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The Best

the-best

It’s no wonder why Paris is the romantic destination of dreams of so many.  It makes sense why it’s the most visited city in the world.  It is after all, Paris. Enough said.  In this city, a flakey croissant, a flawless meal, an aimless stroll down a boutique lined street, a view from the top, will invariably be the subject matter of one of those experiences of a life time for anyone who visits this city.  We come here to absorb her romance, to live out a movie scene, and to experience perfection.  We come here because it’s supposed to be the best, and it is.

Our first day we sat at one of hundreds of street side cafes at a table too small for anything more than a glass of French red wine, an espresso, and the obligatory ashtray.  We sipped and watched as manicured tourists and pretty people all dressed in blacks and grays, and checkered versions of both strolled the streets with shopping bags in tow all searching out their own small cafe table to also sip wine and waft wisps of smoke.  Afterwards we took our turn to stroll the streets of this famous arrondissement window shopping in boutiques and antique stores.  We’d pause to watch an occasional street performer or make way for a groups of annual pub crawlers dressed in team culinary costumes befitting only the French.  Later in the afternoon we’d sample baguettes until we had no room left. 

One morning before the day’s first croissants were baked, we piled into a van for the three hours journey to France’s famed northern coast.  On grassy hills abutting long strips of windswept sandy beaches we stood and listened to some of our most famous, historic, and tragic stories of war.  Down on the beach, dogs played in the water and lovers walked bundled against the wind.  Looking down from the hillside we shared a sorrow not only for the toils of the war that soaked the sands here, but for how distant, almost unreachable, that past now seemed.  We drove through country lanes where the farmhouses saluted us with the unexpected sight of proudly displayed American flags and antique vehicles of war sprouted from the gardens.  A short reprieve from the atrocities of the past was provided by a bowl of steaming freshly netted mussels and a cup of locally churned butter that left no doubt that this is still France; and France is the best.  Our last visits of the day endured a duet of tributes to the lives sacrificed by those on each side who fought for their homelands.  One was a field of nameless black stones, lined up in groups of five.  Thick patches of trees threw dark shadows on the darker headstones casting an eerie gloom through the graveyard; yet at the same time they offered a blanket of protection to the tortured souls buried beneath the trees.  We entered the American cemetery on a tree lined pathway with a lone trumpet blaring in the windy distance.  The gently sloping hillside was streaked with perfect rows of white crosses and the occasionally lit by a Star of David, most of them displaying a name, dates, and home state.  A salt tinged wind blew up from the ocean at the base of the hillside, cleansing the souls of the men resting there for eternity. 

Back in the City of Lights we continued a schedule of doing all the things a good visitor should do at least once.  We queued with the masses to ascend the Eiffel tower to walk her decks and take innumerable pictures.  A rainy morning provided a perfect day to stroll the never-ending rooms of the Lourve, all the while trying to make sense of an impossible audio guide and map.  We carefully planned our meals and ate until every Parisian culinary category had been accounted for.  We walked along the Seine more than once,  and we stared up at the Arc de Triomphe.  It was just a little too perfect. 

On our last few days before leaving the European continent we moved to an outer arrondissement.  For the first time in six months of travel we aborted an afternoon walk because we felt uneasy.  Typical Parisian austere frostiness was replaced by aggression.  Groups loitered on street corners and in front of derelict buildings.  We saw a different city, rippling with palatable tensions. 

As we flew eastward that next morning and stared down at the the world’s most visited city we wondered if the next time we came here if it would be as changed as it is in the last four years.  It will no doubt continue to be the opportunity to live out a day from a movie scene, and experience the best of the best.  Inevitably however in the world of today, with that territory comes a slew of expectations and imitations.  Trip Advisor ratings and 10 Best lists, become the de facto experience guides.  For every 10 best there are fifty abysmal examples with pictures on the menu, tour guides with umbrellas and headsets, and street vendors hawking the same keychains and light up gadgets.  It can muddle the experience of a place that is supposed to be a version of perfection.  That said, the truly unique and ethereal experiences in this city that many of us come to this place in search of are still very much there, but for most they lie just beyond our grasp; behind black tinted windows of luxury sedans, on private rooftops where the cost of entry is a at least a three figure cocktail, in restaurants with six month waiting lists that fill up in five minutes, at the bottom of bottles of wine worth more than a plane ticket, and behind velvet ropes to clubs that employ the strictest of dress codes and frustrating selectivity.  On the other side of the gap is a place that may follow the fate of Casablanca, a city remembered for an iconic romanticized past that now has the charm of a stale cigarette, where metal detectors guard the entry to public places and five star hotels, and where tensions run high.

