La vie nocturne à Paris.

Rules for getting wasted in Paris.

  1. Pre-game with a bottle of wine - Drinks at a nightclub can be from 15-20 euros a pop, which can tally up to quite a bill. Pre-gaming will loosen everyone up for the long, cold metro ride to Franklin D. Roosevelt, Palais Royal Musée du Louvre, or wherever you choose to party. (Plus your heals won’t hurt so bad).
  2. Check in your coat - Even if you have a table, don’t leave your coat laying around, especially if you’re keys and wallet are in your pocket.
  3. Set aside cab money - While the ideal night includes going home when the metro opens, it’s best to set aside some cab money just incase someone gets too drunk, the club is awful, or your just too tired.
  4. Don’t accept drinks from men – When a man buys you a drink, you’re stuck with him for the night. Remember to only accept the drink you poured yourself.
  5. Stick with your girlfriends - The night ends up so much better (and safer) if you’ve brought your best friends.
  6. End the night on stage with the band- that is you’re ultimate goal. Begin by slipping into the VIP lounge if you don’t already have a table. Dance on the couches, eventually the party on stage will let you on.

The best nights at dawn when the metro opens after dancing all night on stage. Let loose and have fun, it’s Paris.

c’est un club de striptease, Madame

Last night was girl’s night out.

My friends and I arrived too early to favorite club of mine (00h30 est trop tôt??? come on!), so we decided to visit the swanky club next door. Besides the 5 bouncers standing outside and the flashing neon pink lights, the place was pretty discreet and when I asked the grosse mec what it was he whispered to me “c’est un club de striptease, Madame“. So we entered.

The place was pretty sultry — with  sexy couches, dim lights, loud music, and beautiful topless people I felt like I was back at Abercrombie and Fitch.

What was really impressive were the women. Their bodies were fantastic! Normally when I think of strippers, I think of fat chicks off of Hollywood and Western with cellulite and stretch marks dancing naked in front of you (blehhh). But no, these women were hot. “Why are they doing this” I wondered, “Perhaps they are just trying to work their way through school…or perhaps they have a son to feed“. But those thoughts didn’t occupy my mind long. We were too busy taking notes.

Nobody looked at us; each person in the audience was too captivated by the naked amazon on stage. Was she powerful or degrading? Did you want her or hate her? No one knew. But to take your eyes off of center stage and acknowledge the real world around you would ruin the effect and bring you back to reality. This was not reality, this was a fucking illusion.

We left before the hour was over and soon forgot about sexy, broken women with fantastic fake breasts.  At the club, (some using the notes we learned at the club before) each of us ladies went home with someone fantastic.

But that’s another story.

Une révélation divine.

Perhaps it’s time to soften my heart and reconsider the Frenchman.

Indeed his amusement is fleeting, his thoughts are quite simple — but I see now that the Frenchman is different then the American. The Frenchman cooks, he cleans, he dresses well; he discusses his feelings and insights about life. Though he appears imperious and proud, his heart is, indeed, quite delicate and he does not want to be hurt. And he does not mean to distress, but he cannot help his respect for beauty and passing curiosity. There is a psychology here that I’m finally beginning to understand:

In France, there is more respect for grace and charm. Things are executed with subtly and tact.

Before, with my brazen outbursts and tempestuous cries, I could not hear the gentle melody Paris plays.

“The Frenchman, by nature, is sensuous and sensitive. He has intelligence, which makes him tired of life sooner than other kinds of men. He is not athletic: he sees the futility of the pursuit of fame; the climate at times depresses him.”

-Anais Nin


La Parisienne.

I’ve realized that in order to begin understanding dating in French culture -

I need to start at the top of the food chain…



Parisienne |pəˌrēzēˈen|noun
a French girl or woman native to Paris
ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: 
French, feminine of parisien ‘Parisian.’

At first glance, the Parisian woman is a captivating achievement of culture. She puts American women to shame with her tall, thin physic and elegant  posture. She wears only black in the winter: a black coat, tall black leather boots, and a black leather handbag. She does not smile, she does not even look at you. She is involved entirely in her own world. As she struts down the avenues of Paris she knows that she is sexy and doesn’t give a damn about you or what you think. Does her coldness offend you? Good.

When I first arrived to Paris, I was taken aback by these goddesses. Each one was so – beautiful: dark hair piled so gracefully upon their heads like a crown, lovely rose lips that pouted so angelically. They spoke to each other in esoteric verses. And their men were as equally breathtaking. Their feathered hair and long black coats were different from any American man I’d ever met. They looked at me from afar in curious bewilderment, but would not dare cross the line in fear of being whipped by their stiff maidens. And so man nor woman would approach me, for in my tattered jeans and cheap Forever 21 shirts I was unworthy to receive them.

It took me nearly a year and a half to fully acclimate to Paris. It meant throwing away ‘boyfriend’ jackets and purple corduroy pants, it meant not wearing the beret which  I considered to be so cute (a young French woman rarely wears a silly beret on the streets of Paris). It meant not dancing like a stripper at a nightclub (damn).

It meant being personally offended by people who were outrageous or weird. It meant not giving a shit about anyone, American or French. It meant being personally insulted when anyone broke the barrier of isolation between myself and the rest of the world.

Finally I made my first French friend. She was lovely, sweet, and polite. I marveled at the way she delicately placed her knife down as she chewed her food and how she always wore sheer stockings.

And then I made quite a discovery.

She was crazy. Irrationally insecure, an excessive dependency for affection, defensive, angry with the people in the world around her, unsystematically hostile, reserved attitudes toward her repressed sexuality…she was a neurotic by classic psychological standards.

Of course, not all French women are like this. In fact, I’ve met some very lovely Parisian women who were not mentally unbalanced and do very well for themselves. But I came  to see the chilly reservation of the common Parisian woman as conformity inbred within the society to hide a much deeper cultural disturbance. Many critics say that French women enjoy eating whatever they want and do not concern themselves with their weight. However, I have found them to be obsessed with their weight. They ruthlessly revile others about their size because they indeed are insecure about their hips.

There are some aspects of the Parisian woman that should be emulated and adored.

There are others, however, that need to be further explored.