Yesterday was supposed to be a rest day, and it kind of was. But I “worked”. I dog sat. It wasn’t a full rest day.
Today I woke up and felt like, yes, today needs to be a rest day. And today is actually becoming a rest day. Even me writing this, we’ll call it a restful thing, because I’m just having fun with it. There’s no expectation. This is purely for enjoyment. There’s a big difference, between having to do something out of obligation or requirement, versus just for fun. And this writing here is just for fun.
Two days ago I finished the first draft of a story idea that I had hatched. I carried it all the way to completion and that took about ten days. Ten days of tenacity, of sticking to it, of staying on it, and not letting it escape me, but getting through the whole thing, through the ups and downs, the struggle and joy. When I finished the draft two days ago, I felt euphoric, and yet, lost. It had consumed me and stayed in my mind for ten whole days. I couldn’t believe that much time had actually passed. For ten days I contemplated the story and worked on it, held it in my mind, stayed tethered to that fantasy world. And when I was done, I felt strange. It was over. Except, it wasn’t over, and it’s not over. That was just the first part. But that’s probably the hardest part, I feel. Who knows. I’m new to all of this.
It’s the longest story I’ve ever written, possibly ever. Probably ever. And I still haven’t recovered from the writing of it yet, I think.
I knew that the first thing I had to do upon finishing was celebrate. I couldn’t move on to anything else without celebrating the accomplishment. Even from a work perspective, if you are trying to accomplish more, you have to celebrate. It’s part of the job, it’s a necessary thing.
I racked my brain on what to do for my celebration. I tried to walk through the great suburban desert of East Nashville to go to Woodland Wine Merchant and buy a bottle of wine, to crack open with my lads tonight, but I only made it halfway through the great suburban desert before dying in the sun and throwing in the towel. I thought about going to Waffle House or getting some donuts at East Park Donut, but I didn’t really to spend money on that. I wanted to have an experience, and I knew that I had wanted to go swimming. I keep thinking about surfing. I guess I miss surfing, and I miss swimming, and I really want to do it again. So, I decided I would go swimming, even though it meant work, because I had to figure out where I would go, and drive there, which I really didn’t want to do. But I had to celebrate, and it was all I could think of.
I found that Percy Priest Lake seemed to be the closest place to me that I could swim in the wild. In freshwater. I had to drive on the highway…. blah blah blah. Long story short, the highway was a nightmare, the “beach” was a strip of grass next to the highway, covered in trash, there was a homeless guy there with swollen, rotting elephantitis ankles, the water was scummy, and made my eyes sting, and yet I did enjoying frolicking in the water like an otter. It was exactly the feeling I was looking for. Then I returned on the nightmare highway, and had angry visions of bombing everyone on the highway, and of having a giant plow affixed to the front of my car that would allow me to drive through the highway unimpeded and plow everyone out of my way. I was stuck in bumper to bumper traffic in the 90 degree July sun and moved 0.2 miles in 10 minutes. Not a good feeling.
Climbing Conquest
So, I still haven’t recovered, and still need to rest, before entering work mode again. I did go climbing at the gym, and if you had read my recent post “Perseverance”, I talk about my “nemesis” climb, the V1-3 that was stopping me from becoming a V2-4 man. Well, I walked into the gym yesterday with Parker, and I had actually forgotten about that climb for a minute, as I was really just there to have fun, and chill, but my man Ryan, a #1 One Piece fan, and a chill high school kid, he told me when I walked in, “Bro you gotta get that climb today, they’re taking it down soon!” And I was like.. Oh, god dammit. The pressure is on. Great. I was supposed to be here for fun.
You know what happened? I was fully charged, and I was strong, and I did some warmups, and then Ryan came out from the behind the counter, and Parker said, “Well, are you gonna do it now? Ryan’s here to watch.” And I said okay. And I walked up to the wall, and I screamed, “THIS ONE’S FOR RYAN!!!!!” And I took that sucker down. It was euphoric. I laid on the ground after the conquest, not moving, eyes closed, basking in the glow of victory. Parker gave me knucks, and Ryan clapped, and then he said, “Now you have to find another project-” But I cut him off, and said, “CHILL. Ryan, chill!!!!” I had just beaten this climb. I didn’t need another project (new challenging climb to be working on) just yet. Chill, bro. Let me savor this.
