to my inner artistic ego. There is a yearning, a strong and faithful plea to come back to the city that makes me feel the most alive. A burning desire, one you can compare to that of missing a lover.

Although I feel far-removed from it all and this is where I’ll stay, the glitz and the glamour, the ability to wear an absolutely breathtaking outfit no matter the time of the day, gets to me. The belief that any type of artistic dream is possible when you are within the city’s borders. The hope is alive, much like for those actors still slinging coffees in the local Starbucks in L.A., clinging to the hope that one day, maybe, they’ll be able to reach the Stars and live amongst them as an equal.

Categories
travel

My Kinda Paris

I talk about Paris A Lot. I think about Paris even more. 

There’s a lot that’s associated with the city and me. It was the first place I went to on a really big trip away from my parents, my friends, my country. It was where I met my high school boyfriend that led into University, and later, our separate ways. It’s where I always seem to be around when there’s some sort of protest going on. Although, it is Paris, so there is always some sort of protest going on. After visiting a handful of times, it’s a place where it feels like home. Where I know my favourite restaurants, streets, and shops. It’s the feeling I get as soon as I land in the airport, like all of the weight of my stresses melt away. 

A lot has changed in the city I first visited and a lot has changed with me. That first time, we stayed in the raunchiest part of Paris in a tiny hotel that looked like how mould would feel. The elevator was so small that we had to send our luggage up without anyone and meet it on the floor above. Don’t worry, this hasn’t changed. But, to a 16 year old who hadn’t left North America yet? It was crazy to think about. The stairs were so narrow that there was no way we could lug our giant suitcases down. But, we sure tried. It’s one of the things I remember most about our stay: trying our hardest to carry our suitcases down the tiny stairs while making sure we didn’t miss the bus.

The rooms were so tiny that, when I hit my friend’s foot in the middle of the night, she, not knowing how to tell time on a 24-hour clock, thought it was time to get up and get ready for the day, confusing us both in the process. Seeing a friend of yours brush their teeth and put on deodorant in the middle of the night doesn’t automatically make a 16 year old think that your friend is confused, it makes you wonder if you should be doing the same thing and if you’re gross for not doing it. Sometimes, the thoughts of a teenager are a little strange. Or, maybe it was just me as a teenager. 

I remember thinking how awful this place is and I couldn’t fathom loving it. It was just another city I could visit and tick off my list. I can still see the one homeless man in the street, rows of empty Heinekens beside him as they puke up one still going down. I can still see that guy bathing in the fountain, not a care in the world about who is watching. It was my first time witnessing something so bold, so disgusting being done in broad daylight without a thought about covering it up. It sticks with me even to this day when I’ve seen far worse.

But then I also saw the architecture, the beauty in the streets mixed with the putrid air of urine that has always been a problem in Paris, filling the cavernous tube of the Metro, and your nostrils. The dirty, dusty streets call to me with their charms, both hidden and boasting. Now, the raunchiest neighbourhood, the lower-class Red Light District where you can get a hooker for cheap, is my favourite. While I absolutely love and adore Saint Germain des Pres, it’s in the 2nd arrondisement, the textile district, that holds my heart. 

It’s filled with history, of greats once visited, of delicious restaurants, and is adjacent to the famous marketplace: Les Halles. The ladies? You get used to them, lined up in a row in front of the Sephora; the younger ones in yoga pants in doorways along the walk to the Metro, alone and working constantly, the groups taking precedent in front of the stairs leading down to the Metro, their legwear and boots always on point. And, the older ones, walking about in their furs and their gloves, whom I like to affectionately think of as the matriarchs of the 2nd. They’re there to remind you that Paris isn’t just Instagram shots of your latte or cappuccino. It’s the grimy, seedy history that is still strutting about.

I used to dream of Saint Germain, heading to Deux Magots every single day, ready to be like Hemingway, like the greats before us all. But, art and life isn’t like that. You have to find your Deux Magots, your own place to sit and contemplate and drink and laugh. Sure, I still visit the café and bar every trip, but I’ve my own kind of place. It may not be a place for whiskeys and late night chats, but late nights have never truly been my thing. Early mornings and contemplative afternoons, that’s where my money lies. 

