SHOCKING UPDATE: WESTON’S LONGTIME FRIEND IN JAPAN HAS BROKEN HIS SILENCE Hiyu Shikari had been one of Weston Higginbotham’s closest friends for years. When he learned that Weston’s family would be traveling to Japan to celebrate Grayton

Hiyu Shikari, who had known Weston for years through shared passions for sustainability and outdoor exploration, arranged a meet-up after learning the Higginbotham family was heading to Kyoto to celebrate younger brother Grayton’s high school graduation. What was supposed to be a joyful reunion between old friends has instead become a chilling window into Weston’s inner turmoil.

According to Hiyu, the Weston he met that day was unrecognizable – weighed down by a deep personal struggle that had been building for months. Daily Mail can exclusively reveal the full, emotional conversation that friends and family now believe may hold the key to understanding why the passionate young man walked into Japan’s dense Higashiyama Mountains… and never walked out.

Best friend's haunting final messages sent to student missing in Japan went  unanswered

‘He Wasn’t the Weston I Knew’: Friend’s Emotional Account

Speaking exclusively to Daily Mail from Kyoto, 21-year-old Hiyu Shikari fought back tears as he recounted the meeting that took place just days before Weston’s vanishing on May 29.

“We had been friends since Weston first visited Japan two years ago on a study exchange program focused on ecological conservation,” Hiyu explained. “We bonded over hiking trails, talking about protecting forests like Higashiyama, and how young people could fight climate change. When I heard his family was coming for Grayton’s graduation, I reached out immediately. Weston sounded excited in our messages. But when we met at a quiet café near Kyoto Station, something was very wrong.”

Hiyu described Weston as distracted, quieter than usual, and carrying a heavy emotional burden. “He barely touched his matcha. He kept staring out the window toward the mountains. Then he opened up. He told me he was struggling with severe eco-anxiety – this overwhelming sense of grief and helplessness about the planet’s future. He said the rapid growth of AI and technology was making it worse. The energy demands, the data centers consuming massive power… he felt like everything he was studying in biosystems engineering was becoming pointless.”

The conversation allegedly took a darker turn when Weston spoke about the family trip. “He mentioned the argument with his mom was brewing even before they arrived. Seeing her use ChatGPT for simple things like directions hit him hard. He told me, ‘Hiyu, if even my own family doesn’t take this seriously, how can we expect the world to change?’ He felt like a hypocrite too – flying across the Pacific while preaching sustainability. It was eating him alive.”

According to Hiyu, Weston confessed the trip had amplified his feelings of isolation. “He loved his family, but he said the celebration for Grayton made him reflect on his own path. He wondered if he was living authentically or just going through the motions. The mountains called to him as a place to reset, to reconnect without screens or technology.”

Hiyu urged his friend to join the family for the rest of the trip or at least stay in touch. “I told him the mountains can be dangerous after typhoons, especially alone. He hugged me and said, ‘Nature is the only honest thing left.’ That was the last time I saw him.”

This revelation adds a devastating new layer to the mystery. Previously, the focus was on the heated family argument over AI. Now, insiders say Weston’s “personal struggle” – rooted in profound climate despair and internal conflict – may explain why he ventured deeper into the wilderness than anyone anticipated.

The Family Argument That Ignited Everything

As detailed in prior reports, tensions exploded in the family hotel room on the afternoon of May 29. Nancy Higginbotham used ChatGPT for navigation, triggering Weston’s passionate outburst about technology’s environmental cost. What began as a disagreement escalated quickly, with Weston grabbing his olive-green backpack – the same one later spotted on a mysterious figure emerging from a remote trail – and heading out alone.

Grayton Higginbotham, Weston’s younger brother, previously revealed how their father Keith tried to mediate but failed. Now, with Hiyu’s account, the picture becomes clearer: the argument wasn’t isolated. It was the breaking point for a young man already battling deep-seated anxiety about humanity’s future.

Fresh Clues from the Mountains: Backpack Sighting, Scattered Items, and the Crucial Cellphone

Search efforts, which had been plagued by dead ends and brutal conditions, received a jolt of hope recently. A local resident reported seeing a figure matching Weston’s description, complete with the distinctive backpack adorned with environmental patches, emerging from a lesser-known trail in the fog-shrouded Higashiyama Mountains.

Teams rushed in and discovered scattered hiking gear: water bottles, energy bars, a rain jacket, boot prints matching Weston’s size, a partially unrolled sleeping pad, and a small notebook filled with sustainability sketches and notes. Most significantly, they recovered a cracked cellphone believed to be his.

Forensic specialists from Japan and the U.S. are working urgently to unlock its secrets. Could there be voice memos about his conversation with Hiyu? GPS data from after he left the hotel? Unsent messages to family or friends revealing his state of mind? Sources say data recovery is progressing, but the remote location and typhoon damage have complicated efforts.

