Author Archives: Lauren

Breaking up is hard to do

I know it’ll sound like a cliche but it’s not you, it’s me. I feel like we’ve grown apart in the last few months and that we’re just not as close as we used to do.

I sincerely hope that you don’t take this personally. It’s hard for me to imagine my life without you. It’s been a great few years and you’ve been such a huge part of my life. A whole new world has opened up for me because of you. I have so much to thank you for. You helped me get in touch with the person I used to be and that’s such a gift I can never repay you for.

But you have to admit that things have been a bit rocky lately. The closeness that we once had feels like it’s gone. We just don’t fit.

So I’m sorry to say that I’ve found someone new. Someone who will hopefully fit my current wants better. It’s time for a change. But I really am sorry, I hope you can move on and find someone new.

And now for a review (of sorts) for The Dark Knight Rises

Sooooo… The Dark Knight Rises.

Before anyone asks, yes, I did cry at the end. Balled my eyes out for the last 15 minutes and had to stay right to the end of the credits to get myself in order. However, I’m actually finding it really hard to get my thoughts in order about the film. I can’t even decide if I really did like it or not because the emotional investment I have in the trilogy and Batman overhangs it all. Still, I do think it was an appropriate ending to the trilogy and I’m happy with how it concluded. My impressions so far are that I think the film was good but the first hour was a bit slow. It took awhile for it to gain momentum but once it got there it was pretty full-on. I think a second viewing will be most helpful in me working out what I think about the film.

I don’t need clarity on two things though.

Anna Hathaway totally rocks at Selina Kyle/Catwoman. She got it just right. Plus, I really like the fact that she was nearly as tall as Batman (I think the super high boots helped a lot!). The other is that I think The Dark Knight is the superior film – probably because Heath Ledger’s Joke was such an mind-bogglingly good performance. Don’t get me wrong, Bane made for a most excellent villain but Tom Hardy got nowhere near the heights of Heath Ledger. Still love Tom Hardy though. He was so good in Inception.

Comics references in the film are Knightfall and No Man’s Land. One of the fight scenes in the film was pretty close to one that happens in Knightfall. Usually I would link to the wikipedia entries but this time I’m not going to. It’ll give too much away for those who haven’t read them already. But I recommend No Man’s Land. It made for some great reading 🙂

A moment of sentiment

I remember sitting on the couch when I finally turned the last page of The Wake, the last book in The Sandman series and feeling bereft. I had become very emotionally invested in the story and characters, especially Morpheus. So when it all came to end and there was nothing else to read, I really did wonder what I was supposed to do in a world where there was no more Sandman to read. (Imagine my delight when I watched this.)

But this isn’t meant to be an entry about the joy that is The Sandman. No, the little story above is meant to be an illustration of how I’m feeling right now because I’ve seen The Dark Knight Rises.

Once again, I’m feeling rather bereft.

There’s no more Christopher Nolan Batman movies. It’s done. Finished. Concluded. And I once again find myself wondering what I’m going to do now that there’s no more new Batman films to watch.

I know there are plenty of people out there who will think I’m very weird for having such a huge emotional investment in a comic book character. It’s an odd thing for a girl to do. I’m supposed to be obsessed with hand bags and shoes but not this little black duck. Nope, I spend a lot of my disposable income on comic books.

Batman Begins came out about a year after I’d been through a horrible, hideously painful break-up of an eight year relationship. I was kidding myself that I was okay but I really wasn’t. I was stuck doing all the things I’d done before and I really wasn’t moving on from my now very dead relationship. I saw the film at the movies, like it but I didn’t really think about it that much again until it came out on DVD. That’s when the obsession started. I watched the movie repeatedly, sometimes several times a week. Then I watched all the documentaries on the disc and heard Chris Nolan talking about the comics he’d been inspired by. Being an obsessive little fan at this point, I decided I had to read them.

Within the space of about three months I had read all of the major Batman storylines from the last twenty years (and bought them all). And I had started collecting comics.

All because I saw a movie.

