Chickenhut, Barnum and Bagels, ginormous parking lots, E! Entertainment News, cabs, elevators, Whole Foods, TJ Maxx, SNL, and high rise buildings with doormen are feeling exotic to me right now. Some other things America has meant to me in these first ten days...
Swinging
It occurred to me yesterday as I was balancing my tall peppermint mocha no whip latte and fishing for my taxi fare (I'm not blowing all my money on cabs, but they're so cheap compared to Paris! And it means I can wear heels!)--I’m really lucky to be bi-coffee. Not ten days ago, I was loving the Cafe Contrescarpe and now I'm in bed with Starbucks. I know French people for whom walking with coffee is anathema, and Americans who are turned off by those wee shots of milk-free expresso. Not me. It’s all my bag and there’s enough of my coffee lovin' to go around, babies.
Greeting
The first couple of days here, I didn’t know how to talk to strangers. I gave a hearty “Hello sir!” to the Airport Express Shuttle man. Sounded funny. Next, I couldn't remember how I greeted people if I needed directions. Was it Hello and then Excuse me? Hail ye fellow citizen of Earth? I was at sea.
Drinking
Water fountains, they are EVERYWHERE. Whenever I want water, THERE IT IS. It is as if this country said, “Let us anticipate that people will get thirsty outside the confines of their own homes, and they will want to satisfy themselves.” Ditto toilets.
Listening
Jingle Bell Rock is just a cracker of a tune--the part with the key change releases more endorphins to my brain than the molten hot chocolate at Le Fumoir. I’ve heard it no less than 387 times since I arrived. In France I’d get to experience it twice if I was lucky. It makes me anxious to think of all the Jingle Bell Rock I'd be missing if I were in France right now.
Eating
Whole Foods is a strange place. 2-bite Brownies, Laura’s Wholesome Junk Food, Pumpkin Seed Cheese Snacker Crackers. Everything is disguised as something else. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for a little variety. Curried Cauliflower is great, but sometimes we should just let veggies be themselves.
Commuting
In the US on a Friday evening, 6:30 pm is rush hour. In France, it’s 1:30 pm. (Okaaaay, 2:00 pm.)
Dressing
You know you’re in the US when you see a college students wearing strange things: pajama pants with puffy fur-lined jackets and flip flops, for instance. I saw three girls hop out of a car and run into the Blockbuster on Huron Street wearing only tanktops and track pants! It’s 20 degrees out! Put some clothes on, bitches!
Overhearing
I stepped off the plane, and overheard this guy say “I mean, I truly do love basketball” with a Southern drawl--right! Southerners say Truly! How charming! Why don't I have any Southern expat friends in France? Later, I caught a little bit of The Food Network where that lady with pretty gray hair was making blueberry dumplings and she said, “Ah thank ah just swallahed mah tongue.” Ha! Regional accents are too much.
Brunching
Sunday, on my way to get coffee in Lake View, I saw people carrying leftovers from brunch. First off, allow me to say: B-R-U-N-C-H! And also: leftovers in styrofoam! Your hungover self can open the styrofoam container throughout the afternoon and graze on bits of breakfast burrito. Makes me miss college.
Thanksgiving
“It’s so strange that you’re in the country and I haven’t seen you yet” my mother said on the phone last night. It’s hard for both of us. I never thought I would be that girl who could go a year without seeing my parents. (Normally, they would have come to France for visiting this summer, but they’ve had a tough year rebuilding our home from the hurricanes of 2004.) 
Gosh, this is going to make me sound like I need a 12-Step Program, but I chose not to go home for Thanksgiving for the sake of my sanity--I have a whopping deadline to meet early next week. Family is more important to me than anything but I guess you have to pay the piper from time to time if you want to do work that you enjoy. To reward myself for pouring through lookbooks and transcribing interviews when I should be making stuffing with my mom, and to continue my life’s current chick lit meets poignancy vibe--(It's not that I'm lonely, but there is something about turning down invites to see Second City with old friends or being too busy for Thanksgiving that makes you feel desert dog-ish)--I think I’ll go see Shopgirl today, or In Her Shoes...they're not around in France yet. But I’m saving Rent to see with my sisters. That has to do with counterpoint renditions of Would You Light My Candle? in a small Renault in Italy, Fourmont Family Roadtrip 2002, but that’s another story for another day.
Back to the salt mines...