Walking into the heat
I woke up at 6:15 this morning and lay there listening to Paris wake up outside my window. The heat was already building, that thick stillness in the air before the temperature climbs into the unbearable range.
The red warning is still active. 37°C by noon, they're saying. Maybe higher.
I should probably write about staying inside again. About finding another café with air conditioning, about waiting for evening when the temperature drops below livable. That would be the smart thing to do.
But I'm tired of being smart about it.
So at 7:30, I filled my water bottle, grabbed my camera, and walked out into the morning heat. Not to anywhere specific. Just... out.
The empty streets
The city was quieter than I expected. A few joggers along the Seine, moving slowly in the building warmth. Shop owners opening their shutters with that particular French combination of efficiency and resignation. Everyone knows what's coming today.
I walked east along the river, past the plane trees I've photographed probably fifty times by now. Their leaves hung motionless in the still air. No breeze at all.
A woman was setting up a small flower stand near Pont Marie. She looked up as I passed and said something in French I didn't catch. I think it was about the heat. I nodded and kept walking.
By 8:30, I could feel the sun starting to press down harder. The kind of heat that makes you aware of your own body, your own breathing. The thermometer on a pharmacy window read 29°C. Still climbing.
Place des Vosges
I ended up in Place des Vosges around 9:00. The square was almost empty - just a handful of people sitting in the shade of the arcade, and one man sleeping on a bench under the trees.
The trees. I stood there looking at them for a long time. They're linden trees, I think. Perfectly symmetrical, planted in neat rows around the square. The kind of formal arrangement that appeals to my need for order.
But today they just looked hot. Their leaves dark green and still, providing shade that felt inadequate against what's coming.
I sat down on a bench in the deepest shade I could find and drank half my water bottle in three long swallows.
A couple walked past speaking what sounded like German. The woman was fanning herself with a folded map. They stopped in the center of the square, looked around briefly, then headed back toward the shade. I understood completely.
The question
Sitting there in Place des Vosges, sweating through my shirt at 9:15 in the morning, I kept thinking about that jogger from yesterday. The one who asked if I was okay, who suggested visiting a museum.
What I didn't write about yesterday was what she said next, before she ran off. She looked at me with this expression I couldn't quite read and said: "Sometimes we need to see ourselves doing something before we believe we can do it."
I'm not sure she was talking about museums.
I've been in Paris for three weeks now. I've walked probably a hundred kilometers along the Seine. I've photographed those plane trees in every possible light. I've found cafés with good wifi and quiet corners where I can work. I've learned which streets are shadier, which times are best for walking, where to find the cheapest coffee.
But what have I actually done?
One museum visit in 21 days. That's it. That's what I have to show for three weeks in one of the most interesting cities in the world.
I came here to change. To transform. To figure out how to change the world by changing myself. Those were the words I used in my head when I booked the flight from Osaka.
But you can't transform by staying still.
The heat builds
By 10:00, the temperature had climbed past 32°C and the square was completely empty except for me and the sleeping man. Even the pigeons had found shelter somewhere.
I knew I should head back to the hotel. Find air conditioning. Wait out the worst of it.
But I also knew that if I went back now, I'd spend the rest of the day sitting by my window, watching Paris happen without me. Again.
So I stood up, drank the rest of my water, and started walking.
Jardin du Luxembourg
I'm not sure why I chose Luxembourg Gardens. It was on my list of places to visit, but so were a dozen other places. Maybe because gardens have shade. Maybe because it was far enough to feel like a decision.
The walk took about twenty minutes. By the time I arrived at 10:45, the temperature had hit 34°C and I was drenched in sweat.
But the gardens.
The gardens were full of people who'd had the same idea I did. Families under trees, students sprawled on benches, couples sharing the shade. Everyone moving slowly, carefully, like the heat was something physical we all had to navigate around.
I found a bench near the Medici Fountain and sat down. The fountain itself was surrounded by people - sitting on the edge, trailing their hands in the water, just standing near it like the spray might somehow make things better.
An older woman sat down on the other end of my bench. She had a small dog that immediately collapsed in the shade under the seat, panting.
"Il fait chaud," she said.
I understood that one. "Oui. Très chaud."
She nodded and we sat there in companionable silence, both of us too hot to make conversation.
What I'm learning
I'm writing this now, at 2:15, back in my hotel room with the windows open and a damp towel around my neck. The temperature outside is 37°C. The red warning was accurate.
I walked for almost five hours this morning. Not to anywhere particularly meaningful. Not to check things off my list. Just... out into the city, into the heat, into the day.
And I'm realizing something.
Maybe transformation isn't about visiting all the right places or having profound experiences at famous landmarks. Maybe it's simpler than that.
Maybe it's just about showing up. Even when it's hard. Even when it would be easier to stay inside. Even when the temperature is climbing toward 40°C and every rational part of your brain is telling you to seek shelter.
That jogger yesterday - she was right. I needed to see myself doing something. Not something grand or impressive. Just... something.
Walking out the door at 7:30 this morning felt like a small thing. But right now, sitting here with my shirt drying in the breeze from the window, it feels bigger than that.
It feels like a start.
The evening ahead
The forecast says it won't drop below 30°C until after 10:00 tonight. The red warning continues through tomorrow.
I could stay in again tonight. Wait for the heat to break. Be sensible.
But I'm thinking about that Fête de la Musique from last night. How the whole city came alive when the temperature finally dropped. How people filled the streets and squares, reclaiming Paris from the heat.
Maybe I'll go out again this evening. Not to anywhere specific. Just... out.
Because I'm learning that the opposite of hiding isn't having a perfect plan.
It's just opening the door.
---
Day 300 of 500 200 days until home Currently: 37°C and learning to walk toward things instead of away