Well, today, it’s a million degrees, and I was not going to try and go swimming again. Nope. I’m not going anywhere, and not driving on the Nashville highway ever again in my life if I can help it. So.. what else could I do for my rest day?
When I was back in Ozu Machi, way back when, in the depths of the pandemic, when we were all bound to the home and desperate for things to do… I bought a 3DS and got Ultra Moon, in Japanese, and played through the whole thing. I hadn’t played Pokemon for like, ten years, so I had no idea what they had been cooking up, but I knew they had been cooking. I remember that time fondly, exploring the new world of Pokemon, and learning so much Japanese I thought my head would explode. These days, I’ve been feeling a pull to Japanese again, and I’ve been thinking about that playthrough, and so as a treat, and for my rest days, I thought I would try to recreate the magic.
After debating on which new Pokemon game I would buy, I ended up settling on Pokemon Violet, for the Switch, an open world Pokemon game from 2022. And now, if you can stand it, here’s what I want to share with you.
Return To Japanese
Note: I think that even if you are not a Japanese language learner you might just be interested to see some of my notes, and a breakdown of some recent Japanese study. If you are not, this part might not be so interesting for you.
I played for about three hours between yesterday and today, and I haven’t even made it to the first town. Parker was watching my slow, crawling progress, as I sat there with my notebook, scribbling my 20th Japanese study note, and he said, “People would love to see this.” I think I had played for over an hour before I even caught my first Pokemon, which is something you can do, if you skip the dialouge and get straight to business, in about ten minutes.
When it comes to studying language, Pokemon is a great mix of everything. Right out of the gate, we had the sensei speaking in keigo (honorific, polite Japanese), especially when talking with the main character’s mom (called in game, ママ, Mama), modeling a real conversation between a Mama-san and her daughter’s school’s sensei.. you have the kids jabbering casually, and then you have the instructive Japanese of the in-game instructions. Between game prompts, in-game signboards, character dialogue, etc… there’s a lot of variety in the Japanese being used. There’s a wide range of characters of all ages and backgrounds as well, and they all have different styles of speaking, so you can see what language is used by an old fisherman, an honorable sensei, a Mama-san, or a young bug catcher child, or an insolent breakdancer gangster lackey, a mob boss, a scientific genius..
Here are some of the snippets of Japanese I wrote down in my notebook today. Let’s break them down. Just for fun.
ご近所同士仲良くしよう!
The word I was wondering about was 同士, and in the context of 近所同士, which is something like neighborhood companion. This is probably a phrase that Japanese use, and is used for members of the neighborhood. Your neighbor friend was saying this to you in the game.
凄腕トレーナーなんですよ
This word is すごうで. I thought it was a more polite way to use 凄い, and actually it’s using the same kanji 凄腕、凄い.. So I was on to something there. 腕 is arm. So it’s saying “great arm”, literally. The dictionary says that 凄腕 means “1. remarkable ability, brilliant technique or 2.virtuoso, resourceful person”. It’s a compliment to someone’s ability. I like this word.
交流を深めてください
交流を深める seems to be a set phrase. It’s saying something like, “deepen our exchange” or “grow together in our relationship”.. Kind of a thing.
ポケモン勝負より放題
I wrote this down because I couldn’t remember at the time what 放題 was. It’s houdai, unlimited, as much as possible. Like 飲み放題, “all you can drink”. So this is “Let’s battle as much as possible.” I might need the whole sentence to perfectly translate it or to graph the entire meaning because I am a little confused about the より here, which seems to be in this case saying “less than”.
実りある勝負をしよう!
I had never seen the 実りある part here. Not hard to guess what this means. I take this to mean “fruitful”, so, “Let’s have a fruitful battle!” 実 is fruit.
勝負をしかける。
Noting that しかける is a verb used with 勝負. This sentence just means “To start a battle.”
Well.. what I have taken on here is unfeasable. I have about forty more notes in book, just from today.
I’ll do a few more. It’s good review for me, at least…!
へえー!きみ やるね!
