What’s the absolute worst thing that can happen to a girl in Paris?
Actually, no, let me be more specific: what’s the worst thing that can happen while you are atop the second floor of la Tour Eiffel looking down at the peacefully flowing Seine carrying thousands of honeymooning couples in cruise ships while they’re served the best cheese and champagne on silver platters?
Let me rephrase: what’s the worst possible thing that can happen as you look down at the glorious greens of Champ de Mars where 140 adorable United Buddy Bears stand in two neat rows representing every country recognised by the United Nations, including a pimped out Sufi bear from Pakistan?
No, let me be clearer: what’s the worst possible thing that can happen as you look down at centuries-old architectural glory and grimy yet beautiful Napoleon III style mansions and castles, and hundreds of quaint French cafes frequented by the greatest minds including Hemingway?
Okay, I’ll ask one last time. What’s the worst possible thing that can happen to you when you’re in the city of your dreams, in the prime of your youth, feeling like a mix of Amelie and Carrie Bradshaw as strong winter winds whip your newly-purchased red beret which can hardly contain your freshly blow-dried hair and you desperately try to avert your eyes from the gorgeous stranger who won’t stop looking at you?
“’You fall down the Eiffel!”’
Wow, sadistic bunch aren’t you!
Okay, here’s what actually happened. But in order to actually understand what happened you have to delete the fantastical scenes of Paris I created in the beginning.
After standing for three hours in the soggy -2-degree centigrade weather in a line that just wouldn’t stop swirling and get to the ticket booth, I finally went up to the Eiffel Tower. No, I climbed the 250-plus steps, huffing and puffing, scolding my heart to at least wait until I got to the top and saw the view before giving way to a full-blown heart attack.
Once on top, the views really were breathtaking. But not so beautiful were the loud American tourists who would exclaim ‚ “OH MY GOD!” every two seconds. It’s like they had a competition who could pull off the most “OH MY GOD!”s in one minute.
Even less appealing was the dried out 10-Euro pizza slice sold in possibly the smallest café handled by one man only. With all the money the tourism authorities make every day, they couldn’t hire one guy to microwave the pizza and another one to ring up the cash register? The only thing worse than the pizza up there were the toilets which I assume hadn’t been cleaned since Gustav Eiffel designed this thing.
But my least favourite thing up top were the winds – because it was those freaking winds which destroyed my weekend in Paris. There I was, trying my best to enjoy the moment: I had found my little corner, away from the annoyingly lovey-dovey touristy couples, and had fished out my camera, Barry, as I called it. Through the barbed wire, I had taken out one very cold, shrivelled hand to get the best shot of the Arc de Triomphe.
Now this gate has monumental historical value. It leads to the much-photographed, much-replicated, much-talked about fashion street Champs Elysees (“shon-de-lee zay”, don’t pronounce it “Champs Elysees” – that never goes down well with the French). Every day a flame is rekindled at the Arc de Triomphe in memory of the soldiers who died in World War I, in particular for that one unknown soldier who lies buried underneath the Arc.
Also inscribed on the Arc de Triomphe are the names of all the 128 battles carried out by Napoleon and the French Republic as well as the likeness of some freaky gargoyle-like creatures which represents something that I fail to remember. So you can see how important it was for me to photograph this.
But as luck and clumsiness would have it, that cold, shrivelled hand never got a chance to take that picture. As soon as my trembling hands put a little pressure on the button, the wind decided to blow a bit harder and swept the camera from my hands, hurtling it to the ground. Okay, I’m dramatising a little bit – I was on a deck so it only fell near the stairs right next to the cafe selling disgusting pizza and the smelly loos. But it fell, and in those moments, falling down myself from the top of the Eiffel Tower would’ve been less painful.
I say this because if it had been me falling instead of Barry, I’d probably have been too busy to hear the loud, snickering American tourist and her: “OH MY GOD, did you see that girl’s camera fall. So funny!” In her defence, she assumed that I couldn’t speak English. But seriously, as a photographer - okay scratch that - as a really good picture editor (with the help of freely downloadable software from the internet), this was the worst thing that could happen to me.
Also, as a completely superficial somebody who puts travel photographs on Facebook primarily as a way to make other people feel bad about their travel-less lives, this was terrible. How would I prove to my friends that I climbed the Eiffel Tower and had a (ahem) ‘fantastic’ time?
