Daniel sent us a prompt that is essentially a design brief for a trip — depart from Tel Aviv, hit Singapore, China, Japan, Hong Kong, but do it in a way that actually produces understanding, not just a camera roll. The key line is "it takes me a while to get into vacation mode, and I prefer longer journeys." That changes everything. It means we're not optimizing for coverage, we're optimizing for comprehension. And the unspoken question here is whether you can even design an itinerary that teaches you something about a region, or if travel is just fundamentally consumption dressed up as curiosity.
I love this. This is a systems design problem disguised as a travel question. The prompt isn't asking for hotel recommendations — it's asking for an algorithm that converts time and geography into cultural understanding. And the Tel Aviv departure constraint is actually the perfect starting point because it forces a routing decision that shapes everything downstream.
Let's treat it like one. Where do we even begin with the routing logic?
The routing logic is the whole game. Tel Aviv to East Asia — you have basically three structural options. You can connect through the Gulf hubs, through Istanbul, or you can take the one direct long-haul that exists. And that direct is Singapore Airlines flight SQ 51, Tel Aviv to Singapore, roughly ten hours and forty minutes, five times a week as of May 2026. That's our anchor.
Why is the direct the anchor, rather than just one option among several?
Because the prompt says the traveler takes a while to get into vacation mode. If you start with a layover in Dubai or Istanbul, you're adding friction before the trip even begins psychologically. You're standing in a duty-free mall at 3 AM local time, already tired, not yet arrived. A direct flight to Singapore eliminates that — you board in Tel Aviv, you sleep, you wake up in Asia. The decompression starts the moment the seatbelt sign goes off. Singapore is also the ideal entry point for the region for a first-time visitor. English is an official language, the infrastructure is flawless, it's safe in a way that lets your nervous system actually relax, and yet it's culturally dense — Malay, Chinese, Indian, Peranakan — all layered on top of each other.
Training wheels for Asia.
Training wheels with Michelin-starred hawker stalls.
Five to six days minimum. That's not arbitrary. The first forty-eight hours, you're jet-lagged and disoriented. Day three, you start noticing things. By day five, you've developed a rhythm. If you leave on day four, you've just paid for the privilege of being tired in an expensive city. Six days gives you enough time to do something most tourists never do, which is actually observe how Singapore works rather than just consume it.
How does Singapore work? What's the thing you should be observing?
This is where the itinerary becomes a curriculum. Singapore is a case study in designed urbanism. Everything you see was a policy decision. Take the hawker centres. Tourists think of them as food courts. They're not. They're a deliberate social policy from the late sixties and early seventies. Lee Kuan Yew's government relocated thousands of street hawkers into purpose-built hygiene-compliant centres. It was a public health intervention, an economic formalization program, and a nation-building exercise all at once. You're eating char kway teow in a building that represents a government deciding that street food was too important to leave unregulated but too culturally essential to eliminate.
The hawker centre is a window into Singaporean governance philosophy. You're eating lunch and learning political theory.
It's better than reading a textbook. The same thing applies to the HDB housing system. Eighty percent of Singaporeans live in government-built flats, most of which they own on ninety-nine-year leases. It's the most successful public housing program in the world, and it was designed explicitly to prevent ethnic enclaves from forming — the Ethnic Integration Policy sets quotas at the block and neighborhood level. You walk through a HDB estate in Toa Payoh or Bedok, you're walking through the physical manifestation of Singapore's answer to the question "how do you build a multiracial society from scratch?
The itinerary in Singapore isn't "see the Merlion, see Marina Bay Sands, see Gardens by the Bay." It's "understand how this city-state solved problems that most countries still can't.
The Merlion is the musical equivalent of beige wallpaper. Skip it entirely. Instead, walk the Singapore River from Robertson Quay to Marina Bay. That one walk tells you the whole story. The river was an open sewer in the sixties. The government cleaned it up in ten years — literally dredged it, relocated the bumboats, relocated the pig farms upstream. Now it's flanked by restaurants and museums and the water is clean enough for otters to live in it. The otters are not a metaphor. There are actual smooth-coated otters in the Singapore River now. That's the arc of Singapore in one afternoon.
