I’m Paris bound for two days on my first visit back to the US from my new life in France. I tried to squeeze in too much. My brain went into overload.
The short visit to Paris on my first visit back to the USA seemed to be going as planned. The only mess-up happened when I realized the AIRBNB room I rented was in an apartment on the sixth floor with no elevator. Fortunately, with the help of a French-speaking friend from Uzès, the cab driver agreed to carry my two guy-enormous suitcases up the stairs.
Although I thought I would spend most of the daylight hours in Paris at the Louvre, I changed plans when I saw how close I was to the Musée d’Orsay. The museum is on the left bank of the Seine and is housed in the former Gare d’Orsay, a Beaux-Arts railway station built around 1898. Since I have suddenly become passionate about the Romantic era in France — especially since the blog about “BoBo” (Bourgeois Bohemian fashion) — the idea of spending my days among the famous art of the time seemed “heaven blessed.”
Sights along the way
A short walk from the apartment where I stayed for two nights, across the Place de la Concorde, took me straight to the Jardin des Tuileries and the bank of the Seine. The beautiful scenery drowned out the traffic and bustle of the Paris morning. Fortunately, the weather was perfect for my slow stroll to the Musée d’Orsay. I wanted to take it all in — the smells, the people, the noise, and the sights.
A walk in the park
Even though I’ve been to Paris before, I’ve never seen it like this. On my own and with no real agenda, I was perfectly free to spend an hour or so taking photos or stopping for an espresso in the park. Indeed, I’ve seen these statues before, but now they seem more meaningful.
Who can help but wonder what was going through the artists head with this pose?
Lunchtime at the Musée d’Orsay
The Musée d’Orsay is a “must-see” whether you enjoy art or not. Formerly an early 20th-century train station, the museum holds the world’s largest impressionist and post-impressionist art collection. Its architecture heightens the drama of the building with soaring windows and steel beams.
A “living” museum, the Orsay is active with learning opportunities for people of all ages that are scheduled throughout the year, along with concerts and rotating art exhibits.
For “foodies” like me, the museum had cafes and restaurants that ranged from casual to formal. The day I visited, I ventured all the way to the top of the building to the Musée d’Orsay Restaurant. The view and the food were magnificent.
Taking in a setting like this makes traveling more fun for me. I can imagine dining with Royalty.
I have a champagne and caviar appetite on a “plat du jour” budget.
Getting home
The rest of the Paris trip is chronicled in the Paris Lights post. The part you don’t know is what happened next.
Remember the spiral staircase in the apartment building? Geoffrey may have saved the day when I arrived in Paris, arranging for the cabby to carry the bags up the six steps. Now, I was on my own.
No problem. My kind host at the AIRBNB apartment arranged for a cab with a driver who would come up for my bags. The cabby didn’t even mind that he was picking me up at 4 am for a 7 am flight out of Charles de Gaul. Case closed, done.
Not so fast …
The morning of my departure
The morning of my departure home came earlier than I wished. After walking for hours along the Champs Elysee, after a nice dinner, and after treating myself to a ride on the Paris “Loop,” it was a short night.
The morning alarm clock that rang at 3 am was most unwelcome. Nevertheless, I scampered out of bed and readied myself for the long trip home — from Paris, through Frankfurt, to Atlanta.
As scheduled, the cabby arrived, hustled my bags downstairs, and we went to the airport. Since there was hardly any traffic at 4 am, we made it to the Charles de Gaul at close to 4:30 am for my 7 o’clock flight. Not only was there no traffic on the roads, there was hardly a soul at the airport.
A few people were huddled near the United Airlines desk, ready, like me, to check baggage when the attendant arrived. I sat down to make myself as comfortable as possible.
4:30 AM…. 5 AM … 5:30 AM ….6AM
No attendant at the United Airlines desk.
By 6:30, a United person showed up, and a short line formed. I was in the front.
I should have known something was wrong all along, right? My flight was scheduled for 7 am. I hadn’t checked my bags, no security, no gate stop. All that was going through my mind was that perhaps flights had been canceled in and out of Paris.
The United attendant looked at the itinerary I handed her. It was printed straight off the United Airlines website. She looked at me; she looked at my luggage. Was she going to scold me for carrying too many bags?
Instead, she said: “you are at the wrong airline.” Then she continued, “Your flight is scheduled with Lufthansa.”
I’m unsure what sound came out of my mouth next, but I’m still hoping the attendant isn’t well-versed in English 4-letter words.
“But I made the reservation with United!” I cried. “Where’s Lufthansa?” I murmured as I fled away in tears.
“Around that way,” the lovely United lady directed as she pointed to the right.
Screeching through the now-busy airport to the Lufthansa desk, I was met by a very strict-looking German lady. When I told her my mistake, she wasn’t phased.
“Too late,” she said in part German/part English.
“But, but …” I cried, although I knew I had no chance with her or my situation.
I had been ready to leave Paris since 3 am. Now I wasn’t going to get home at all!
The new me
There was a time when this news would have sent me into orbit. Fortunately, my new “sensibility” to adventure set in.
This will make a great story!
I swear, I can’t make this stuff up!
Needless to say, I was fortunate to get a flight to Atlanta through New York despite the holiday tourist surge. Better yet, the tale of my airport dilemma made a big hit with the flight attendant assigned to my coach section in the back of the plane.
He supplied me with free drinks all the way.