So, I wake early, head out of my apartment or hotel and take the quick metro over to the Tuileries. It’s my home away from home, where I truly feel at peace. Those green metal chairs call to me as I sip on my café au lait not from one of the cafés dotting the park, but taken from home or from a Starbucks I had to go out of my way for. My favourite time is before any of the cafés open, before anyone has settled in for the day, before the tourists have arrived or have even started lining up at the Louvre or L’Orangerie.
My greatest treasure about being in Paris? I’ve already done it all; I’ve taken in the tourist attractions, waited in the lines, and now I can relax and take in the city’s true self.

Categories
books

7 Books you Need to Read Before Going to Paris

Juniper and Daisies is part of the Amazon Affiliate Program. This post contains affiliate links and I will receive a small commission if you make a purchase after clicking on my link.

Paris, my beautiful city, there’s just something about you that warms my heart. I don’t have to be doing anything but sitting in the Tuileries and yet I feel the pull of this place. Clearly, so do so many others, given how many have flocked there to write and paint and how many books are centered around the city. Here are my absolute favourites you must read before your next trip to get you even more ready and in the mood for Paris. Like you need the help. **read to write your own story…something like that

Paris Hangover
I read this book before my last two trips to Paris and a dozen times in between. It’s casual and witty and tells the story of someone who was brave enough to move from New York to Paris before everyone and their Influencer dog were doing so. A love story within a love story within a love story, we are pulled into the life of someone who adores Paris, finding her love for painting and her dream man.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

Blame it on Paris
This book can either make you fall in love with Paris or hate it. Although some of the complaints are a little over the top and scream American (something she makes fun of herself), Laura’s tongue-in-cheek writing is entertaining and gives you a glimpse into the world of what it’s really like to live in France. Except, maybe not so terrible and cold as she’s describing. Anything would be cold if you came from Georgia.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

The Secret ways of Perfume
I didn’t think I would like this book when I started reading it, but it turned out to be a great read. Elena, an Italian from a long line of perfumery discovers Paris and her history. A tale that isn’t just about the beautiful city, but everything that can happen in it, hidden behind those tall ornate doors.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading ” rel=”noopener noreferrer”>here.

7 must read books before your next trip to Paris | Luxuriously Thrifty

Madamoiselle Chanel
Coco Chanel wasn’t Coco Chanel until she sang and danced in a bar first. The story of how Gabriel Chanel became Coco Chanel, one of the most powerful fashion designers in the world is heart-warming and inspiring. It all started with a song and a hat.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

The Paris Secret
One of my favourites and a delightful read. Flora is an Art Agent, assessing an old art collection that holds more than just the appeal of painters long gone. An intense history of the paintings reveal more than she wanted to know and leads her deeper into the family’s past.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

The Paris Wife
While there is always talk of Hemingway and his writing and his ridiculous antics, there is rarely any talk of his wife. The one who came to Paris with him and changed their whole lives. It’s a bittersweet tale of Hadley, Hemingway’s wife, in a time where it wasn’t so easy to be independent and even harder to let love go.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

Becoming Marie Antoinette (triology)
I absolutely loved these books. While this isn’t exactly Paris based, the tales of becoming Marie Antoinette are both heart-warming and harrowing. You watch as she leaves her family as a girl for a new country, a new world, a whole new life. You see her grow into a teenager, her role as Queen, and follow along with her downfall and the atrocities that happened as the monarch began to fall.
Buy it from Amazon and start reading here.

Need a Paris book for your baby? Check out my published book Baby’s Trip to Paris.

Categories
TV & Books

Infuriating Things About Emily in Paris

If you’ve ever been to Paris before, chances are you were annoyed with a few things in Emily in Paris. It was such a classic rude American abroad story that I couldn’t help rolling my eyes at the stupidity. I may be a little late to the Emily in Paris review game, but I was thinking about it late last night and couldn’t get these annoyances out of my head, so now they’re in a grumpy old rant in a nice, easy listicle here for you to enjoy.