I was just suprised at this sentence. It’s so basic. The girl I had just beaten in a battle said this, which basically just means “you can do it!” as in, “You can fight!” That’s what I took it to mean. Natural English translation of this sentence might be: “Damn girl! You can really fight!”
Hermoine, Crookshanks, And Katakana
I was mysteriously drawn to choosing a young black girl as my protagonist in the game. I named my girl Hermione, trying to write that in Katakana (this took me about five minutes of debating and saying aloud how I thought a Japanese person would write it), and settled with ハーマィオニ. This turned out to be very close to correct, but not quite. The official Japanese translation of Hermione is ハーマイオ二ー。And then after naming my character ハーマィオニ, one of the starter Pokemon was a cat, and extremely cute, so I had to pick that.. because Crookshanks. (Hermione’s cat in Harry Potter world.) I couldn’t name my cat Pokemon Crookshanks though, because I was limited to 6 Japanese characters when naming in the game, which pissed me off. What the hell? 6 characters??????
Crookshanks in Katakana is a nightmare. I have to attempt writing it now, for you. For the blog.
クルックシャンクス.
I guess that wasn’t so bad.
But was it right?
Internet says: クルックシャンクス
Yatta!!!!!!!!
I do not know how much you are enjoying reading me thinking about Japanese and getting an insight into my Japanese study world, or if you are just confused. I imagine it would be interesting just to see some snippets of Japanese and look into the world of Japanese language. Japanese is really a fun and interesting language. (Profound statement.)
Chat GPT Sensei
疲れておいでですよ
This was interesting because of the おいで part, which seemed to me a kind of grammar conjugation going off of 疲れておく (spoiler: not true, it’s actually a form of 来る), but I don’t think I’ve ever encountered it. The おいで, and then adding です at the end, which is a formal sentence finisher. This sentence is keigo (honorific Japanese) I think, which has interesting and lengthier conjugations. That’s my guess here.
This one actually is a puzzler. So let’s ask our master translator, Chat GPT.
(For all y’all who don’t already know about the power of Chat GPT.. you’re about to see it. I’m bouncing around here in this post. It’s my rest day, alright? Stream of consciousness. Below I have pasted the entire result of me asking: “Can you help with this sentence? I’m wondering about the conjugation.” to Chat GPT.)
(Chat GPT answer)
Yes, I can help with that! The sentence: 疲れておいでですよ is a polite and somewhat gentle expression in Japanese, but the conjugation is slightly unusual and worth unpacking.
Breakdown:
疲れて = the て-form of 疲れる (to be tired)
おいで = an honorific or polite imperative form of 来る (to come), but in this context, it is functioning differently
です = polite copula
よ = sentence-ending particle for emphasis or assertion
What’s going on here?
This is a respectful/polite way of saying “You look tired” or “You are tired,” using a classical or regional (often Kyoto-style or older) construction. It’s a softened, polite version, especially common in service industry or among people showing concern in a gentle way.
Key point:
おいでです is a polite respectful form of いらっしゃる, which itself is an honorific verb meaning “to be,” “to go,” or “to come,” depending on context.
So:
疲れておいでですよ
really means:
You are tired, or more literally, You are in a state of being tired, said politely and with care.
More “standard” equivalent:
お疲れですね (You’re tired, aren’t you?)
お疲れのようですね (It seems like you’re tired)
In summary:
The conjugation おいでですよ is a respectful and slightly old-fashioned or regional way to say “you are…”
It comes from おいでになる, a polite form of いらっしゃる
It’s perfectly natural in certain contexts, especially when someone wants to express gentle concern
(End Chat GPT answer.)
How incredible. Chat GPT just gave us a detailed explanation on the meaning of 疲れておいでです. This phrase seemed strange to me is because.. well, it is strange. It’s a set phrase, it’s keigo, and it looks like it comes from older Japanese, so the grammar is funky. It seems to be an older and more polite way of saying お疲れですよね!
That was an interesting one. Yes indeed…
興奮しやっって ついつい…
しやっって is an interesting conjugation.. I didn’t even notice that so much when I wrote it down because I was thinking about the ついつい, and I understood it. I think it is another way to say しちゃって.. combining しちゃう and って. Now I can’t even remember exactly what って is used for in Japanese, in this context at least… But that gets used all the time. The ついつい seems to be “accidentally” or “unintentionally”.