The significance of this is that it’s the first thing I did on my own after “the break-up”. For such a long time, I only thought about the wreckage of my relationship. I obsessed about it, wondering what I did wrong. But suddenly there were Batman comics. Stories, writers and artists to discover. Instead of living in the past, I was discovering new things. Because of Batman Begins, I now have friends all over the world, a brilliant art collection and have been to America four times. So you’ll have to forgive me if I’m more than a little sentimental about Chris Nolan’s Batman trilogy coming to an end. It gave me life back and helped me move on.

I shall give the final word to Matt Wagner. One of my favourite comics is his story called Trinity. He set it in the early periods of Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman’s crime fighting careers. It’s such a great example of everything that’s wonderful about comics and Batman.

[Scene]

Wonder Woman confronts Superman after yet another for her infuriating meeting with Batman (who she’s decided she really doesn’t like).

Wonder Woman: Why?

Superman: What?

Wonder Woman: Why do you allow him to continue like this? Don’t his methods make him little better than the very criminals he pursues?

Superman: I know. I felt that way once. Maybe it’s the fact that we’re both orphans. I had the benefits of a foster family, but Batman had to grow up on his own. But more important… I know his courage. I’ve seen him throw himself in harm’s way time and time again, all to rescue the lives of the innocent.

[Pause]

Superman: And remember, he’s got no extraphysical prowess like you and I.

[Pause]

Superman: I can’t find it in myself to deny the exercise of such bravery. Even if I don’t always agree with his style. In fact, I often wonder if I were an ordinary man, would I show the same valour?

The cobbles broke me

I’ll say from the onset that doing the Melburn Roobiax ride wasn’t my idea. I don’t like riding over cobbles at the best of times but I got signed up for it so I went along with it. And hey, the time I’ve been as an observer, it has looked like a lot of fun.

I was a little apprehensive as the day drew closer but I decided that I should just go with it and have some fun. Really, how bad could it be?

Uh… bad. Really, really bad.

I managed to get about 100 metres into the first section before I panicked. I was going too slow and the cobbles were really, really slippery after three days of heavy rain. There were people all around me and I could hear so many unfamiliar voices saying “wow, it’s so slippery”, “it’s a bit muddy!” etc. I totally freaked out. I managed to get my foot down but it promptly slipped out from underneath me. Then I cracked myself in the left shin with my pedal as I struggled to maintain my balance. Got my other foot out and somehow managed to whack my right shin with my pedal so hard that it broke skin. I have no clue how I did this. Of course I was in a bit of a state by now, verging on what felt like a full-blown panic attack. I stood there for about 10 minutes with people careering past me, adding to my fear.

I couldn’t move. I couldn’t go back and the idea of riding out of the lane filled me with a terror that had me frozen to the spot. So I did the only thing I could. I got off my bike and walked to the end. On insanely slippery cobbles. In cletes. How I didn’t fall over I have no idea.

The second section was worse. Again, I was way too slow and I simply didn’t trust myself or my bike on the cobbles. I panicked and stopped as soon as I could. It was awful. I haven’t felt that way since the first ride back from my fall last year.

And that’s the thing isn’t it? What did I fall over on last year? A bluestone gutter. I really thought I’d gotten over the whole bike accident thing. I’ve been happily riding on the road for months. Hell, I’ve ridden up a mountain! (Okay, so on occasion I get a bit skittish in large crowds and I don’t like when I feel that other cyclists are getting too close to me but I think that’s normal!) What happened Sunday was totally unexpected and I think that’s what made it so scary. I didn’t even think of that there would be a subconscious connection between my accident and the cobbles on the Roobaix ride. But wow, my brain made it pretty damn quickly.

I feel kinda dumb. I mean, there were kids doing it. Not to mention people on old bangers of bikes that must’ve been absolute agony to ride over the cobbles. But me, in my expensive Rapha kit and road bike? Nope, I freaked out on the first section. Still, I should remember that I did hurt myself well beyond the normal “jump-up-and-laugh-it-off” injury. I hit the ground so hard that I cracked my helmet.

After two sections, I gave up. If I persisted with the cobbles, I knew I’d be in for a terrible day on the bike. It was obvious I wasn’t going to be able to get past my fear and if I kept trying, I’d end up hurting myself and probably the people around me. It was just easier to skip the cobble sections and simply ride around them and meet my other half, who was doing them, at the end. I did manage to complete one section though so I’m rather proud of that as it was considered one of the more difficult bits (had three stars).