I ran to Barry and embraced it, crying like a baby; I knew it would be too damaged to be fixed. As I turned it in my hands, it made this last, sad whingeing sound of someone about to give up on life. Then, even before the zooming thing in the front had time to go back inside, the display went completely blank. I poked my fingers and tried to close the shutter at least, my way of closing Barry’s eyes, but was unsuccessful.
I swear if it weren’t for the huge crowds and the grim-looking French security guards down below, I would’ve screamed out “NOOOOOOOOOOO!” like a madwoman from the top of the Eiffel Tower. People down below would have assumed that something really tragic had happened to me – like my husband dying or something.
Although this was definitely worse than a stupid husband dying.
Nursing my camera and my little leftover pride, I tried to tell myself, This trip to Paris with its amazing views was for me and my eyes only, not for all my Facebook acquaintances. I would relish my memories for days to come.
I closed my eyes to summon the magical moments I’d spent in Paris. But I couldn’t even remember what I had had for lunch yesterday and what it looked like. How in blue blazes would I remember these beautiful scenes fit for a postcard? It will all fade into a blur, I realised, a tragic blur. And it did.
The rest of my trip was a haze in which pretty much everything unfortunate that could happen to me did happen. My vintage boots broke (don’t ever buy second-hand boots), my iPod was stolen from the hotel (no matter how broke you are, pay attention to the number of stars on every hotel name) and the airport security decided to confiscate ALL my toiletries (pay attention when they ask “Are you carrying any liquids?”). As if I was going to concoct a bomb with my Herbal Essences shampoo and conditioner!
So I’m going to go out on a limb here and tell all those people who have never visited Paris and are dying to go there that ... Paris sucks. It sucks because it’s crowded with tourists, the metros are disgusting, smelly and again crowded, the food is insanely overpriced and the cheese will surely make you gassy if you’re lactose-intolerant like me, and the French dress up and look good primarily to make us tourists from around the world feel ugly.
And it really sucks when you don’t have Barry with you!
Published in The Express Tribune, Ms T, November 25th, 2012.
Like MsT on Facebook and follow at @TribmagMsT for your dose of girl talk
COMMENTS (48)
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So Paris sucks because you're misinformed (and that's the nicest word I could think of) and you didn't know Europe was expensive (duh) and their food portions are small and it's busy with tourists pretty much year round (it being Europe, particularly london paris etc) and the underground transportation systems aren't the cleanest and Americans are loud and even louder as tourists and it gets really windy when you're so high up and the Eiffel Tower was crowded (um, hello????) and you didn't like the food and the potty was dirty...?? Did I miss anything?
Good grief. The whole point of experiencing the world is just that: experiencing the world. It's not always as artsy fartsy and amazing as a movie experience, but it's what we make of it. And it's an experience nonetheless. I've had plenty of incidents and mishaps during my travels (I almost got accidentally pushed off the tube platform and onto the tracks in London last year; luckily there was no tube coming and even luckier the person who bumped into me caught my arm. Although now that I think of it, maybe I could've written a blog about my near-death-almost-fell-onto-rats-and-rat-poop-and-empty-bottles-and-God-knows-what-else). Travels are always a combination of goods and bads. Cherish all of it! Cheers.
it couldnt be more cynic then this
and ET published this. nice.
So let me get this straight...this chick went to Paris, broke her camera and then wrote a 5000 word essay on how depressing her time was in Paris. Wow. Just. Wow.
I have lived in Paris for over 2 years. Let me explain a few basic guidelines to Paris:
The real Paris is not the view from the Eiffel. It is in the streets, in the bars, and wineries, and in tiny squares. That is the magical Paris everyone talks about. You took the stairs to the Eiffel? Boo hoo. Didnt you explain why? It is cheaper to take the stairs. I took them every time. If nothing else, it burns some calories off our lazy Pakistani behinds.
You complain about airport taking away your liquids. Hello? Travel 101? Never carry liquids purses while travelling? Your Ipod got stolen? Darling, you should have read on Paris before you had gone. Paris is famous for petty crimes like theft. Be grateful it was just your Ipod that was nabbed, not your entire physical self (seen the movie Taken?)
