Showing posts with label Laval. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Laval. Show all posts
Saturday, February 13, 2016
The Flight to Japan hr562
After I checked out the hotel in Laval, I was waiting for the Uber in
front of it. Snow of the day before brought a bitter chill that made me
shiver while I enjoyed a breathtaking view of a clear sky in the early
morning. I was going to the airport where I would take a flight to Japan
via Toronto. No matter how often I travel overseas, I feel extremely
nervous on the morning of a flight every time, fearing that I might miss
the flight. I was lucky, as it happened to be Sunday this time. If it
had been a weekday, I would be crushed by an additional worry of a
traffic jam. While I usually plan anything carefully, luck is an
invincible helper in the end. The Uber driver was a man from the Middle
East, who knew a few Japanese words since his son learned judo. It was
his third day to work as an Uber driver. Because both my partner and I
had wished for something like Uber for a long time and we have been
impressed with its convenient service since we began to use it, my
partner said to the driver that he had a bright future in his new job.
He thanked my partner with deep gratitude and pure joy in his words. At
the airport in Montreal, my partner suddenly claimed that he was very
hungry. I told him to wait until we got to Toronto as we had gotten the
ticket to use the lounge there. He wouldn’t listen and we ended up
paying $25 for the overcharged airport sandwiches. And the airline
company I frequently use, and have troubles with, did it again. Although
I made a reservation and chose the seats well over four months ago,
they had handed the seats to other passengers. If they boast about the
advance seat selection, they need to learn how to hold it. During the
seventy-five-minutes’ crammed flight to Toronto, my partner and I had to
sit separately, and I got water when I asked for apple juice for some
reason. Other than those small incidents, the flight to Japan took off
without any troubles, fortunately. Thirteen hours later the plane would
land and my trip to Canada would come to an end. I was surprised that
there was no Japanese family with noisy children this time that I
usually encounter on the plane. Instead, quite a few Canadian tourists
were on board. Their trip to Japan had just begun and they looked so
happy and excited. I couldn’t understand why they had chosen Japan for
the destination of their trip and how they could be happy about it like
that. I was sitting behind them feeling so depressed to go back to Japan
which houses and buildings are tasteless, which historical spots are
gloomy and dark, which cities are jammed with too many people, and which
families with kids behave obnoxious. I wanted them to tell me even one
charm they found about Japan where I would be stuck again from now. I
suppose every one wants to get out of their daily lives, but of all the
beautiful places in the world, why Japan? In there, I will spend every
day waiting for the day to get out and escape to Montreal and Laval
again, figuring out how to do it…
Labels:
airline,
airport,
Canada,
daily life,
flight,
hotel,
Japan,
Japanese,
Laval,
luck,
Montreal,
reservation,
seat selection,
Toronto,
tourist,
traffic jam,
travel,
trip,
Uber
Saturday, January 30, 2016
A Shopping Mall in Laval hr561
Near the hotel I stayed in, there was an indoor shopping mall called
Carrefour. I walked on the bridge that crossed a 10-lane highway and
caught a glimpse of the glass ceiling of the mall up ahead. As I came
closer, the mall got bigger and more splendid. It was my first visit to
this mall which beauty made my jaw dropped. Although it was a one-story
complex, its ceiling was about three-story high. The passageways are
wide, and in the middle of them, there were cafes, kiosks, shop wagons,
trees, and life-sized decorations that looked like a park. A classic
car-shaped cart was running around to help shoppers who had difficulty
in walking. I felt as if I was strolling around an elegant European town
rather than a mall. It was undoubtedly the most gorgeous, fashionable
mall I’d ever seen. I passed high-class brand shops and bought
accessories on sale at Old Navy. To have lunch, I was headed for the
food court that was the fanciest one I’d ever been. Sunlight came in
through the glass ceiling high above. Glittering chandeliers were
everywhere. The restaurants weren’t just for fast food but for steaks
and seafood as well. I had a Chinese dish at a cozy, clean table with a
gleeful grin all over my face. After lunch, I strolled about the
department store Simons that was on one of the wings of the mall. I
couldn’t tell whether it had to do with a French-spoken region or not,
shoppers there were all fashionable and somehow good-looking. I was
embarrassed that I wasn’t pretty enough for the place and felt the need
of more serious dieting. The merchandise the store carried was colorful
and stylish, which was the kind I rarely found in Japan. By the reason
that I couldn’t get any of those in Japan, I talked myself into impulse
buying of a bag, scarves and gloves. And I took a rest on a bench in the
mall having ice cream. I had never been in such a pleasant mall like
this. Of course Japan has big modern malls in suburbs too, but those are
crammed with idle housewives and noisy kids. Restaurants are
chronically too full with them to get in. Remembering how uncomfortable
life in Japan was, I was impressed by this town Laval afresh. People
were nice and kind. The town was safe and relaxing. And it had this
beautiful and gorgeous mall. I couldn’t believe a place like this
existed on earth. I craved to live here and wished I had money to do so.
