Monday, October 14, 2013

Week seven: Was that an earthquake or did a sumo wrestler just sneeze?

こんにちは、みなさん!

Welcome back to week seven of my life in Japan. This might be a long one, as I've had one helluva weekend, so I advise you of this now--you can break this one up however you like. This weekend I went to Hiroshima and Miyajima for our three-day weekend, so let's begin now!

On the night bus with one of my Canadian friends
Friday we left our dorm at 9pm and took the train to Osaka station. While on the train, my friend had his headphones on and had them loud enough that it was a muffled sound that we could hear outside of it, but not enough to make out words. When the train conductor came through, he actually stopped, identified who's music it was, and tapped him on the shoulder and asked him to turn it down. Yes, on the train. I was across the aisle from him and couldn't hear it, and it was definitely not any louder than people having a whispering conversation. Just something to point out just how quiet these trains are. We got to our bus and boarded it at 10:30. The night bus is the cheaper alternative of traveling, (only $40 each way to Hiroshima, compared to the $80 Shinkansen--bullet train), but there is definitely a reason for this. It was a normal motorcoach, probably about 30 people capacity, with normal mini-bus type seating, which means it was pretty narrow, and didn't have very good recline. They have heavy curtains on all of the windows to block out the lights, and a curtain that blocks the view from the driver.
On the way there I had a nice Japanese guy next to me luckily, who was very unimposing, quiet, and skinny. Half a bottle of umeshu and two Benadryl later, I was sleeping...for about an hour and a half. At 1 AM we stopped at a rest stop, lights inside the bus blazing, and with a very loud announcement about using the restroom. I figured, grumpily, that I might as well go and was pleased to find clean, modern toilets, so this stop didn't bother me that much. However, three hours after this, at 4 AM, we were greeted by an alarm-clock-like song, a 5 minute speech in Japanese (followed by a 5 minute one in English), and full on blazing lights...all for two people to get off at one of the stops. This pattern then continued for the next two hours, with the lights bright and the alarm clock going off every thirty minutes. I, and every other foreigner on there, was aggravated, to say the least. For whatever reason this hardly bothered the Japanese people, who seem to be able to sleep through everything--buses, trains, airplanes, you name it, they're passed out cold on it until exactly the right moment somehow. It's a skill they have. Anyway...
Genbaku Dome
Atomic Peace Memorial Museum

We finally arrived to a very chilly (50 degrees) Hiroshima, wearing our summer clothes for the afternoon, freezing to death in a city that hadn't woken up yet. We meandered around until we bought breakfast at the conbini down the street from the station, and continued exploring Hiroshima. We kind of just stumbled into a lot of places on our hunt for Hiroshima Castle, like the Genbaku Dome, or the Atomic Bomb Dome at the very end of the Peace Memorial Park. It used to be Hiroshima's Prefectural Products Exhibition Hall before the bombing on August 6th, 1945. It was the only building left standing near the hypocentre of the bombing, though everyone inside was killed instantly. It is crazy how well they've maintained it in it's exact condition since the bombing. It's an eerie place to be, as if you can just feel some parts of the city that still haven't quite been able to rest in peace yet. We headed up Peace Park, which has lots of different statues and things to see, like the Children's Peace Memorial. This is a memorial that was petitioned by people and children after the death of Sadako, a little girl who survived the bombing, was thought to be okay, but died years later from leukemia. She made a thousand paper cranes while in the hospital (based on the belief that folding a thousand of these will grant your wish), each one representing her will and fight to live. However, at the age of 12, Sadako passed on, and was buried with these paper cranes. And now, in her memory, an uncountable amount of people donate paper cranes to the memorial in honor of her and all the other thousands of children who died from the atomic bomb. There were some incredible donations, and it was beautiful. On this both inspiring but depressing note, we finally headed into the museum..
Paper crane donations at the Children's Peace Memorial
Sadako's Memorial
...to see and hear even more horrible, horrible things...not quite as graphic as the Peace Museum last weekend, but horrible still. After we made our way through the museum, we were able to listen to a survivor speak on her experience, translated by one of my professors. She was 12 or 14 when it happened, and she was out working at one of the factories, not far from the hypocentre.