You probably went to Paris thinking some hot Frenchman was going to follow you all the way back to Pakistan and express eternal love in his amazing accent. Sweetie, that doesnt happen in real life and that is not a reason to hate on one of THE most visited cities on Earth. Also, no one buys food from touristy areas. Paris 101. Food is always expensive where there are more people. Basic supply and demand rules.
Man, I can't believe a worthless piece like this got me so fired up. But really, ET, you could do so much better than taking a sorry piece like this.
The problem isn't that the piece is bad, the problem is that all the haters are in Pakistan while you're in Paris. Its a matter of envy less hate
This is self-satire at its best, you managed to make me laugh and still like you as a person
I think you need to have a sense of humour to understand that the writer is making fun of herself and her quirks than Paris
YOU ARE HILARIOUS. Hahahaha I love people who make fun of themselves. obviously a lot of your readers just didn't get it. Also, I agree - Paris sucks.
Anyone whos been all over Europe, will not bat an eyelid over Paris. Its for you tourists that it sounds fantastic and magical. But for all the Europeans or anyone who has backpacked through Europe, Paris is pretty blah
Are you kidding me? I have been to Paris in the same time as yours. I wore woolen gloves so my hands don't shiver. Seriously get over it this article wasted my time. Paris is the most amazing city in Europe each view is breath taking. I miss every tiny little bit of my trip to Paris what a lovely city so much to discover in Paris. One thing that puts you off are the couple making out infront of you lol other then that PARIS IS A DREAM tourist place. Viva La Paris !
By the way, battles are fought not "carried out" as Ms Khalid would have it!
paris jana tha tu aik sweater bhi khareed laina tha :P
Although this article was more worthy of a personal whiny blog then a Newspaper (ahem: Tribune..pay attention) I'm gonna slap everyone of you buffoons who bring up religion or people dying or Gaza or Karachi here. Get Over it. You are living your lives just like the writer here.
Well if only to justify my nickname of Maverick, I am going to support you in your argument in the face of all the negative comments you have thus far received. I visited Paris in 2010 for 2 weeks when I travelled through Angers, Le Mans, Lyon and Paris. Paris was by far the worst place in the trip. The Louvre was horrible. For such a large and renowned museum, none of the descriptions were in English. No you have to pay EUR 10 and rent an audio guide, lest you commit the grave sin of not understanding the french language.
Plus the people in Paris are easily the rudest and most unfriendly bunch I have ever come across. Thankfully I had my french friend to translate and guide me, and even she was embarrassed and kept repeating that people in Paris do not represent all French. And I believed her, the people we met in all the other places were really friendly. In fact we were even invited to a couple of homes for supper. To really enjoy France, I suggest you do not visit Paris. Paris is extremely over-rated.
As for people bashing your shallowness, well I think that was artificially done to sound whiny, was it not? It added a kind of satirical and comical touch to the article. Keep up the travelling!
Hasan.
PS. Rookie mistake, letting the camera fall. I strap it around my neck or arm. But mine also cost me around EUR 500! :P
BONGI is the word for this article. I didn't want to be disrespectful to the writer, but I couldn't resist myself. I suggest Saba Khalid to visit Old areas of Karachi and Lahore someday.
Don't blame Paris for your i'll planned trip, for the benefits of others: - there is no queue if you book Eiffel tower tickets in advance - you can pay 7 euros extras to take the lift up, no one forces to you climb stairs - don't buy dried out pizza, get the subway sandwich from across the Bir Hekim station on your way to tower or numerous other restaurants around that area - Put the your camera strap around your neck, don't be foolish - Get a good map or tons of free phone apps and plan well
Paris is an awesome place if you don't walk into tourist traps without planning and your eyes closed.
That was really funny and entertaining. I'm so sorry that most of your readers completely missed that. You have a knack for humour. Do keep writing.
I read the comments first so I just wasted one minute.
@Author You are one of the more fortunate ones. Be thankful and enjoy life. Petty issues will always be there.
Cool story behan.
"French dress up and look good primarily to make us tourists from around the world feel ugly."
Well i have been to Paris few times and i agree with most of the things you said but french people have the worst sense of dressing in Europe specially if you compare them with Italian or Spanish or even English.
if anyone is traveling to Europe always go to small cities or country side you will love it specially if you like wine :P
Maybe next you should visit Afghanistan or Sudan. Get over yourself and write something productive. Next time you'd be moaning why you do not like Saddar because of the traffic. Good God!!!