I had liked to live in my apartment back in Japan since I moved in five
years ago, but that life seemed miserable now that I knew Laval. Time
is limited. With each passing day, the remaining days of my life
decrease. That thought pressured and threatened me. I was assailed by a
strong urge to move to Laval as soon as possible…
Saturday, January 16, 2016
It Is Laval hr560
On the sixth day of my trip to Montreal, I moved to a different hotel in
a Montreal suburb Laval from downtown. The hotel rates there were a
little cheaper, and I also wanted to visit Laval that I had never been
to even when I lived in Montreal a long time ago. I looked out the
window at the lounge in the hotel. A vast 10-lane highway ran straight
through a wide stretch of plane land covered with greenery as far as the
eye can see, which reminded me of Orlando, Florida. Across the highway
from the hotel was a new building of the space camp attraction beside
which a tall replica of a rocket stood. Right next to them, there was a
movie complex which building had a futuristic, UFO-like shape. Looking
at all of them against the background of twilight, I felt as if I had
traveled through time to the future or I had actually arrived at
Tomorrowland. I thought I should have known and come to Laval sooner. It
was kind of an exquisite mix of openness in Anaheim, California and
chic in Montreal, which added up to an ideal place for me. I wished I
could live here someday. Just before leaving Japan for this trip, I saw
the biggest, clearest rainbow I’d ever seen from my apartment window.
Since I watched a movie ‘The Muppets’, I’ve always felt like there is a
dreamer’s place on the other side of a rainbow as the song in the film
says whenever I come across one. And one morning in Laval, a rainbow
appeared. I was in the bathroom when my partner shouted, “Here’s a huge,
beautiful rainbow!” Although I quickly came out, it had vanished
already, and only my partner’s ecstatic face was there. He had taken a
photo of it and proudly showed it to me, as if he was the chosen one to
have seen it. For some reason, I extremely resented and kept wondering
why I was in the bathroom at that moment. I was grumpy all day long,
thinking that meant I wasn’t good enough to live in Laval, Laval
rejected me, I was disqualified, all of which was merely because of one
missed rainbow. I returned to the hotel room exhausted and still sullen
early in that evening. I casually stood by the window, and saw what was
in front of me. It was a gigantic perfect arch of a rainbow against an
orange sky. I felt awed and relieved at the same time. As the way and
the look of the rainbow that appeared for the second time in one day
were quite mystical, I even thought the rainbow was trying to tell me
something. I may have passed through the big rainbow that I had seen in
Japan and have reached to the opposite side of it. This place could be
that one on the other side of the rainbow. Or, more possibly, three
biggest rainbows ever in a few days simply occurred by sheer chance…
Labels:
Anaheim,
California,
future,
highway,
hotel,
Japan,
Laval,
Montreal,
movie,
movie complex,
Muppets,
Orlando,
rainbow,
rocket,
space camp,
Tomorrowland,
travel,
trip,
twilight,
UFO
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