🌃🌉 When The DISTANCE Becomes The HORIZON 🌄🌌

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So today is the day I published the 1st chapter of this book ✍️ it completed 1 year and I'm glad I finished writing it in the same date of the same month :)

So hope you all will enjoy the last chapter of – 🌃 When The DISTANCE 🌉 Becomes The HORIZON 🌌

❤️ Stay tuned 🎶

(. ❛ ᴗ ❛.)(◕ᴗ◕✿)(◍•ᴗ•◍)(◠‿・)-☆(^^)

Third Person's POV

New Year's Eve, Kiyose City, Tokyo, Japan

Winter in Japan is dry and sunny, with temperatures that rarely drop below freezing-except for the country's northern reaches of Sapporo and the like.

Snowfall occurs the further north you go, with central Japan receiving light dustings as well. Winter in Southern Japan is mild...

Visiting Japan during New Year (Shogatsu) is a once in a lifetime experience.

It is Japan's most important National Holiday, even bigger than Christmas! It is a family affair, where everyone gets together and exchanges gifts.

There are also many tourist attractions and fun things to do. Stores and restaurants are closed so getting around may be a bit of a challenge.

New Year's Eve in Japan is not a night for crazy parties like in many countries.

Japanese people spend time with their families and enjoy traditional food, rituals, and activities. However, there are places to celebrate, especially in big cities.

The New Year's season in Japan is full of special traditions, in particular, one before the new year begins, when the Japanese look back on the past year and bid farewell to old worries as a way to start fresh

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The New Year's season in Japan is full of special traditions, in particular, one before the new year begins, when the Japanese look back on the past year and bid farewell to old worries as a way to start fresh.

A bonenkai, or "forget-the-year party" is an end of year party for friends and coworkers to forget the trouble and stress of the year about to finish. Lately, countdown parties have become more popular in large cities.

January 1st symbolizes joy and no obligations. Japanese homes are decorated with pine, bamboo, and plum trees to ring in the New Year.

It is customary for people to start the year by viewing the first sunrise (Hatsu-Hinode), and your Japan Rail Pass can take you wherever you decide to enjoy this tradition, believed to be representative for the whole year that has begun.

Another favorite New Year tradition is hatsumode or the first visit to a shrine or temple.

The best temples in Japan attract several million people during the first three days of January, and here, you can experience a festive climate with food and stands, and join in the crowds at the main hall praying or buying good luck charms...

"I sit and I wonder where you have been, what are you doing now?

Are you in this endless, deep blue sky, high in the clouds?..."

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