Small detours
The rain started around 10:00, light at first, then building to something more persistent. I was already out, walking the edges of Nakanoshima, that narrow island in the middle of the city where the two rivers meet. The forecast had warned about this β the tail end of yesterday's weather system.
I'd planned to visit Osaka Castle this morning, photograph the trees in the castle grounds, maybe climb to the top for the view. Instead, I found myself in the Nakanoshima Museum of Art, watching water streak down the glass walls while I stood in front of a collection of Modigliani paintings.
The museum opened at 10:00. I was there at 9:52, waiting under the overhang with an elderly couple and a young woman sketching in a waterproof notebook. We didn't speak β just stood there, listening to the rain, watching the rivers.
Inside, the galleries were nearly empty. Just me, the couple, the sketching woman, and a security guard who looked like he was fighting sleep. The Modigliani exhibition is temporary, here until the end of June. I wouldn't have known about it if I hadn't been standing outside in the rain, reading the poster while I waited.
There's something about those elongated faces, those impossibly long necks. They shouldn't work, but they do. I stood in front of "Portrait of Jeanne HΓ©buterne" for maybe twenty minutes, just looking. The guard shifted his weight behind me. The couple moved to the next room.
I thought about Kyoto, about those hours at Ryoan-ji, staring at rocks and raked gravel until they stopped being rocks and gravel and became something else entirely. This felt similar but different. The rocks were about emptiness, about what wasn't there. These paintings were about distortion, about seeing people in a way that revealed something true by making them slightly wrong.
By the time I left, the rain had eased to a drizzle. I walked back across Nakanoshima Bridge, stopped at a small cafΓ© near the Osaka City Hall. The coffee was good β dark, slightly bitter, served in a heavy ceramic cup by a woman who looked like she'd been making coffee in that exact spot for thirty years.
I ordered a second cup and sat by the window, watching office workers hurry past with umbrellas, watching the river flow beneath the bridge. The memorial service at Ikeda Elementary School was happening today β 25 years since that terrible morning. I'd read about it this morning on the news. 760 people gathering to remember, to mark time, to acknowledge what can't be undone.
Twenty-five years. I would have been 25 then, just starting my IT career, probably thinking I had everything figured out. Now I'm here, 286 days into this journey, still trying to figure out what I'm supposed to be learning.
The rain picked up again around 13:00. I gave up on Osaka Castle, walked instead through covered shopping arcades in Namba, eventually ending up back at Dotonbori. Different in daylight, less neon, more practical. I bought takoyaki from a street vendor β the real thing, not the tourist version. The vendor worked fast, flipping the balls in their molds with practiced efficiency, brushing them with sauce, sprinkling bonito flakes that danced in the steam.
I ate them standing up, burning my tongue on the first one, learning to wait on the second. Around me, the city moved at its usual pace. A businessman checked his phone. Schoolgirls laughed at something on a screen. An elderly woman fed the pigeons despite the signs.
Tomorrow I leave. The ticket is booked, the decision made. But right now, standing in the drizzle eating takoyaki, watching this city do its daily work, I feel oddly settled. Not ready to leave, exactly, but not restless either. Just here, present, tasting octopus and noting how the rain makes the neon reflections blur into abstract shapes on the wet pavement.
The fireworks last night feel like days ago. That fisherman at his post, the families on the beach, the explosions overhead β all of it already becoming memory, already reshaping itself into story. That's the strange thing about travel. Everything becomes past tense so quickly.
I walked back through Shinsekai on my way to the hotel. The Tsutenkaku Tower looked different in daylight, less dramatic, more like what it actually is β a 1950s reconstruction of a 1910s idea of modernity. The kushikatsu restaurants were opening for the evening shift. I thought about going in, getting dinner, but I wasn't hungry yet.
Instead, I'm here in my room, windows open despite the rain, listening to the city below. Tomorrow morning I'll pack, check out, head to the station. But that's tomorrow. Right now, I'm watching the light change as evening approaches, watching Osaka shift from day to night, from work to play.
I never made it to Kuromon Market. Never photographed the trees at Osaka Castle. Didn't explore half the neighborhoods I'd planned to see. Five days wasn't enough, but then again, it never is. There's always more. Always another temple, another park, another hidden shrine.
Maybe that's the point. Not to see everything, but to see enough. To let the rain change your plans. To stand in front of a Modigliani for twenty minutes. To eat takoyaki in the drizzle and call it a good day.
214 days left. The number feels less important than it used to.
The rain is letting up again. Through the window, I can see people starting to emerge, umbrellas folding, the evening crowds building. Soon the neon will start to glow. Soon Dotonbori will transform into that electric version of itself, all light and noise and motion.
But for now, this quiet moment. The sound of rain. The smell of wet concrete. The city breathing between weathers.
Tomorrow, Paris. But tonight, one last evening in Osaka.