Monday, December 15, 2008

a weekend with Sir Bennett Baldwin

A couple weekends ago, my good buddy Ben came over from South Korea for a weekend in Japan.



We learned several important things.

1) Ben is capable of eating a helluva lot of sushi.



2) Hot dog sushi is delicious.



3) The ancient city of Kamakura (capital of Japan from 1185–1333) has a very large Buddha.



4) According to the fortune I bought at Hase-dera Temple, now is a fortuitous time to buy armor, a harness, a cow and a horse.



5) Even halfway around the world, you can still meet cool people from Boston like Mandy.



6) There is apparently a "party train". This will remain forever a mystery, we didn't board it.



Speaking of mysteries, Ben and I also went clubbing and stayed out at Roppongi all night. But we didn't bring cameras, so that story will live on only in the tales we tell our children in the years to come ... Ben, come back to Japan again soon.

Monday, December 01, 2008

trash in Japan

Yep - this is a blog entry about trash.

If I had a 100 yen coin for every time I thought to myself, "Henry, you should blog about trash in Japan", I would probably have enough to hire my own personal Trash Consultant. But that is, unfortunately, not the case. A quick primer on trash - in kanji it's 護美(ゴミ) - "go-mi" which according to my coworker means "protect beauty". And actually she also said it's an old word - it's always meant "protect beauty", it's not just part of some recent government green campaign, it's a deep feature of the language itself.  Pretty amazing, huh?

I really respect the Japanese attitude toward trash. Unfortunately, I find myself consistently rebelling against it. Click on the picture below and zoom in (all sizes button in Flickr just above the picture) to see what I mean.



That's the trash spot right in front of the entrance to my apartment. The green mesh is to keep out birds/bears, I'm guessing. Up at the top centerish of the picture, zoomed in, you'll see a sign that outlines which day each type of trash item is picked up - but I've got an English spreadsheet at home which translates it as well. Yes - spreadsheet. Officially, each item is supposed to be not only separated, but placed in a different colored bag (which must be purchased at participating supermarkets located in the area). The yellow one right there is my "combustibles" trash - meaning paper, food, etc. which can be burned. If the trash is not accurately and thusly labeled, the trashmen will leave a sticker on the bag which is covered in very difficult Japanese and they'll check off a few options, which probably translate as:

Bag was:
(yes) improperly labeled.
(yes) improperly sealed.
(yes) a bit scuffed up on the bottom, which is completely unacceptable.
(yes) emitting odors above acceptable trash processing levels.

Tenant is:
(yes) a terrible person who hates our Mother Earth.
(yes) clearly a foreign buffoon.

The pickup days and organization scheme require a great deal of effort and perhaps 4 or 5 more trash cans than I currently own in my apartment (I own one). Such things as plastic convenience store trays, every kind of bottle material, different metals - and it's all on a very complicated pickup scheme. I think non-burnable, non-convenience store plastics (type 2) are picked up every second Tuesday. Most of the people in my apartment complex, I've heard, simply put everything in the yellow burnable bags and call it a day.

While you're out and about in Tokyo, the situation is even worse. The only trash cans you can consistently count on are the ones for recycleable plastic bottles, which are found next to vending machines (which are EVERYwhere). Apart from that, you won't find any trash cans on street corners, in parks, in bathrooms (also: no paper towels), and in most stores. Sometimes you'll see them in convenience stores, sometimes not. I wandered around Shibuya for 45 minutes dragging a trash bag with me, I only lost it because I asked an information booth lady if she had one, and she took it (I think she was just being polite).

At my school there are trash cans in the bathroom, but no hand towels, and you're not allowed to throw anything in the trash can which is not already contained in a plastic bag.

So you can imagine how this is all very alien and very limiting, especially when you find yourself with something messy on your hands. But hey - protecting the beauty of the Earth is worth something too.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

just something interesting I just read

Right now I'm reading Sake and Satori: Asian Journals - Japan by Joseph Campbell. From page 100: "The distinguishing characteristic of one who has attained awakening and lives in it is: gratefulness to the world- to the tea, the teacup, the table, everything - which has made and makes existence and enlightenment possible. The idea of religion as gratefulness permeated Japan".

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Two Eyes in Tokyo

So I was walking to a cafe the other day with my Japanese friend and all of a sudden we came upon these two fellows in suits wearing strange, huge masks. We couldn't figure out what they were until we walked around the other side - two giant eyeballs being guided by a Santa's elf girl. A true WTF?! moment, even my Japanese friend had no clue what was going on. Merry Christmas, super early, Tokyo style! This picture doesn't do just to the bizarreness of the situation, and the creepy way they just sort of shuffled along the road. Very ironic to be dressed up as a giant eye and be completely blind.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

i made a joke!

So, I'm not sure if I've ever made up a joke in my life. But today, I was just thinking about my friend Ben who's coming to visit me in a couple of weeks here in Japan, he's in the US Army and I believe he's a lieutenant. So that word was just floating around in my head, and this joke just popped right in after it. It's terrible, but I'm going to share it with you anyway. Here goes:

Q: What do you call an army officer who takes up residence in a bathroom?
A: A loo tenant!

