A slightly blurry, low-light shot taken from inside a train window at night, showing the blurred streaks of city lights outside, with a small, carefully wrapped onigiri resting on a worn, textured fabric in the foreground. The mood is quiet and transitional, like a smartphone photo taken on a journey
A dimly lit hotel room interior, captured from a low angle. A sliver of a dark, tree-lined park is visible through a window, with faint city lights in the distance. The image has a slightly grainy, authentic feel, as if taken with a phone in the late evening, focusing on the quiet atmosphere of arrival
A close-up, handheld shot of a person's hand holding a smartphone, the screen displaying a map of Nara. In the background, out of focus, are the muted colors of a business hotel room. The image conveys a sense of planning and anticipation in a new, quiet place, with the imperfections of a quick smartphone capture

Arrival in Nara: stepping into a different kind of sacred

It's past midnight now, and I'm sitting in this small business hotel room in Nara, trying to process the shift that's happened in the last few hours. The train from Kyoto departed at 19:51 - right on schedule, naturally - and I watched the city lights blur past the window, feeling that familiar mix of relief and melancholy that comes with leaving a place that's gotten under your skin.

The elderly woman at the ryokan had prepared onigiri for my journey again, wrapped in the same careful way. I tried to thank her properly, but my Japanese is still embarrassingly limited. She just smiled and pressed the package into my hands with both of hers, a small gesture that somehow felt enormous.

The train ride was only about forty minutes, but it felt like crossing into a different world. Kyoto Station's futuristic chaos gave way to Nara's much smaller, quieter station. When I stepped off the platform around 20:30, the first thing I noticed was the silence. Not complete silence - there were still people, still traffic - but a different quality to the sound. Less urgent, maybe.

I'd booked a hotel near the station because I arrived late and didn't want to navigate unfamiliar streets in the dark. The check-in was efficient, the room is small but clean, and from my window I can see a sliver of what I think might be Nara Park in the distance. Or maybe it's just darkness and my imagination.

I haven't seen any deer yet, which is probably for the best at this hour. Tomorrow morning - and yes, I'll probably be at the park gates when they open, whenever that is - I'll start exploring properly. Todai-ji Temple, those ancient trees I've been reading about, the famous deer that bow for crackers. Sixteen days in Kyoto was longer than I usually stay anywhere, and I can feel how much I needed this change.

But there's something else I'm feeling too, something I didn't expect. It's not just the excitement of a new place. It's more like... anticipation mixed with a kind of nervousness. Nara is smaller, quieter. In Kyoto, I could lose myself in the crowds, duck into a temple garden or a narrow street whenever I needed space. Here, I'll be more visible. More present. There's nowhere to hide in a city of 350,000 people, especially when you're 196cm tall and obviously foreign.

The weather forecast says it'll be mostly cloudy tomorrow, around 24Β°C. Perfect for walking. I'm planning to head out early - the main temples open around 8:00 or 8:30, and I want to experience the park before the day-trippers arrive from Kyoto and Osaka. There's something about these early morning hours in Japan that I've come to treasure. The way people move through their routines with such quiet purpose, the way the light filters through the trees differently, the way you can hear individual sounds instead of just noise.

I spent the last hour researching Nara's layout on my phone. The main sights are concentrated in Nara Park and the surrounding area - Todai-ji with its massive Buddha statue, Kasuga Taisha Shrine with those ancient cedars I'm dying to photograph, Kofuku-ji Temple with its five-story pagoda. Everything is walkable, which appeals to me more than you'd think. After all the trains and buses and crowds of the past weeks, the idea of just... walking through a park with deer feels almost absurdly simple.

I keep thinking about something the suited businessman on the Philosopher's Path said - or rather, didn't say. Just that small nod of acknowledgment, that moment of shared appreciation. I wonder if Nara will be full of those moments, or if it'll be something else entirely.

The restlessness that pushed me out of Kyoto has settled now, replaced by a different kind of energy. It's quieter, more focused. I came here with a list of things I wanted to see and do, but I'm also curious about what I didn't plan for. The unexpected conversations, the streets I'll wander down because they look interesting, the trees I'll find that aren't in any guidebook.

Day 274 of this journey. 226 days remaining until I turn 51 and return home to Kristiansand. More than halfway through, and I still don't have clear answers about what I'm looking for or whether I'm actually changing. But maybe that's okay. Maybe the point isn't to have answers by now. Maybe it's just to keep asking the questions.

For now, though, I need sleep. Tomorrow starts early, and I want to be at the park when the morning light hits those trees. I want to see the deer in their natural rhythm, before they're surrounded by tourists with cracker bags. I want to stand in front of that massive Buddha and try to understand what it means to create something that endures for over a thousand years.

Nara, I'm ready for you. Show me what you've got.

γŠγ‚„γ™γΏγͺさい (good night).