I have been living in Paris, one of the best cities in the world, since October last year. I love it and always get asked what my recommendations for things to do and cool bars are.

 

So, although I am already 8 months into my crazy life here, I’ve decided to share what I get up to a bit more on this blog. Looking back, I have barely done any posts on my adventures here, and with summer about to burst into the life of Paris, there is a lot going on!

 

Hopefully, my posts will be helpful for visitors or people living in Paris who want to be inspired, get out there and see what the capital has to offer!

 

Rule #1 for living here is GET OUT OF THE FLAT!

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Let’s start with some rooftop bar vibes:

 

One of the best rooftops in Paris for drinking, dancing and chilling is the Cité de la Mode et du Design. It’s really big, feels very Shoreditch and has several bars and eating outlets.

 

What I drank there: Rosé wine and bottles of cider.

What I paid: 5 EUR to get up to the rooftop but it’s free before 8pm. Drinks around 6 to 9 euros each.

Website:https://www.citemodedesign.fr/

 

On my most recent visit, I saw the band Patawawa play (for the second time in two days) and they are the most fun, dancy live group I have seen in a long time. I am looking forward to seeing them again at JoeFest, a Lincolnshire-based festival run by my family, in August, not least because they are really nice people!

 

 

This is a good spot for early evening evening drinks with a view, or a good old boogie through the night. Try it on any vaguely sunny day!

 

Me exploring in my beloved giant 'duvet coat'. Paris v rainy at the moment.

Me exploring in my beloved giant ‘duvet coat’. Paris v rainy at the moment.

Reads of the month-

 ‘The trouble with Goats and Sheep’ – Joanna Cannon

‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’ – Truman Capote

I have been out of the habit of reading for years so two books a month is a good start for me.

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Inspiring words of the month- ‘You’ll never change your life until you change something you do daily. The secret of your success is found in your daily routine.’

See my Pinterest Account (where I found the quote)

This resonated with me this month because I felt inspired to add more things I love into my daily routine: reading a good book on the Metro (I live in Paris now); taking back up an old hobby; remembering to do the things that make me happy like getting off at a different stop on the way home and seeing a new part of this city. I even began to think about my website again which is why I am writing this post. I enjoy making content and maybe doing more of it could help take me somewhere in the future. A few people have encouraged me to get back into it and I hope I can get back into the routine.

It really can be the small changes that can make a difference to how you feel. They can also help lead you to success- just deciding you want to do something and doing it.

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Highlight of the month-

The old hobby I brought back into my life this month is knitting. I finally finished perhaps the longest cushion cover in the history of cushion cover production. I decided I wanted to make it in September 2016 when I moved to London. After nipping into my new office to meet my new managers, I headed to John Lewis on Oxford Street, full of excitement to buy some wool. I chose a lovely but not cheap grey chunky number and some fat needles and that was all I needed.

I think I felt inspired by these cushions in Waitrose

I think I felt inspired by these cushions in Waitrose

As the nights grew longer and darker, I knitted row after row using YouTube tutorials along the way. If anyone’s interested, I alternated rows of knitting and purling.

 That’s when my progress slowed and I basically stopped after I had knitted a long rectangle. The reason I didn’t spend my time knitting anymore was because I went out drinking a lot with friends and summer came along and there was far too much socialising to do. For me I suppose it’s a winter hobby.

I ended up leaving the lovely, long, warm strip in its John Lewis bag and it went back home when I moved out of the flat.

The second of January 2018 came along and there were a few hours to go until I got the Eurostar back to Paris after a Christmas break at home. For some reason I suddenly had the motivation to finish the cushion cover! (I think it was the time pressure, there’s nothing like a deadline to make you do something.)

Mum showed me how to cast off (the act of finishing a piece of knitting so you can take it off the needle) and I sewed it up onto the cushion. Here is the finished result:

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Perfectly imperfect.

It feels great that I created something that is unique and also looks like something I would definitely buy, even if it did take me 16 months! I have always loved crafting and sewing, and now i can add knitting to the list. Next project is slightly confused as I am knitting without totally knowing what it is going to be.

January brought me my first ever five star hotel experience. I also did some pastel painting and work and went to a pastels exhibition at the Petit Palais. Let’s see what February brings!

The Eiffel Tower as viewed from the Arc de Triomphe

The Eiffel Tower as viewed from the Arc de Triomphe

The Louvre with John, Mum and Joe

The Louvre with John, Mum and Joe

My 21st Birthday meal at Au Bon Coin with Lois and Phoebe

My 21st Birthday meal at Au Bon Coin with Lois and Phoebe

Jardin de Tuilleries in the rain

Jardin de Tuilleries in the rain

Sacré Coeur with home friends

Sacré Coeur with home friends

Here are some (perhaps very obvious) things I have noticed about Spain having spent four weeks in various parts of the country:

 

1. Most people live in flats rather than houses.

What a pretty example

What a pretty example

 

2. Everyone uses Whatsapp.

I was invited to get on board straight away

I was invited to get on board straight away

 

3. You can’t get fresh milk here, only UHT.

This is going to be a hard six months

This is going to be a hard six months

 

4. The streets are empty between about 2pm and 5pm in the summer because it gets ridiculously hot.

This photo was actually taken about 7.30pm, yet it was still extremely hot

This photo was actually taken about 7.30pm, yet it was still extremely hot

 

5. The Spanish are very generous.

Especially concerning free tapas

Especially concerning free tapas

 

6. They eat their evening meal very late, even at 11pm and beyond.

Spanish Tortilla

Spanish Tortilla

 

7. They talk a lot, and very loudly at that.

Good job there are many churches where silencio is encouraged.

