When the heat breaks
I woke up at 5:30 to rain.
Not the heavy thunderstorm kind that Paris had yesterday afternoon, the kind that makes you think the world is ending. This was gentler. Steady. The kind of rain that sounds like an apology.
I lay there listening to it against the window, feeling the temperature drop degree by degree. My phone said 24°C. Yesterday at this time it was already 28°C and climbing toward that impossible 40°C that made the whole city feel like it was holding its breath.
The red alert expires at midnight tonight. Twenty-four more hours of official extreme heat warning, but the worst is over. You can feel it in the air, in the way the rain sounds almost celebratory.
I got up at 6:00 and made coffee with the little kettle in my room. Stood by the window watching Paris wake up in the rain. The streets were empty except for a few early runners, people who'd clearly been waiting for exactly this moment - when it was finally cool enough to move again.
The past few days feel like they happened to someone else. That version of me who walked to Musée d'Orsay in 35°C heat. Who sat in that café while tourists complained about the temperature. Who stood by the Seine watching that jogger disappear into the morning.
I keep thinking about what that museum guard said. The one who smiled when I told her I was just looking, not lost. Something about taking your time. My French isn't good enough to catch all the nuances, but I understood the sentiment.
That's what I've been doing here, isn't it? Taking my time. Too much time, maybe. Paris has been in my plans since before I left Kristiansand - one of those cities you dream about visiting properly, not just passing through. And I've been here almost three weeks now.
Three weeks of heat and stillness and small decisions that felt enormous. Walk to a museum. Sit in a café. Go out at night when the music finds you. Each one a tiny revolution against the inertia that had settled over me like that red alert haze.
The rain is lighter now. I can see people starting to emerge - the café across the street opening its doors, a woman walking her dog, a delivery truck making its rounds. Paris returning to itself after days of being suspended in amber heat.
I'm thinking about leaving.
Not today. Not tomorrow. But soon. That familiar restlessness is back, the one that's been my companion for 302 days now. Except it feels different this time. Less like running away, more like... readiness.
I came to Paris because I had a flight from Osaka and needed somewhere to go. Chose it partly because it felt significant - the city of transformation, of art, of revolution. All those grand ideas we attach to places when we want our travels to mean something.
But what's actually happened here is smaller than that. Quieter. I stopped moving for a while. Sat still in the heat. Made myself walk out the door when staying in felt easier. Went to a museum just because someone suggested it. Danced in a square because the music was there.
Small things. The kind you don't write home about. The kind that don't look like transformation from the outside.
Except maybe that's exactly what transformation looks like.
The temperature is supposed to stay around 28°C today. Manageable. Normal for June in Paris, even if it's still warmer than I'd like. The Eiffel Tower and Louvre will probably open regular hours again. The city will exhale.
I think I'll go for a walk this morning. A real one, not the survival shuffle I've been doing the past few days. Maybe toward Père Lachaise - I've been meaning to see those ancient trees, to walk among the graves and think about mortality and time and all those big questions that seem more manageable when you're surrounded by centuries of other people's lives.
Or maybe I'll just walk. No destination, no plan. Just movement for its own sake, because I can again.
There's something about weather breaking that makes you realize how much it was affecting you. The heat wasn't just uncomfortable - it was limiting. Making every decision feel heavier, every action more difficult. And now that it's lifting, I can feel the space opening up again. Possibilities returning.
I have 198 days left. That number used to terrify me - so much time, so many places I haven't seen, so many experiences I haven't had. Now it feels different. More like an invitation than a countdown.
The rain has stopped. The clouds are breaking up, showing patches of that pale Paris sky. The temperature will climb today, but not to yesterday's extremes. Not to that impossible heat that made the whole city slow down and reconsider.
I'm finishing my coffee and watching the light change. In an hour or so I'll head out. See where my feet take me. Maybe toward those trees I've been wanting to photograph. Maybe toward a new café where I can sit and write properly, not just scribble notes in my phone while trying to stay cool.
Maybe just toward whatever comes next.
Because that's what this whole journey is, isn't it? One next thing after another. Sometimes dramatic and transformative. Sometimes just walking out your hotel door on a Wednesday morning after the rain.
Both matter. Both count.
I'm learning that too.