Taking the first step
The museum opened at 9:30. I was there at 9:20.
Not because I'd planned it the night before. Not because I'd set an alarm or marked it in some calendar. I just woke up at 6:47, couldn't fall back asleep, and by 8:15 I was standing outside my hotel wondering what to do with the day.
The heat warning is still active. Red now, not just orange. Everyone's supposed to stay indoors between 11 AM and 9 PM. Drink water. Find air conditioning. Don't be stupid.
So I walked to Musée d'Orsay.
The streets were quieter than I expected for a Sunday morning during Fête de la Musique. Maybe the heat kept people inside. Maybe they were saving their energy for tonight's concerts. I passed a few joggers who looked like they were already regretting their decision, and a couple setting up equipment for what I assume will be a street performance later.
The Seine was perfectly still. Not a single boat moving yet. Just that glassy surface reflecting the early light, and the plane trees standing watch along the banks like they've been doing for decades.
I've photographed those trees maybe twenty times in the past three weeks. Different angles, different light, same trees. At some point you have to admit you're just avoiding going inside anywhere.
The building itself
Musée d'Orsay sits in an old railway station. I'd read that somewhere before coming to Paris, but standing in front of it this morning, I finally understood what that meant. The architecture is this beautiful mix of industrial and ornate—iron and glass and stone all working together in a way that shouldn't make sense but does.
There was already a small queue forming when I arrived. Not terrible, maybe fifteen people. A family speaking what sounded like Portuguese. Two young women with matching backpacks taking selfies. An older man by himself, reading a book while he waited.
The doors opened exactly at 9:30.
Inside
The main hall is overwhelming in the best way. That massive vaulted ceiling, the natural light pouring through the glass roof, the sculptures arranged down the center like a procession leading you forward. I stood there for probably five minutes just taking it in.
A museum guard noticed me standing still and asked in French if I needed directions. I said no, I was fine, just looking. She smiled and said something I didn't quite catch but I think it was about taking your time.
I started on the ground floor with the sculptures. Rodin, Carpeaux, Camille Claudel. There's something about sculpture that forces you to slow down. You have to walk around them, see them from different angles, understand how the light changes their form.
Then up to the Impressionist galleries on the fifth floor.
The paintings
I'm not going to pretend I understood everything I saw. I'm not an art critic or a historian. But standing in front of Monet's water lilies, I got it. Not intellectually—I got it in my chest, in that same place where restlessness usually sits.
The way he painted light on water. The way the colors blur and blend but somehow your brain still sees a garden, a pond, reflections. It reminded me of sitting by the Seine these past weeks, watching the light change on the surface, trying to photograph something that's constantly moving.
You can't capture it. That's the point. You can only try.
I spent maybe an hour in those galleries. Renoir's dancers. Degas's ballet scenes. Cézanne's landscapes that feel like they're about to dissolve into pure color and form. Van Gogh's self-portrait where his eyes look right through you.
There was a bench in front of one of the larger Monet pieces. I sat down, mostly because my legs were tired, but also because I wanted to just... sit with it. A couple came and sat next to me. We didn't talk. We just looked at the painting together for a while, then they left, and I stayed.
The jogger was right
Yesterday morning by the Seine, that jogger stopped and asked if I was okay. Suggested I visit a museum to escape the heat. At the time I thought it was just a polite French person being concerned about a confused tourist.
But maybe he saw something I didn't want to admit. That I'd been standing in the same spot for twenty minutes, photographing the same trees I'd photographed the day before and the day before that. That I looked like someone who needed a reason to move.
The museum gave me that reason.
Not because the art was transformative or life-changing or any of those big words we use when we want experiences to mean more than they do. It was simpler than that. I just... went somewhere. Did something. Showed up.
Walking back
By the time I left it was almost noon, and the heat was already brutal. 34°C according to my phone. The streets were nearly empty now. Everyone following the warnings, staying inside, being sensible.
I walked anyway. Slower than usual, stopping in every patch of shade I could find, but I walked. Past the Seine again, past the plane trees, past cafés with their terraces empty except for a few brave souls drinking water and looking miserable.
Music was starting to drift from different directions. Someone practicing guitar in an apartment above. A street performer setting up speakers. The city preparing for tonight's celebration even as the heat tries to shut everything down.
I won't go to the concerts. Not in this heat. But I can hear them from my hotel window, and that feels like enough.
What happens next
I have 201 days left. Paris has been home for almost three weeks now, and I still haven't seen half the things I wanted to see. Père Lachaise Cemetery. Versailles gardens. Montmartre in the early morning. The Promenade Plantée.
My flight isn't until October 7th. That's 108 days from now. More than three months.
That's both too long and not long enough. Too long to keep hiding in my hotel room. Not long enough to figure out what I'm supposed to be learning from all of this.
But maybe that's okay. Maybe going to one museum on one hot Sunday morning is enough for today. Maybe showing up is enough.
The jogger didn't know he'd get me moving. The museum guard didn't know her smile would make me feel welcome. The couple on the bench didn't know they were giving me permission to just sit and look without feeling like I had to understand everything.
Small moments. Small actions. Small steps.
I'm learning that's how transformation actually works. Not in big dramatic revelations, but in the decision to walk out your hotel door at 8:15 on a Sunday morning when you could have stayed in bed.
The rest will come. Or it won't. Either way, I showed up today.
That's something.