Leaving Europe we’re not for the first time confronted with a powerful reality of travel; that expectations will always be shattered and that travel is not in fact about meeting expectations, but rather having new experiences that often make us at least a little bit uncomfortable.  As far is Paris is concerned, the best croissant may be in San Francisco, the most memorable meal belongs to Israel, and the most powerful sight to behold isn’t in the Louvre, it’s several hours north along the shores of Normandy.  Paris will however, forever be Paris, and that alone is worth going to experience “the best” at least once. 

                                                

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poetic-justice
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Poetic Justice

Before we had even arrived several people had made sure to mention that this was their favorite city, that they’d live here if they could, and that it was the tech startup capital of the East.  Even so, we came here without expectations.  In the first few minutes here, it was clear that Israel was going to be a sharp blend of tradition as old as the book it comes from from, and a font of newness like fresh light. Just walking through the enormous modern airport awash with travelers from all faiths and dressed for the occasion, from burkahs to kippot, pouring into the gateway to the Holy Land, was a testament to the uniquely delicate but functional symbiosis of this place where tradition mingles with technology and old perseveres amidst the new. 

On the recommendation of a friend we sat down to dinner that first night and got to taste Israel as much with our eyes and ears as our mouths.  High school era hits bumped down from the ceiling.  The staff behind the bar playfully danced with each other to the beat.  The chefs chopped along to the rhythm, pausing every so often to pass a new dish around to share amongst themselves.  A round of shots was poured for everyone, including the kitchen.  Everyone waited until the last glass was full and then there was a cheers to life.  Ten minutes later there was another, and then another.  No one bothered to take themselves too seriously and in fact there was a genuine effort to avoid just that.  It was like being at a friend’s house party.  We all talked, about where we all were from and why they were there.  They wanted to know what we thought of their home; we wanted to know more about what life was like here.  Nothing was off limits; and nothing was sugar coated.  The food itself was as powerful and vibrant as the people.  It also might be the best kept secret in Israel.  Each ingredient erupts in a concentrated version of itself; wistfully soapy basil, eye wateringly sharp black pepper, arugula that bites back, cauliflower that manages to melt, and even apples from Eden.  It turned out that this joie de vie wasn’t just a lucky first night, but true of almost everywhere. 

That first night as we meandered our way home dodging whizzing electric bikes and stepping over stale water poured out of closing market stalls, this Middle East city wrapped us in a sense contentment and natural ease that we hadn’t experienced in any city in Europe.  Small tables spilled out of cafes crowded with friends late into the night.  No where was left empty, and no one it seemed, was left alone.  It might be the center of some of the world’s most enduring and greatest conflicts, but to the people in Tel Aviv it really is the land of the New Spring; guaranteed to be different tomorrow from the day before, leaving no moment wasted and unlived. 

An hour’s journey from the wild youth of Tel Aviv sits the epicenter of the world’s most enduring conflict and its most treasured history.  It was almost too real in its differences for us to wholly accept and understand it as other people’s everyday reality.  In order to enter the old city, we first pass through a modern outdoor shopping mall at its border.  During our first visit the entire place was ghostly empty in observance of Shabbat.  Once inside the old city walls reality was for the time being, suspended.  Some people would call this the beginning of a spiritual experience.  We pass through the market in the Muslim quarter avoiding eye contact with pushy shop keepers.  Orthodox Jews wearing enormous fur hats and long black coats in the hundred degree weather, shuffle past us with a determined gait.  A group of boys practices acrobatic flips in a pedestrian intersection, while a nun patiently waits to pass.  At the top of a row of gradually sloping steps there is an arch overhead announcing the entrance to the courtyard of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the burial place of Jesus Christ.  Above the arch an imam’s voice crackles from the speaker of a minaret. 

That next afternoon we visit the Western wall, expecting to find a scene of a thousand prostrated bodies in a state of somber prayer.  Instead we find scenes of celebration and levity.  Young men celebrate their Bar Mitzfahs and families dressed in in their most bright and colorful formal wear pose for photos that will eventually hang in a place of honor in their homes.  This birthplace of belief that is inexorably tied to in some way nearly every war in the world;  this place of reverence and solace that is too often ruined for the many because it has been stained by the actions of an extreme few; this place doesn’t seem like any to those things today.  Today it’s suspended from reality.  Today it is a celebration of the gift of life and humanity.  Today it was perfect.  Those that live here though, were quick to remind us that tomorrow it all could change, and more often than it should, it does. 

