
In Japan, a seven-year-old rides the train across the city. Alone.
No parent. No phone. No adult watching over her at all.
She bows to no one in particular, finds a seat,
sets her little backpack on her lap, and folds her hands.
She is going to school. By herself.
Across a city of fourteen million strangers.
And not one person in that car thinks anything is wrong.
A businessman glances up, then back to his paper.
An old woman smiles at her and looks away.
Nobody films her. Nobody calls anyone. Nobody is afraid.
Because here, a small child alone is not a victim waiting to happen.
She is just a kid going to school. Like every kid before her.
I was raised on the opposite. Lock the door. Watch your back.
Hold their hand. Never look away, not for one second,
or the world will reach out and take them.
And somewhere across the years, I let myself believe that was simply true.
Then I watched a seven-year-old ride home through a city of millions.
Step off at her stop. Walk the rest of the way. Safe.
We had this once, too. I am sure of it.
A street that kept an eye on your kids.
A town that walked them home.
Japan did not find a secret. They just never stopped
being decent to each other. Quietly. Every single day.
While the rest of us slowly forgot that we ever could.
That little girl will make it home tonight.
She always does. 🇯🇵