The Scottish guy I work with here gave me a chuckle, though I'm not sure if it was out of pity or not. Seriously though, I think this joke is gold. I'm gonna be famous!

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Meiji Jingu 50th anniversary

Recently the biggest Shinto shrine in Tokyo, the Meiji Jingu, held its 50th anniversary celebration. The Meiji Shrine was built in the early 1900s to enshrine the spirits of Emperor Meiji and his wife - it was destroyed in the bombings during World War II, but was rebuilt in 1958, making this the 50th year since its restoration.

As I walked through the park in the dark, candles lit the path toward the shrine.



The torii which mark the entrance to the shrine, lit up in the dark.



A priest (or king?) and a young disciple maybe, talked to each other in a strange sing-songy voice - my friend said it reminded her of Noh theater, something I'm hoping to see in Tokyo soon.



The priest, at times, cried.



We left around the time when a scary-looking white-masked robed figure entered, slowly walked around menacingly, and finally sat next to the priest and a young cherry blossom tree.



Good times!

Monday, November 10, 2008

File Under: Awesome Engrish

Usually, I'll model dialogue for my students, and then have them use substitution from their own lives to build understanding.

My dialogue model for today:
"Yesterday I ate sushi. It was so delicious."

One of my student's substitution:
"Yesterday I made love to my girlfriend. It was so delicious."

A+ !!

Japanese food

Those of you who know me, know that I love Asian food. So coming here to Japan, one of my most important missions has been to make friends with the native food, then devour it. Here are some of the things I've been eating.

I was on my way to hike Mitake mountain and I had to change trains to a local line on the same platform. So, I had 20 minutes to kill and I was hungry, but I didn't want to leave the station ... no problem! The Japanese have thought about this problem, they have ramen shops right in the middle of the train platform. I had soba (buckwheat noodles) with fried vegetables mixed in ... mmm. It's a surprisingly dark taste - hard to describe. Definitely not sweet or even salty.



The rotating sushi bars are the best. You just sit down, get free unlimited tea from a spigot, all the wasabi and pickled ginger you want, and just pull down plates from the conveyor belt to eat. You get to make a sweet tower that tells your dining neighbors exactly how much of a sushi pig you are. :D



Speaking of pigs .......



And finally, a Japanese take on a Korean restaurant. the prices are heartbreaking, but even more disturbing ... I don't recall ever seeing a floating poopie sausage on the menu in Korea?!



The good news, tea report: in the teacher's room of my school, there is a machine which dispenses two things - hot water, and loose leaf green tea, at the touch of a button. Most days, I just don't stop drinking it.

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Tokyo Design Festa

This weekend, Ross Ilana and I went to Tokyo Design Festa, a once-a-year independent art festival held in a massive convention center called Tokyo Big Sight. In some cases you could even watch the art as it happened - this woman was body-painting a ... tiger man?



This little boy fell in love with a new robot friend - which clapped symbols and whistled to advertise the booth's art.



There was a ninja dance show!!



Children could learn how to weave at looms.



There was a teepee village.



Some sensual dance body painting ...



... and some people just sat around with animal heads on.



Just simply amazing to be able to see new, original artwork even few feet, turn a corner, and see tons more -- I believe there were between 2,000 to 3,000 artists at the show.

And oh yeah - they crowned me their mushroom king! They just pulled me into this display, I had no idea what was going on ...

Thursday, November 06, 2008

o b a m a 2 0 0 8 !!!!

It's been too long since I've last posted here, but a long time between posts usually means I'm having too much fun to sit down and write something, and that's definitely the case lately. Just some bits and pieces of life here in Japan ...

I mentioned the election in all of my classes today (I teach college freshmen, mostly boys), and the reactions were so varied. Usually I started it out like this:

Henry: "Something happened yesterday, in America. It was a special day. What happened?" (yay for simple English!)
((silence, students process it and scratch their heads ... then, one of two things))
Random student: Obama!
OR
Random student: (Incomprehensible Japanese, and laughter)
Henry (both situations): "Yes! And now for today's lesson ..."

In some classes where I thought they might be able to handle it I pushed the "conversation" a little further.

Henry: "Why is Obama special? He's the first ... what?" I was looking for - the first black/African American President. What I got, in one class, was a kid who yelled out the "n" word.

You can guess from this the level of most of the students in my class - sometimes worse English than my 4 weeks of Japanese. ;)

And now a couple of pictures ...



A wolf god dances at an autumn festival in Kawagoe, north of Tokyo.



An old bell-tower, Kawagoe.



A noodle sandwich in the 7-Eleven near my house. Mmm ... carbs!

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

tokyo a go go

Days are rushing by.

Last weekend, I took the train out to Mitake-san, a small mountain close to Tokyo which has a town and a Shinto shrine at its peak. Above is one of the huge guard dog statues at the foot of the shrine, with a sunset over Tokyo in the distance.