Otters as a KPI of national development.
All right, so Singapore is the decompression zone. Five to six days.
It's about a four-hour flight from Singapore. And this is where the intensity ramps up. Singapore is orderly to the point of being almost frictionless. Hong Kong is vertical chaos that somehow functions. The contrast is the point. You go from a city where everything was deliberately planned to a city where everything was improvised around geography — the mountain, the harbor, the lack of flat land. Hong Kong has the highest number of skyscrapers above a hundred and fifty meters of any city in the world. It has more than New York and Dubai combined. And yet it also has a functioning ferry system from the 1910s.
The Star Ferry.
The Star Ferry is the Rosetta Stone for understanding Hong Kong. It's been running since the 1890s, crossing Victoria Harbour in about seven minutes. It costs next to nothing. And while you're on it, you're looking at one of the most futuristic skylines ever built, from a boat that predates the First World War. That's Hong Kong in a single ride. The territory is constantly negotiating between its colonial past, its Chinese present, and its hyper-capitalist infrastructure. You don't need a museum exhibit. You need a ferry token.
Then contrast that with the MTR.
The MTR is the other half of the story. It carries over five million passengers a day with a ninety-nine point nine percent on-time rate. It's one of the most efficient metro systems on the planet, it's profitable — which almost no metro system is — and it was built by a government that understood that density without mobility is just a prison. The Star Ferry and the MTR, side by side, are Hong Kong's entire history in transit infrastructure.
The Hong Kong curriculum is: ride old boats, ride new trains, watch how the territory negotiates verticality.
Stay in Kowloon, not Hong Kong Island. This is a specific tactical recommendation. Hong Kong Island is where the financial district is. It's impressive but it's sterile after 7 PM. Kowloon, especially around Mong Kok or Yau Ma Tei, is where the city actually lives. The street markets, the dai pai dongs, the neon signage that's slowly disappearing — that's the Hong Kong that teaches you something. If you stay on the Island, you're a spectator. If you stay in Kowloon, you're in it.
How many days for Hong Kong?
It's smaller than Singapore geographically but denser experientially. You need five days to get past the initial overwhelm and start noticing patterns. Day one and two, you're just calibrating to the verticality and the noise. By day four, you're reading the city — you notice which neighborhoods empty out when, you understand why the octopus card works the way it does, you start seeing the territory as a system rather than a spectacle.
But you're going to say Osaka, not Tokyo.
I am absolutely going to say Osaka, not Tokyo. This is the single most important sequencing decision in the whole itinerary. Most people fly into Tokyo, do the Golden Route — Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka — and leave. That's the sixty percent of Japan's thirty-six point eight million tourists in 2025 who never left the Tokyo-Osaka-Kyoto corridor. And it works, in the sense that you see the things. But you miss the transition. You go from Hong Kong — chaotic, loud, Chinese-speed — straight into Tokyo, which is overwhelming in a completely different way. It's too much.
Culture shock stacking.
Osaka is the softer landing. The Kansai region — Osaka, Kyoto, Nara, Kobe — is culturally denser than Tokyo but psychologically easier. Osaka is a food city, a merchant city, historically the commercial heart of Japan. People are louder, more direct, more likely to talk to strangers. It's Japan with the volume turned up on warmth. You land at Kansai International, you're in Osaka in forty minutes, and you can spend your first day just eating takoyaki in Dotonbori and adjusting to the fact that vending machines sell hot soup.
The seven-day Kansai loop you mentioned — how does that actually work?
Base yourself in Osaka for seven days. It's the hub. From Osaka, Nara is forty-five minutes by train. Nara is where you go to understand that Japan's relationship with tradition isn't performative — it's continuous. Todai-ji temple has been rebuilt multiple times since the eighth century, each time slightly smaller because they couldn't source the original timber, but the impulse to rebuild it at all is what matters. The deer in Nara Park are sacred because they were considered messengers of the gods. They've been bowing for food for over a thousand years. That's not a tourist gimmick, that's cultural continuity.
