“I
took the opium of dream in order to face the hideousness of life.”
The body is a
curious thing, we breathe air, we walk on our feet on the constructed path ways
of civilization, we close our eyes to the truth but can let our bodies go to a
point where are subconscious dreams come alive, these dreams of the events,
facts everyday faces and things we see, we have restrictions, we are not
boundless, limitations are shown by the outer layers of our skin, but the body
can let go completely where the back arches in a cry of pleasure in a moment of
pure ecstasy.  
The body is a curious
thing, we are produced by a body, we exit the womb, into a world produced by
bodies, then exit the earth engraved into the dirt of the world, cells,
microscopic bits of our previous body remain as a piece of the earths history
that has been developing for centuries on end. The cycle happens again, and in
each life you have you become something else, develop an aspect you were in a
previous life, I believe that when one dies you wake up as someone else, a new
born about to start in this world all over until you reach a point of
understanding and of serenity you had not achieved in your past lives. Dreams
allow you to venture into all aspects of your life, they allow you to feel and
experience things that you might never do in reality. Like Miller who says he " believes that only a
dreamer who has fear neither of life nor death will discover this infinitesimal
iota of force which will hurtle the cosmos into whack- instantaneously" (Miller). This idea of achieving a certain level of discovery of
ones inner workings will allow you to move forward. The way Miller goes about
in his writing for Walk Up Down China shows
just how much this idea of liberty of the body has, how far can one venture
into their subconscious of dreams, how one is able to explore the unknown territory
that is of the human body, an unusual specimen that has achieved so much over centuries.
We are an animal by nature, we derive from an animalistic past, and we are
drawn by the unknown always entering uncharted waters. 
This concept of
freedom and liberty is something that ties perfectly with the body, knowing
just how free are we? Just how much freedom do we get as a human, we have been
pre enrolled into the mankinds idea and perception of how this civilization
should function. We came out of the womb into a pre determined world that one
day one would have to follow the past and its present, moving future, staying
between the lines of the body and the civilization one lives in. A nation where
we are at “a pre natal condition- the born man living unborn, the unborn man
dying born” (Miller).
Understanding the limitations of the body and its interaction with its
surroundings is one that Henry Miller focuses on in his piece of Walk up down
China, an exploration of the dreams and the mind of a man, understanding where
one lies in this world, what is ones place, “the more I think of it the more I am
convinced that what disturbs me is not whether I am dreaming or insane but
whether the man on the sidewalk, the man with arms outstretches, was
myself”(Miller). 
Freedom. What does this world signify?
How does one let themselves go to a point of no return, how is one to exceed
the expectations of oneself, and allow thyself to venture into your darkest
desires and brightest dreams. How do we know to what point is ok to explore our
imagination in reality, can we only explore the pleasures and desires and
dreams we have within the lines of our mind our can we tare apart this
civilization and rules and laws to experiment with the ideas of the creative,
the outsiders. Henry Miller perfectly questions this idea of dreams and how one
it to go about it, how one finds oneself in dreams, for dreams is a place where
our body doesn’t even control, our mind doesn’t control the images we see, our
subconscious the depths of our mind is the one that allows us an inch of
freedom every night if we’re lucky. Miller poses  “if it is possible to leave the
body in dream, or in death, perhaps it is possible to leave the body forever,
to wander endlessly embodied, unhooked, a nameless identity, or an unidentified
name, a soul unattached, indifferent to everything, a soul immortal, perhaps
incorruptible, like god- who can say?”(Miller). 
This idea
of liberation, a state of freedom, allowing ones imagination run wild and
explore the jungle of the mind, letting their visions comes through their
creativity by means of paintings, writings, music, performance etc. Often
American expatriate writers coming to Paris during the 19th -20th
century felt that they could achieve their explorations of their pleasures far
greater there than where they came from. That “of itself Paris initiates no dramas, they
are begun elsewhere. Paris is simply an obstetrical instrument that tears the
living embryo from the womb and puts it in the incubator. Paris is the cradle
of the artificial births. Rocking her in the cradle each one slips back into
his soul”(Pizer). As Donald Pizer says in his text the Sexual
Geography of Expatriate Paris, demonstrates that Paris cuts this connection to the rules and laws one
perhaps faced in a different place and allows them this feeling of limitless
exploration. He explains that authors such as Hemingway, Stein, and Alice
Toklas and so on created in their works this idea that Paris allowed them to
explore their dreams with pen and paper. They were allowed to dance in their
minds, explore the pleasures of life, and explore the desires they shared. 