Burgers
Okay, Emily is clearly not paying attention to anything around her, which is apparent in more than just her stupidity about food. The scene where she is in the Ralph Lauren restaurant with another American is so unimaginative it’s sigh inducing. Here, Emily complains of not getting a burger in Paris and joyfully orders one off the menu, beyond excited that the menu is in english, because what would be worse than moving to a foreign country and actually having to learn the language? First off, McDonald’s exists in Paris and you can order a beer with your meal, so it’s already kicking America’s butt. So do lots of restaurants that serve burgers. So do restaurants that are all about burgers. My favourite burger joint in Paris? Paris New York. Delicious as fuck.

The Language Barrier.
Okay, so she had to leave fairly quickly and didn’t have much time to learn the language. Fair. But, she seems confused as to why people want to speak the language of their own country and won’t cater to her every whim. She does, eventually, try to learn the language, but her complete rudeness that not everyone will bow down to her American needs makes me want to vomit.

Plain Rude
When she tells her neighbour how stupid it is that the first floor begins on the second floor (and the main ground level floor is actually zero), I can’t. She has just met him and sounds like a complete ass. It’s kind of weird that this is a thing, and can be confusing at times, but it also makes sense. Why would the main floor be the first floor? It’s the main floor, so zero. Honestly, I go back and forth on this and have to remind myself that an apartment on the 5th floor without an elevator is actually 6 flights of stairs and I better be prepared to get my exercise in.


Complain about things all you want, you don’t have to like everything from a country, but don’t be surprised about differences and don’t complain about them to locals you just met. Save that shit for downloads with your friends or your diary. It’s like she expected to move to a different country, but it still be America with better architecture and fashion. Don’t get me started on when she sends back a steak because it isn’t cooked to her, disgusting, expectations.

The Wardrobe
She looks like an idiot in almost every scene and I can’t believe that she’s supposed to be coming off as somewhat fashionable. She’s in Paris, can she not go shopping for some better clothes? She, clearly, has tons of money considering her apartment location and the fact that she never takes the metro. The loud, obnoxious dressing is just so over the top. She doesn’t need to look like every fellow Parisienne, but take note from them and get some better outfits.

Her Expectations
She just expected that she would land in a new country, roll into the office, and then be handed every dream account imaginable. Slow your damn roll, kid. That’s not how life works. If just simply moving to Paris was exciting for you, then take a moment to realize that that is part of the dream package and you’ll, eventually, be able to do more for the company.

Lack of Research
She seemed to have done zero research into living in Paris; instead, she assumed it would be like a movie (and to be honest, her life is like a movie. Her Paris experiences are those that aren’t normal). She would land at the airport, fly over to her ultra chic apartment, and start at her dream job where everything works exactly as it does at home. There are definitely some things to get used to in Paris, and no amount of research can prepare you for some things, but at least do a little research into the company and into the working hours. She didn’t look into when the office would open, and showed up when she thought it should. If you’re starting a new job in a new country, wouldn’t the start time be one of your first questions? If you’re starting a new job in your home city, wouldn’t the start time be one of your first questions?

Instagram Fame
I’m not quite sure how her Instagram following skyrocketed with a few pics of Paris. She had nothing going on before, and suddenly, she’s a star everyone is listening to? I don’t think so. As a social media ‘expert’ she barely even had a hold on her own social media accounts. No amount of charming Parisian architecture will change that.

The American Obsession of Hating Different Cultures
American friends, is this really how all of you were raised? As a Canadian visiting the States many times, I know that these douches actually do exist, but isn’t it about time we all put the stereotype to rest? Or, is it too engrained in some people’s minds (*ahem Darren Star*) to get over?

Yeah, some things are weird in other countries. Yeah, a lot of things can be annoying. Yeah, the stereotypes portrayed in Emily in Paris can be accurate at times. But, not all the time and not with such intensity. It’s just another show of an American who hates everything that is not American. Honestly, I watched this for the supporting characters, and tried my best to ignore the ignorant, rude American who sat front and center. That being said, I really can’t wait for the more seasons.

Categories
Published Book

My Published Books

Yay! I published some books!

You can find any of the printed books through Juniper and Oak Publishing here.
Right now, there is one children’s book for purchase: Potato Baby and Raccoon Friend. You can also buy it off of Etsy here.

More coming soon!

I’ve also a chapter-by-chapter release of a Christmas novella called The Snowy Christmas, available for free on Substack here.

Thanks muchly if you buy any copies of my book!