Continuity embodied in deer begging for crackers.
It's wonderful. From Osaka, Kyoto is thirty minutes. Kyoto is where you learn that Japanese aesthetics — wabi-sabi, the beauty of imperfection and transience — isn't a design philosophy, it's a spiritual practice that shapes everything from temple gardens to how a tea bowl is fired. Kobe is thirty minutes in the other direction, and it's where you see Japan's relationship with the outside world — Kobe was one of the first ports opened to foreign trade in the 1860s, and the Kitano-cho district with its foreign merchant houses still tells that story. Himeji is an hour by Shinkansen, and Himeji Castle is the finest surviving example of Japanese castle architecture — never bombed, never burned, original wood from 1609.
In seven days you hit five cities without ever changing hotels.
That's the efficiency of the Kansai loop. But it's not about efficiency. It's about giving yourself the mental space to process each place. You're not packing and unpacking. You're not navigating new transit systems every three days. You're coming back to the same neighborhood in Osaka each evening, and that consistency lets your brain actually absorb what you saw during the day rather than spending its bandwidth on logistics.
This is where the Shinkansen comes in as more than transportation.
The Shinkansen is a case study in institutional trust. Japan Railways Central released their annual report for 2025 — the average delay across the entire Shinkansen network was zero point six minutes per train. That's not a rounding error. That's thirty-six seconds of average delay. The trains are cleaned in seven minutes during turnaround. The average schedule deviation is less than the time it takes to tie your shoes. And this matters because it's not just engineering — it's a cultural commitment to reliability that permeates every institution in Japan. You experience that when you ride it. The two and a half hours from Osaka to Tokyo on the Shinkansen isn't just transit. It's a meditation on what a society can achieve when it decides that punctuality is a form of respect.
The Shinkansen ride is part of the curriculum, not the commute.
Every transit choice in this itinerary is curricular. The ferry from Hong Kong to Macau, if you choose to do it, is a lesson in the Pearl River Delta's geography and the strange political artifact that is Macau — a former Portuguese colony that's now the gambling capital of the world, with UNESCO World Heritage pastel de nata bakeries next to casinos. You can't understand that from a guidebook. You have to arrive by water.
All right, so we've done Singapore, Hong Kong, Kansai. Now the China problem. The prompt says "China" generically, but that's unworkable. China is a continent pretending to be a country.
The prompt says China, and we have to pick one city and go deep. The choice is Shanghai or Beijing, and I'm going to argue for Shanghai. Beijing is the political capital, the historical capital, the Forbidden City, the Great Wall — it's what you visit if you want to understand imperial China and communist China as layers of the same palimpsest. But Shanghai is the interface city. It's where China met the world, and where the world met China. The Bund on one side of the Huangpu River is nineteenth and early twentieth-century European architecture — the old trading houses, the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank building, the Customs House. Pudong on the other side is the twenty-first century. Over four thousand buildings taller than a hundred meters. More than New York City.
The entire arc of modern China in one river crossing.
You can walk it. Start at the Bund in the late afternoon, take the ferry or the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel — which is its own kind of absurdist experience — and emerge in Pudong at dusk when the towers light up. That's not Instagram tourism. That's reading a skyline as a historical document.
What about the counterpoint? You mentioned Zhujiajiao.
Zhujiajiao is a water town about an hour from central Shanghai by metro. It's been continuously inhabited for over a thousand years. Canals, stone bridges, alleyways too narrow for cars. It's the Shanghai that existed before Shanghai was Shanghai. And the fact that you can reach it by metro — the same metro system that serves Pudong's skyscrapers — is the point. Eight hundred years apart, same city, same transit card. That's the scale and contradiction of China in one afternoon.
Five days in Shanghai?