Survivors
The things she described are unimaginable--walking through the streets after managing to escape from her destroyed factory, seeing people who's skin was billowed around their hands as they held the entirety of their arm flesh by their fingernails, a boy walking around with his severed arm in his hand, people with babies burnt head to toe in hand...just unimaginable suffering. She lost all of her family and the majority of her friends except for her father, who was able to find her, but died a year later from stomach cancer. She was incredible, and it was a very moving speech and question/answer section. The actual Atomic Bomb Memorial and Peace Museum was massive, and really pretty--manicured grass (kinda something hard to find here in Japan, actually), lots of statues and fountains, the whole bit.
Atomic bomb survivor

Hiroshima-style Okonomiyaki!
We headed out to do some lighter things like shopping and eating, and headed to Okonomiyaki-mura (Okonomiyaki town), which is a 6-floor building with a crapton of shops specializing in okonomiyaki--Hiroshima style. Osaka people mix together all their ingredients first, but the Hiroshiman's do it layer-by-layer, and it was equally tasty...I'd probably be more of a fan if I liked cabbage more, but since I'm not a huge lover of it (kinda fishy or something) it's all right. I'm sure everyone else would love it. It's grilled and layered with batter, cabbage, noodles (soba or udon), an egg, whatever meat you chose (I got bacon, mmm), and various spices. Pretty tasty. Afterward, we stopped for a pastry you see everywhere in Japan--essentially a copy of that one French pastry thing--it's a pancake-like-thing made into a cone and stuffed with whip cream and whatever you choose, and I got brownie chunks and chocolate in mine. Delicious, mm!

Pastry dessert thingy, mm.
We went out to our hostel, $4.80 away by train, and arrived...only to find out we were at the wrong one. Luckily, my friend with us is fluent in Japanese, and talked with the very confused owners of "Fuji Business Hotel" (the one we booked was Fuji Hostel, booked through booking.com), who tried everything they could to help us. They called the hotel, who's number didn't work, and who's address wouldn't work on our phones (and, at best guess, was 2 and 1/2 hours away from where we now were). They tried calling around other hotels nearby for any rooms, but everything was booked up. Unbelievable. (I now have a cancellation fee of the full price on my credit card, which I now have to fight and dispute, joy.) Also, this town was mad sketchy--everything was still open and bumping at 8pm on a Friday (yeah, that's weird in Japan), and filled with very yakuza looking men in tuxedos, surrounded by questionable looking women they had come flirt with our group of boys. AKA we were now in a town run by the yakuza, homeless.

Prices at the Internet Cafe
We decided to go back to Hiroshima ($4.80 back), exhausted, and try our luck there. We all had dying or dead electronics (no Internet or phones to find another place to stay), and I managed to find some outlets near the ticket booth, behind some chairs. As I tried plugging my stuff in, the ticket guy yelled at us not to use it, without explanation, and so we moved to the other side of the station to try our luck. He actually watched us and sent someone else over there, where we were very out of the way from everyone and everything because everything was closed, just to tell us that we couldn't use the outlets. I had my friend explain our terrible situation, and I begged for just 10 minutes ("Ju-pun kudasai!"), and he "allowed" us 5 minutes...and he timed us. However, as we were leaving, a Japanese lady came and plugged her stuff in, which the workers clearly saw, and didn't say anything. I pointed it out to them (as they stared at me like I was crazy), ready to flip out on someone in rage, just leaving before I got kicked out of the friggin' country. Japan gets a lot of things right, but when they get something wrong, they get it very wrong. Simple things like this always piss me off, America or Japan, because it's just power-hungry little security guards who feel the need to assert their dominance. As the topping on the cake, my friend lost his ticket on our way there, and like jerks, they made him pay again before leaving even though he explained he already paid, he just lost his ticket. Woohoo.