We walked on the powdered sugar sandy beaches of Tel Aviv for our last few days letting our time here crystallize.  We watched a blotchy and broken sun, like a few strokes from God’s paintbrush, set over the beginning of our world. Along the waterline countless pairs played paddle ball, the sharp plink of the paddles, an off beat rhythm counting time not in minutes and hours, but in moments of now because they know that that’s all any of us really have. Together, Israel’s newness and its history create their own sort of harmony.  Sometimes its a sad, deep and tragic harmony; while others it sings with a vibrance and zeal for life that make you want to live like this every day.  We watched and we listened, and we thought about history, and the future, and our new reality and then promised to return here. 

                    

  

 

 

seven-steps
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Seven Steps

It’s been said that this city is the Paris of South America.  It’s also been said that it is the “new” New York.  Both and neither are correct.   After nearly a month in Buenos Aires we gently uncovered a place with a depth, tradition, and pride that defy any comparison. 

Like all great romantic cities this place is best explored by walking its streets as aimlessly as possible.  It’s buildings are majestic, old, and wealthy; craftily hiding the torments of time.  So too, are the numbers of old ladies who take charge of this city during the day.  To start to understand what makes Buenos Aires herself, sit at any cafe at any time of day and watch the women. They’re a living version of Rene Magritte’s man in the bowler hat with his face hidden by the apple.  They all radiate with the same carefully bronzed skin.  Their quaffed hairstyles are dyed the same gold over silver. They’re purposefully poised.  However, instead of a polished red apple hiding their face, they’re all throwing the apples.  Under the St John knit sweaters and carefully stylish and sensible shoes they have sharp elbows on the bus.  Clenched fists fly in a rage at street bands who overstay and overplay their welcome too near the sanctified peace of an Argentinian Nona.  Shop in their store and they’ll grace you with a Parisian kiss on each cheek.  Attempt to hail a taxi at the same time, and one will, without mercy, upstream you faster than it can happen in New York. 

Walk deeper down her streets and you’ll find bars and cafe’s in the early evening filled with locals drinking coffee and eating a sickening amount of sweet pastries to fill the void between meat at lunch and more meat for dinner at ten or eleven PM.  Each night we drowned ourselves in what they called half sized cuts of steak. 

Afterwards we would set out in search of the night layer of Buenos Aires.  We visited bar after bar of the city’s supposed best and recommended nightlife.  We sat in gigantic Victorian chairs sipping whimsically named cocktails while a larger than life “Alice in Wonderland” worthy clock spun circles overhead.  We passed secret messages at dinner to find an escort into a too perfectly reenacted hideaway Prohibition bar.  We followed our noses through an overflowing flower shop to find a secret refrigerator door to an illusory underground mirrored tunnel.  On an acid high from the botanic biosphere above we drank from lab beakers of smoke, swirled vials of rose petals, and gaped at a giant octopus.  As wondrous as it was, we couldn’t help but feel the tinge of anticlimax.  Hadn’t we been to these bars before?  Didn’t we sneak though the same secret passage, and sip on an equally exotic elixir?  Maybe this is the new New York. 

With that realization, our flower headed high began to wear off; until one night when a friend said ‘come with me.”  We still used special keys, and spoke secret passwords to find our destination.  This time however the key was a subway card, and passwords, unintelligible local Castellano Spanish.  We found ourselves in a cross between a local community center and below ground gym.  It didn’t start until after midnight and didn’t end until after the long after dawn.  We sat at cheap tables surrounding a polished wood floor and drank fernet and cokes.  The lights dimmed ever lower.  An accordion sprang to life on stage, and then another, and then three more.  Then the strings, and finally the suede voice of the singer.   Gracefully and gradually they glided in pairs onto the dance floor; timeless old men in shimmering suits; young beautiful women in bedazzled dresses and sparkling shoes.  Those simple seven steps to the music was all it took and we were mesmerized.  They spun and twirled;  toes swept the floor and wound up around each others bodies.  Their hands barely touching each other.  Their eyes were closed and yet not one of the hundred people on the small dance floor bumped another.  They moved like every great Tango scene from every great movie, except better.  These were regular people.  They were the old ladies we walked past on the street, and the young couples we sat next to in the prohibition bar.  This is where we found the real Buenos Aires and fell in love.  Here, Argentina didn’t cry for us, we cried for Argentina.