I filled the rest of my notebook on the train from Nantes to Paris and in the airport. I'm not above saying that I cried most of the way to Paris; writing was the only thing I could focus on. So, I can proudly say I accomplished yet another bucket list task (oh, and escargot, too! I found some chocolate ones at the airport). While I'm sure you'd find the tale of my six-hour wait in Charles de Gaulle absolutely scintillating, I'd prefer to fill this last entry with some selections from my final thoughts in France. (Although, notably, I shared my flight with about ten serious hipsters from the NYU Paris program. Not that I'm judging. If you'd like some judgmental commentary, see me in my office and I'd be happy to oblige. Then again, I'm about to provide excerpts from my moleskine, so who am I to judge?)
I feel as though I should try to synthesize my (sweeping) experience this semester and I don't know if I can. As you've seen from this rambling blog, I've got a lot of stories, too many, maybe -- or maybe not enough, maybe all I've got is a collection of descriptions and feelings. I've always had a penchant for vignettes. It's weird to be home now, weird but good. After a semester of being a tourist, I feel kind of like a tourist in my own city. I've reinvigorated my interest in this city; I want to explore it some more, try to find the nooks and crannies that I've overlooked for most of my natural life. I have a lot to think about, too. I hate it, but it's time to grow up, I guess. The semester in Nantes feels so much like a bubble of my youth that hasn't burst but that is slowly drifting out of my sight. I know it's not over forever because I've got far too many reasons to go back, but this part of it has come to its natural conclusion. The chapter has been written, if you will, and here's how it ended (or some selections, at any rate):
12/19/2009I like not being perfect, though. It's given me somewhere to go from here.
TGV to Paris
AMERICAN AIRLINES to New York
the last thing Marie said to me before we parted à la gare:
"Reste comme tu es." [Trans: Stay as you are.]
this is so hard.
I'm sitting in the airport right now waiting for my gate to open & I feel like I owe it to myself to finish this "carnet" before I leave France. Plus writing will keep my mind off of those thoughts that make me cry & distract me from reading. It's funny how being in motion (even just the motion of moving a pen across a page) can have such a leveling effect on me.
I love being young. I guess you couldn't say I learned that here, but I felt it more strongly here that at other times in my life. I also feel like I grew up here, though. I've got that Peter Pan "but why can't it stay like this forever" itch. And I know it can't. All this mental pushing & pulling is really doing a number on me.
This last page is almost done & I'm starting to think about some of my regrets. I shouldn't do that. This was a take-one [or one-take, I guess] experience & there's just no way I was going to execute it perfectly...but you know, those people who became important to me and my life came pretty damn close to perfect.