A close-up, slightly blurry smartphone photo of a hand holding a coffee cup at a Parisian café table, with the warm, slightly worn interior of the café visible in the background. Sunlight streams through the window, catching dust motes. The focus is on the texture of the ceramic cup and the steam rising, capturing a moment of quiet contemplation. No faces are clearly visible
An authentic, candid shot taken from a low angle in Jardin du Luxembourg, showing a gardener meticulously tending to a young linden tree. The focus is on the gardener's hands, the leaves of the tree, and the rich soil. The background is softly blurred, hinting at the grandeur of the park without being the main subject. The image should feel natural, as if stumbled upon
A slightly off-center, natural light photograph of a weathered stone bench in the Jardin du Luxembourg, with the Medici Fountain visible in the background. The water is perfectly still, reflecting the surrounding greenery. A small portion of an elderly woman's arm and a tiny dog's paw are visible on the edge of the frame, suggesting a shared, silent moment. The overall tone is peaceful and observational

When stillness becomes the destination

I'm writing this from the same café near Place de la République where I've been coming most mornings. It's 8:47, and the owner just brought me my usual coffee without asking. She knows now.

The helicopter announcement caught my attention while I was having breakfast—some commemoration flight over Paris tonight between 8:30 and 8:45. The American 250th anniversary. It made me think about how different my own sense of time has become. Two hundred and fifty years versus three hundred and eleven days. Both feel impossibly long and impossibly short at the same time.

This morning started at 6:30. The temperature was already 18°C, and I could feel what's coming—the forecast shows 30°C today, climbing to 36°C by Monday. The kind of heat that makes you rethink everything.

But I wasn't thinking about the heat when I woke up. I was thinking about leaving.

Not in the restless way. Not in the "I need to move or I'll disappear" way that's driven so much of this journey. Something different. Something that feels like completion rather than escape.

I walked to Jardin du Luxembourg at 7:15. The gates had just opened, and the gardeners were already at work. I've watched them so many times now that I recognize their patterns—the way they check the soil around the potted palms, the careful attention they give to the formal parterres. This morning, one of them was working on a young linden tree near the Medici Fountain. He spent twenty minutes just looking at it, occasionally touching a branch, stepping back to observe from different angles.

I found myself doing the same thing. Looking at Paris. Touching it, in a way. Stepping back.

There's a difference between having seen a place and having known it. I came here with a list—the Seine, Musée d'Orsay, the trees in Luxembourg, Montmartre mornings, authentic croissants. I've done most of those things. But somewhere along the way, the doing stopped being the point.

The knowing happened in the gaps. In the two hours I spent by the Medici Fountain doing nothing. In the morning the museum guard told me to take my time. In the café owner bringing me water without asking. In understanding that the restlessness wasn't something to cure—it was something to listen to.

And now it's quiet.

Not gone. Just... quiet.

I sat by the fountain again this morning, in my usual spot. The water was perfectly still, reflecting the trees and the sculpture above. A woman sat down nearby, maybe in her seventies, with a small dog. We didn't speak, but after a while she said, "C'est beau, non?" Beautiful, isn't it?

"Oui," I said. "Très beau."

She smiled. "You've been here before. I've seen you."

I told her I'd been in Paris for almost ten months. Her eyes widened.

"Dix mois? And you still come to the fountain?"

"Especially now," I said.

She nodded like she understood something I hadn't said. "C'est comme ça. The places we love most, we visit them again at the end."

I hadn't thought of it that way. But she's right.

I'm not leaving Paris tomorrow or next week. My flight isn't until October 7th—ninety-six days from now. But something shifted this morning. The knowing that I will leave has changed how I'm staying.

It's like the gardener with the linden tree. He wasn't fixing anything. He was just... completing his relationship with it. Making sure he'd seen everything he needed to see.

The temperature is climbing now. I can feel it through the café windows. By this afternoon, it'll be too hot to do much. But that's okay. I don't need to do anything.

I need to finish being here.

There are ninety-six days left in Paris. One hundred and eighty-nine days left in the journey. And for the first time since I left Kristiansand, those numbers don't make me anxious. They just tell me how much time I have to complete what I started.

The woman with the dog stood up to leave. Before she went, she turned back.

"You know," she said, "the trees here—they're the same trees Napoleon planted. They've seen so many people come and go. They know the difference between tourists and residents."

"What's the difference?" I asked.

She smiled. "Tourists look at them. Residents sit with them."

I'm still sitting.

The café is filling up now. Morning is becoming day. The heat is becoming real. But I'm in no hurry.

I've learned that leaving well requires staying completely first. And that's what these next ninety-six days are for.

Not to see more. To see fully.

Not to do more. To complete what I've started.

The restlessness was always about searching. Now I know what I was searching for.

The ability to stay.