This was your experience and not Paris. Paris is the most beautiful city I've ever been to (though I didn't like Eiffel Tower a bit) and would love to go back again.
And toiletries are confiscated at some airports because many people smuggle drugs into shampoos and conditioners, and even dogs can't smell it.
I thought this piece was a good read. I settled down for a nice, story-form subjective rant against Paris (cause that's what the headline suggested) and that's what I got.
Terrible Article! in fact Terrible Advice...as thats why I clicked on the link in the first place!
However now I would like to advice you something. The reason you had a bad day/trip in Paris is due to your own poor planning...what were you expecting? you are going on the sets of Amelie or Carrie Bradshaw will personally escort you to show you a good time? wake up and smell the coffee with the delicious Parisian croissants...that will automatically make you feel better. BTW was your trip free? someone offered you visa/tickets/hotel stay and you decided to go with no prior planning? Well even then your loss....next time....plan prior to visiting Paris and the best time is from June to Aug. for Eiffel tour, you can book the tour online so you dont have to stand in queues, instead of relying on Tom, Dick or harry...oh I mean Barry, invest in a smartphone with a good camera....and wear it with a band round your neck! everyone knows Paris and all other tourist destinations are expensive so when you are spending hundreds of dollars on air ticket, hotel stay (stay in a hostel instead; much cheaper) spare some money for food...as thats what you will relish the most....learn to read maps and walk instead of using metros, though metros arent half as bad! when in Paris do go to Euro Disney as well...book that online too...the main point is PLAN, PLAN & PLAN....you will not be disappointed....neither will we.....
A part of me thinks that you were in fact hoping for an ugly backlash from the readers. So you had a bad day, who cares.
World's best croissants served by the worlds' most racist nation, and you had to write a 2000 word article on dropping your camera? Waste of cyber band width. Am I reading a personal blog post?
Venice, Florence, Istanbul and Amsterdam are much more beautiful than Paris...
May be this article should have been published in primary school to scare kids. Definitely not the article up to Tribune standards.
For those who dont understand the buddy bear concept, here you go: http://www.buddy-baer.com/united-buddy-bears/world-tour/paris-2012.html
I thought this was hilarious. I love that you keep making fun of yourself throughout the article
Okay, this was lame. Very lame. Just because you had a bad time there doesnt make it any less of a place. And that isnt even much of a bad time, by the way.
Well that's the problem with everyone, documenting life on FB. Well aside from the few attractions in Paris, rest is dirty. Agreed she is exaggeration her camera loss as a very critical event, and it wasn't Paris's fault any ways.
Seems like you're too busy documenting your life for facebook rather than actually enjoying it.
You had a string of bad luck; fair enough. I lived for many years in Paris and yes, parisians are rude, it is overpriced, chock full of tourists, yada yada yada. It is also one of the most beautiful places in the world with so much to see and do culturally besides the eiffel tower and the arc de triomphe. Sad to read that despite your opportunity to travel, you are still close-minded enough to connect a series of bad luck with condemning a place as a whole.
How can someone such a pathetic article...and at the same time manage to pass school
Losing your camera Barry is "definitely worse than a stupid husband dying." I feel sorry for you.
I'm sorry but this is just plain rubbish. Can I write about the dirty toilets at Behra next?
No wonder why women are famous for whining all the time :/
I was in Paris 2 months back and same I don't like it at all. It's just over hyped.
I was in Paris this weekend. And I can safely say there is nothing much wrong with Paris. But for a person who thinks she's too "K for Kool" for this world, doesn't know how to travel, what shoes to keep and how to take care of her stuff while traveling, yes Paris can be difficult.
I just wasted five minutes of my life.
Sorry to say but one of the worst article I have ever came across. I have been to Paris multiple times and have seen all of it almost. Its one of most beautiful city I have been to. Moreover, if you felt cold you should have taken warm clothing accordingly. You should have taken elevators rather than stairs to climb up the Eiffel Tower. Lines are long but they move quickly. Also there are free lockers available in every hotel where you can store you valuables, you could have used that easily.
First world problems. I'm sure even children in Gaza aren't complaining this much.
Boohoo! You went to Paris and didn't like it. Get over it!!!