Saturday, October 28, 2006

Kashi Matsuri

Today we went to a festival right up the road from my house. It was the Kashi Matsuri, a festival to celebrate the art of kashi-making.

To tell you the truth, I really don't know how kashi is made, but these pictures show you how remarkable it is. Basically, there are tons of sculptures -- of flowers, animals, pine trees, and here, people and houses. Here's the trick, though: they're all made of rice.

Pretty amazing, huh? The rice is somehow processed into these sheets, and then it is transformed into an amazing variety of shapes and textures. From delicate leaves to pointy pine needles, it pretty much all looked so real that if you saw it in nature you wouldn't give it a double take. It is another case of me being blown away by small, ingenious, carefully made things of beauty. Nice work guys.

Enjoy the photos!





















The Night of the $35 Beef

For the last month or so, I have gone out every Thursday night with my friend Anthony, whom we call "Godfather" because if you squint one eye he sort of looks like Luke Wilson, who was "Godfather" in Old School. First, we go grab some dinner, usually carniverous in nature, then we head to a little restaurant called Annie Hall, where a group of people gather on Thursday nights to hang out and speak English.

The first time we went on one of our outings, we headed first to a restaurant called "Prince Matsuba." I don't know why it's called that. It's quite fantastical-looking, with huge turrets and spires and stained glass. The inside looks like the set of a King Arthur movie. I have a feeling that the inspiration might have come from watching something like that. Anyway, Godfather has been in Japan since 2004, but he's not too skilled at or interested in learning new languages specifically, Japanese) and so his communicational skills are, well, improvisational to say the best. We sat down and he asked the waitress "Menu? English?" Hmmm, no, don't have those. So he just said the word "STEAK" and luckily all the steak-related words are basically English in disguise, since it's a foreign and not Japanese food. So we were going to get "Siruloin" medium-rare. Not bad.

The steak came, and my, it was fan-tastic. Probably the first real meat I've had in Japan. It was big, rare, and delicious. The fun came to an end, though, when we were eating and enjoying it and suddenly got to thinking...I wonder how much this costs? I mean, simple logic says that if noodles and a few shrimp cost $13, then a big piece of premium steak can't be cheap. We found a price list sitting on the side of the table, where the bottom value was $25 and the top was $35. Dang it!

Sure enough, when we went to pay, $38 a person it was. Damn the Godfather! Just another case of unexpectedly treating yourself to a fine and expensive meal. At least in this case, unlike the eel, the steak was truly fantastic. But my anger at the Godfather simmered until it was at least medium-rare.

Thursday, October 26, 2006

Absentee's Anger

Apparently, absentee voters aren't as important as regular voters. Read on to hear my thoughts on this issue.

me
: man i'm confused
i just got my absentee ballot for san diego
but i can only vote for federal offices
so just senator and representative
no local people?
what's up with that?
Andrea: i have nooo idea
me: come on
you were a poli sci major!
Andrea: i forgot to apply for absentee ballot
you know i barely got out of there witht hat major
me: you disgrace the polisci profession
your professors are hanging their heads
Andrea: well im not going into poli sci
they should
they were bastards
me: ahhh
Andrea: yea didnt like most of them
i have no idea why you cant vote for local people
maybe because you are doing an absentee thing
me: that makes no sense though
i feel kind of disenfranchised
it's a strange feeling
Andrea: awww
white boy disenfranchised
hahaha, thats a new one
me: this is the most effort i have contributed to democracy in like 5 years
and what do i get
i didnt even vote in the presidential election
and now that i'm in JAPAN
i cant vote for san diego water commisioner
Andrea: im seriously laughing my ass off
me: or the school board wackos
Andrea: LOL
i can imagine you right now like a hurt little puppy
pouty and so sad
me: yarrr

Monday, October 23, 2006

Images of Beauty

I don't want to give the impression that everywhere you look in Japan you find a tranquil Zen garden or a majestic waterfall. But, these things are all around for the finding, if you look for them. I tend of course to write about the more beautiful things I have seen, and though I try to be even-handed and cover all aspects of my experience here, I like beautiful places. So this post will be devoted to beauty.

Last weekend, we visited the city of Tajimi and visited the Eihoji Zen Temple, part of the Rinzai denomination of Buddhism. Okay that last part might have been too much information, except for all 2 of you Buddhists out there. For everyone else, it's the place where the dudes in the robes hang out.

