A slightly out-of-focus shot taken from a hotel room window at night, showing a sprawling city skyline with distant lights. The composition should feel candid, as if the photographer just happened to glance out and capture the view. Include subtle hints of city life, like faint car headlights or illuminated buildings, but avoid any dramatic or overly picturesque elements. The overall mood should be contemplative and a little uncertain
A close-up, slightly grainy photo of a half-packed travel bag on a hotel bed. A laptop is open in the background, its screen dimly lit. The lighting should be the artificial, slightly harsh light of a hotel room. The scene should convey a sense of temporary pause and contemplation, with personal items scattered around in a natural, unarranged way
A candid shot taken from inside a museum, looking towards a display case. The focus should be slightly soft, capturing the atmosphere of a quiet exhibition space. The subject matter of the display is secondary; the emphasis is on the feeling of being present in the moment, perhaps with a hint of the outside world visible through a distant window or doorway, suggesting a normal day interrupted. The lighting should be natural museum lighting, not overly dramatic

The sound of sirens

It's 21:10 and I'm sitting on my hotel bed with my laptop open, half-packed bags scattered around me, trying to make sense of what just happened.

The day started normally enough. I woke at 07:00, had breakfast in the hotel dining room - the usual spread of labneh, olives, fresh bread, and that sweet cardamom-spiced tea that I've come to appreciate. The plan was simple: spend my last full day in Amman visiting the Jordan Museum, maybe walk through King Hussein Park one more time, then have an early night before my departure to Damascus tomorrow.

I got to the museum at 09:50, ten minutes before opening. The morning was already warm, the sun bright against the limestone buildings. There were maybe three other people waiting at the entrance. Everything felt peaceful.

Then, around 10:15, while I was examining a display about Nabataean trade routes - thinking about how these same routes connected to Petra - I heard it. A distant boom that seemed to shake the air itself.

The museum staff moved quickly but calmly. They guided everyone to an interior room, away from windows. No panic, just practiced efficiency. A young woman next to me was translating the Arabic announcements on her phone: missiles intercepted. Iranian missiles. Three of them destroyed, one landed in a remote area down south.

We stayed in that room for maybe forty minutes. I found myself thinking about those 800 steps up to the Monastery, about how solid and permanent those ancient stones felt. About how the Bedouin man who gave me water must have seen so much conflict pass through this region over the years, and yet still chose kindness.

When they let us leave, the streets outside looked normal. Traffic moving. People going about their business. The resilience here is something I'm still trying to understand.

I didn't go to King Hussein Park. I came back to the hotel instead, checked the news, sent a message to my mother to let her know I'm fine. The Norwegian news sites are already covering it, of course. She'll worry anyway.

Now I'm sitting here looking at my departure tomorrow. The bus to Damascus. The route I've been planning for weeks, working backward from that October 7th date in Chamonix. Syria, Turkey, through the Balkans, up through Europe.

But tonight, with the news showing footage of intercepted missiles and diplomatic protests, I'm questioning everything.

The IT part of my brain wants to debug this, to find the logical solution. But there isn't one. This isn't a system error I can troubleshoot. This is the Middle East, with all its complexity and layers of history that I barely understand after 327 days of trying.

I opened my booking confirmations. The bus ticket to Damascus is non-refundable, but that's not really the point. The point is whether it's wise. Whether my desire to stick to a plan - to move efficiently through my remaining 173 days - is more important than basic common sense.

The hotel staff, when I asked them at dinner, were philosophical about it. "These things happen," the receptionist said in careful English. "We are used to it. Tomorrow will be normal again."

But I'm not used to it. And I'm realizing, sitting here at 21:10 on a Sunday night in Amman, that maybe that's exactly the kind of transformation I was supposed to find on this journey. Not becoming more comfortable with danger, but understanding that other people live with uncertainties I've never had to consider.

In Kristiansand, the biggest worry is whether the bus will be delayed by snow.

I'm going to sleep on it. Make a decision in the morning. The bus leaves at 08:00, which means I'd need to be at the station by 07:30. Old habits.

But for the first time in this entire journey, I'm thinking that maybe being ten minutes early isn't the most important thing.

Maybe sometimes the smart move is to pause. To wait. To let the situation settle before making the next move.

The trees in King Hussein Park will still be there next time. If there is a next time.

Outside my window, Amman looks exactly as it did last night when I couldn't sleep - a sprawl of lights, the city that doesn't stop. But now I understand something I didn't then. This isn't restlessness that keeps it awake. It's resilience.

I'll write again tomorrow, once I know what I'm doing.