But there’s no getting away from it – the cobbles broke me.

What’s in the box?!

ring box

Could it be a genuine 1920s Art Deco diamond and platinum engagement ring?

Diamond and platinum engagement ring in its ring box

I think it might be!!

For those interested: it’s 0.42 carats. Personally, I think the 0.4 of that is the diamond in the middle and 0.02 is the 22 grain diamonds surrounding it (12 on the top level and five on each side). They’re seriously tiny and I keep thinking I’ve lost one all the time!

I don’t know anything about the history of the ring except that it’s from the 1920s and it’s possible it could’ve originally come from America.

The proposal happened early evening 11 April which was our last full day in Paris while we were taking a walk in the Luxembourg Gardens.

And that was the highlight of my trip 🙂

Oh the humidity!

You know how I said previously that the French people had been a delight and that the stereotype of them being rude wasn’t true? Weeeeeeeell, you get rude people in every culture and we ran into one on the flight from Paris to Hong Kong.

The flight to Hong Kong was… uh… not great. I’m now rather puzzled as to why people rave about Cathay Pacific. My experience was the exact opposite. It didn’t start well. When we got on the plane, there was absolutely no room left in the overhead locker because people had gone crazy with the duty free shopping. Which, of course, you have to take on the plane with you. Then the guy in the aisle seat in our bit of row was most indignant when we indicated those two empty seats next to him were ours. He begrudgingly got up to let up get in. The air conditioning on the plane was incredibly noisy so it was impossible to hear any of the cabin announcements except, interestingly enough, the captain’s and the ones in French. The seats were weird. Instead of reclining like normal airline seats, the seat padding moved. Which was totally useless for me because it left an enormous and uncomfortable gap between the back bit and the base. I could only recline a little bit which wasn’t conducive to sleep at all.

For the first time ever, I felt totally ignored by the hosties. One came through with what turned out to be entry paperwork for Hong Kong – which we needed – but he zoomed right past us and we couldn’t actually hear what he was saying because of the A/C. Later in the flight, the hosties came through the cabin with water but I missed out because I couldn’t get their attention, even though it was obvious I was awake and reading. So I ended up with a massive headache because I was dehydrated.

But what takes the cake was the odious man in the row with us. He wedged himself into that seat and he wasn’t moving for hell or high water. I only got up twice but each time I did, he gave me the evil eye and then wouldn’t get out of his seat. We both had to climb over him. I’ve never had that happen before and it was disturbing. Personally I think he was hoping I’d stumble and end up in his lap. Eugh!!! *shudders* He was my first rude French person but at least it was on the plane on the way out.

All in all, it was an awful flight. I definitely won’t be in any rush to fly with Cathay Pacific again.

So yes, Hong Kong. The humidity has turned out to be too much for me and we’ve spent our two days here in the hotel, enjoying the air conditioning. I can deal with hot weather. After all, I grew up in country Victoria where the summers are blazingly hot and a cool change is when it dropped a couple of degrees from 39°C to 35°C. But I can’t deal with humidity at all. I hate the sensation of being sweaty and clammy all the time. I hate that it takes so much effort to move around. We went for a walk yesterday morning but I just couldn’t hack it. The whole time we were out I just wanted to go back to the hotel and read my book (I’ve joined The Games of Thrones bandwagon and have already gotten through the first book and well into the second one).

The hotel is pretty awesome though. I decided that we should go five star for our final hotel stay so we’re at the Regal Hong Kong Hotel in Causeway Bay. And we’re on the 33rd floor in a room that faces out towards the mountains, which are rather close.

View from our hotel in Hong Kong
This is about half of what we can see out our window.

To be honest, I’m kinda glad that we’re heading home. We’ve spent a lot of time in airports and on planes which sounds so much more fun than what it actually is. Reality is, airplanes are boring places to be. Don’t get me wrong – I love to travel but I really wish teleportation was a reality.

Au revoir Paris

Aaahh… Paris. I know I haven’t visited very many cities in the world but I’m going to go out on limb and say Paris would have to be one of my favourite places in the world. It’s just magic and I was sad to leave it. There were still so many places I’m sure we could’ve visited.

