Back in NYC!

Much to our surprise, we’re back in NYC! After nearly 7 months in Europe and an extended and very welcome stay in Utah with family, Lisa and I have returned to the scene of the evacuation just over a year after the move from the underworld (both meanings). At least this time we smartly left the move to the professionals. Thank goodness. I can honestly say I’m not incredibly happy, nor am I necessarily disappointed to be back. New York is an anomaly among the places I’ve lived. There are very many things I love about it, and there is an equally long list (maybe a little longer) of things I absolutely hate about it. But now that we’ve gotten a few things squared away, like a couple methods of transportation out of town whenever we want, and home delivery of most of what we need, then some of the worst aspects are minimized. Then we can leave the house for work and pleasure, and less often for errands (which seem to eat too much of our free time), and get out on weekend day trips or overnighters with ease. I probably sound nit-picky about the hassle of NYC, but it’s the little things that really get under my skin. What can I say. I know I sound very down on being back, and admittedly, I’d like to have tried another place since life is so short, but honestly, I’m pretty excited to do a few things we didn’t get around to last time and now we have the chance. Having a great place and a great location are really making it nice.

Anyway, Lisa has been too busy to write since we were in Italy. Perhaps my mentioning her delinquency here will be inspiring. Love you Sweetie! A good way to get back into the habit might be to describe our very cool apartment, its amazing location, and the new wheels we have acquired.

The True Van Gogh Country

For our third wedding anniversary, we decided to spend the day immersed in Van Gogh. We set out for Arles and St. Remy de Provence, the former being the place where he lived and shared an apartment with Gaugin before famously losing his ear, and the second being the site of the mental hospital where he spent a very productive year after the incident in Arles. Arles and St. Remy are the places where most of his best-known and most beloved works were painted. Van Gogh painted 187 paintings while in Arles and 142 paintings in the year he was at St. Remy.

We went first to St. Remy to visit the sanitarium at St. Paul de Mausole, which is just outside the center of St. Remy and is still a mental institution, now known as the Van Gogh Institute. Here in a separate part of the complex they have kept and preserved Van Gogh’s room as it was when he stayed here. They have hanging on the walls several of Van Gogh’s letters written to his brother Theo describing his surroundings. Judging from his writings, it actually seems he was very happy there.

Walkway towards the asylum at St. Remy
Walkway towards the asylum at St. Remy
Cloisters at the entry
Cloisters at the entry
Van Gogh's bedroom at St. Remy
Van Gogh's bedroom at St. Remy
View from Van Gogh's bedroom - at least as it looks today
View from Van Gogh's bedroom - at least as it looks today
Out in the gardens - now you can see why sunflowers were the subject of so many of his paintings!
Out in the gardens - now you can see why sunflowers were the subject of so many of his paintings!
Another look at the cloisters
Another look at the cloisters

Outside of the building that holds Van Gogh’s room are the gardens hung with blown up reproductions of Van Gogh’s paintings created at St. Remy, hung in the spots where they were created. For those who love Van Gogh’s work, as we do, it is almost a sacred experience. Ostensibly his most famous painting (and my personal favorite), Starry Night, was painted at St. Remy.

One of the many paintings he did in the gardens at St. Remy
One of the many paintings he did in the gardens at St. Remy
My favorite self portrait - done while at St. Remy
My favorite self portrait - done while at St. Remy

Once he left St. Remy, he went to live just outside of Paris, near a doctor who was treating him, where he then shot himself in the chest in a field. The initial shot didn’t kill him – he wandered back to the auberge where he was staying and died two days later in his brother Theo’s arms. His last words to his beloved brother were “La tristesse durera toujours” – “The sadness will last forever”. In a sad footnote, Theo, his closest confidant and friend in life, died of what one can only describe as heartbreak six months later. They are now buried side by side just outside of Paris. Van Gogh did not even begin his career as an artist until he was 27. He was 37 years old when he died. Imagine what he could have done had he lived a full life.

We followed up St. Remy with a visit to Arles, where Van Gogh lived with Paul Gaugin and painted many of his best-known works. At the tourist office they have mapped a ‘Van Gogh Route’ that you can follow to visit all of the spots frequented or made famous by Van Gogh. Unfortunately the house he lived in, Maison Jaune or Yellow House, was destroyed during World War II.

We also visited the Roman coliseum at Arles, built in during the first century. Unfortunately we could not go inside as they were busy holding a bullfight, which they do every Wednesday during the month of July. It was not a tempting activity for us.

Roman coliseum at Arles
Roman coliseum at Arles
La Cafe de la Nuit in Arles - subject of some of Van Gogh's paintings
La Cafe de la Nuit in Arles - subject of some of Van Gogh's paintings
Part of the remains of an old Roman bridge in Arles
Part of the remains of an old Roman bridge in Arles

We returned back to the town of St. Remy for dinner, stopping to visit the birthplace of Nostradamus while we wandered the streets looking for a restaurant.

Birthplace of Nostradamus
Birthplace of Nostradamus

This little guy left the bar where he was spending his evening to come and say hello to Larry. He then returned to his post and assumed his seat. Hilarious.

Hanging out
Hanging out

Interesting Stores

We keep seeing these stores here in France. Each time we ask “were they ever classics?” But I guess with what appears to be a majority of the population being vigorously avid smokers, I guess this store makes some sense here. Still funny though. Right?

Loving To Be “Tired of Being Sorry”

We were in a store the other day doing a little shopping when I heard a really catchy song on the in-store system. In an unbreakable trance I made my way to the nearest speaker and listened for a bit before realizing I need to find out what/who it was. Luckily I have Shazam on my iPhone, so I held it up and recorded/tagged it. Shazam is a MUST HAVE. The song is called “Tired of Being Sorry”.

Not being much of an Enrique Iglesias fan at all, it pains me to say that I can’t get enough of this song. Lisa and I have played it probably 50 times in the last several days. It was written by a guy named Scott Thomas, the lead singer of the band Ringside. (For you Brothers and Sisters fans, Balthazar Getty is the keyboardist and other half of Ringside). Iglesias knows a catchy money-making single when he hears one, so he put it on an album, which attracted this French-Algerian track-star-turned-pop-star Nadiya to do a duet version, which you can see in the video below. I also like the original Ringside version, find various live versions on YouTube. The excellent Ringside version music video was directed by Joaquin Phoenix and is also farther below.

Enjoy at your own risk. If you have addictive genes, better to bypass this one.

Kitty Sitting (Day 5)

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