When the heat makes decisions for you

I'm writing this from a small café near Bastille, where the owner just brought me a second glass of water without asking. It's 7:10 in the morning and already 18°C. The news on the radio behind the counter is talking about morgues being strained, about restrictions on alcohol sales, about the hottest day Paris has ever recorded.

I arrived at 6:50, before they officially opened. The owner was sweeping the pavement and just unlocked the door when she saw me waiting. "Vous êtes matinal," she said with a smile that suggested she understood something about people who show up early.

The streets are different this morning. Quieter, maybe. Or maybe it's just that I'm paying attention differently. Yesterday's news about the fatalities—around a thousand people—sits heavy in my chest. These aren't abstract numbers. These are people who were probably just trying to live their lives in a city that suddenly became dangerous.

I've been in Paris for 282 days now. Nine months. Longer than I've stayed anywhere except home. And this morning, sitting here with my coffee (which is good, but I'm learning that's not really the point anymore), I realize something has shifted.

The restlessness that arrived three days ago—the one that made me walk past my usual café, that made me feel like I needed to move—it's not gone. But it's different. It's not the old panic, the feeling that I'm wasting time or missing something. It's quieter. More certain.

I have a train ticket booked for October 7th. Ninety-nine days from now. Three months and a week. When I bought it six weeks ago, it felt impossibly far away. Now it feels like exactly the right amount of time.

The woman at the table next to me is reading a newspaper, fanning herself with the folded pages. She catches me looking and shakes her head. "Incroyable, non?" she says, gesturing at the headline about the heat. I nod. We share a moment of mutual understanding about living through something unprecedented.

I've been thinking about what the museum guard said last week—"Prenez votre temps." Take your time. And about the elderly woman at Père Lachaise during the worst of the heat, how she said "On fait ce qu'on peut" when I asked how she was managing. We do what we can.

Maybe that's what I'm learning here. That taking time doesn't mean staying forever. That being present doesn't mean being static. That you can know it's time to leave and still choose to stay a little longer, not out of fear or avoidance, but because the story isn't quite finished yet.

The café owner brings me a small plate with a croissant I didn't order. "Service," she says with a wink. "Trop chaud pour cuisiner, non?" Too hot to cook. I laugh and thank her. These small acts of kindness in the heat—they mean something.

I'm not sure what I'll do today. The forecast says it will reach 29°C, which sounds almost reasonable after what we've been through. Maybe I'll walk to Père Lachaise again, check on that elderly woman if I can find her. Maybe I'll just sit in the shade somewhere and watch the city adapt to this new reality.

Or maybe I'll start thinking about where I want to go when I leave in October. I've been avoiding that question, afraid that planning the next place means not being present in this one. But I'm starting to understand that's not how it works. You can hold both—gratitude for where you are and anticipation for where you're going.

The radio is now playing something jazzy and cool, incongruous with the heat warnings. The woman with the newspaper has left, but not before nodding at me in that Parisian way that acknowledges shared experience without requiring conversation.

I finish my croissant slowly. Outside, the city is waking up to another day of heat. Inside this small café, with its rotating fan and kind owner and second glass of water, I feel something I haven't felt in a while.

I feel ready.

Not to leave—not yet. But ready to be here, fully here, for these last ninety-nine days. Ready to let Paris finish whatever it started in me back in June. Ready to trust that when October comes, I'll know where to go next.

The heat makes decisions for you sometimes. It forces you to slow down, to choose carefully, to prioritize. And in that forcing, you learn what actually matters.

I pay and thank the owner. She smiles and says "À demain"—see you tomorrow. And I realize she's right. I will be here tomorrow. And the day after. And for many days after that.

Just not forever.

And that's okay.