I love being in cities that seem to encourage you to discover it by walking. Even when it was raining, Paris always seemed to whisper that you should be outside walking her grand boulevards, ambling through her pretty parks. It was such a pleasure to be there and I know it’s somewhere I will visit again.

And all this rubbish about the French being rude is just that – rubbish. The people we talked to were always polite and friendly. I think that particular stereotype has gotten around because the French still have manners and it is considered rude to not greet someone when you enter a premises, in French of course. I got a handle on that really quickly but I kept saying ‘thank you’ instead of ‘merci’. At least I was trying, even if it was in the wrong language. (And I must say it’s normal for me to say thank you when the situation warrants it. It’s not like I’m rude all the time or anything!)

The next time I visit France, it’s going to be after I’ve learnt some basic French. It was such a pain not being able to read menus. I also didn’t like having to rely on people being able to speak English. Made me feel like an uncultured lout! The majority of menus do have English on them but it would’ve been nice to be able to order in French. The restaurant we went to our on final night only had a French menu so the poor waiter had to tell us everything that was on it and then we had to try to remember what he’d said.

The croissants in France are so much better than the ones we get in Melbourne. There was a boulangerie very close to the hotel so we’d stop in the morning before heading off to wherever we were going. It has to be said that the macarons we get in Melbourne are just as good as the ones in Paris – not that they weren’t yummy of course! And now I need to find a crêperie in Melbourne because I’ve developed a love for nutella and banana crepes.

Now that I have visited both the Louvre and the Musée d’Orsay, I can say that I prefer the Louvre. I loved the grandeur of it all. And yes, we did go look at the Mona Lisa and the Venus De Milo but I didn’t feel compelled to get a photo of me standing in front of either of them. I don’t understand why people do that. I don’t need a photo to remind me, I know I’ve been there. We skipped entire sections as there was simply too much to see but we did spend quite a while in Napoleon III’s apartments. What really astonished me was that they had the throne of Neopleon Bonaparte. I would’ve thought that something like that would’ve been destroyed when they deposed him. There were so many beautiful things to look at and the Louvre definitely needs more than one visit to do it justice.

Notre Dame Cathedral
Notre Dame Cathedral. We didn’t go in because the line was huuuuuuge!!

Statues on roof of Notre Dame
Okay, these kinda creeped me out when I realised they didn’t have a head underneath the helmet.

Paris streetscape

Cafe Oz in Paris
Yes, really. It wasn’t that far away from our hotel but I know you’ll all be terribly shocked when I say we didn’t go there.

Musee d'Louvre

Heading into the courtyard for the Louvre

Pyramid entrance at the Louvre

Eiffel Tower

Avenue des Champs-Élysées
Avenue des Champs-Élysées in the rain.

Avenue des Champs-Élysées

Forecourt of the Louvre
The forecourt of the Louvre.

Queue to get into the Louvre
And this is the queue to get into the Louvre. We already had tickets so we got to go in a different entrance.

Eiffel Tower at night
Au revoir Paris.

Things to do on a Sunday when you’re in France

When I slipped my beanie and gloves into my suitcase I felt a bit silly. Surely it wasn’t going to be that cold. But when I was standing on a Paris street on Sunday 8 April before the sun came up and it was about 1°C, it didn’t feel like such a stupid idea!

It was only last year that I told myself I had to get to the Roubaix velodrome at least once in my life. Strike one thing off the bucket list!! It’s an experience I think I’ll always remember. The roar of the crowd as Tom Boonen edged closer and closer to the velodrome, only to reach an amazing intensity when he actually entered. Not something that you easily forget.

Start line of Paris Roubaix 2012
The start for Paris Roubaix

Pave at the start of the race
They even have to start on pave!

Pros of the future
Future pros perhaps?

Stuart O'Grady's shoulder
Stuart O’Grady’s shoulder…

Stuart O'Grady's ear
Stuart O’Grady’s ear…

Stuart O'Grady adjusting his helmet
Look! It’s Stuart O’Grady!!

Pro at the starting line for Paris Roobaix
Contemplating what’s to come.

Australian flag
It’s not a bike race in Europe if there’s not at least one Australian flag.

Sign for Paris Roubaix route
Ya gotta go that way!

Pave
Our first cobble section at Inchy. I had enough trouble walking on it, couldn’t imagine what it’d be like to ride on it.