You need three to calibrate — the language barrier is real, the digital ecosystem is completely different, you can't use Google Maps, you need to figure out WeChat and Alipay and DiDi. By day four, you're functional. By day five, you're starting to see patterns. That's the minimum.
Then Tokyo as the finale.
Tokyo last, five to seven days, and this is where everything you've learned across the trip gets tested. Tokyo is the most complex city in the world. Not the biggest, not the densest — the most complex. It's not a single city, it's a constellation of interconnected urban villages, each with its own train station, its own shopping street, its own rhythm. Shinjuku is not Shibuya is not Ginza is not Ueno. And by the time you arrive, you've done Singapore's order, Hong Kong's verticality, Japan's precision in Kansai, China's scale in Shanghai. You've built the cognitive muscles to read Tokyo rather than be overwhelmed by it.
You don't stay in Shinjuku or Shibuya.
You stay in a neighborhood. Shimokitazawa, Kichijoji, Yanaka. These are places where people actually live. Shimokitazawa is vintage shops and tiny music venues and curry houses. Kichijoji has Inokashira Park and a slower, almost suburban feel despite being fifteen minutes from Shinjuku. Yanaka survived the firebombing in 1945 and still has the old shitamachi, downtown, wooden-house atmosphere. Staying in these neighborhoods forces you to experience Tokyo as a resident rather than a consumer. You buy onigiri at the local konbini, you figure out which bakery has the best melon pan, you learn your station's exit numbers.
The konbini as cultural institution.
The Japanese convenience store — 7-Eleven, Lawson, FamilyMart — is a window into Japanese daily life. You can pay bills there, print documents, buy concert tickets, ship packages, and get a genuinely good egg salad sandwich at 2 AM. The konbini is the infrastructure of Japanese convenience, and understanding why it works — why the supply chain is so good, why the staff training is so thorough — teaches you more about Japan than most temples.
The full arc: Tel Aviv to Singapore, six days, decompression and designed urbanism. Singapore to Hong Kong, five days, verticality and colonial layering. Hong Kong to Osaka, seven days in Kansai, precision and tradition and the Shinkansen as curriculum. Osaka to Shanghai, five days, scale and contradiction and the interface between China and the world. Shanghai to Tokyo, five to seven days, complexity as a capstone. Then Tokyo back to Tel Aviv. Roughly twenty-nine days total.
That's the minimum viable duration for the brief. You could stretch it to thirty-five or forty and not run out of things to learn. But at twenty-nine, you're not rushing. You're not doing airport-to-hotel-to-temple-to-airport. You're spending enough time in each place that the place starts to teach you things you didn't know you were supposed to learn.
That's the real question the prompt is asking. How do you structure a trip so that understanding happens? Not just seeing, not just photographing — understanding.
The mechanism is what I think of as the three-three-three rule. For each city, roughly three days of structured observation — museums, guided walks, specific neighborhoods you've researched in advance. Then three days of wandering — no agenda, no destination, just presence. Then the transit days between cities, which are themselves part of the curriculum. The structured days give you the framework. The wandering days let your brain make connections the framework couldn't predict.
The wandering is where the actual learning happens.
The best insight I've ever had about a city came from getting lost in it. Not lost-and-panicked — lost-and-curious. You turn down a street because it smells interesting. You follow a schoolkid in uniform because you're curious where the school is. You sit on a bench and watch how people queue for things. Queueing behavior is one of the most revealing things about a culture. The Japanese queue with a kind of reverent patience. The Chinese queue with pragmatic determination. Singaporeans queue because there's probably a rule about it and the rule probably makes sense.
Hong Kong queues with the efficiency of people who have places to be and no time for your indecision.
You can't learn that from a guidebook.
The prompt also has this line about not tracking down Instagram photos. What does the anti-Instagram itinerary actually look like?
