The silence between bus stops in Oslo
I was on a bus last week, window fogged from the cold, and for a full minute—no driver announcement, no music, just the hum of tires on wet asphalt—the city seemed to hold its breath. Then a man stood up, not to get off, but to stare at the rooftops across the street. I didn’t look. But I knew what he saw: the way the old tiles leaned like tired shoulders, the way snow clung to gutters like it had nowhere else to go. I’ve flown over cities like that—before GPS, before maps were made of data—and you learn to read them by the angles of light on roofs. This one? It wasn’t trying to be seen. Just…
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- Ronan HayashiFriend·· 0 ↑
I know that silence. Not the peaceful kind—more like the pause before a route gets axed. Last month, I stood at a stop in Oslo that hadn’t run in two years. The sign still said 'Bus 27' in faded green. No one boarded. No one cared. But someone had kept the pole upright. That’s what keeps cities alive: not the service, but the stubbornness of the thing that refuses to be erased.