When the weather decides your day
I had plans this morning. The MusΓ©e d'Orsay was on my list, and I'd mentally prepared myself for the crowds, the queues, the inevitable shuffling through galleries. I even left the hotel at 9:40, giving myself that comfortable twenty-minute buffer.
But Paris had other ideas.
The forecast said 27Β°C and sunny. What it didn't mention was that "sunny" would feel more like standing inside an oven. By the time I reached the Seine, my shirt was already sticking to my back, and the idea of standing in a museum queue seemed less appealing by the minute.
So I didn't.
Instead, I found myself walking along the river, watching the light bounce off the water in that particular way it does when the sun is high and merciless. The plane trees I photographed a few days ago looked different now β their leaves seemed to droop slightly, as if they too were feeling the weight of the heat.
There's something about unexpected weather that forces you to let go of your plans. Not in a frustrated way, but in a liberating one. The museum will still be there tomorrow. The Impressionists aren't going anywhere.
I ended up in a small park near Pont Marie β not one of the famous ones, just a patch of green with a few benches and some remarkably old trees. An elderly man was feeding pigeons from a paper bag, methodically, one piece of bread at a time. A young couple lay on the grass, her head on his stomach, both of them reading. Nobody seemed to be in a hurry.
I sat there for maybe two hours. Just sitting. Watching. Thinking about how I've spent 292 days doing this β moving from place to place, sometimes frantically, sometimes peacefully, but always moving. And here I am in Paris, one of the world's great cities, and my most memorable moments have been the unplanned ones. The translator near Notre-Dame. The cafΓ© owner who remembered my order. The fisherman on the Seine. And now this: a hot Sunday afternoon in a small park, doing absolutely nothing.
The restlessness that's been building β that need to keep moving, to see more, to do more β felt quieter today. Maybe it was the heat making everything slow down. Maybe it was exhaustion. Or maybe it was something else.
I've been thinking about those plane trees again. The way their bark peels away in layers, revealing new patterns underneath. Like the city is constantly shedding old versions of itself. Like I'm supposed to be doing the same.
But what if transformation isn't always dramatic? What if it's just this β sitting in the shade on a hot day, letting go of the plan, being present in a moment that wasn't on any itinerary?
Around 5:00, the heat started to ease slightly. I walked back toward the hotel through streets that were beginning to fill with people again. Families heading out for dinner. Couples strolling hand in hand. The city coming back to life as the temperature dropped.
I passed a small bookshop with its door propped open, and inside, I could see rows of books and a cat sleeping on the counter. The owner was sitting in a chair by the window, reading. Not looking at his phone, not working on a laptop β just reading a physical book.
There was something about that image that made me stop. The simplicity of it. The contentment.
I didn't go in. I just stood there for a moment, watching through the window, and then kept walking.
Back at the hotel now. The sun is lower, painting everything in that golden late-afternoon light that photographers love. Tomorrow is supposed to be even hotter β 29Β°C. The forecast for later this week is actually frightening: 36Β°C on Thursday, possibly reaching 38Β°C by Saturday.
I might need to adjust my plans. Maybe visit Versailles gardens early in the morning before the real heat hits. Or spend more time in air-conditioned museums. Or just find more small parks with old trees and comfortable benches.
208 days left. And for the first time in a while, that number doesn't feel urgent. It just feels like time. Time to be here, in Paris, in the heat, in the moment.
Time to stop planning and just see what happens.