My "bedroom" for the night
Now outside, in the cold wind, at midnight on little to no sleep, we wandered around, looking for something. Another friend of ours had our dilemma earlier, just because she hadn't booked anything, and we knew she was staying at an Internet cafe across the street from the station, and we decided to give that a try. Let me tell you how strange this whole phenomena is: it's a place where you pay various blocks of time and are given either a room or a cubicle, and have access to Internet, manga, and TV. They have a game section (pool, darts, whatever) available for another fee, bathrooms, showers ($3 a shower for some amount of time), drinks, snacks, and ice cream. This is apparently really popular among runaways and homeless people, and it was busy. There were normal looking people, some sketchy people, some travelers, you name it. We paid $16 for 6 hours, plus $3 for a (required) membership card. For this, we were given a cubicle-like-office that fit a desk with a computer and a Lazy Boy recliner. There wasn't a real door, just this half-thing (think Western saloon style) you could slide closed but not lock, and you could still see over everyone's thing if you were walking by. My friend was walking around and saw people casually watching porn, or playing games, or doing whatever, at midnight on a Friday night, by themselves. I grabbed a drink (included in my price), washed my face in the sink, and managed to pass out by 1:30 after downing two more Benadryl.

On the ferry to Miyajima!
Somehow surviving the night without getting robbed or molested, we checked out at 6am to avoid any extra fees (though somehow got charged an extra $2 for God knows what), and stumbled over to the station to head to Miyajimaguchi, the port city leading to Miyajima. It was a quick, (cold) painless 25-minute ride ($4.00), and a 5-minute ferry ride (another $4.00) to Miyajima Island.

This place also holds deer sacred, therefore they roam all over, but they're less friendly/humanized than the bowing Nara deer. It was an absolutely beautiful island, with so many friendly visitors and residents, really some of the kindest people I've interacted with since being in Japan. We saw the famous Itsukushima Shrine and its torii (gate), which was breathtaking (especially in the evening), and was cool because in the morning with low tide we could touch it, but by the afternoon it was surrounded by water with boats floating between it.
Deer of Miyajima
Beautiful!
We climbed two miles up Mt Misen, (535 meters high) a two hour hike up and up and up...I swear I use this analogy too much in Japan, but it was literally like the stairway to frickin' Heaven. I thought I'd die--the way we took apparently is the way you should go down, as it is way more difficult due to the stairs that go on forever, as opposed to the more sloping area that you're supposed to go up. My legs and knees are still shaking. All the Japanese people we passed were very encouraging, and friendly, always saying good afternoon and good luck, pleased to see us climbing instead of riding the car up. Somehow we made it to the top, and the entire way up really was gorgeous, and the view justified it all. Beautiful.

We then, exhausted, took the cable car down ($8 or $10) and enjoyed the views the lazy way. Starving and thirsty, we grabbed lunch--two skewers, one fried chicken, the other oyster filled with cheese and wrapped in bacon, and a dessert of the famous momiji dessert--and enjoyed the perfect, breezy weather on the rock lining the ocean.
Top of Mt Misen
Oyster stuffed with cheese and wrapped in bacon!

Momiji, pancake-like-batter stuffed with bean paste or vanilla maple custard
Several samurai's-trying-to-kill-us and deers-eating-my-souvenir-bags-while-I-was-napping later, we took some last-minute pictures of Isukushima Shrine, shopped around, and headed out on the ferry back to Hiroshima. We ate dinner at Sukiya (the "McDonalds" of Japanese food, specializing in gyudon--literally meaning "meat bowls") and killed time before our bus left at 10pm. I thought the ride back couldn't be any worse than the ride there...and yet somehow, I was wrong.

