Friday, July 21, 2006

Back from Japan

Konnisha wa!! Well...I'm back from Japan. I've been back for some time now but I haven't gotten over my terrible jet lag yet completely and didn't want to worry about posting. Now that I have semi-gotten under control my sense of what day and time it is I thought I would finally update the blog. Look for a post a week. I'm going to continue using the emails I sent everyone to base my posts off of. My blog posts might contain a few surprises here and there that I didnt' talk about in my emails and of course what you all want to see PICTURES!

Alrighty then on with the post...

Showers, Squid and the Sea of Steve Oh My!

Many of you wrote to me while I was in Japan asking why showering was interesting in Japan. Well... I don't know if this is true of all Japanese homes but in Erin's apartment she has an entire room devoted to just the shower and bath. This room is about 25 square feet. Now you first walk into the sink and laundry room. To the right of this room is the bath and shower. To enter the shower you have to step up about a foot and open a water tight door. Once inside you see the tub against the wall. This is a larger tub almost like a one person hot tub in the USA but not as big. The shower is actually a long hose with the shower head at the end.

This entire room has drains in the floor everywhere. The cool thing is actually on the tub itself. You turn it on like you would a television set to get hot water. Once you press the blue button (shown in this picture) a Japanese voice comes on and says something but I don't know what she says. On this dial you can set the temperature of the water, 30 to 40 degree Celsius is about right for a shower. Then you turn a knob to make the water come out of either the tub or the shower nozzle and you have a shower while standing on the floor of this large room. I always felt like I needed to lean over the tub though because I didn't want to get water all over the floor. I had to keep reminding myself that the whole room is a shower and I didn't have to do this.

Now what is most interesting about this tub contraption is when you make a bath. The tub actually sings to you as it is filling up with water. Since it is computerized the tub automatically knows when it is full of water and the Japanese lady comes on and says the "tub is done gushing" in Japanese (I had to ask what she said this time). Actually she says, "It is nearly done gushing" first so that you can prepare to come in and then a few moments later she comes on and says, "It is done gushing." According to Erin, Japanese first clean themselves by taking a shower and everyone in the family does so. Then they run the bath and each person takes a turn in the tub and they share the same water. It is a place to relax and become warm. Erin however told me that I could take a bath with soap if I wanted to. I just can't get over how amazing the tub is. It sings to you as it is filling up and automatically shuts off. So amazing. I think the best is being able to set the temperature of the water to your exact liking. Tomorrow I think I'll go for a 37 degree Celsius shower. But you know Wednesday it might be warmer outside so I think I'll have a colder shower of 32 degrees. In America you could never do this but here it is as simple as pressing a button.

Now on with today (Monday, July 3). Today I experienced life completely on my own in a foreign country. Erin had to go to work and Felix had to meet a client of his. In the morning Felix showed me how to get to and from the train station so that I was comfortable making that trip. He also showed me how to go to a supermarket and a 99 yen store. At the 99 yen store I bought a couple of sandwiches and those rice sandwiches (onijiri) that were really good for lunch. After that, Felix gave me a map, a cell phone (in case I did get lost) and he waved goodbye.

Then it was just me, a blonde headed, backpack wielding, sandal footed, no Japanese speaking, man meandering about. It was amazing! Now I truly know what it feels like to be alone and how hard everyday tasks are if you can't understand a language. It really has made me appreciate life so much more.

Now completely on my own, I headed for the train station because it seemed so easy when I went with Erin and Felix. However by myself it took a little more concentration of the map and trying to find where I was by matching the Japanese Kanji and Katakana characters. This really wasn't too difficult and I got off of the first train at Nishinomiya, the main station. Here written nicely in English but not every station was this kind.

I wanted to familiarize myself with the area around Nishinomiya station since it is a main station that I came to and it leads to almost every other station I would need.

I went out about on the streets making sure that I remembered each right and left turn I made so that I could go back. I tried to find a shop of some kind but mostly this area was residential. They did have a KFC (Kentucky Fried Chicken) that I walked by. I looked at the pictures on the menu and I really don't think that they serve that kind of stuff in Kentucky. After walking around there for awhile I went back to the train station and took the Omeda Express train.

Now they have many types of trains. Express trains go fast and skip a lot of in between stations and just go to major ones. Then they have local trains that stop at each station and some other trains that I haven't been on and probably won't ever go on because I might end up in Tokyo if I'm not careful and I don't want to do that.

Ok so I thought that Omeda was the place that I went to yesterday where I purchased a bunch of T-shirts at a covered street mall area but it turns out it was in the complete opposite direction. However, for me, Omeda looked just like this other place because it too had a covered street mall area just off of the train station. I wandered about this area trying to find the UniQlo store that I found all those 500 yen shirts at but I couldn't find it.

