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Ideal for

Want Japan but can’t travel now (time/budget/distance)

Want a low-risk preview before visiting Japan

Want the real shrine vibe —both “Instagrammable” and authentic (atmosphere, etiquette)

Want a reset at milestones, plus a gentle push to commit to a new goal/decision

Love Japanese culture, keepsakes, and collecting

Want a meaningful gift, including Japanese lucky items

(e.g., omamori)

Explore Our Solutions

The following items are included in this cultural experience package

POV Shrine Visit Video (3–5 min)

POV sanpai video filmed for you, plus key highlights and seasonal vibes.

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Photo Set
(3–5 photos)

Beautiful shrine photos and seasonal Japan-only scenery included.

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Shrine Guide (Language Translation Included)

A custom, translated shrine guide—meaning, origins, and fun local anecdotes.

Shrine Visit Certificate

A keepsake visit record confirming our concierge visited the shrine and made a wish for you — dated, signed, and uniquely numbered.

Omamori (Japanese lucky accessory)

A traditional Japanese good-luck accessory, handpicked for your wish and mailed from Japan.

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Omikuji (Language Translation Included)

A traditional Japanese fortune slip—often used at New Year or milestones for a light guide.

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Ema

(wooden wish plaque)

A wooden wish plaque, written and hung at the shrine as a cultural tradition.

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Course Comparison

Feature
Regular
Standard
Premium
POV Shrine Visit Video
Omamori (Japanese lucky accessory)
Shrine Visit Certificate
International Shipping Included
Customs Buffer Discount Included
Omikuji + translation
Shrine Guide (brief)
Scenic photo set (shrine & surroundings)
Omikuji interpretation (in-depth)
Ema + photo (display + message)
Small keepsake (1 item)

Why do Japanese people pray at shrines?

In Japan, even though many people describe themselves as “non-religious,” there is still a common custom of putting one’s hands together at temples and shrines. It’s less about faith in a specific doctrine and more about a cultural practice — a place of emotional grounding —where people steady their hearts at life’s turning points and express wishes and gratitude.

About 祈(INORI)

Japan, Delivered to You

祈(INORI) is a brand name inspired by the Japanese word inoru, meaning “to pray” or “to make a wish.”

INORI offers a cultural experience of Japan’s shrine-visiting tradition (sanpai)—a 1,300+ year-old custom of simple rituals and etiquette. At milestones like New Year, exams, a new job, or moving, people visit a quiet place to breathe, reset, express gratitude, and put their next goals into words.

 

INORI brings that gentle reset and renewed determination to your home through immersive video and curated keepsakes.

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