A close-up, slightly blurry shot from a smartphone of a small, worn wooden comb with a few strands of dark hair still caught in its teeth, resting on a slightly stained surface. The lighting is soft, morning light filtering through leaves, suggesting an indoor museum display
A candid, slightly off-center photo taken from a cafe table, showing a small plate of sticky dates and a cooling cup of tea. In the blurred background, dappled sunlight falls on lush green leaves of sycamore trees, with a hint of people gathering at a museum entrance in the distance
A low-angle, slightly tilted phone photo capturing the hands of a cafe owner offering a small plate of dates to the camera, his face mostly out of frame, with a gentle, knowing smile. The background shows hints of a simple cafe setting with green foliage

The museum garden and the weight of time

It's 09:50 and I'm back in the Egyptian Museum's garden café, the same spot where I sat yesterday afternoon. The café owner recognizes me now - he brought tea before I even sat down, with a small nod and half-smile that said "I remember you."

I came early. The museum opens at 10:00, but I walked here from Zamalek at 08:30, crossing the Qasr El Nil Bridge as the morning heat was just beginning to build. The forecast says it'll hit 35°C today, with humidity that makes the air feel thick. I wanted to be here before the crowds, before the full weight of the sun.

But mostly, I think I wanted to sit here again. To have this quiet moment before going back inside.

Yesterday afternoon, after my visit, I sat in this same garden and wrote about finding my own pace. About letting moments settle instead of rushing through them. I thought I'd processed what I saw - the wooden headrest, the ancient combs, the everyday objects that spoke louder than gold.

But I woke at 06:30 this morning thinking about that headrest again. About the person who rested their head on it 3,300 years ago. About how they had no idea their pillow would outlast everything they knew - their city, their language, their entire civilization.

The café owner just brought me a small plate of dates without asking. He said something in Arabic I didn't catch, gestured at the dates, then at me, then smiled and walked away. These small acts of hospitality keep catching me off guard. In Norway, we don't... we're more reserved, I suppose. We respect boundaries by maintaining distance.

Here, kindness is proximity.

I'm thinking about yesterday's visit to the pyramids, and how it connected to what I'm feeling now in this garden. Standing before Khufu's pyramid at dawn, I was overwhelmed by scale and age. But here, surrounded by smaller artifacts, I'm overwhelmed by intimacy.

A wooden comb with strands of hair still caught in its teeth.

A child's toy.

A letter written on papyrus, the ink faded but the handwriting still visible.

These things weren't meant to last. They were used, worn, touched by hands that never imagined they'd be behind glass 3,000 years later. The pyramids were built for eternity - these objects just happened to survive.

And somehow, that makes them more powerful.

The tea is cooling in front of me. Through the garden's trees - I think they're sycamores, the same species that would have grown here in ancient times - I can see people starting to gather at the museum entrance. A tour group is assembling, the guide holding up a small flag. A family with young children, the parents already looking tired.

I'm in no hurry. The museum will be there. The artifacts have waited millennia - they can wait another ten minutes while I finish this tea.

That's something I'm learning here in Cairo. Or maybe I'm re-learning it. In Nara, I watched a shrine priest prepare for a ceremony with such deliberate slowness that I finally understood the difference between being slow and being present. Here, sitting in this garden, I'm finding that same quality.

Not rushing. Not checking my watch every few minutes. Just... being.

The dates are sweet and sticky. I eat them slowly, one at a time, watching the garden fill with morning light.

I have two more days in Cairo before my flight to Addis Ababa. Two more days to walk these streets, to sit in cafés, to let the city speak to me in its own time. Yesterday I felt like I was finally starting to hear it - not the tourist version, but something deeper. The rhythm underneath the chaos.

The café owner is clearing tables nearby. He catches my eye and points at my empty tea glass, raises his eyebrows in question. I shake my head, smile, say "shukran" carefully. He nods, satisfied, and I remember how he corrected my pronunciation yesterday. "Shuk-RAN," he'd said, emphasis on the second syllable.

These small corrections, these tiny moments of teaching - they matter more than guidebooks.

It's 10:05 now. The museum is open. But I'm going to sit here for a few more minutes, finish these dates, watch the sycamores move in the slight breeze.

Yesterday I wrote about finding my own pace. Today I'm practicing it.

The artifacts inside have waited 3,000 years. They can wait a little longer.