Walking down the streets in my little red polka
doted dress with my red youthful curls bouncing as a took each step, holding my
fathers hand and a vanilla ice-cream in a brown caramelized cone we walked down
the streets of Paris. My ten-year-old feet in their black little rounded shoes
braced the cobbled stone pavements; my sweet innocent eyes admired the
illustrational lamps shining above our heads. In each little window had a
display of some new novel, delicious chocolates, beautiful chandeliers, or a
fascinating painting, and the smell of the sweet, oh so sweet mouthwatering
pastries being crafted from the boulangeries. It was the first time I was in
Paris, the beauty and femininity of the city played with my mind, I wanted to
visit more, I was enchanted by the narrative aura of the architecture, the way
the women in their café chair with their red Chanel tinted lips, gazed at the
handsome men, their laugh and their quick tongues effortlessly displaying their
knowledge for various subjects in French. At that point I was in a French lycee
in Norway, (a colder more reserved place, business, law dominated), and was
beginning to understand it and speak it, but hearing it for the first time from
a Parisian man and woman was exciting. Ever since I was younger I was drawn to
stories taking place in a Victorian time but always-fictional novels. I was
never interested by the non-fiction stories; I’d rather see an image of
someone’s imagination placed by words on a paper than seeing someone’s
biography stated on a sheet. With this love for romantic stories I picked up on
the qualities of such endeavors when I was a young girl walking through the
Eiffel tower park at night as the lights began to sparkle, it was a city I
could feel bursts with life, art and creativity. I was young with an innocence,
no sexual connotations. Yet within this purity I could feel the passion the
city held, I could sense the romantic, fictisious aura of Paris was evident,
however as I come back from the various countries I’ve lived in and been too, this
romantic view of Paris has always remained, and has enhanced, for Paris truly
manages to capture beauty and art in one. However by reading numerous authors
works I can see how they take this romance one step further to love, to love
making, this sexual connection between Paris and an artists is a theme that
often conjures up.  
Artists
I feel no matter where they are positioned will always want to venture into the
world of the unknown, will forever want to explore their bodies and experiment
with this boundary of life. Paris will help bring this out “a late afternoon and the
heavy whiteness of it are stifling. A heavy somnolent whiteness, like the belly of a jaded woman. Back and forward the blood ebbs, the contours
rounded with soft light, the huge billowy cupolas taut as savage
teats.”(Miller). In this piece Miller compares Sacre Coeur to a woman’s body,
this relationship between Paris architecture is easily compared to feminine
traits, this city lends itself to such ideas and perceptions. Miller even goes
to say that wandering around Paris if one gets lost you have a way of coming
back to where you wanted to be, Paris lets you get lost in your imagination,
it’s a canvas for many authors, painters, musicians. Paris does have a way of
capturing the artist, has a way of teasing the artists with her beauty and rich
culture and history, it intises the viewer, it’s said to be one of the most
romantic cities in the world, if not the most romantic city in the world. Thus evidently
expatriates will read the novels by the great American writers and think that
these authors somewhat fictious realities will be their truths. I think Paris
is a beautiful place, and can lend itself to rather sexual and passionate view
and ideas, however the experience you have in Paris shapes the way you perceive
it. I have had a great experiences here and it continues to surpass my
expectations and wildest dreams, thus for me this city is a place of great
seduction and allure and permits me to with its restrictions roam freely in her
realm. Like Miller once said “the streets swarm through my fingers, I gather the whole of France in my
one hand, in the honeycomb I am, in the warm belly of the sphinx”(Miller).