When the heat becomes the teacher
I woke up at 7:00 to the sound of sirens.
Not unusual in a big city, but these felt different. More frequent. More urgent. I checked my phone: 26°C already. The red alert extended through tomorrow. Another article about hospitals at capacity.
I lay there thinking about yesterday's post—about wanting versus doing, about the weight of all these places I haven't seen. The Louvre. Versailles. The Promenade Plantée. That list I made when I first arrived here.
Then I looked at the weather forecast again. 38°C today, possibly higher. Heat index making it feel like 42°C.
The restlessness was there, that familiar pressure to move, to see, to do. But underneath it, something quieter was emerging.
Maybe the heat itself is teaching me something.
The morning decision
I got dressed slowly. Drank water. More water. Checked the news: public alcohol ban from noon today through Sunday morning. Tourist sites closing early. Eurostar cancellations. The Eiffel Tower shut down yesterday afternoon.
My IT brain wanted to debug this problem: optimize the route, find the air-conditioned museums still open, maximize the limited hours before everything closes.
But that quieter voice kept asking: what if the point isn't to see everything? What if the point is to be here, in this heat, in this moment, learning what it has to teach?
I thought about that museum guard from last week. "Take time," she said.
So I made a decision. No Louvre today. No rushing to fit in monuments before they close. Just... one thing. One intentional thing.
I would walk to Père Lachaise Cemetery.
Walking into the heat
I left the hotel at 9:40.
The streets were already quiet in that eerie way that comes with extreme weather. A few tourists hurrying between patches of shade. Locals moving slowly, deliberately. A woman setting up a cooling station in a small park, arranging bottles of water on a folding table.
"Come back this afternoon if you need," she called to me in French. I thanked her, feeling that familiar warmth that has nothing to do with temperature.
The walk took forty minutes. Normally I'd probably do it in thirty, but I stopped often. Drank water. Stood in shade. Watched Paris adapt to the heat.
A café owner was hosing down the pavement outside his shop, creating temporary pools of coolness. An elderly man sat on a bench with a wet towel around his neck, reading a newspaper like it was any other day. Two teenagers were filling water bottles at a public fountain, laughing about something.
Life continuing. Not stopping, not hiding, just... adjusting.
Among the trees and stones
Père Lachaise was different in the heat.
I'd been wanting to visit since I arrived in Paris—partly for the famous graves, but mostly for the trees. The cemetery is essentially a forest, 44 hectares of mature trees creating their own microclimate within the city.
And today, that forest was a sanctuary.
The temperature dropped maybe five degrees under the canopy. The air felt different—still hot, but breathable. The trees were doing what trees do: creating shade, releasing moisture, making the unbearable a little more bearable.
I walked the paths slowly, no destination in mind. Past elaborate tombs and simple stones. Past families placing flowers. Past other heat refugees seeking shade and quiet.
I found myself at Oscar Wilde's tomb—the one covered in lipstick kisses, though they've put up a barrier now to protect it. Someone had left a fresh rose despite the heat.
Then I just walked. Following paths that looked interesting. Stopping to look at trees—a massive copper beech, ancient plane trees, lindens with their heart-shaped leaves. Reading names on stones. Thinking about mortality and transformation and what it means to leave something behind.
At one point I sat on a bench in the shade of a chestnut tree and just breathed. Drank water. Watched light filter through leaves. Listened to birds that somehow still had energy to sing.
I don't know how long I sat there. Maybe twenty minutes. Maybe an hour.
Time felt different in the heat, in the shade, among the dead and the trees.
The walk back
By the time I started back, it was nearly noon. The temperature had climbed to 35°C. The alcohol ban was in effect. The streets were even emptier.
I took a different route, through residential neighborhoods. Saw apartments with all the shutters closed. Heard the hum of air conditioners where people could afford them. Passed a small grocery store with a sign: "Glace et eau fraîche disponible"—ice and cold water available.
I stopped in a small park and sat under a tree—another plane tree, the kind that lines the Seine. A mother was there with two children, playing quietly in the shade. The kids were making patterns with leaves and twigs, completely absorbed.
The mother caught my eye and smiled that universal parent smile: grateful for a moment of peace.
I thought about yesterday's post again. About wanting to visit the Louvre, to see Versailles, to walk the Promenade Plantée. About the weight of all those unchecked boxes.
But today I'd done one thing. Walked to a cemetery. Sat among trees. Watched light through leaves. Breathed.
And somehow that felt like enough.
Back at the hotel
It's 12:30 now. I'm in my room with the windows closed and the fan running. I've drunk maybe two liters of water since I got back.
The news is showing footage of cooling stations around the city. Interviews with doctors urging people to stay inside during peak heat. Updates on train cancellations and museum closures.
I'm thinking about the next 102 days until my flight to wherever comes next. About this restlessness that's been building, this pressure to move, to see more of the world.
But I'm also thinking about that quieter voice. The one that asked: what if the point isn't to see everything?
What if some days, the lesson is simply to show up? To walk into the heat and find the shade. To sit under a tree and breathe. To let one intentional thing be enough.
The trees at Père Lachaise have been there for decades, some for centuries. They've weathered countless heatwaves, countless storms. They don't rush. They don't try to be everywhere at once.
They just grow. Slowly. Steadily. Creating shade for whoever needs it.
Maybe that's what transformation looks like. Not dramatic change, but steady growth. Not seeing everything, but being present for something.
I don't know. The heat makes it hard to think clearly.
But I know this: tomorrow will be hot again. Red alert extended. Museums closing early. Life adjusting.
And I'll make another decision. Maybe I'll stay in. Maybe I'll find another shaded walk. Maybe I'll finally visit that café I keep passing.
One thing at a time.
Taking time.
Learning what the heat has to teach.