As I was walking down the covered street, I looked down a side street and saw some flashing lit up signs. This seemed like an interesting street to go check out so I headed off that way. As I was walking, I began to notice that these signs had Japanese woman on them in scantily clad clothing and seductive poses. I thought that hmm this is very strange maybe an advertisement of some sort. Then about in the middle of this street I came to a building that on the side was writing in English "Sexy Live Show." Oh my! I have found the dark side of Japan. Really though it wasn't that bad but I quickly made my way back to the covered street mall.

Here I found a shoe store that was selling these really interesting wooden sandals. I bought two pairs of these as gifts for other people because they look so cool. A block of sanded down wood molded to a shape for your foot. Very very cool. Erin said she loves them too.

After that, I headed back to the train station because it was nearly lunch time and I wanted to eat my sandwiches. Once back at the Omeda station I couldn't find the Express train back to Nishonimiya. I waited and waited at the place that I was sure that I got off of but no train ever said Express Nishonimiya. Now I started to get a little concerned because I thought I had become disoriented especially after going through that "Sexy street." I finally followed my gut instinct and just took a local train in the direction that I was sure that I came from because I didn't want to get on an Express train and then be really far away if I was wrong.

I made the right choice. However because I took the local train it meant that I had to stop at all the local stations in between Omeda and Nishonimiya. I got off at one of these in between stations and decided that I would find a park to eat my sandwiches at. This became an adventure because I didn't know where a park was located at and I didn't know how to ask directions to a park. Heck I can only say Konnisha wa (Hello), domo arigato (thank you), ohayo (good morning), sumi masen (excuse me), hai (yes), and iee (no) but you never so no in Japanese because it just isn't polite. If someone asks you if you like something and you really don't like it, you say things like "maybe next time" or "I'm not sure" but you never say no. Anyway that was a long way to say that I couldn't ask directions to a park.

Ok so I just walked in a straight line and hoped that I would run into something... anything that resembled a park. I walked and I walked. I walked some more. Japanese people walked by and smiled and bowed their heads at me. I continued to walk by apartments and stores and canals. No parks. Finally I saw an area of trees ahead of me. I thought large trees must equal a large area of some sort maybe even a park so I went over to it. It turns out this was some kind of school yard. They had a large area to play soccer on but it wasn't grass but dirt. They did have a bench so I sat there and ate my sandwiches.

Then I headed back to Erin's apartment. Felix called and said that he was back there and I needed a little nap because I woke up at 3am (due to jet lag) and couldn't sleep for about an hour and the birds woke me up early after I went to sleep again at about 5am. I'm a light sleeper. Once I got to the apartment though I wasn't tired so Felix and I went to the post office because he had to pay bills. Then we went to the market and bought some dinner for tonight. He got some fish that looked like a zebra and this weird looking package with some sort of yellowish white thing in it that I had no idea what it was.

Back at the apartment I started writing this email and he prepared the fish and this yellowish white thing that turned out to be a vegetable but I still didn't know what it was. Then Erin came home and we had this small dinner. It was very good and the yellowish white thing turned out to be very delicious. Erin said it might be translated to English as a pickled radish. I love it soo much. Mmm very good and very tasty.

After this dinner I began typing away at this email and then decided that I would take a nap finally. I had Erin show me how to run a bath first. This is how I knew that it sings to you and was very relaxing. Then I took a long nap until about 8pm.

At eight, we decided to go to a sushi restaurant. Now this was quite an experience. The sushi goes around on a moving track and you pick off little colored plates of what sushi you want. The colored plates determine the price that you pay. A gold colored plate is the most expensive and yellow was the least amount. The prices arranged from 600 yen plates to 100 yen plates. Felix and Erin picked out many dishes for me to sample and they were all good. The raw tuna was really good. It melts in your mouth. I also had raw squid. Yes raw rubbery slimy squid. Ha! It wasn't too bad. Just like rubber. Quite an experience. I had to give it a go.


4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey it's great you enjoyed your time. I think it is very brave of you to take the train by yourself even when you don't understand the language. And about "sexy street"... at least you figured out what it was before someone pulled you in. Other than that, you were one great adventurer! 0(^o^)b

Rain said...

Welcome home! Wonderful posts and pictures. Sounds like you had a great time!

ManNMotion said...

Hey Steve, sounds like you're an intrepid adventurer. Is that part of comining from the Western US? I remember when Wyoming's license plates had fewer numbers than the other states with a picture of a horse and a guy on it. Thanks for the tour of Japan, this was great stuff.

IbaDaiRon said...

Konnichi-wa! Got here via a comment on L>T's blog.

Glad you enjoyed your visit. It's always fun for a long(old?)-timer to see things afresh from someone else's eyes.

The yellow thang is called a takuan; it's a pickled daikon, if you're familiar with what one of those is. (A gawud-awful big white Japanese radish-relative, if you're not.)

I'm one of those obsessive types who looks at people's profiles. Ox, eh? Me, too...futa-mawari chigau kedo.

I like the Mansei tanka. I hadn't seen it before...but then you'd have to be a specialist to know all the Ten Thousand Leaves, eh?