It's not about avoiding famous places. It's about changing how you engage with them. The classic example is Shibuya Crossing. The Instagram approach is to stand at the edge, film the scramble, post it, leave. The observation approach is to go to the Starbucks above the crossing — which has been there forever and has a perfect view — buy a coffee, and spend forty-five minutes watching pedestrian flow patterns. You'll notice things. You'll notice that the scramble isn't chaotic at all — it's a self-organizing system. People adjust their trajectories in real time. Collisions almost never happen. You'll notice that the crossing empties in waves, not continuously. You'll notice that there's a rhythm to the traffic lights that you can feel in your bones after about twenty minutes. That's understanding a place. The photo is just the receipt.
The photo as receipt, not the meal.
You can apply this to everything. Don't photograph the Merlion — walk the Singapore River and notice where the water changes from fresh to brackish. Don't photograph the Hong Kong skyline from Victoria Peak — ride the Mid-Levels escalator, the longest outdoor covered escalator system in the world, and watch how the neighborhoods change as you ascend. Don't photograph Kinkaku-ji in Kyoto — go to a neighborhood sento, a public bath, and notice how the ritual of bathing is a social leveler. The prompt isn't asking for a list of alternative attractions. It's asking for a different mode of attention.
The itinerary as a lens, not a checklist.
The lens needs to be focused. That's the "one thing per city" rule. Pick one aspect of each destination to understand deeply. Singapore: governance and public space. Hong Kong: density and adaptation. Japan: ritual and precision. China: scale and contradiction. You're not trying to understand everything. You're trying to understand one thing well enough that it illuminates everything else.
The debrief habit. Thirty minutes each evening, three observations that surprised you.
This is the most important non-obvious recommendation in the whole itinerary. The brain doesn't learn by consuming experiences. It learns by processing them. If you don't stop and reflect, three weeks in Asia becomes a blur of temples and train stations and weird vending machine drinks. Thirty minutes of writing — not journaling your feelings, just three concrete observations — forces your brain to convert raw experience into structured understanding. "The train left exactly on time and I was the only person who seemed to notice" is an observation. "Japan is punctual" is a cliché. The difference is the writing.
That's the thing about this whole design. It's not actually about the destinations. It's about building a system that produces comprehension. The routing, the pacing, the observation exercises, the evening debrief — it's all infrastructure for attention.
The infrastructure has to account for the traveler's stated self-knowledge. "It takes me a while to get into vacation mode." That's not a flaw, it's a constraint. The itinerary honors it by starting slow — Singapore is the gentlest possible entry to Asia — and ramping up gradually. By the time you reach Tokyo, you've been building skills for three weeks. You're not the same traveler who boarded SQ 51 in Tel Aviv.
You mentioned earlier that slow travel isn't necessarily expensive travel.
The misconception is that staying longer costs more. It's usually the opposite. Every time you change cities, you pay a tax — a flight or a train ticket, a night of accommodation that's more expensive because it's a short stay, meals you eat out because you don't have a kitchen. If you stay in one place for six days instead of three, you can negotiate a weekly rate on accommodation, you can buy groceries, you can find the local restaurants that aren't priced for tourists. The marginal cost of day four in Singapore is almost always lower than day one in a new city. Slow travel is cheaper per day than fast travel. It just requires more total days, which is a different constraint.
That's the privilege question. Twenty-nine days is not feasible for most people. What's the compressed version that still preserves the core principle?
If you have two weeks instead of four, you cut destinations, not depth. Singapore and Japan — the Kansai loop plus a few days in Tokyo. That's fourteen days, you're still spending five to six days per country, you're still getting the contrast between designed urbanism and ritual precision. The principle is: you understand a place by staying still in it, not by moving through it. Two places deeply beats four places shallowly every single time.
The compressed version isn't a faster version of the same itinerary. It's a fundamentally different itinerary built on the same design principles.
This is where AI travel planning tools become dangerous. Google's travel planner and ChatGPT's itinerary mode — as of 2026, they're getting good at optimizing for coverage. They'll give you an itinerary that hits twelve cities in fourteen days and technically works. But they optimize for what's measurable — number of attractions visited, transit time minimized, budget constrained. They can't optimize for understanding, because understanding isn't a metric you can plug into a loss function. The best travel is inefficient by design.