Yeah.. we can stop here. Let’s wrap up this brain dump.
Reflecting on this morning’s session, I was thinking: I already know so much Japanese, and yet there is so much Japanese I don’t know. It’s crazy. There’s just so much language out there. So many words. It’s wild how much we all really know.
The only stain from my Osaka days was my League binge. Please never forget, everybody, fuck League of Legends. Fuck Overwatch, fuck competitive gaming, fuck video games. Fuck Fortnite. Fuck all of that shit. Fuck vice. Read books, lift weights, play guitar, write a novel. But, there is no doubt, fuck competitive gaming. I can’t just say fuck video games because some games are really cool and rewarding to play. Samorost 3, Pikmin, Zelda, etc. But the modern competitive video game that cares only about stealing your time and attention and money, only about getting as much as they possibly can from you, fuck them. Fuck them so hard. Don’t ever think that they are not trying to fuck you over. They are.
*Depressed at the cubicle. There will only be two more days of this.*
The other day, I threw my mouse in the trash. I’m thinking about that right now, because I’m somewhat hoping that my roommates haven’t taken out the trash, in which case I can dig to the bottom of that full can, get my mouse back, and play League of Legends tonight. That’s what I’m thinking about this morning, now, at 11:37am, from my cubicle. (And you know what? I fucking did it. I pulled my mouse out of the bottom of that jam packed can, covered in celery juice and coffee grounds, and I wiped it off, and I played six horrible games of League of Legends. Filled with idiots, filled with trolls, with people being angry, people being mean, people being sad. I played until 2 in the morning, spent 4 more hours on the computer after a full day of being on the computer, and then went to bed watching someone else play more League. The League formula is so powerful that it made me pull my trash mouse out of the trash. That’s addiction. That’s an addict relapsing. Fuck you League. I will never play you again. You suck asshole, and you people who run League, you fucking suck too. You never get any more of my precious time again. I will never say the words again, like He Who Must Not Be Named. The Game That Must Not Be Named. That is what you are, now. You have achieved Harry Potter supervillian status. The Game That Must Not Be Named. The most hated enemy. And I will never play any game like you. I will never touch a multiplayer competitive game for as long as I live. I don’t want to. I have no interest in it. And I will not. 1/24/2024. Remember this day. The final day, the last day I was a slave. The last day I allowed myself to be taken advantage of. When you play these games, you are not the player. You are being played. (Oh, that’s so good.) January 24th, 2024.
I’m sitting here, and after having gone through a period of just straight up depression, probably from a lack of sunlight and any social interaction or physical movement, basically there has been no joy yet in my day, except when Mr. Shimoyama had a few words with me, and a moment on the train where the train lurched forward and I slipped in water and did a little ballerina pirouet, spinning exactly 360 degrees in one second and somehow perfectly catching myself on the railing, to which I made a witty comment and not a single person of the many people around me on this packed train had any response to at all, and I now have some energy, having had some coffee, and am waking up. I am waking up, and I am waking up in my cubicle, which is something of a desert of the senses, you could say, and am now once again retreating into the oasis of my mind for my mental water and dates, that are entertainment and stimulation.
I don’t really have a pressing task right now, I already managed one. And the problem with these computer tasks that require no creativity is that they are not going to provide you any kind of juice, or gas, to get you going, and inspire you. Conversely, they require energy and motivation. But right now, I’m out of that. The tank is empty, you can say. And so, I daydream.
