I stepped from my plane and onto the soil of the country that, for the next six months or so, I will call home. I had dressed up for my arrival, sporting a tattered Chicago Cubs hat and a rumpled yellow t-shirt proudly claiming my allegiance to Thursday Night Club – perhaps a bold move in arguably the most fashion conscious city in the world. In retrospect, there was no more obvious way to state my heritage except for maybe stapling a passport to my face or wearing some type of American flag cape.
I have journeyed to the mighty city of Paris, France in search of healthcare information technology opportunities and crepes, preferably to be enjoyed simultaneously. The company that I work for had decided to engage in a bit of diplomacy and had made it a goal to improve France – USA relations that had been a bit chilly as of late. Their solution has been to send me over as a humble ambassador.
Now, these wintery relations can partially be explained by the foolishly misplaced French opposition to the 2003 Iraq war. Who wouldn’t agree that bombing civilians in an effort to uncover mythical weapons of mass destruction hidden by gypsies, gnomes, and Al-Queda is a noble and just cause?
Unfortunately, that will continue to be a fundamental difference between our two countries. Obviously France supports the far left terrorist-gypsy-gnome agenda, and the USA doesn’t.
I mentioned that Iraq was only part of it. The other factor in this complicated relationship is simply that French people enjoy eating at McDonalds and listening to iPods and strolling about in Nike shoes, and they hate that us Americans came up with these things first. I have complete faith that the France entrepreneurial machine would have churned out such products in due time, but the reality is that American men (and women) of genius did it first. I don’t think that is appreciated. So, in summary:
Misplaced Political Allegiances + Awesome American shit = USA, France Frostiness
I look at it this way. France and America are like those two people out at a bar looking for someone to go home with. Maybe it’s not going to happen right now, in the beginning of the night, but given enough time and beer (or wine) they will both realize that maybe pairing up won’t be that bad.
It was late morning on a Tuesday, and I was confused. I had an overstuffed laptop bag, a passport that I compulsively kept checking to make sure wasn’t lost, and a newly formed loathing for French people’s ability to form a line. Pick a barnyard animal, any one of them. They line up better than the French. To make it worse I couldn’t even throw witty statements at them, taunting their line-forming inadequacies, because sadly I know virtually none of this new language that I was now immersed in. This ruly mob was aiming for the one passport line that was open. I watched in absolute incredulousness as passengers that had still been pulling baggage out of the overhead compartments as I exited the plane just rolled up past me and join the growing mass of people at the one entry point. Interestingly there was not a whole lot of pushing, shouting, or general malaise, which I found odd. In the States it would have felt like a mosh pit, or perhaps the line at a Panera on a Sunday morning.
My Tuesday adventure was capped off nicely by stumbling across a crepe stand on my evening walk down Champs-Elysees. By the way, news to me – crepe is actually pronounced phonetically like “crep.” Try it. I don’t think it sounds as fun.
CREPE COUNT = 1
It is hard to imagine a more impressive culinary item than the crepe. Brilliant in its simplicity, flawless in its preparation and satisfyingly astonishing in its tastiness, the possible rivals to the crepe exist only in the kitchens of Taco Bell. Crepes, as legend has it, originated from the Brittany region of France many years ago. Ingenious “crepers” (a title which I will use to reference crepe bakers) were faced with wheat flour shortages, this being the main ingredient of the bread needed to feed the population at the time. These crepers, rather than sit about bemoaning the lack of wheat flour, turned instead to their old friend buckwheat – despite its name, not actually related to wheat. Voila! The crepe was born! Every time I think about that I get real happy that the people of old Brittany were not fanatical gardeners, otherwise Parisians would be walking around with rutabagas or cups of green beans.