Final goodbye to Miyajima
This bus had no power outlets, and I had dying electronics, and the girl I sat next to (another student from Kansai Gaidai I didn't know) kept scooting into my space and squeezing her butt onto mine. I literally could feel her butt cheek division on my thigh. Annoyed, I took my two Benadryl without realizing that we were going to do the same stops in reverse, so my driver talked for 30 minutes, and kept the lights on for 2 hours. I managed to groggily stay half-asleep for those first two hours, but after the first rest stop, I couldn't fall back asleep or get comfortable in the narrow seats with terrible recline. He kept flicking the lights on and talking about God knows what, and we arrived at Osaka station at 4:30 AM. Note, the drive doesn't actually take that long, but the drivers sleep halfway through the ride--not that big of a deal because the trains don't start until 5 anyway, but for those who were riding to Kyoto, another 30 minutes away, I'd probably be annoyed. We took our cold, crowded hour ride back home, plus our 15 minute walk, and I showered and crashed, never so happy to see my flat little futon in my life.


Cheese gyudon
Overall, it was a good weekend. A very long one, but a good one, despite all the bumps and bruises and lack of sleep. I'm glad to be back in my room, curled up on my futon, showered, fed, and using my electronics. It's the simple things that make you the happiest. We're currently planning our trip to Tokyo, leaving the night before Halloween so we can be in Tokyo for it (eep!) and we're going to finalize all the details tomorrow. We've got midterms coming up the next two weeks (holy crap), and my oral exam for Japanese is this week. Wish me luck!

Ponder-ances~~
Melon float from McDonalds
I felt my first earthquake! http://www.google.org/publicalerts/alert?aid=c8e488af6425776b&hl=en&gl=JP&source=web . It kind of just felt like being in a small house/car and having a big semi go by, where you can feel the sway and shake and you hear a little rumble, and you raise your eyebrow and say, "Dang." You gotta feel for Japan, I mean really--tornadoes, typhoons (hurricanes), tsunamis, floods, earthquakes, volcanoes...for a country so small, they sure do have a lot of problems. Seriously.

The melon soda float at McDonalds is delicious. Do normal floats have ice in them? They put ice in theirs, and I'm not sure if that's normal or not. Whatever, it and the ebi-fillet are must-haves here in Japan. Don't miss out.

Japanese people turn their cars off at stoplights. At first I thought they were just turning off their headlights, or dimming them, but you can actually hear their cars clicking back on when the light changes. They're incredibly patient about the person in front of them turning their car on and going (whereas in Miami, if you sit for even half a millisecond after the light turns green, they're honking violently behind you). I don't know why they turn their cars off, because at this point they should be able to idle efficiently enough that this is unnecessary. Nevertheless, just an observation.

The best brand of melon bread. SO GOOD.
Sweat rags are sold everywhere--decorative, cute, masculine, for the young and for the old. They're normal face towels, except they're used specifically for heavy amounts of sweat. I'm kind of torn on the whole sweat rag vs hand debate, as I can't decide what's actually grosser. Yes, it's nice that you don't have to worry about them having just wiped their neck sweat off with their hand and grabbing the door handle, but it's also really unattractive when you see a pretty girl whip out her sweat rag from her bag (stank and all). Practically every Japanese person has one, and I'm just not sure if it's a trend I want to catch on in America.

Top of Mt. Misen
When you go to a buffet in America, the goal is to fill up your plate with everything possible, and at least try a little of everything. Yes, inevitably, some things are going to be gross, possibly inedible, but you try it and move on. That's the whole point of paying for a buffet, right? Well, in Japan, there are rules specifically against leaving anything on your plate, especially at buffets. This is a constant struggle we non-Asian-country kids have been having, because if we first of all can't read the signs, we kind of just grab everything and hope for the best, and secondly, a lot of things just don't taste as good as they may look here. This gets us lots of glares as we try to swallow down the unpleasant food we have on our plate (and allows us to come with creative ways to hide the food we don't eat, like in a bowl of melted ice cream). Most of the buffets have time limits, and you are clocked in and clocked out, given the set of rules which always include the "clean plate" rule. I know, I know, it's good that they save their foods with all the starving people out in the world, but I just paid over $12 to eat, which means by golly I am going to eat and not eat whatever I please, because if it isn't good I'm going to fill up on good stuff instead. This argument never really works with Japanese people, however. /sigh

And on that final note, tada and farewell, oyasumi nasai!

