Tag: travel
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Who’s a good fit for my yoga retreats?

The women who come on yoga retreats with me are diverse in background, identity, interests, and life experience. What they share in common is a spirit of open mindedness to the new: new experiences, new foods, new cultures, new languages, new people. The kind of women who join my retreats are The women who join…
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Healthy habits I keep while traveling

Just don’t do it. This may seem counter-intuitive, in a post entitled ‘Healthy habits I keep while traveling’ to open with this hot take. But, what if you give yourself a break from your usual routine (the same workouts, the same, rigid types of meals)? Whether you find down-time in between work events or can…
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The best coffee shops in Paris

The coffee scene in Paris has progressed in leaps and bounds in the last ten years. (Not to mention the last fifty, as post-war Paris clung with a certain intensity to chicory long after the ration years of World War II had passed.) The most joyful part of these coffee shops for me? That the…
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How I navigate international travel as the daughter of two moms

During a wine tasting we attended in Paris’ 11th arrondissement my partner and I met lots of lovely expats. Over the course of our conversation I learned that my neighbor had just gotten engaged to her French girlfriend. So, naturally I brought up my family: my queer, non-heteronormative, two-mom family. She asked the questions that…
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How to allow yourself rest while traveling

Originally written Sunday November 13 Yesterday I went to hot yoga and afterwards met my partner, Ernie, for lunch at Bouche in Paris’ 11th arrondissement. From brunch we wandered around what is becoming a familiar region of Paris to us: the Marais and Canal St. Martin in the 11th, 3rd, and 4th arrondissements. Once the…
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The Paris Syndrome

Paris Syndrome is an extreme form of culture shock that tourists, particularly Japanese tourists, experience on their first trip to Paris. The main symptom (though not technically classified in the DSM-V) is a paralyzing and overwhelming feeling of disappointment sometimes accompanied by nausea and dizziness. The Paris of tourists’ imagination (presented in movies like Amélie…
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How to enjoy Parisian art museums

Art is best enjoyed over time. Seated. Quiet. Notebook and pen in hand. I’ve always been drawn to write l for as long as I can remember, even scribbling in a notebook alone in my room, “writing” if my moms asked me what I was doing. My kindergarten teacher, Mrs. Reitzel, was the first person in…
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The luxury of the metro

I expected to write every day in my journal or notebook from quaint Parisian cafes, pen in hand. Instead I’ve written mostly in the ‘in-between times’ on the metro. The metro is a meeting of peoples and cultures. Of phones ringing and people speaking in French, Hindi, German, Spanish, Mandarin, Italian, and Wolof. Some people…
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Parisian café vignettes

The view of Parisians’ lives that I have is largely a public one. I see Parisians bustle from one engagement to the next. The spill onto café sidewalks, coffee in one hand, cigarette in another. They squeeze onto the metro at rush hour and read their books. So much of their lives have to happen…
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Getting sick + healing in Paris

Being sick is hard. Being sick in France is hard *in French*. It’s not glamorous, and it’s not cute but thankfully… it’s not COVID! When I first started feeling sick a couple days ago, as we Americans do, I defaulted to my usual solution: better living through chemistry. I popped out to my local pharmacy…
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What to do when you leave a belonging on your flight

Where: Charles de Gaulle airport; Originally written 10/13 I’ve been in Paris for two hours. Well, let me clarify, I’ve been in the Paris airport for two hours. I deplaned and navigated my way through customs in an hour. But, at baggage claim, I realized I had left my yoga mat on the plane. My…

