I’ve found a place in the shade in Luxembourg Gardens to sit and rest my feet. A cool green breeze blows. I hear birds twittering and wind in the leaves, and the air smells fresh and crisp. My eyes are soothed by the curves of the garden paths, the trees and flowers and sculptures, the people reclining in park chairs reading books with their feet up. I hear the crunch of feet on the gravel and sand path, and pigeons bob their heads in the dappled shade from the trees above me. Are these the horse chestnuts?
-Sunday June 1, 2025
Brian and I walked the empty city this morning, picking our way through the wreckage of last night’s Champions League win while cleanup crews swept loose garbage into piles to be hoovered by the mechanized street sweepers. Crews had already gotten to some streets, and those were pristine; other sidewalks barely had empty spots to put our feet without stepping on trash. Our destination was Notre Dame. We wanted to see it without the massive crowds. We didn’t go inside, the lines were too long even early in the morning, but the grounds weren’t crowded when we got there, the streets around it were clean, and we were able to spend some time with the cathedral, spellbound and in awe of the intricacy of it.


We went back to the apartment after our walk, and then I was ready for my One Thing in Paris: Jardin du Luxembourg.
I’m so happy here. The bird song and ivy air feel cleansing after the garbage water stench of the city on a hot day yesterday, the endless honking and emergency vehicles last night, and the streets littered with bottles, food wrappers, and cigarette butts this morning.
This garden is less about the flower beds and more about green spaces with sculptures and shade and wide paths to stroll on or sit beside. The sculptures are part of the garden, with greenery all around them. Sometimes they’re in a grassy area with a bed around them, sometimes they’re against the backdrop of a tree or shrubbery, sometimes they’re nestled in the green themselves, like a bust I saw peeking out a few minutes ago.





My husband and daughter stayed back at our Airbnb, but our son came with me to the garden. He wanted a quiet place to sit and read his book; he found a serene spot in the shade. I left him by the Medici fountain and will return to him soon.

I’m in a shady spot by the stag sculpture. In front of me under a tree, a silver haired gentleman leans his chair back and looks at his phone. He wears dark fitted jeans, brown loafers, a fitted grey lightweight crewneck sweater over a faded navy polo. To my right, two women sit side by side in the park’s green metal chairs under another tree. They turned their chairs to face a small flower bed filled with purple petunias, white begonias, and red geraniums. They chat in French. One wears a scarf around her neck. They laugh. The one on the left tells a story and reaches her right hand out to tap her friends elbow with the back of her hand, like can you believe that? A dapper white-haired man in a jaunty flat cap and a blue shirt with white polka dots just walked haltingly by; he looks like he might need a cane, but that doesn’t stop him from strolling in this tranquil green space.
There are chairs everywhere in this garden. You can sit in the shade along any of the garden paths. You can sit in the sun along the mall that leads up to the palace. You can sit in dappled shade seats around the stage pavilion where a jazz band currently plays. You can sit along the pool of the Medici fountain, surrounded by swags of ivy vines and shaded by giant maples that rose ringed parakeets swoop in and out of. You can picnic on the grassy expanses between the rows of horse chestnut trees.



I’ve moved from my seat by the stag to a seat by my son. I’m shocked that there are empty chairs, this is such a perfect spot. The fountain splishes and music from the pavilion drifts on the air. The soundscape is soothing: water tinkling, sweet toddler voices and dad murmers, the crinkle of a wax paper sandwich wrapper, rustling leaves, a bird saying “whit whit.” People sit alongside the fountain reading, holding hands, or just gazing at it. Some eat on their laps, legs casually crossed with sandaled feet dangling.

I could do this every day in retirement, come sit in this garden to read, write, watch the birds splash in the fountain, gaze at sculptures in different kinds of light, eat a crêpe or a croissant or a sandwich on a baguette, enjoy people strolling and lounging in this beautiful green space.






