It seems that every day holds one moment of pure happiness.
It always lands at a different time; never following any precise pattern.
Just one moment of
pure
contentment.
Sometimes it lasts for a long time,
And sometimes, it's an evanescent spark.
A moment of happiness I would like to elaborate on with you occurred yesterday, in Marseilles, during the descent of a gigantic hill borderline mountain.
On the way up, I literally thought I was going to die.
I was just so unhappy.
I really wish I could tell you that I enjoy vigorous and painful exercise, but no, unfortunately, that's just not my forté.
So I finally see a light at the end of a tunnel...the hill is almost mounted! Ah yes, sweet sweet victory.
Not exactly.
After this monstrous hill, my friends, lie three grand sets of cold hard concrete stairs.
I remember standing there facing that staircase to heaven watching everyone else be a trooper and climb up. I wished that when I was three and tried soccer and all those other adorable team sports I didn't kick the ball into the wrong net, or strike out every time, so then I would have stuck with those sports and have been athletic right now in my life. And then, if I didn't kick the ball into the wrong net, and I scored a home run, I would be feeling fantastic mounting those stairs.
But no.
Samantha is highly unathletic.
So Samantha just looked at her skinny legs, and pretended to not hear their cries of utter distress as she forced them to climb.
When we finally reached the top, I sounded like a donkey entering vigorous labor. However, once I got over my exhaustion and was able to turn around and absorb the view, I found myself in an alternate reality. I was standing on a balcony above the entire city. I saw every corner of Marseilles from above. I was like a bird - flying high. The entire city was practically in the palm of my hand. And then, after the city was the great Mediterranean -- it stretched far and wide. And then it was broken up by islands. Islands which struggled their way to surface but are now standing tall and strong.
I think that I was on one of those islands, on the third day of the trip. I looked down at that island on which I thought my feet have trodden and I felt like I was looking through a wormhole on my past self. It was only the third day of the trip. I was still in the semi jet lagged excitement of first getting to France. There was so much I haven't learned yet. So many people I haven't gotten to know. So many experiences, lacking from my memory.
So I kind of experienced a sensory overload.
Just a tad.
Because, mes amis, we were served the food.
And then.
After all of that.
We descended the mountain of the city.
We were high on life and felt like we earned what we saw. And now we are all returning with food in our belly's and a picture of possibly on of the most incredible views, burned forever in our memories.
And that. That, my friends, was my moment of pure and complete bliss.