<3

Recreation of the bombing
Interpretation of my speaker's story of what she saw


Weird salty drink

Peace Memorial Museum

Paper crane donation

Being goobers on the train ride

<3

Samurai's trying to kill us
Manga available to read at the Internet Cafe
Goodbye and goodnight, Miyajima

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Week six: Floating along in a sea of Asian

Konbanwa again everyone!

Hope y'all are doing well. Well, the week was a long one--fighting with my school to get my loan money (fingers crossed I get it this week), studying for some exams and quizzes, and fighting to stay awake half the time--but we made it through and we're rounding our way onto the seventh week. Wow!

Allied POW in Singapore
This week, in class, I spent a big chunk of time in my classes watching events leading up to Hiroshima and Hiroshima itself, as we prepare for our trip to Hiroshima this coming weekend. This was an incredibly graphic journey through the 1900s, from Vietnam to the horrors of WWII, with no mercy spared to my thoughts later. This was then rounded up by my trip to the Center for International Peace in Osaka this past Saturday. Peace Osaka is a museum dedicated to showing the horrors of war, and to promote peace. Well, they showed horrors all right--every bad thing that happened from modern day. This included, impressively, the horrible things Japan has done to Asia, as well as dedications to the Holocaust and the Stalin genocides, and various other terrible crimes against humanity.

Japanese attacking Manchuria (China)
They showed us an animated film where a family prepared for the fire bombing on their city, releasing their pet bird into the sky for freedom, and their entire ordeal of escaping just a little too late--the baby got blown up on the dad's back while he was bandaging up the arm gushing blood on the older sister, the mom was bleeding from her face, etc--such a graphic animation, something I know they'd never show in the US (even WITH parental permission). Funny how different societies function. Graphic but important, and interesting. History can't be ignored just because it's ugly.  The museum did a good job not really placing blame on any one person or country for any horror, instead just really showing it and saying ways we could and have been improving.

Osaka Castle
After all of that, we went to the nearby Osaka Castle, a gorgeous piece of architecture. We browsed around (but didn't go inside or up top, because I'm planning on going back once the leaves change colors in another month or so), and went shopping in the souvenir shops around the area. And then, starving as we were, we headed off to Sweets Paradise in Umeda (a city about 15 minutes by train from where we were). Sweets Paradise is a sweets buffet, and for $14 you get 70 minute access. It included a lot of appetizers as real food, like various pastas and soups, finger sandwiches, mini-pancakes stuffed with mochi (surprisingly delicious), and curry rice. There's "nomihoudai" for the non-alcoholic beverages (amazing melon soda, as always <3), which is always a bonus. And then there were the cakes. Okay, so cake in Japan is usually dry as a desert, sticking to your tongue and basically being a choking hazard for every person who attempts to eat it. For whatever reason, they really like it this way--truly--and it is just horrid. Finally though, there were some not-dry cakes! I had chocolates and strawberries and cheesecake and some odd little fruit flavored jelly-like-mochi-kinda things (pear flavored?) and ice cream. While nothing here is ever as sweet as it is back home, and I mean nothing--not even the cheesecake!--it was nice to finally get (some) moist cakes and normal sweets. A pretty good deal I'd say.

Sweets Paradise cakes, mmm
Today I spent catching up on sleep, television, laundry, and homework. Overall a pretty productive day I'd say. TV can be all but impossible to watch here if you don't torrent it online, because even when you want to watch it legally, the websites for the official networks don't work here. Therefore, if you're ever going overseas for a length of time, download UTorrent and get on Piratebay or something. Your life will be much, much happier. This weekend, like I said, I'm going to Hiroshima and the next I'm going to go have a heart attack at Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios Japan. Wish me luck!

Delicious!
Random thoughts: There's so many old people here, what with Japan's upside-down pyramid population, and it's so rare to see a family with more than two kids. My dorm is next-door to the cemetery, and so therefore I see frequent funerals and, as someone who has been to more funerals than weddings, I can notice some differences between the ones I've been to and the ones here. They transport them from the funeral home (also close to where I live) on a minibus usually, over to the cemetery, though I have seen some processions walking or a few cars straggling behind the hearse (maybe the cheaper funerals?) They still wear all black, but you don't see the weeping emotions you normally do at our funerals. It makes you want to find the person who is most closely related with the deceased and see if they, at least, are crying. I guess it goes with the whole stoic Japanese persona, but still...