Good job there are many churches where silencio is encouraged.

 

8. There is often free wifi in city centres, parks and public places.

I get a warm feeling when I see the words 'free' and 'wifi'.

I get a warm feeling when I see the words ‘free’ and ‘wifi’.

 

9. You can’t get on BBC Iplayer, 4oD or Netflix.

No English TV for me then!

No English TV for me then!

 

10. You can’t browse a souvenir shop without it being assumed by the shopkeeper that you want to buy everything you look at.

Don't even think about going near these fans, they'll ask you which one you want.

Don’t even think about going near these fans, they’ll ask you which one you want.

 

Today I took the bus from Madrid to Toledo to obtain a social security number in order to work and to start the flat hunt. I am lucky enough to be staying in Madrid with a family who now live mainly in Lincoln, until I find my new home. They have been so helpful, they helped me get my Spanish mobile number and their local knowledge in general is invaluable! This being my first full day in Spain and with only 6 days before I begin work in the Hilton Buenavista Toledo, I set off, naively believing that everything would go quite smoothly and very excited to get my first glance of my new city.

Toledo is as it appears on Google- which is that it is absolutely stunning. I am so happy that I have ended up here, of all the Spanish places I could have gone! Take a look for yourself on street view, which is what I did, and then found myself looking at the exact view in real life that I had seen virtually. Think castles, cobbles, a river, quaint streets contrasted with grand museums. I walked to my destination (the social security office) upon the exposed hill where not a single cloud was in the sky.

Of course, everything didn’t go as smoothly as I had hoped. I knew in the back of my mind that there may be a few niggles with getting permission to work in a different country, especially as the hotel’s human relations manager had given me his number and said to call if there were problems. The inevitable problem was that I needed Spain’s equivalent of the national insurance number to get my social security number, the NIE. It seemed that this had never been necessary before and it took three separate employees and a lot of ‘discussion’ (not argumentation) on the phone to confirm that the NIE was definitely what I needed. I was sat in the middle of all this, just wanting someone to confirm what the rules actually were, so that I could do what was necessary. I think they mistook me for also being irate and aimed a lot of heated explanation of the rules towards me.The office to obtain this NIE was a bus ride away, and conveniently all governmental workplaces close at 2pm. It was half past one and definitely not worth the hassle. I am getting up early tomorrow in the hope that I can get the permission I need to start work on Monday!

Before I got the bus back to Madrid, I wanted to begin the flat hunt, however I soon realised that my phone battery was diminishing quickly. After bashing out some Google searches on the free wifi at Burger King (with bottomless Fanta!), it was not long before the power was gone and alas I could not phone anyone to find a room (plus there were loads of noisy kids in BK). I went to the public library and got a free hour on their computers to check out more websites advertising rooms to let. It had a very old version of Internet Explorer so I immediately downloaded Google Chrome, don’t know what I would do without multiple tabs! Soon after this I was back on the bus and fell asleep after much sun exposure and lost wandering on cobbled streets. I will try again tomorrow and I can’t wait to call Toledo my home for 6 months!

The view I got to see in real life

The view I got to see in real life

Any photos that I take are automatically uploaded to my Google+ account where they appear privately. I normally don’t share them with my circles, until Google+ started to do really cool edits of them, and now I think they are worth seeing. This process is automatic and I didn’t ask for it to happen- which is why it was a nice surprise when I was notified to these Auto Awesome photos from my time in Barcelona:

Fountain in Ciutadella Park

Fountain in Ciutadella Park

Montserrat

Montserrat

Casa Battlo

Casa Battlo

Catalunya en Miniatura

Catalunya en Miniatura

View from the Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor at Tibidabo

View from the Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor at Tibidabo

Inside the Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor (lower church)

Inside the Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor (lower church)

Goat up the mountain in Palleja

Goat up the mountain in Palleja

YEAR ABROAD

I am doing a degree in Modern Languages (French and Spanish) and the time has come for my third year abroad.

I hope to use this blog to briefly record some of my experiences as I live outside of the UK for the first time.

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A few handy hints on how to bore your students to tears:

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There is no way of escaping a boring lecture once you’re in there…

1)      Write a six thousand word monologue on Microsoft word, put it in size 28 font and project it onto the big screen.

2)      Proceed to read out your carefully crafted piece of enthralling literature for the entirety of an hour.

3)      Begin your lecture at 9 o’clock in the morning when you know your students will be the most alert.

4)      Make sure you scroll through your monologue with a slight delay. Try and make it more difficult for your audience to catch up with what you’re saying.

5)      Upload this dissertation to the student portal afterwards so that the students realise that there was no point in attending your stupidly early lecture.

eBay

This is a link to my eBay listings for my account, By Hannah UK: http://myworld.ebay.co.uk/byhannahuk

I start the bidding at 99p on everything so it’s worth a look.

Can’t promise that there will always be listings up, I tend to sell things in waves when I fancy a clear out.