I am a sucker for all things French. If something is labled "French" I will buy it. If something sounds French, I will listen to it. If a movie is made in France by French people I will pretend to enjoy and understand it. I want to be French. I have always wanted to be French.

Keep in mind I have never been to France, nor have I ever eaten a real croissant. I have only been there a thousand times in my detail oriented imagination. I have tasted a thousand croissants, but never once consumed a calorie. I know what it feels like to have the sun shine on my face as I sit on a Parisian park bench and eat the fabled croissant. Or maybe it's lunch time and I am having a jambon buerre ( the equivalent of a ham sandwich here, but without all the crap. Just ham, butter, baguette).
I could go on and on and on with all the sights, sounds, tastes, and smells I have experienced over the years. But they will all have to wait their turn. All in good time, my pretties, all in good time.Now to explain the French Logic part. That is much more complicated. As are the French. The best example I have ever seen of French logic is this apparently true story.
A certain Chodric-Duclos, who was a stanch loyalist, found himself during the revolution of 1830 close to the barricade, from the top of which some boys were firing at the Swiss Guards of course they aimed badly, and their bullets went far beside the mark. Duclos, who was a magnificent shot, felt disgusted at the waste of powder and shot, quietly crept to the back of the structure and clambered up.
"You ought to be ashamed of yourselves" he said to the astonished lads; "when I was your age I could spot my man at a hundred yards. Let me show you how to do it."
And forthwith he takes up one musket and brings down a Swiss Guard, then another, and a third. The workmen standing below and looking out of the windows applauded frantically, and bade him "Go on."
"I can't!" he shouts; then explains: "You see, I belong to their side. I only came up here to show these lads how to do it."
No one but the logical Frenchman would have been capable of such ludicrously illogical conduct.
-from The New York Times archives, August 29, 1895, "French Men and Manners"

How is it that nobody has written a comment here?! Well, truth be told I am a French junkie as well and your first paragraph sums of the very pathetic/noble desires of my heart to be French as well. Oh to have the true croissant and a box full of macaroons!
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