news&views Autumn 2020 | Page 23

A Flâneuse in Paris Alison Browne | Article & Photos The art of slowing down has never been so accessible. In the past, decelerating the pace of life was reserved for holidays and retirees. With COVID-19, the whole world has been interrupted and as we cautiously resume normal life, a shift in our very existence is present. Slowing down a fast-paced lifestyle has been a gift to many. People have picked up paintbrushes and knitting needles. Connections, albeit at a Zoom distance, have never been so cherished. Millions of book pages have been turned. Many countries ran out of flour with the resurgence in baking. The amount of family time spent together was unprecedented. I spent my confinement in Paris. It was a choice I made. I arrived on a one-year visa just weeks before the borders closed. Slowing down in Paris was unforgettable, a chance to connect to the empty city laid bare before me. Is it selfish to speak of this gift in a country that has already lost over 30,000 lives to the coronavirus? Probably. But in my small world ambling down the middle of eerily vacant cobblestone streets in Paris seemed like the most unique of situations to relish. It wasn’t a far stretch from my preferred way to travel. Pico Iyer’s timeless quote is my mantra for travel. “Travel is like love … mostly because it’s a heightened state of awareness, in which we are mindful, receptive, undimmed by familiarity and ready to be transformed. That is why the best trips, like the best love affairs, never really end.” In Paris, I love to step into my alter-ego of flâneuse and become a passionate observer of lived moments. Flâner, a common word in France, hails from the French poet Charles Baudelaire. In the nineteenth century, to flâner was a gentleman’s prerogative. The flâneur could leisurely stroll the streets of Paris, frequent cafés, and observe local life. news&views AUTUMN 2020 | 23