A quick aside. It was Hong's birthday nearly a month ago, but due to some poor strategic planning my birthday dinner for her consisted of microwaved soup and Ritz crackers from a convenience store. More on that later. Anyway, I told her I'd make it up to her, so we met in Tajimi (halfway between us) and went trolling for restaurants in my car. On some random street we smelled the intoxicating aroma of...roasting beef! Oh my, we had to stop. But, since we can't read the signs on restaurants, we didn't know which one was which. We followed our noses to one and headed in. We sat down. Shit, no pictures on the menu. This is dangerous. After much verbal confusion with the waitress, she lost patience with us and transferred us to her more English-proficient colleague. Turns out all this restaurant serves is eel. Shit, that's it. Just eel. I promised Hong steak. Crap, well, can't leave, that would be too rude. So, I tell her that this is not the birthday lunch anymore, and therefore we can split the tab. Eel comes, it's not bad really. We go to pay the bill, and she asks if we want separate bills. We do. She rings up $18. Oh, there must be some mistake, we asked for separate bills. Nope. It's $18 a person. That's some motivation to learn Japanese right there. Know what you're paying for.

So anyway we drove to the Eihoji Temple and walked around and it was quite lovely. I love temples and gardens. Maybe it's my escapist side that doesn't want to deal with the outside world, but I don't think I'm happier than when I'm in a tranquil garden, isolated for a moment from modernity, responsibility, cars, politics, concrete buildings. Something about a place of beauty in the middle of a much uglier, much grittier world makes me feel good. In one sense, this makes it even harder to accept what you find when you leave its gates, but I think of it as refilling my 'bowl of goodness.' Some moments spent in quiet appreciation of beauty are never wasted, even though they must inevitably end.
This particular temple was built into the side of a mountain, and as we made our way up the trail, we could see spectacular rays of light coming through the trees (not this tree...sorry!). It was like nothing I've ever seen before. It looked as if E.T. were landing above us, it was so intense. I let my imagination run wild a little bit and wondered if maybe there were something there.

We did find something unusual. A huge Goddess of Mercy, a Buddhist goddess. Hong has a jade necklace with the some one, so it was a nice surprise. She's always saying how the Japanese Buddhism is so different from hers, so it was cool to find something familiar.

Yesterday we drove up to Tsukechi, a beautiful place up in the mountains around the city I live in. I got lost many times, and it was mildly terrifying driving on those tiny roads with ridiculous cliffs and lots of loose, scattered leaves (the better to lose traction with, my dear!). Finally, though, I found what I was looking for, a gorge with high-strung walking bridges and precarious paths hundreds of feet above crystal blue water. I can't describe how much I like it, so I'll just let the pictures speak for themselves. This place was where I went into the forest in Japan for the first time when I first arrived here, and thus it has a special feeling for me. It is a powerful, beautiful place, and one of my favorites in Japan.
















The fall colors are beginning to change. Beautiful.















The leaves in this forest are so delicate and luminous.















You can get a sense for the scale of these bridges. The whole place has a Peter Pan Treehouse feel to it. It's a wonderful place for the imagination.
























Saturday, October 14, 2006

Our Okinawan Journey, Phase Alpha














When we decided to take a trip for our birthdays, we narrowed it down to Japan's extremes: it was either going to be Hokkaido or Okinawa. It turns out that Hokkaido is so cold that by late September it would already be too much. Tropical Okinawa it was, then.

Thanks to a neat little Japan Air Lines birthday discount, we got tickets to Okinawa for $120 a leg - Not bad considering they're usually about $400. Yes, travel in Japan is almost never cheap, but sometimes you get lucky and find a bizarro discount, like 15% off if you travel with your grandma on the 3rd friday of a leap year--that kind of stuff.

Our journey began early Saturday morning on the 23rd. Our flight was leaving from the new Nagoya Centrair airport, built on an artificial island in Nagoya Harbor. I left my house in a hurry on my mountain bike at about 5:15, late for my train as per usual. It was an inauspicious beginning for such a large trip, but you've gotta begin somewhere I suppose. I raced down the hill toward the station like I was flying. This was the morning after the office enkai, so I was not in the best of conditions. Hong and I somehow managed to rendezvous in Nagoya and find our way to the airport, where we boarded a spiffy-looking 747 bound for Naha, the capital of Okinawa Prefecture.

I had an embarassing encounter on the plane when I decided to try out some of my newly minted Japanese phrases. I asked the guy sitting next to me, in the politest form, 'Where are you from?' He responded, of course, but I couldn't understand the name of the place (I'd probably never heard of it). It turns out I couldn't understand anything he said after that, so eventually I just sort of faced forward and waited for it to be over. You can't win 'em all, I guess. But still, how embarassing. I tried not to let it get me down.

