I used to be described as an impulse decision maker. Julien says I possess the ability to reason from A-Z without stopping at BCDE.....) and come to the right decision. In recent years though, I've tamed myself and learned through my marriage to "slow down" for the sake of my husband and everyone else who reasons differently. While we often come to the same conclusion, I've learned to bite my tongue and let him go through A, then B, then C all the way to Z so he can process everything and come to his conclusion without me pointing out what, (to me), is the obvious choice.
Every once in a while, though, that impulsivity breaks through, and I end up doing something that, to most, seems kind of nuts.
Case and point.
I was transferring photos from last summer to the external hard drive and reminiscing about the fun times with our extended family and dear friends in Paris. That took me to pictures of our old flat with its view of the Eiffel Tower. Which led to my taste buds tingling for foie gras with onion jelly and a fresh crusty baguette with hand churned butter. Which led to me thinking about the next time we could go back and enjoy the Tuileries garden and walk along the Seine river. Which led to me remembering all the good times in Paris (obviously forgetting the hard ones). Which led to homesickness for the land I called home for so many years.
I sighed and turned off the computer and came upstairs to clean for the 90th time that day. Our house is for sale, you see, and with regular showings and 3 little kids, it's a full time job keeping it show ready. As I was tidying, an idea started to form in my head. "What if we went back in October or November? We could surprise the family! Hmm, a whole 2 weeks without having to keep the house ready? Sounds good to me!"
So I worked out my not-really-serious-just-a-dream- plan in mu head, finished my tasks and went back to look for flights to the city of lights.
Tickets, of course, were unreasonably expensive. Layovers were too long between flights. The dates I thought could possible work didn't for one reason or another. And then, at the bottom of one flight search, a bright blinking sign: "Vancouver Paris flights up to 70%off!"
I never click. Like, ever. But this time, for whatever reason, I did. A flight, leaving less than 2 days later, had a huge fare drop. It was direct, no layovers. Cue my impulsivity.
My plan from A-Z was complete in less than 2 seconds, I called my husband, rattled off the details, got his accord, and threw myself headlong into buying the tickets for myself.
Voila, that's the story of how I "impulsively" bought tickets for a "whirlwind"trip to Paris. I am elated, excited for my girls to stay in their other homeland for a bit and see their much-missed and often thought-about family.
While it looks to the world that this is a crazy, random, whirlwind of a thing to do, I actually think it's been a long time coming. A taste of extreme joy in the midst of a very tough year. A year where I was diagnosed with a rare neurological disorder that causes migraines, temporary paralysis and painful pins and needles on a permanent basis and for which there is no known cure. A year of illness, surgery and then emergency surgery for my youngest baby. A year of watching a few loved ones battle cancer. A year with no breaks or reprieve or breathing time. And I feel very very blessed to be able to go and change up the daily status quo, to spend time in prayer and read my Bible in one of the most beautiful cities on earth (minus the doggy-doo; you can read that story here)
I have to admit that I am kind of terrified for the flight, but many have gone before me, and all I can do is take it minute by minute (and excessively bribe my children to be perfect little angels!
So for now, please pray a Bon voyage for us, and au revoir et a tres bientot!