Silly bean.
As I suspected, Japan has an extremely protected farming market, and places tariffs on anything imported, which causes apples to cost $5 and for 2 kilograms (4.4 lbs) of Japanese "high quality" rice--the only kind of rice you can buy (because non-Japanese rice isn't allowed here)--to cost $14.00. Japan has one of the lowest food self-sufficiency rates among major industrialized countries, and Japan’s food self-sufficiency rate on a calorific intake basis slipped to 39 percent in 2010. Half of the meat products consumed in Japan is imported, and even a vast majority of staples in the Japanese diet like soybeans and cooking oil are imported. This means that a massive part of their diet is heavily taxed, and that sucks for the Japanese people...and for those of us temporarily visiting. Augh. The tariff rate in 2007 on imported products was as follows: 10.1 percent for agricultural products, 4.6 percent for fish and fish products, and 1.7 percent for wood, pulp, paper and furniture. 10.1%! Holy cow. I'm all for supporting your local farmers and eating local, but you eat local what you have local, and you don't force those who can't afford it to pay a higher price (or, ya know, just kick them out of the market entirely, like all of us students who can't afford to buy fruit this semester). Also, all meat from the US is banned here, including weird things like beef jerky, because the Japanese government doesn't trust the USDA/US meat. Not like I blame them for not trusting the USDA, but come on. Australian meat, but not ours. Rude.



(http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2011/08/12/national/food-self-sufficiency-rate-fell-below-40-in-2010/#.UlFlZxC_sls)

Friends at lunch :)
I bought vitamins this week, too, after experiencing a lot of joint pains and fogginess. I guess any change in diet can bring this on, and since I've been taking it (call it a placebo effect) I've been feeling at least mostly better. Vitamins have to be bought at the health and beauty market, and most Japanese pills are really weird looking, and once again, in bags. Luckily they did have NatureMade (not my favorite brand), so I was able to buy some Vitamin B-12 and multi-vitamins. Huzzah!

I'm going to call this one a wrap and leave you with pictures instead. Have a great one everyone, until next time, ja mata!




Being French in Japan. Globalization!
Engrish.

Kamikaze with a cherry blossom.



Horrible stories of war
Just awful stories of the fire bombings

Osaka Castle Park

Squid--augh! So chewy apparently.
So cute before death.
Missiles dropped in Japan



Osaka Castle with Jacob








Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Week five: This country is one big, never-ending mountain...

Hashiburi minnasan!

Here we are again, five weeks in. The weather here is still hot as the dickens (today had 85 high, humid, low of 65), but it can't be any worse than Florida is right now (if it is, don't tell me, I don't want to know), and everything is going good. I think I'm starting to get all vitamin-deficient, so I just invested in some multi-vites (difficult to find actually, and no gummy-vites, wahh), and am planning on buying a pack of spinach and some other vitamin-packed-but-not-outrageously-expensive things. Fingers crossed! My week went pretty well, and I've got lots of fun pictures. Hajimaru!

Lake Biwa
On Saturday my friend and I headed out to Lake Biwa in the Shiga prefecture. Biwa-ko is the largest body of freshwater in Japan, and the tip of it is just an hour away by train from Hirakata. It reminded me a lot of Lake Michigan, seemingly endless, more ocean-like than lake, and equally pretty (but not nearly as numbingly cold).  My friends have visited other parts of the lake which are further away, and that seems really pretty too--more "beachy", with sand and places to lay out on the shoreline. The area we went to was still cityish, and it was more of a park surrounding the lake, but it was still really pretty.

