The space between departure and arrival
It's raining again. Not the gentle morning drizzle from yesterday, but a proper downpour that turns the streets into mirrors and sends tourists huddling under temple eaves.
I'm sitting in the same café near Kyoto Station where I've spent my last three mornings. The owner nods when I walk in now, already reaching for the pour-over equipment before I've even sat down. Tomorrow I'll be gone, and someone else will sit at this table by the window, watching the rain.
My flight to Paris leaves tomorrow afternoon. The ticket has been sitting in my email for weeks now, booked during one of those moments when I felt the pull to keep moving, to see more before my time runs out. Osaka to Paris. Then eventually a bus from Paris to Chamonix in October, though that feels impossibly far away right now.
Two hundred and eighteen days left. Sometimes that number feels like forever. Sometimes it feels like nothing at all.
What I didn't do
I never made it to the bamboo grove in Arashiyama. Never experienced a proper tea ceremony. Never walked the Philosopher's Path or photographed those canal-side trees. The list of things I planned to do here in Kyoto sits in my journal, half-crossed out, half-abandoned.
A month ago, this would have bothered me. I would have felt that restless urgency to optimize, to check boxes, to make sure I was getting my money's worth out of every destination. I would have pushed through the rain, arrived at opening time, moved efficiently from temple to temple.
But Nara taught me something about that kind of thinking.
What I did instead
I went back to Fushimi Inari four times. Not because I was trying to see everything or photograph every angle, but because I wanted to see how it changed. How the morning mist transformed the torii gates into something otherworldly. How the afternoon crowds shifted the energy entirely. How the evening brought a different kind of quiet.
I found that small shrine in Higashiyama on my second day and returned every evening after. Just sat there, watching the elderly woman tend to it with the same careful attention. She never spoke to me, but on my last visit, she left a small bundle of incense sticks on the bench beside me.
I spent an entire morning at Ryoan-ji, sitting in front of the rock garden. The first hour, my mind was noisy—thinking about what I should be doing, where I should be going next, whether I was wasting time. The second hour was quieter. The third hour, I stopped counting.
A priest came by during my second visit and placed a cushion beside me without a word. I stayed until closing.
The rain and what it teaches
It's rained almost every day I've been in Kyoto. Twenty-three days, and maybe five of them were dry. I kept waiting for it to stop, kept planning around it, kept thinking tomorrow would be better for visiting that temple or walking that path.
But tomorrow I'm leaving.
The café owner brings my coffee and sets it down with both hands, the way he always does. Through the window, I watch a businessman sharing his umbrella with a stranger. A group of schoolgirls splashes through puddles, laughing. An elderly couple walks slowly, stopping every few steps to look at something I can't see from here.
Life doesn't wait for perfect weather.
What I'm taking with me
Not photographs of every famous temple. Not a complete checklist of tourist attractions. Not the feeling of having conquered or completed anything.
Instead: the memory of mist rising through torii gates at dawn. The sound of rain on temple roofs. The weight of incense sticks left on a bench. The way a priest can communicate kindness without words. The practice of sitting still when everything in you wants to move.
And maybe this: the understanding that being present doesn't mean doing everything. Sometimes it means choosing one thing and staying with it. Returning to it. Letting it unfold.
Tomorrow
I'll take the train to Osaka in the morning. Board a plane in the afternoon. Land in Paris in the evening—though it will be morning there, time zones being what they are.
Part of me is ready to leave. That familiar restlessness that drove me to book the ticket in the first place. The pull toward something new, the curiosity about what comes next.
But another part of me—a quieter part that I'm just starting to hear—wants to stay. Not because there are more temples to see or more boxes to check. But because I'm not sure I'm finished learning what this place has to teach me.
That's the thing about travel, I'm realizing. You can't complete a place. You can't finish with it. You can only be there for as long as you're there, and then you leave, and it continues without you.
The rain continues. The coffee grows cold. Tomorrow comes whether I'm ready or not.
I suppose that's always been true. I'm just finally starting to notice.