Pros come past our corner at Inchy
All that standing around and they go by so quickly!

Pros going by at Inchy
There they go!

Entering the corner at Haveluy
Breakaway group entering the corner at our second stop, Haveluy.

Pros in the corner at Haveluy

Thor Hushovd in the peleton
Thor!!

Georgoe Hincapie
George!!

Peleton making its way around the corner at Haveluy
These are not happy faces. Stuart O’Grady tucked right in the middle. From what I can gather, GreenEdge did not have a good race.

Breakaway group at Orchies
Breakaway group at Orchies.

Peleton at Orchies
Peleton coming through!!

The Roubaix velodrome
Roubaix velodrome.

Tom Boonen entering the velodrome
And he’s arrived! Tom Boonen entering the Roubaix velodrome.

Boonen receiving a congrations hug
I think he deserves a hug.

Viva Paris!

No updates recently because the hotel we’re in has no wi-fi which makes it a bit difficult. You have to trek all the way to down to the breakfast room (which is underground!) to plug into a cabled router. And then sit there, as I am doing now. I have a bunch of photos to put up but as that’s a time consuming process so it’ll have to wait until we’re in Hong Kong.

Recently I was asked which city I would live in if money (and language) was no barrier. And I decided rather randomly that it would be Paris. Now that I’m here, I heartily stand by my choice. Paris is just magic. There are no high rises in the heart of the city. They’ve all been shoved off to one end, far away from the very pretty city.

We’ve been doing a lot of walking so we’ve had plenty of time to take in the sights. We walked up to the Arc de Triomphe yesterday from the Louvre and it’s a lot further than it looks when the pros are sprinting up and down it on the last stage of Le Tour de France. Today was a visit to Musée d’Orsay. It was insanely packed on the fifth floor where they’ve moved the Impressionists to so we kinda skimmed through that area reasonably quickly. In my defense, I think I’ve seen quite of few of the paintings before when they’ve been toured to Australia. Or the Melbourne Art Gallery has somehow managed a loan or two.

I was a little disappointed with the Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec paintings they had on display. I was hoping for some of his brilliant posters but there were none to be seen. But of course the star for me was the Van Goghs – except it was absolutely packed and today must’ve been “bump into Lauren and nearly knock her over” day. Happened to me three times in the Van Gogh room! The other clear favourite was all the Art Nouveau rooms. The gallery had some beautiful pieces of furniture and glassware. But really I shouldn’t say surprisingly because Art Nouveau was a precursor to Art Deco.

Tomorrow we’re going to the Louvre, hopefully with pre-purchased tickets so we don’t have to queue. The wait today for Musée d’Orsay was an hour and a half – in the rain. I did get to use my new umbrella so it’s all good 🙂

And of course there’s that bike race that was on on Sunday just gone. Lots of driving, being cold, bumping around on cobblestones and standing around waiting for a bunch of cyclists to vibrate past. But it was just excellent. Really exciting to be out there on the backroads of rural France and actually seeing the race as it happened. Of course, I have no idea what actually went down during the race but who cares? I was in the Roubaix velodrome to see Tom Boonen win. The roar when he entered was amazing.

New York! New York! New York?

Three New Yorks doesn’t really work but I’m sticking with my theme.

We visited The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). It was packed but worth the visit. They have The Starry Night which, of course, was extremely popular so I only managed to spend a few minutes looking at it before all the camera flashes drove me away. It was wonderful though. They also has some stunning Monets but I was very disappointed in their single Lichtenstein painting on display. I was hoping for more. After all, Roy Lichtenstein worked out of New York for all of his career and I would’ve thought MoMA would’ve had a few more paintings on display.

The Cindy Sherman exhibition surprised me. I’ve never been a fan of her work but it was easily my favourite thing that we viewed. It was amazing to see one artist change her physical appearance so much for her portraiture. There was also a wonderful display of photos by a turn of the century French photographer, Eugène Atget.

The other cool thing was a real helicopter suspended in a floor to ceiling space.

Open umbrella
Your average, run-of-the-mill umbrella right?

Inside of umbrella which is printed to look like a blue sky with clouds
Ta-dah!! This is my new umbrella, bought from the MoMA store. It might be raining but under my brolly it’s all blue sky and fluffy clouds.