Early morning clarity

It's 6 AM and I'm sitting in a small café near my hotel, watching Paris wake up through rain-streaked windows. The city is grey again today, but there's something peaceful about being awake before most tourists, before the museums open, before the crowds arrive.

I couldn't sleep. Not from jet lag anymore—my body has adjusted to European time—but from that familiar restlessness that's been my companion for 291 days now. The kind that makes you lie awake thinking about the 209 days remaining, about what you've learned and what you're still searching for.

The café owner nodded when I walked in, recognizing me from yesterday. He brought coffee without asking—a small gesture that feels significant after three days of feeling displaced here. The coffee is strong and good, though I've stopped comparing everything to what I'd get back home. That's progress, I suppose.

What I came here for

I've been in Paris almost four days now, and I keep thinking about my list. The things I wanted to do here. I've walked along the Seine and photographed those magnificent plane trees—their bark peeling like old maps, revealing layers of cream and olive green underneath. That box is checked.

I've found quiet cafés to write in, like this one. Another check.

But the Musée d'Orsay remains unvisited. I've walked past it twice now, once deterred by the strike chaos, once by the crowds. There's something about museum lines that exhausts me lately. The queuing, the shuffling forward, the pressure to appreciate art on schedule.

Montmartre before the crowds? Haven't made it there yet.

Versailles gardens? Still just an idea.

Père Lachaise Cemetery? On my mental list for today, maybe.

The weight of intentions

Here's what I'm learning: I came to Paris with this list of intentions, these things I was "supposed" to do. Classic Paris experiences. And some of them I genuinely want—I do want to see the Impressionist collection, I do want to walk through those formal gardens.

But there's also this other thing happening. This unplanned rhythm I've fallen into. Yesterday I spent an hour watching a man fish from the embankment. I discovered a tree near Pont Marie that made me stop and stare. I sat in a café in the Marais and just... existed.

These weren't on my list. But they're becoming the experiences I remember.

In Osaka, I learned something about the value of unplanned moments. About how the museum I stumbled into during rain meant more than the castle I'd planned to visit. About how standing under that massive camphor tree while an elderly couple practiced tai chi gave me more clarity than any scheduled activity.

Paris is teaching me the same lesson, just in a different language.

The 6 AM question

Sitting here now, watching a baker across the street arrange croissants in the window (I'll get one before I leave), I'm asking myself: What do I actually want from today?

The forecast says it'll be mostly sunny later, warming up to 27°C. Perfect weather for Père Lachaise or Versailles. Perfect weather to finally brave the Musée d'Orsay line.

But there's also this pull to just... walk. To follow streets without a map. To see where the plane trees lead. To find another café at noon and watch people pass. To let the city show me what it wants to show me.

I have 209 days left. That feels like both plenty of time and not nearly enough. I still haven't figured out how to change the world. I'm not even sure I've figured out how to change myself. But maybe—and this feels important at 6 AM with good coffee and grey light—maybe that's not the point.

Maybe the point is learning to be present in moments like this one. Learning to value the unplanned alongside the planned. Learning that transformation doesn't announce itself with trumpets and clear signs. It happens quietly, in cafés and under trees and while watching fishermen who don't care if you're there or not.

Today's loose plan

I'm going to get that croissant when the bakery opens at 7. I'm going to walk—probably toward Père Lachaise, but I'm not committing. If I end up somewhere else entirely, that's fine too. If I finally make it to the Musée d'Orsay, great. If I spend another day just wandering, equally great.

The weather will improve throughout the day. The city will fill with people. And I'll be here, 196cm of Norwegian IT specialist turned wanderer, trying to learn how to be okay with not having all the answers.

209 days to go. But first: today. Just today.

The baker is unlocking his door.