The first thing that struck me in Okinawa was the stifling heat. It reminded me of how brutal mainland Japan was 2 months ago. All the sweat and frustration came back in full swing. However, this was tempered by the beauty of the place. The ocean is delightfully aquamarine and makes you glad every time you look at it. Naha itself is a pretty bustling city. It looked pretty much like any other Japanese city, except it had a really nifty monorail, which I haven't seen anywhere else. We used it like mad. We walked around and browsed the schlocky souvenir shops for a while, marveled at the amazingly high prices, and then navigated our way to Shuri-jo Castle, the former capital of the Ryukyu Kingdom. (A sidenote: before 1879, the Ryukyu Islands--all the islands south of Kyushu and north of Taiwan--were an independent kingdom. But in 1879 the greedy Japanese snatched up the islands for their own, perhaps sensing their future tourism needs. Then from the end of World War II until the early 1970s, Okinawa was controlled by the U.S. It is again part of Japan, though about 20% of the land on the main island is still given over to U.S. bases.

Looking for Shuri-jo was surprisingly difficult, given that it was on the biggest hill in the place. I found what I considered to be a genius shortcut, but due to the castle's, er, extensive fortifications, we walked right up to it, but at such a place as one could not enter. We had to walk all the way back down the hill and walk around to the other side of the whole affair. Let me tell you, it was FAR. The castle itself was fairly cool. Sadly, it was destroyed in World War II, like so much of this country's heritage, but it was lovingly rebuilt in 1992. You would never guess it, let me tell you. It feels old and it feels solid. Inside the building I could really sense the history that had happened there, even though the building was new. Some places have a memory stronger than physical materials.

The next stop on our itinerary was the island of Kume-jima, 90 kilometers to the west of Okinawa. I had high expectations for this place, especially since it would be my birthday and I wanted to have fun. We managed to find the ferry harbor AND purchase ferry tickets (these are small miracles, let me tell you), and boarded for our 4-hour journey into the East China Sea. While we were headed over there, I tried to imagine all the things that had taken place in these waters; envoys and traders from China in junks, American battleships cruising for enemy Japanese, maybe pirates? It was so exciting to be so far from home, out on the open ocean, finding someplace new. I felt very grown-up.

Our relationship with this island turned out to be fairly complex. At first sight, it looked quite beautiful. We caught a bus from the ferry terminal to what our guidebook, Lonely Planet, described as 'the' place to stay on the island, Ifu Beach. Needless to say, when we stepped off the bus, I thought there must be some mistake. We were dropped at the "Eef Beach Hotel," which, judging from the amount of people who got off the bus and went inside, was 'the' only place to stay in Ifu Beach. It looked pretty crappy. We walked around back and asked someone how to find the hotel we were looking for. They drew us a map. It turns out we hardly needed it. Ifu Beach is not a city on the scale which demands maps. It just takes fingers. We walked about 50 feet up the street and found the place.

We walked inside and it looked clean and nice enough. A man stood in the lobby doing something, and when we entered, it took him a while to notice that we might want something. He approached the desk and I took a deep breath and read from my pre-prepared sheet of 'hotel Japanese.' To everything I said, he replied with a terrified stare. Even when I knew it made sense, it was just Stare. He almost looked like it would make his entire year if we would just slowly back up, walk away, and not make him speak English any more. But, persistence paid off and 10 confusing minutes later we had a simple room, directions to the shower, and some peace and quiet. Now at this point I was not super-thrilled, I'm not gonna lie. The beach was quite beautiful, but the town seemed boring at best and really boring at worst. It didn't seem like 'the' place in any sense. It didn't help that I was hot, sweaty, stinky, and that it was my birthday. Hong and I were both a little afraid to admit that we had made a big mistake in coming here. We cursed Lonely Planet for leading us astray and vowed to exact vengeance upon its foolish authors.

We headed out to the beach to see what we could see. Saw some sand, some water, and some clouds. All of it quite lovely, of course. But...we were bored. We decided to head off to tiny O-jima island nearby to see "a natural formation of pentagon-shaped rocks that covers the seashore but can only be seen at low tide." It was exciting enough to get us moving. To get there was surprisingly difficult. To get to the bridge to the island required walking a bit inland and also crossing what turned out to be the bottom of a low-tide zone. We didn't know all this when we started, of course. It looked so close...

As we walked and walked, with each turn discovering anew just how far away the entrance to the bridge was, we became filled with despair and frustration. This reached a fever pitch when we realized we had to walk through the squishy, muddy, nasty bottom of a marina to cross it. As our shoes sunk into the soft dirt and we hopped over puddles, we became increasingly not happy. When we had to cross a small concrete stream to get to the road, I hit my low point when I slipped on moss, dropping my backpack (with $1,000 Nikon) and only shoes into the water, cutting my toe and bruising my foot in the process. I silently cursed this island for being so terrible and Lonely Planet for not being honest with us.

