An unscheduled goodbye
The train leaves at 9:17 tomorrow morning from Osaka Station. Platform 11, JR Kyoto Line bound for Kyoto. I've checked three times already.
I'm sitting in a small cafΓ© near Dotonbori, watching the last of the morning commuters flow past the windows. My coffee's gone cold while I've been staring at the departure board on my phone. The barista keeps glancing over β I think she's wondering if I'm okay.
I'm not ready to leave.
This wasn't supposed to happen. Osaka was meant to be a quick contrast stop after Kyoto's contemplative stillness. Five days to experience the energy, eat the street food, feel the urban pulse. I've done all that. I watched fireworks alone on a beach. I stood under the massive camphor tree in Tennoji Park. I got caught in the rain and discovered Modigliani in a museum I'd never planned to visit.
But somewhere between the takoyaki vendors in Dotonbori and the quiet morning walks through Shinsekai, something shifted. This city got under my skin in a way I didn't expect.
Maybe it's the way people move here β purposeful but not rushed, going about their lives while I float through as an observer. Or maybe it's simpler than that. Maybe I'm just tired of moving.
The weight of 287 days
This morning I walked to Nakanoshima Park before the museums opened. The weather forecast says mostly cloudy, temperature around 22Β°C β comfortable walking weather. The kind of day that doesn't demand anything from you.
I found a bench near the river and did the math. Again. 287 days since I left Kristiansand. 213 days until I'm supposed to be back. That's 57.4% complete, if you want to think of it that way. My IT brain can't help but calculate percentages.
But here's what bothers me: I've been thinking about this journey as a project with a deadline. A 500-day sprint to figure out who I am and how I want to change the world before I turn 51. Like I can optimize personal transformation if I just hit enough waypoints.
Osaka is teaching me that's not how it works.
The fisherman I saw during the fireworks β he didn't care about the spectacle overhead. He was focused on his line, his technique, the subtle movements in the water. He wasn't trying to experience everything at once. He was just... there.
I keep thinking about him.
What I didn't do
I never made it to Kuromon Ichiba Market at dawn like I planned. I meant to go yesterday, set an alarm for 5:30, but when it went off I just... couldn't. The restlessness that usually drives me forward had evaporated. I reset the alarm for 7:00 and went back to sleep.
This would have bothered me a month ago. Hell, it would have bothered me a week ago in Kyoto. But this morning, lying in my hotel room listening to the city wake up outside, I realized I don't care about the market. Not really. It was on some "Top 10 Things to Do in Osaka" list I read before arriving, and I added it to my mental checklist without questioning whether I actually wanted to go.
How many places have I visited because they were supposed to be important? How many experiences have I collected like stamps in a passport, proof that I was somewhere, did something, checked a box?
The unplanned museum visit during the rain taught me more about myself than a dozen planned attractions. Standing under that tree in Tennoji Park, watching an elderly couple practice tai chi, feeling the weight of the branches above me β that mattered. That was real.
The Osaka Art & Design festival
I just learned this morning that there's an art festival happening right now. Started today, apparently. The Osaka Art & Design 2026 festival runs through mid-June, exhibitions and installations all over the city.
I found out because I saw a poster in this cafΓ© window. Just a simple flyer with dates and venues. No big announcement, no tourist push, just... there. Like the city saying, "Hey, if you're interested, this is happening."
And I am interested. But I'm leaving tomorrow.
This is the paradox of travel: the more you see, the more you realize you're missing. Every choice to move forward is also a choice to leave something behind. And lately, I'm feeling the weight of all those abandoned possibilities.
What I'm learning
In Kyoto, I learned to be present. To let go of the checklist and just exist in a space without needing to consume it completely. Those four visits to Fushimi Inari weren't about seeing everything β they were about returning, about depth over breadth.
Osaka is teaching me something harder: that sometimes being present means staying still. That movement for its own sake isn't growth, it's just motion.
I have a ticket for tomorrow. Platform 11, 9:17 AM. The punctual part of me β the part that arrives ten minutes early to everything β says I have to use it. It's booked. It's paid for. It's the plan.
But another part of me, the part that's been growing stronger since I left home 287 days ago, is asking a different question: What am I running toward? Or what am I running from?
The trees in Nakanoshima
There are ginkgo trees lining the paths in Nakanoshima Park. Tall, straight, their fan-shaped leaves creating dappled patterns on the ground. This morning I stood under one for twenty minutes, just looking up.
A woman walked past with her dog, circled back, asked if I was okay. I must have looked strange β this tall foreigner staring up into a tree like it held some secret message.
"I'm fine," I told her. "Just... looking."
She smiled, nodded, continued her walk. The dog looked back at me once before they disappeared around the bend.
I don't know what I was looking for in those branches. Maybe just a reason to stay. Or permission to go. Or confirmation that the decision I make tomorrow morning doesn't matter as much as I think it does.
The trees don't care. They're rooted here, growing slowly, measuring time in seasons and decades, not in 500-day journeys with artificial deadlines.
Tomorrow
The cafΓ© is filling up with the lunch crowd. Salarymen in dark suits, students with laptops, elderly couples sharing a pot of tea. Normal life happening around me while I sit here with my cold coffee and my train ticket and my 213 remaining days.
I could cancel the ticket. Stay another week. See the art festival, visit the market at dawn, find more trees to photograph. Give myself permission to slow down, to actually absorb a place instead of just passing through.
Or I could get on that train tomorrow at 9:17 and continue forward. Keep moving, keep experiencing, keep collecting moments and memories and blog posts about cities I barely understand.
Both feel right. Both feel wrong.
Maybe that's the real lesson Osaka is teaching me: that there's no perfect answer. That whether I stay or go, I'll wonder about the path not taken. That uncertainty isn't a problem to solve, it's just the nature of being alive and having to make choices.
The barista is bringing me a fresh coffee. I didn't ask for it. She just smiled and said, "On the house." Maybe she can see I need it. Maybe she's just kind.
I'll drink it slowly. I'll watch the people pass. And tomorrow morning, I'll either be on platform 11 at 9:07, or I'll be walking back to Nakanoshima Park to stand under those ginkgo trees again.
Right now, I honestly don't know which it will be.
And maybe that's okay.