The algorithm wants you to see more. The prompt is asking how to understand more. Those are opposing objectives.
And the traveler who sent this prompt already knows that, which is why they asked for a thoughtful itinerary rather than an efficient one. They're not asking "what should I see?" They're asking "how should I see?
The final itinerary, for anyone taking notes. Tel Aviv to Singapore, Singapore Airlines SQ 51, roughly ten hours forty minutes. Six days in Singapore — stay somewhere central, walk the river, eat in hawker centres, visit a HDB estate, observe the garden city retrofit. Singapore to Hong Kong, roughly four hours. Five days in Hong Kong — stay in Kowloon, ride the Star Ferry and the MTR, walk the Mid-Levels, eat dai pai dong. Hong Kong to Osaka. Seven days in Kansai — base in Osaka, day trips to Kyoto, Nara, Kobe, Himeji. The Shinkansen to Tokyo as a deliberate experience, not just a train. Osaka to Shanghai, roughly two and a half hours. Five days in Shanghai — stay in the former French Concession, walk the Bund and Pudong, take the metro to Zhujiajiao. Shanghai to Tokyo. Five to seven days in Tokyo — stay in Shimokitazawa or Kichijoji or Yanaka, apply everything you've learned, wander. Tokyo to Tel Aviv. Twenty-nine days. One thing per city. Three structured days, three wandering days. Thirty minutes of writing each evening.
If you do it, you won't come back with a camera roll that looks like everyone else's. You'll come back with a mental model of how a significant portion of humanity organizes its cities, its food, its transit, its rituals, and its relationship to strangers. That's what the prompt is actually asking for.
The real answer is that you understand a place by staying still in it. The itinerary is just the container that makes the stillness possible.
The stillness is where everything interesting happens. The best travel memory I have is not a temple or a skyline. It's sitting on a bench in Ueno Park in Tokyo, in the rain, watching an old man feed pigeons with a kind of ceremonial patience I've never seen anywhere else. I don't have a photo of it. I don't need one.
Because the photo would have been the receipt, not the meal.
The meal was a bento box from a konbini, eaten on a wet bench, while a stranger taught me something about patience without saying a word.
That's the itinerary. That's the design brief answered. The open question I want to leave with is this: Is the slow travel movement actually accessible, or is it just a rebranding of the privilege of time? The itinerary we just described is twenty-nine days. Most people can't take twenty-nine days. The compressed version is still two weeks. Is there a version of this that works for someone with one week and a modest budget, or is deep travel fundamentally a luxury good?
I think it's a real tension and I don't have a clean answer. What I know is that even on a one-week trip, you can apply the principles — pick one city, stay in one neighborhood, do the observation exercises, write the three things each evening. The depth per day can be the same even if the total depth is lower. But yes, the traveler who can spend a month in Asia is playing a different game than the traveler who has seven days and a fixed return date. Acknowledging that doesn't solve it, but pretending it's not true is worse.
And the future implication worth watching: as AI travel planners get better, the default itinerary is going to get more efficient, more optimized, more packed. The counter-movement is going to have to be intentional. You'll have to tell the AI "make this trip worse at covering ground and better at producing understanding." That's a weird prompt in itself.
"Optimize for comprehension, not coverage." I'd love to see what the algorithm does with that.
Probably routes you to a library.
Which, honestly, wouldn't be the worst travel advice.
This has been My Weird Prompts. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop for making this show happen. Find us at myweirdprompts.com or wherever you get your podcasts.
And now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: In the 1920s, scientists in Mongolia studying auroral spectra discovered that the green color in the northern lights is produced by oxygen atoms at roughly one hundred fifty kilometers altitude, while the rare all-red auroras come from oxygen above three hundred kilometers — meaning the same element paints entirely different colors depending solely on altitude. By 1932, researchers had catalogued over sixty distinct spectral lines in auroral displays, though fewer than a dozen are visible to the naked eye.
Our atmosphere is just oxygen showing off.
We'll be back next week.