Don't worry -- there's a reason for the smiley cookies. Those little guys, as seen on the package, are called BN. I have no idea what BN stands for ("Biscuit National?" -- National Cookie?), but I am certain of one thing: they are quite tasty. Not only are their strawberry jelly insides delicious and nutritious, but they also represent my welcome to Montpellier. The first night I got here I was starving, so I got a quiche (another food I've found I really enjoy) and a box of these from a store down the street. They provided the sustenance and comfort that I needed so badly after a tough day of travel. Furthermore, I appreciated their weird little smiles. Some of them even wink at you.
BN cookies are rather plain -- not the flavor of BN cookies, mind you, but the subject matter of BN cookies. It is, however, largely in the plain things of life that life takes on meaning. In my displacement the last two weeks I have found this to be true over and over again. The way people drive is different here, the hats they wear, their mannerisms on the tram, their method of grocery shopping. It's all boring stuff to them, I'm sure, but to me every detail of normal French life warrants the closest of examination. Their culture consists almost entirely of boring stuff! (So, too, does ours. I think I will have a much greater appreciation for the little idiosyncrasies of our culture when I return to the states.) In light of this newfound appreciation for the great value of normal things, I want to dedicate this post mainly to explaining what my normal, day-to-day life is like in Montpellier.

First of all, you should know where Montpellier is. It's almost directly south of Paris, all the way to the Mediterranean Sea. It's located in the Languedoc-Roussillon region of France. I believe Montpellier is the 8th-largest city in France, with somewhere between 500,000 and 600,000 people in the metropolitan area. It doesn't feel like a big, bustling city, but it does sprawl a good deal. There are two tram lines and many bus routes, and I bought a pass to use either mode of transportation as much as I want. The city is home to the three branches of Montpellier University -- the law and business school, the school of science, and the school of arts, letters, and humanities -- which have a total of about 50,000 students. Because of this high number of students, demographically speaking it's a very young city. Taking the tram at night, people 40 and over are typically a minority.
As you can imagine, then, this is a lively place. The night life especially is very active. I've gone out a number of times, and I've had fun on every occasion. "Going out" is not something I'm accustomed to doing. At Whitworth, especially having been on leadership the past two years, most activities seem to take place on campus. And in Denver, my friends usually prefer hanging out at someone's house rather than going out. The drinking age makes a big difference, too. Up until this year, the adult night life has been mostly off-limits to me and my peers. Here, however, bars are the place to be at night. I'd guess there are 50 bars downtown, in addition to cafes and clubs or discotheques where people would drink.
And people sure do drink. Every time I've gone out at night I've seen at least a couple people totally drunk, stumbling down the streets or falling face-first onto them. Two nights ago I went out with some Americans, my neighbor David and his French friend, and some other French people. This guy, Thomas -- who was already drunk before we left -- kept telling me how much he loved alcohol. As we got off the tram at La Comedie, the downtown tram stop, he smiled stupidly and pronounced proudly in very French-sounding English, "I am an alcoholic." Thomas was quite funny, actually, and I didn't mind at all hanging out with him. On the other hand, I am completely unattracted to the lifestyle he leads. I asked my American friend, Anthony, how often he and his friends went out last semester. "Pretty much every night," he told me in all seriousness. My immediate reaction to such a notion is a financial concern. The cheapest beer usually costs at least 3 euros, and any other drink will be more like 6 or 7 euros; that's 10 euros a night (if you drink conservatively), times 7 nights a week, times twenty-some weeks in Montpellier; then you think of the dollar-euro exchange right nowadays, and you have yourself quite the investment. But even if it was all free, I know that I don't want to go out to the bars every night. It makes me wonder, though: What will I do instead? A difference between the dorms here and the dorms at Whitworth is that people really don't hang out in the dorms in France. Indeed, people in the dorms don't talk to each other much at all. That's quite the shift for me as a recently retired RA at a community-focused university. All that to say, I predict that I'll have many a social decision to make during the semester, trying to balance my social life with my moral convictions and general introversion.
At the same time, I should reiterate that I've had lots of fun when I've gone out. I went to a club where the dance floor was raised a good two or three feet off the regular floor, and there were ledges and barrels to dance on that were raised another two or three feet above that. I got up on one of the ledges and danced in full view of everyone. It felt like I was in a movie or something ("Order 'Chris Gone Wild' while you can!!!"). Another time we went to a bar that was so packed with people that my friend had to take off his glasses because they fogged up. It was kind of gross, but wonderfully novel as well. I also heard of this pirate bar called Redbeard (well, Barberousse, actually) that is shaped like a pirate ship and only serves rum. In honor of Whitworth, I'd say it's a must for me to check it out.
During the day I lead a rather simple life. I eat most of my meals in my room or in the dorm kitchen. For breakfast I have croissants and Nutella, a combination to which I am utterly addicted. Actually, I think it's just the Nutella I'm addicted to, because every morning I finish a croissant or two and then get impatient and just start spooning Nutella into my mouth. That stuff is simply too good. For lunch I either make something simple on my own like a ham sandwich, or I go to the dorm cafeteria. The food isn't bad, and it costs less than four euros. I almost always make my dinners, usually either pasta or rice. I've come up with some pretty tasty dishes (last night was rice with onion, yellow pepper, ground beef, and salami in a mushroom marinara sauce), but I've also had some far less successful culinary experiences (such as forgetting to remove the sticker from the bottom of the pan I bought. Yep. I actually did that).
Of course, now anyone reading this blog thinks that all I do is eat and party, which isn't the entire truth. It's remarkable how a whole day can go by while tending to everyday business. I go shopping for food, I walk around and explore, I play soccer on Saturdays with some Africans, I research classes I can take. It's all pretty normal stuff (perhaps with the exception of playing soccer with the African guys; that's a bit out of the ordinary). But, like I said at the beginning of this post, it's the normal stuff, the boring stuff, that makes up the majority of life. And perhaps the most important difference between my life in the states and my life in France is that I appreciate the normal and the boring much more here.
For some more normal and boring stuff, here are a few pictures from around campus:

This post was not small, but simple and sufficient :)
ReplyDeleteDude, love the carpet in your room! Very nice!
ReplyDeleteSo, yeah, "Pierre" is actually Kyle...it's a long story and the site won't let me put my real name. Ha!
ReplyDeleteChris I couldn't agree more about the thrill of boring stuff. Perhaps the excitement is due to pleasantly broken expectations, or in large part curiosity is stimulated from the realization you had expectations about the size of grocery stores, shelves, and what the would hold. I cannot help but wonder what other expectations lie in wait of an enlightening, "Oh!"
ReplyDeleteYou should have been practicing your ping pong all semester in Boppell!! - Danny McCaffrey
ReplyDelete