My haven and my hole (read as studio, we have a tricky relationship) is where I have been spending most of my time recently, I am sad to say. This is not due to lack of want of going out and exploring, more due to seriously screwed up sleeping patterns, not falling asleep until 2am then needing twelve to thirteen hours. I have slipped out after lunch for coffees, walks, walking and walking before I have to start work for the evening. A momentary fall out has happened between Paris and I, as I feel cramped, exhausted and alone all at the same time. It is quite something the realisations you go through when you take yourself out of your comfort zone and reflect upon the life you really desire, even amid all of the beauty. Strip me back and there’s an old soul who was put here for long walks, being part of a community, making good wholesome food, creating things and lending a hand to loved ones. 
I really do not have an awful lot to share, I have still filled the hours that I am not sleeping. Wine with friends; solo coffee dates; discovering bookshops crammed so full that with one quick turn a whole wall of books could fall upon you, urging you to tread carefully and gently; late evening walks resembling a slightly trendier michelin man, nose pressed up against the windows of antique stores and galleries; curled up in bed watching film after series after film; sitting in parks watching people live their lives. Paris by no means feels uneventful, it is just I am right now. 
Yesterday I had a brief lunch with my Dad, a welcome visitor, and after laughing maybe too hard at the misfortune of two wheels coming off his suitcase, I idly walked back towards my studio feeling rather thankful and content. Rue des Petits Ecuries, a road I walked down three years ago when going home for Christmas from the beloved mill, was where I ended up and it once again bowled me over. It was somewhat a distant memory trudging across Paris from Montparnasse to Gare du Nord with my leather holdall slung over my shoulder, meandering through the streets avoiding boulevards and the elbows of shoppers, I could not even place where the street was. It was one of those happy accidents, just coming across it again. Full of independent boutiques; a “little India” shop tempting with its luminous fabrics; old textile factories, apparent from the floor to ceiling studio windows; old school Tabacs with regulars chain-smoking post lunch. It really is another corner of Paris that seems to have maintained a little community and it made my heart feel a little lighter to be in it momentarily. 
Safe to say I am on the countdown to friends visiting and going home for a weekend before heading to dear Derbyshire for Christmas and it will have been seven months since my last visit - it really has been too too long. On that note, I am going to continue cradling my cup of chai and people watch a little more before I again put one foot in front of the other.
À bientôt,
Lydia