The zigzag papers below are hung on a rope to show the boundary of the sacred space. They're origami, made by Shinto priests from a single sheet of square paper.



I really like seeing the more traditional/early pictograms of kanji - Chinese characters. They mean giving something to someone higher than you.



This is a fox god, which according to one of my co-teachers here at the university is "one of the most popular gods". Go fox! There were two of them in a quiet little shrine off the main shrine area, their stares were stunning.



More zigzag papers; they're called "o-shide".



Sunset, mist, and trees.



On Friday night after work, Carrie, Ross and I went out and had a beer in an izakaya (traditional Japanese bar), and they had these giant beers that made us feel like hobbits. First week of work ... kam-pai!!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

I moved to Japan!!

Hello from JAPAN!! I still can't believe I'm here, honestly. :P

Flight was great, made friends with a couple of college kids who were part of a Philipino dance troupe (though they were Japanese) on tour in America, and they helped me practice my terrible Japanese - it's a little less terrible now! After the flight, my company helped me navigate the intense mesh network of trains that is the greater Tokyo metropolitan area, and after a short walk from the train station, I arrived at my apartment.



That's the entrance-way, with a little galley kitchen. I sleep directly above the entrance-way, if you can believe it.



This is the main room of my place, with mid-afternoon light. The computer-looking screen is actually my TV, which has all kinds of special features which I have no idea how to use. Exciting to look at though.



From the other direction. The first time I saw the loft I jumped with glee, no kiddin.



On the ladder, which is a scary place to be half-awake from jet-lag in the middle of the night, heading to the bathroom. No injuries, so far so good.



The crowning prize - a toilet that squirts your butt with water. What else could I need? Maybe an air dry button, I'm still trying to figure out if it has one ...

Right now I'm heading off to downtown Tokyo, all the teachers hired this semester with my company have a seminar for the next two days to get to know each other and the company curriculum, will post more when I get back. :) Miss you guys

I moved to Japan!!

Hello from JAPAN!! I still can't believe I'm here, honestly. :P

Flight was great, made friends with a couple of college kids who were part of a Philipino dance troupe (though they were Japanese) on tour in America, and they helped me practice my terrible Japanese - it's a little less terrible now! After the flight, my company helped me navigate the intense mesh network of trains that is the greater Tokyo metropolitan area, and after a short walk from the train station, I arrived at my apartment.



That's the entrance-way, with a little galley kitchen. I sleep directly above the entrance-way, if you can believe it.



This is the main room of my place, with mid-afternoon light. The computer-looking screen is actually my TV, which has all kinds of special features which I have no idea how to use. Exciting to look at though.



From the other direction. The first time I saw the loft I jumped with glee, no kiddin.



On the ladder, which is a scary place to be half-awake from jet-lag in the middle of the night, heading to the bathroom. No injuries, so far so good.



The crowning prize - a toilet that squirts your butt with water. What else could I need? Maybe an air dry button, I'm still trying to figure out if it has one ...

Right now I'm heading off to downtown Tokyo, all the teachers hired this semester with my company have a seminar for the next two days to get to know each other and the company curriculum, will post more when I get back. :) Miss you guys

Saturday, September 13, 2008

vermont, new york, boston, franklin

I'm sitting in my kitchen in Franklin, sipping on some 설록차 (Jeju Sulloc Plantation green tea), and I'm realizing I only have a little more than a week left here in the States. September 22nd - Yokohama!!

I'm way behind on uploading pictures, those will hopefully be up in the next few days. I bought a Canon G9 and I couldn't be happier.



A noiseless, patient spider,
I mark'd, where, on a little promontory, it stood, isolated;
Mark'd how, to explore the vacant, vast surrounding,
It launch'd forth filament, filament, filament, out of itself;
Ever unreeling them--ever tirelessly speeding them.

And you, O my Soul, where you stand,
Surrounded, surrounded, in measureless oceans of space,
Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing,--seeking the spheres, to connect them;
Till the bridge you will need, be form'd--till the ductile anchor hold;
Till the gossamer thread you fling, catch somewhere, O my Soul. ~Whitman

Monday, June 16, 2008

microwaves

Ahh, microwaves. Those magical devices whose delicate "whhrrrrr"ing sound gently transform your cold spaghetti and meatballs from last night into a deliciously warm breakfast of champions. I was looking closer at the microwave in our dormitory and here's what I found on the pre-sets:



1) Reheat rice
2) Reheat stew
3) Reheat milk
4) Frozen pizza
5) Frozen dumplings
6) Steam egg
7) Ramen
8) Cook potatoes
9) Sterilize a nursing bottle

Glorious mix of east and west. Also seen recently - Konglish t-shirts:



Brilliant flowers on the edge of campus:



And ... my students threw me a party for teacher's day!



My camera is currently broken, which is why all of these were taken with my cell phone. I'm thinking about a Nikon or a Canon dSLR - any suggestions?

"I don't believe people are looking for the meaning of life as much as they are looking for the experience of being alive." ~ Joseph Campbell

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