Bonjouree, Paree

On a brisk walk this morning, in one last attempt to find something special (your ideas were brilliant/funny, by the way.) before we trained away from Paris, I saw a little old lady walking her dog. And her dog was holding an umbrella in its mouth. It was scheduled to rain today, so this brilliant lady must have trained her dog to hold her essentials.

I wished for a dog like that as we waddled through the streets with all our stuff, heading for the metro. It wasn't as bad as it could have been, but I found myself thinking what I always think when I have to carry my own junk: what IS all this junk? I begin to regret packing specific items, like my stack of ten (!?) books, a skirt I haven't had occasion to wear yet, my pair of black shoes, etc.

But we got here, to London, sigh of contentment. The train was speedy and it felt decadent to sit for so long on our behinds. I tried to read, but promptly fell asleep. Sam dithered about writing, worried he couldn't write, then wrote.

Turns out there's a subway-workers strike right now, so what should have been a quick hop and skip on the tube turned into waiting for a taxi in an enormous line, then sitting in traffic because everyone had to take taxis. Darn strikers.

But then, oh then, we got to our little place in the same neighborhood as the BYU Center, near Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. The place is small and we have to climb 4,000 stairs to get to it, but it's quiet and sweet and we've moved our clothes into a tall cabinet by the bed. Well, the few clothes that don't reek. As I type this, Sam is hauling all the clothes that do reek to a laundry mat, bless his soul.

We had dinner at this Lebanese place I went to hmmm, six years ago? seven? and have dreamed of ever since. It was the first time I had ever had Lebanese food and since we were young and American and didn't know what to order, they brought us out this enormous spread and it was one of the single-most wonderful dining experiences of my life. I had wondered if Sam and I could track that place down while we were here, and today, without trying, we stumbled across it and I wiled my way into going there and then pouted until we got a similar big spread with mostly vegetarian dishes. I tell you, it was nearly as good as I remembered. Love it when that happens.

That's it for now, folks. Wasn't a very eventful day. Tomorrow we'll figure out the bus system (yippee!) to go to the Tate Modern and St. Paul's. I can't think of a lovelier day.

Comments

Terry Earley said…
Well, I get to be the first to be glad you made it to London. I groaned this morning when I heard of the London subway workers strike. It is supposed to take until Friday for normalcy.

We do envy you. London is such a wonderful city.
Sam Ruddick said…
do i dither? i don't dither.
belann said…
We did love London--and you did too. Hope you two make many wonderful new memories. Tell Sam it is okay if he dithers, as long as he ends up writing. Sorry about the subway strike. Should make it memorable.
Amara said…
envious of the Lebanese....of course.
Have fun in London! I love it there! I hope you can see a show or two. And I am probably the only person you know who took a nap while in the Tate Modern. It just didn't do anything for me. A few of my friends almost disowned me when I did that. "Feed the birds" for me =)
Mike and Emily said…
oh, the lovely city by the thames. eat it up, lady!
Jan said…
We saw "War Horse" and "Duet for One" a couple of weeks ago while we were in London. I would highly recommend both shows.

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