So apparently I’m pretty lax at this whole blogging malarky.
Sacré bleu.
Much, much has happened since I last wrote! Most notably was
the Toussaint holiday. (A quick note on the French school holiday system: they
have far too many of them. As you were.) So, having only really been at work
properly for about three weeks, I had a two week break over Halloween and All Saints
Day (Toussaint to the French). So I packed my bags and went back to England.
We won’t talk about my incredibly stressful journey home,
which involved a taxi which showed up fifteen minutes late causing me to dash
for my train, lugging an extremely heavy suitcase round a metro system with no
escalators, and the loss of all record of my Eurostar booking. EVENTUALLY, I
made it home for two blissful weeks where I could give my poor brain a rest and
not speak any French at all.
The first week coincided with the half term week in England,
which meant my mum was off work and so I spent the week with her in Bedford. My
sister also came down from university at the weekend, which was nice, and we
went Christmas shopping, which was even nicer (sorry, Natalie), and it was
Bonfire Night (yay!) so there was fireworks-going as well. Then, on Sunday
night, I gadded off to Leicester, to stay with Josh (who knew I was coming) and
to see my housemates from last year (who didn’t). Unfortunately I wasn’t quick
enough off the mark to take pictures of their faces when they opened the door
but believe me, the sight will remain with me for a long while.
So, activities during this week involved the celebration of
Josh’s 21st birthday, a bread-and-butter pudding date and a
cocktail-drinking night out with my housemates, a Pizza Express date (that date
was actually with my boyfriend), and... other things I think have already forgotten
about. In summary, it was a very lovely week. It was a bit difficult leaving
again, but I was kind of expecting that, and I was fine once I was back anyway.
I do miss gravy though. Oh, and baked beans. And seriously, do they sell mince
pies in France? I don't think they do, and it distresses me greatly.
Recent French adventures included a trip to Paris with
Rachael at the weekend. I’ve only been to Paris once before and I’d forgotten
how much I loved it. We did the sort of generic touristy bits – the Arc de
Triomphe, Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame – but there was also a slight Christmassy
twist as there was a Christmas market along the Champs Elysées which we weren’t
expecting and which I enjoyed immensely.
| I have no picture of the Christmas market so you'll have to make do with the Eiffel Tower. |
| Oh, books, how I love you. |
And we even managed to find the most stereotypically
Parisian café/bar place where we stopped mid-afternoon for crepes and mulled
wine. Christmassy and French all rolled into one!
Finally, school anecdote of the week: after one of my
lessons yesterday a girl came up to me and said “t’es belle” (“you’re beautiful”).
My heart melted. Seconds later, another girl asked how old I was. When I
responded with “21” (not that old!) she looked absolutely horrified and
slightly sorry for me. You win some, you lose some.

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