Parents and Brother’s Heart-Wrenching Response

Nancy Higginbotham, speaking from their temporary base in Kyoto, expressed both gratitude and sorrow upon learning of Hiyu’s account. “Weston has always carried the weight of the world on his shoulders. His passion for the environment is beautiful, but we had no idea it was causing him this much pain. We flew here to celebrate Grayton, but we wanted all our boys to feel loved and supported. If we had known how much he was struggling, we would have done things differently.”

Keith added: “Hiyu was a good friend to him. Hearing this makes us even more determined. Weston is strong, resourceful, and deeply connected to nature. We believe he’s out there, perhaps finding the clarity he sought, or maybe needing help after the storm.”

Grayton, who has been a pillar of strength, said the new details have strengthened the family’s resolve. “My brother opened up to Hiyu because he trusted him. It shows how much this meant to him. We’re not giving up.”

The family has raised significant funds via GoFundMe, hiring additional trackers and equipment while coordinating with hundreds of volunteers.

Higashiyama’s Deadly Beauty: The Wilderness That Swallowed a Son

The Higashiyama mountain range near Kyoto is a place of ancient temples, misty forests, and breathtaking views – but also hidden perils. Steep ravines, wildlife, landslides triggered by recent typhoons, and disorienting fog have made the search one of the most challenging in recent memory. Searchers have waded through waist-deep mud, calling Weston’s name into the void.

Experts in search and rescue note that individuals experiencing eco-anxiety or emotional distress may seek extreme solitude, underestimating risks. “Nature can be therapeutic,” said one psychologist familiar with climate grief, “but for someone already overwhelmed, it can become a dangerous escape.”

Hiyu’s description of Weston’s mindset aligns with reports of young environmentalists facing “solastalgia” – distress caused by environmental change. “He talked about feeling powerless despite his studies,” Hiyu recalled. “The AI argument was just the spark.”

Inside Weston’s World: Passion, Principles, and Pain

Weston Higginbotham was no ordinary student. A junior in biosystems engineering at Auburn University, he had hiked Spain’s Camino de Santiago solo and used his Instagram (@westonhig) to advocate for sustainable living. His bio read: “Protect the future, live sustainably.”

Friends describe him as principled to a fault – someone who walked the talk but felt the world’s failures acutely. The Japan trip, meant to be joyful, instead highlighted the contradictions: international travel’s carbon footprint, reliance on modern tech, and family dynamics under stress.

Hiyu’s friendship offered a safe space. Their past hikes together in Japan had been filled with hope. This time, the tone was different. “He said he needed the mountains to think without distractions,” Hiyu shared. “I wish I had insisted he stay with me.”

Timeline of a Tragedy Unfolding

Early May: Family plans Japan trip for Grayton’s graduation. Hiyu arranges meet-up with Weston.
Days Before Disappearance: Emotional meeting with Hiyu; Weston reveals eco-anxiety and internal struggles.
May 29 Afternoon: Heated family argument over ChatGPT and AI. Weston leaves hotel with backpack.
Evening: CCTV captures him heading toward Yamashina and Higashiyama. Phone goes dark.
May 30 Onward: Reported missing. Massive search amid typhoon conditions.
Recent Days: Sighting of backpack figure, recovery of items and cellphone. Hiyu speaks out.

Global Outpouring of Support and Expert Insights

The #FindWeston movement continues to grow, with prayer vigils in Alabama, support from Japanese locals, and donations flooding in. Environmental groups have highlighted Weston’s story as a stark reminder of the mental health toll of climate awareness.

Psychologists warn that eco-anxiety is rising among young people, particularly those in STEM fields focused on sustainability. “It’s not just worry – it can lead to withdrawal, risk-taking behavior in nature, or feelings of alienation,” one expert noted.

Hikers familiar with Higashiyama urge caution while praising Weston’s preparedness. “He knew what he was doing,” one volunteer said, “but emotions and weather can change everything.”

What Lies Ahead: Hope Amid the Fog

As forensic teams analyze the cellphone and notebook, search operations are expanding into new remote areas using drones and thermal imaging. The family remains in Japan, refusing to leave without answers.

Hiyu Shikari has joined volunteer efforts, walking the trails he once hiked with his friend. “If Weston sees the news or hears us, I hope he knows we’re here. The mountains gave him peace before – maybe they will again.”

For the Higginbothams, every update brings a whirlwind of emotions. The argument, the eco-anxiety, the personal struggle – all point to a young man seeking truth in nature, possibly overwhelmed by the very issues he wanted to solve.

Is Weston injured and sheltering in a hidden spot? Has he found the clarity he desperately needed? Or does the cracked cellphone hold a final, poignant message from the wilderness?

This story continues to grip the world, blending family drama, environmental passion, cultural friendship, and the unforgiving power of Japan’s ancient mountains. Daily Mail will bring you every new development as investigators race against time.

The Higginbotham family’s fight is a testament to love in the face of uncertainty. In the shadow of Higashiyama, one young man’s personal struggle echoes far beyond the trees – a call for understanding in an increasingly complex world.