After my shoes became unusable, it was barefoot for me. I don't mean to whine, but man it was painful. Of course this only added to my increasing sense of anger that we were stuck on such an inhospitable, beat-up little berg in the middle of the sea, on my birthday no less! We finally made it to the interesting rock formations, which were okay. I would have liked them a lot more if I hadn't suffered bodily damage to find them. I took my first dip in the East China Sea/western Pacific, relaxed in the warm, shallow water for a while and used my imagination. Sometimes when I'm in the ocean at an island I like to think how far it is to anywhere else. Something about being on an island makes me acutely aware of just where I am. So as I sat in the water I wondered, how far to home, to Japan, to China?
















We headed back to our hotel, cleaned up, and headed out to try and find a little food and excitement for the evening. Much to our surprise, the place was hopping. Cozy, inviting restaurants lined the street and happy-looking people inside seemed to be enjoying themselves. What a change from earlier! We were mildly giddy as we walked down the street, feeling for the first time all day that we weren't the only people on this whole island. We found a nice restaurant, ordered a beer and some Okinawan food, and sat in amazement at our pleasant reversal of fortunes. The food was great, the waitresses were friendly, and the atmosphere was comfortable. I was beginning to like this place.

We began to see that this island had charms that weren't so apparent. Like its people. If the people in Okinawa were more friendly than those in mainland Japan, those on Kume-jima were even more friendly than those in Okinawa. The pace of life was very slow and relaxed. On the way back from O-jima, a bus driver saw us walking and stopped to ask if we wanted a ride, and a group of high school-age boys gave us a warm and hearty "Hello!" when they thought we had said Hi to them (we were actually saying hi to a small, cute little boy who was on the other side of the road...they were just walking by...oops!). Still, I was touched that they turned around and all said hi. It was great. The place was obviously not so well-off, and so the fast-paced lifestyle which in many other parts of Japan is the norm seemed very far away from here. It turned out to be a great birthday.

The next morning it was back to Okinawa for us. Good-bye, Kume-jima! We hardly knew ye! I think out of all the places we visited on this trip, it was hardest to leave this one.
















Back on Okinawa, we rented a Honda Fit hybrid and set out to find some places in the guidebook. I hadn't anticipated that traffic would be as bad as it really was. We couldn't get anywhere. Plus, our on-board navigation system was in Japanese (no real surprise there, even though the employee diligently spent about 7 minutes explaining how to use its myriad functions). We spent hours arguing over directions and schedules and ended up pretty much getting nowhere we wanted to. We decided to cut our losses and just headed straight for the top of Okinawa, so we could say that we had been to the most northern point ("Of course you went to the north tip of Okinawa, right? It's all the rage!"). But it was far, and night fell. Needless to say, some of the magic of Okinawa's beauty is lost at night. Driving there and back seemed remarkably like driving at night anywhere else. It was long, tedious, and boring, but somehow it had a sense of adventure to it, so Hong and I enjoyed ourselves for at least the first part, before it got to be really a slog.

The northernmost point on the island was just that. A point that was the most north. We were a little let down, but what could we really expect? We got out of the car and stared at the stars for several minutes. It was breathtaking, actually, and after seeing those stars I just couldn't be upset.

The next day we headed off to our next destination, Ishigaki, about 400 kilometers away. I will cover that next time. Happy trails till then!

For expanded photos and commentary from our trip, please go to http://community.webshots.com/user/viewfromjapan, my photo-sharing website.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Clifton: what have you seen
me: hongster and i went to okinawa
Clifton: I am not up to date ewith your blog
me: and then some islands even further south, by taiwan
it was like the japanese hawaii
sort of
and we went to nara, the first capital of japan, and went in the world's largest wooden building.
needless to say, it was freaking huge
Clifton: cool
me: i got a car
i'm now the proud owner of a right-hand drive mitsubishi
Clifton: Theats great jay,I hung a window curtain yesterday
me: hey you asked man

Friday, October 06, 2006

Check out the genius flowin' out of this here brain:

me
:
there are some cute japanese girls, i must admit
but i dunno
Andrea: hahaha
me: it could be too weird
Andrea: what could be?
me: dating japanese girls
unless she had amazing english
or boobs

Monday, October 02, 2006

Back from Okinawa. More on that later.

Before I left, I frantically stuffed all my fresh veggies into the freezer. I don't know much about fresh veggies.

Here is a white man-style Haiku that I inadverdently wrote about it:

all my veggies are going bad
i had to use them all tonight
they tasted like shit
it was very sad
the bok choy was limp and flavorless
the peppers were soft
the carrots were borderline
the bean sprouts werent edible
so so sad
and i'm out of rice!

dangit