Beer Garden, Kyoto Tower
Here in Japan they have seasonal beer gardens on the rooftops of various buildings around the country, and on Saturday night we went to one in the heart of Kyoto, on the Kyoto Tower. It was $30 for unlimited food and drinks, and it was pretty good--lots of chicken in different ways, salads, fried foods, desserts, and really good umeshu, or plum wine. Umeshu is truly delicious, and this is coming from someone who doesn't like wine or alcohol that much. So good! Good food, awesome atmosphere overlooking the city, and a good night. Definitely worth doing at least once.

Rockin' On: Japan Circuit Vol. 52!
On Sunday we went to Namba in Osaka, and went shopping before our concert later that night. Namba has lots of shopping districts, from kitchen and home supplies to cheap electronics (called denden town). I've been trying to stockpile on my sweaters slowly but surely, preparing for the cold that I know is going to come, and I love the new Snoopy sweater I bought from UniGlow (a branch of H&M). We shopped around the electronics district for awhile (scouting around past the millions of semi-sketchy maid cafe's we passed) and hit up a hardcore nerdy arcade before heading off to our concert at Namba Hatch.
There were six performers, predominately female rock bands, and it got pretty crazy. The hall was about as big as Hard Rock Live, and filled to the brim with people young and old. There was both moshing and crowd surfing (though not as much as at an American concert). What was odd? First of all, we didn't get our bags checked, something I've never had happen to me at any place, and they made us buy a $5.00 drink voucher the moment we walked in the door, no opt-out. There were barriers all over the standing-room floor, big metal poles that made section-like-walls, which I found to be unbelievably dangerous in a completely unlit floor area. Japanese people didn't sing out loud to the songs, even when they knew them, unless prompted by the artist. They all kind of just followed what the other fans were doing--when people raised on finger up and waved it to the music, all of them did (still not singing--SO WEIRD!). They didn't take out their phones or cameras to take pictures or recordings of the artist. No one talked between sets, or between songs (until some people got drunk and started yelling some things during one bands performance). The other band members would sometimes talk, but not very often, nor would they play rifts of music while the singer got ready for the next song, or anything, so you'd stand there between songs with enough silence to hear a pin drop. So odd.
I do a lot of walking. My month-old flip flop :(

Random thoughts: Japanese bathrooms are seriously slacking on the paper towels OR hand dryers. They kind of just want you to shake it off, or use your sweat rag (the rags they sell everywhere, called exactly that--sweat rags), or your handkerchief (who has one of those these days besides my dad?).

Manicures, pedicures, and haircuts are all really expensive in Japan--manicure can cost up to $60, pedicure can cost another $50 or more on top of that, and my friend gets her haircut "cheaply" for $35 (her hair is just touching her shoulder blades). Can I get some minorities up in this country please?

Found online--a picture of our local hospital. Kinda sketchy.
The doctor/medical system here is a socialized national healthcare program, and on that note, here are some major issues I've seen/heard about thus far: my friend from my university has been here since the beginning of August, and has been sick since then. She has what seems like thrush (the fungal infection of the mouth), with some pretty obvious symptoms pointing at this (her tongue is completely white!), and yet she's been to seven different doctors to no avail. No antibiotics, no medicine, no advice. She went to a regular doctor who pointed her to a throat doctor who pointed her to a dentist who pointed her to a different ENT who pointed her back to the dentist and so on and so forth. All the doctors looked at her and said she was fine with hardly another word--and this isn't because of a communication breakdown, because she had a Japanese person with her to translate. They simply won't do anything. She finally went to an American doctor this past weekend and was able to get some simple medicines, but nothing prescription still, so hopefully it works and that'll be that, but who knows.

Also, my other friend was cleaning early one morning and went to move a Seminar House blender aside, and without realizing it was still plugged in, promptly sliced his hand into sashimi. After running around, calmly speaking Japanese (though bleeding out profusely) and trying to get help, he was sent on the bus (yes, the bus, by himself) to our university, who then had to look up which hospital was open. Wait, did you get that? I'll say it again. Which hospital was open. Because...hospitals close here? Apparently, most hospitals in towns and smaller cities are only open Monday-Friday from 9-7, and are often not open on the weekend at all (but if they are, it's for very limited hours, like the bank). So he had to go to the hospital (luckily, on a Tuesday or whatever weekday it was, our local hospital was open) with an interpreter from our school, cash in hand (ha, ha) and wait for the hospital to open at 9. After he went in he had an all right time with everything, got eight stitches, tada, all done (though oddly enough, they weren't the dissolving stitches), 80 something yen later or something close to that (after his insurance kicked in). Yeah, and keep in mind you need cash to pay your hospital bills here, so be ready. I'll keep my "reasons why I don't want the government controlling my healthcare" points for another day...

