When the heat makes you stay inside

Woke up at 6:30 this morning, which has become my routine here. The hotel room was already warm despite the air conditioning running all night. Checked my phone: 21°C outside, but forecast to hit 33°C by afternoon. The yellow weather warning is still active.

I had plans. The Musée d'Orsay has been on my list since I arrived, and I thought today would be the day. Early morning visit, beat the crowds, spend a few hours with the Impressionists. But when I opened the curtains and saw the haze already forming over the rooftops, I knew those plans were changing.

Sometimes travel is about letting go of what you thought you'd do.

Made it to the café by 7:45. The owner had my coffee ready before I reached the counter - this small gesture still catches me off guard. Sat by the window and watched the street slowly wake up. A delivery truck double-parked. A woman walked past with two small dogs. The bakery across the street turned on its lights.

The couple who've been painting near Pont Marie walked past around 8:15, carrying their easel and supplies. They waved. I waved back. We've never spoken, but there's something comforting about these repeated encounters, these small acknowledgments that we're all here, moving through the same spaces.

By 8:30, I could feel the temperature rising. The air had that thick quality that makes you want to move slowly, deliberately. I paid for my coffee and walked back to the hotel, taking the shaded side of the street.

And now I'm here, in my air-conditioned room, writing this at 9:00 while the city outside begins to bake.

The thing is, I don't feel guilty about changing my plans. A month ago, maybe even two weeks ago, I would have pushed through. Would have gone to the museum anyway, dealt with the heat, ticked it off my list. But something's shifted. Maybe it's the 295 days of constant movement. Maybe it's Paris itself, this city that seems to encourage a different pace.

Or maybe I'm finally learning that sometimes the best thing you can do is nothing.

I've been thinking about those bucket list destinations I wrote down before I left Norway. Bali, South Africa, Peru, Iran, that road trip across the USA. They're still there, still possibilities, but they feel less urgent now. Less like items to check off and more like... options. Maybes. Things that might happen if the timing feels right.

I have 205 days left. That's still a lot of days. And right now, with the temperature climbing toward 33°C and a heatwave settling over Paris, I'm okay with spending this particular day inside.

I'll probably venture out later, when the sun starts to drop. Maybe walk along the Seine again, find that small park near Pont Marie. Or maybe I'll just stay here, read, write, let the day pass quietly.

The Musée d'Orsay will still be there tomorrow. Or next week. Or maybe I won't go at all.

That thought doesn't bother me as much as it should.

Outside my window, I can see the heat shimmer starting to rise from the pavement. Someone just walked past holding a bottle of water, their shirt already showing sweat stains. The weather alert on my phone keeps reminding me about the extreme temperatures, advising people to stay indoors during peak heat hours.

So that's what I'm doing. Staying inside. Being still. Letting Paris happen without me for a few hours.

Maybe this is part of the transformation I've been looking for - learning when to stop moving, when to simply be where you are, even if where you are is just a hotel room with decent air conditioning.

The restlessness is quiet today. Not gone, but manageable. Distant.

I'll take it.