[first unphotographed event] Friday night a group of six or so made dinner together in my dorm. The kitchen on my floor is right across the hall from my room, which makes cooking quite convenient. It also means that I am the go-to guy for cooking supplies, a responsibility I enjoy; it's really my only way to express hospitality here. We had quite the mélange of food: some left-over soup/casserole thing I made the other night with lentils and white beans and angel-hair pasta which we affectionately dubbed "angel guts;" some spaghetti with ham, onion, and sauce; baguettes with roquefort and brie; scrambled eggs; really cheap German beer (39 cents for a half-pint; I don't know how that compares in the US, but here that is ludicrous); and hot chocolate made with actual chocolate. A savory evening by all accounts.
[second unphotographed event] We ate and talked and lounged until after 11. It's common here for a meal shared with others to take a long time. It never feels like it takes a long time, though. It doesn't feel like it takes any time at all, in fact; it feels like it gives you time, time to enjoy food, enjoy friends, enjoy life. I've heard a lot of people talk about the difference in conception of time between the US and other countries, notably those of Latin America. For the first time in my life I'm able to actually experience that difference, and it really is a special thing to enjoy the presence of others without worrying about or even considering how much time passes. And what a great word that is, "enjoy." In my opinion (or perhaps just my limited body of knowledge) there isn't a great translation of "enjoy" in French. You can say "have pleasure," "take pleasure," "profit from," "amuse yourself," "be entertained," "like," and "love," but not exactly "enjoy." The word seems incarnational to me: let joy be born into whatever you're doing.
[third unphotographed event] After all the food and conversation, my friends Rachel, David, and Romain and I decided to go out and try this place called La Couleur de Bière (The Color of Beer). It almost instantly became one of my favorite spots in the city. It's not downtown like most hangouts are, so it seemed more "local" than other bars or breweries I've been to. La Couleur features beers from all over the world -- yes, even selling Michelob, Miller, and Budweiser (yet, sorry to say, Colorado, no Coors). There were easily two hundred options. The beer expert I am, I chose a 10.5% Belgian beer on the merit that it's name translated to "Golden Dragon." Between the four of us we tasted beers from Belgium, Poland, Brazil, Australia, and -- in my opinon the best -- Quebec. The place was packed, so we drank outside among a diverse array of beer bottles and beer drinkers, including a group with a tambourine and a love for French drinking songs.
[fourth unphotographed event] My friend Sarah had arranged for a Frisbee game the next day. The five of us that went were disappointed at our low numbers, but after a while a group of about ten guys wanting to play soccer showed up and we played with them almost the entire afternoon. When I got back to my dorm I was happy and sore, and as I unlocked my door, my neighbor David asked if I wanted to go skiing with him, Romain, and Rachel (my beer buddies) the next day. And thus the fifth unphotographed event.
Actually, I did take a few pictures. That night we stayed at Romain's house in a little town called Sauve, located northeast of Montpellier. It was fantastic to stay at a French home. French television, French kitchen appliances, French art -- you can't really duplicate it in the US. You especially can't duplicate French Simpsons. The voice they use for Marge is horrendously coarse, and a good number of the jokes simply don't make sense to a French audience. Even if it was a bit strange to watch The Simpsons with French dubbing, I delighted in every little detail of that house. We could've sat around watching the weather channel all night and I would have been happy. All the commercials for perfume and cologne, the 26 old volumes on each of France's regions, the nude photographs displayed in the bathroom, the automatic yet delicate manner by which Romain rolled his cigarettes, the kitchen table next to the window looking onto the rolling hills and mountains of Les Cevennes -- I loved every bit!
Here is the kitchen. The photo doesn't capture how wonderfully quaint it is, but let me put it this way: the kitchen was wonderfully quaint. Notice the Nutella on the table. I sure did.
To the right is a picture of the house. His parents built it about 30 years ago. Their town, their street, and their property all bespeak peacefulness.
And to the left is the view from their back yard.
[fifth unphotographed event] We left on Sunday morning for the slopes. I should explain that the mountains of Les Cevennes are certainly no Alps. They're mountains, and there's snow, but in terms of grandeur they can't compare to Colorado. One big plus of its small size, however, is the effect on the price. To rent all the equipment I needed and to ski for the day cost 18 euros. That's ridiculous. On the slopes I rediscovered something that I had learned as a kid: skiing is freaking fun! When I tell people I'm from Colorado, they often ask me if I ski, and I say no, and they say, "No way!", and I say, "Well...", and they say, "Get out of town!", and I explain that I skied as a kid when my family paid for me, but that I stopped when I got to an age where I'd have to pay for myself. I'm not even sure that's true, but it's just what I've always told people. On my first run on Sunday, tho
ugh, I seriously questioned why the heck I'd stopped skiing. It's beautiful, active, liberating, and thrilling. Of course, when I tried the first blue, I remembered part of the reason I might have stopped skiing: it's also freaking scary! I only fell a couple times the whole day, though, and I was so glad I'd said yes to the invitation.
[Okay, so it wasn't an entirely unphotographed event. This was where we rented our equipment. As you can see, it was a really nice day.]
[sixth and final unphotographed event] And what better way to top of a weekend with friends than to watch the Super Bowl at midnight with French commentators and no commercials? Well, that's not exactly what happened, because we were too tired at halftime to stay up for the rest of the game. The next morning, Romain and I got up before David and Rachel. We'd stayed at Romain's house one more night than we'd planned because David was too tired to drive back, but I didn't really mind missing my Grammar and Geography classes. I heard plenty of correct grammatical usage on the TV, and I had my own personal geography lesson in Les Cevennes. Romain -- who had never watched American football before this year's Super Bowl -- got out his computer to see who won the game. "Oh," he said as he read the article. "And which team was New Orleans again?"