Tampons aren't even an option here. Seriously. You can find some, after searching at several different shops, but there's one brand, and it looks kind of awful. Just a warning.

My bank booklet. Amount in my account is stamped inside every time I check/deposit money.
The banking system is a little weird--if you lose your pin number, you have to cut the card up and get a new one sent to you...something that after the original creation of the account took 4 weeks to accomplish.  They make you come up with your own signature, and it isn't your name, it's just supposed to be something close to your name, but something that is uniquely yours, but not too hard to remember, but it has to be kept relatively short. My name is kind of long, especially by Japanese standards, at 26 letters (if they have a long first name, they usually seem to have a short last name, or vice versa), but this shortening does make it kind of confusing to remember that my signature isn't my signature..just a made up one. You have to keep this chunky bankbook (seen pictured) with you if you ever want to do deposits, even though you're also given a regular "cash card", essentially just a debit card. Of course, cards are taken practically nowhere, so you have to go to the ATM (the one with hours) to get your money out--and, if you visit an ATM, even your banks, after the inside bank is closed (even though the ATM is still open), you are charged a convenience fee. At YOUR bank. Today, I deposited what I had of my US dollars and my travelers checks into my new bank account at Sumitomo Mitsui Bank, and out of the $526 dollars I put in, they only took $20 for a currency conversion fee, which I guess might not be that bad. I don't know really. Oh well.

Japanese mosquitoes and their lack of screens. They've never heard of spraying for mosquitoes, just spraying yourself or using scented candles. And there are mosquitoes here like there are in Florida--if not worse (it might be worse here, truly). You can be out in the middle of the blazing hot afternoon and get bitten by several different mosquitoes. And, to make this worse, they don't have screens on the majority of their windows, so when the weather is nice, you can't have the windows open without inviting every bug in the world in, too. I just don't understand.

Finnish people all kind of look the same, is that racist? Seriously.

Women-only section
 They have their fair share of homeless/drunk people here, too. And plenty of perverts. At the concert I attended, there was a (Japanese) guy who smashed up against my backside in the crowd (he was my height, too, so imagine how unpleasant that direct my-butt-to-his-groin contact was), grabbed my hips, and then grabbed my inner thigh after I tried getting him off of me. I promptly had to smack his hand as hard as I could (which wasn't very strong, considering I was in a tight crowd without the ability to really cock back my hand) and leave the crowd until the band left. Augh. And we've had several homeless/drunk people come up to us at the stations, muttering things in Japanese, yelling, pounding on the train doors, etc. Some trains and subway carts have women-only sections during certain hours to avoid all the perverts. Nowhere is perfect I guess.

My classes are good, I'm going to Peace Osaka (a WWII museum) this weekend with one of my classes. Japanese is good, but difficult to do at 9 and 10 in the morning when my brain is at a completely non-functioning level, period, but still good.

And with that, I think I'll call it a wrap.

Arigatou, ja ne!

RIP Uncle Miklos Bus. <3 Your unbelievably positive (especially for a Hungarian!) outlook, warm smile, and kind heart will be sorely missed by everyone. I'm so sad I wasn't able to see you or your family as often as I would have liked, but the moments we had together are things I will treasure forever. <3 Sayounara, à plus tard, amíg.
Expensive Spam



$20, thin slices of fatty beef.

Lake Biwa
Tomodachi and I during lunch--Miki (center) and Yuri (right)!
The meat I've been buying--about two meals (it's thin), but so greasy!

One pork chop, $5. Augh.



Wedding releasing balloons on Lake Biwa