I was thinking about my time in Osaka, actually. I was thinking about the time I spent at Tully’s Coffee, at Tennouji Park. When I think about Osaka, the two months that I spent there, living in Toyo Hotel (which was really more of a hostel), I think about a lot of things. At the time, I did not appreciate how transformative of a period of time that was, but the more that I go back to those memories, I see how precious they are. Like Thailand, they cost me so little, and are worth so much. I didn’t really know what I was doing in Osaka. Actually, that’s not true. I had just been in Hokkaido, trying to force myself into a life that wasn’t working for me, and after forcing, and scheming, and carrying out plans that just weren’t working, I gave up on the game, and relinquished myself of that vision. I left, and I decided that I would now simply give myself up to the river of life, for some time, without planning, as that only seemed to get me into trouble, and cause me trouble, and I did that, and ended up in Osaka. I went to Osaka because I wanted to be somewhere else in Japan, and I wanted to try a big city, and my Japanese friends told me I would like Osaka more than Tokyo. They said it was more of my style, and when I did a little Googlin’, and found a Tokyo vs. Osaka post, and saw that Tokyo had in its corner, “History, food, art, entertainment, anime culture, sports, etc. etc. etc.” (basically, everything ever) and then on the Osaka side, only one thing, “Comedy”, I knew Osaka was for me. I have so many stories from these two months in Osaka, so many good stories. I was a completely free man living in hostel with international travelers, mostly young people but there was a mix of everybody, longer term students living there (Mao and “Miss Tiger”, Yuko Woo, Chinese girls), a teacher, half New Zealander half Canadian, who had been there for four years who was exactly a modern day hippie hobbit (short, hairy, always barefoot, and with long dreads)(and just to give you an idea of the level of swag that this man was at, he wore the Okarina from The Legend of Zelda, Okarina of Time around his neck, 24/7).. and there was.. god what was his name, KEN, it was Ken, Ken was a real character man. I don’t even know what the hell Ken’s story was. I can’t remember where he was from, I think he was from Arizona, and what the hell he was doing at Toyo, I have no idea. When I first met Ken, I have to say (sorry Ken) I thought he was cracked. He was always asking questions and I almost felt like he was a little nosy. But very quickly Ken grew on me, and I saw that he was just goofy and easygoing, and always in a good mood. You know, with people being so complicated and moody and difficult, anyone who is always in a good mood is a winner in my book. That’s a person that is so welcome in my life. I need it, because I’m fucking moody sometimes. I’m not one of those people, and that’s alright. The happy people, the people who are always having a good time, who keep things in perspective, and are not overly preoccupied with all of the many great horrors and injustices of the world, who are always grounded in the here and now, who are up for talking about anything, who keep it light, they are winners in my book, and they are very valuable to me. Ken was one of those people, and so was the other guy, and they were buddies.. Noah. I have to remember these names. Noah, my god man, what a character. I also thought he was just a total goober (I’m sorry Noah). I mean, you have to be a little crazy to commute anywhere six hours a day, which is what he was doing in Australia, to his college. He said that was normal, but man, that can’t be normal. There’s just no way that’s normal. That’s pretty fucking insane. He would drive three hours every morning, and three hours back at night. You would think he was making that up right, but I swear Noah wasn’t a liar. He wasn’t even an exaggerator. He just actually did stuff like that. He had big square glasses. We both showed up at Toyo at about the same time, and he was looking to become an English teacher, and he got a job while I was there, and was working out of the hotel. I remember his first interview, he told me that he was interviewed by a anime cat, and he couldn’t take it seriously. I thought that was hilarious. I could never have taken it seriously either. I mean, if someone decides to have an interview with you, and they use an animated cat to do it, you don’t take that seriously, because that’s not serious. That’s a dumbass company right there.
“Miss Tiger” Yuko Woo was one of my favorites. We had a special bond. She was hot for me. She was like my old Chinese wife, in a way. We just acted like an old married couple. We had really great banter. She would just give it to me straight, and you know I love a woman who gives it to me straight. She once asked me, “Why you wear glasses? You look like nerd.” And took them off of me. “That’s better.” That was Yuko Woo. Her Zodiac animal was the tiger, and she was talking about it one day, I can’t remember why, I think because we had a Chinese New Year’s party together, and that year it was the Year of the Mouse, and she said she was a tiger, so I started calling her Miss Tiger, and it was really very fitting for her, and then she asked what I was, and I told her boar, because that’s what I am, and then she started calling me “Mister Pig.” And I told her many times, I am not a pig, I am not born in the year of the pig, that’s a different Zodiac animal, no, I am a boar, a mighty boar, with tusks, roaming the wilds and goring things, and she would say, “Ok Mister Pig.” Yuko was into partying every night, or on most nights at least, and I was always disappointing her, because I almost never went out, and at least not with the big group, or whoever she was going out with that night. I did still go out, because it was the first time I had ever lived in a place with a real nightlife, and I experimented with that, and I gotta say in the end, it’s mostly just not for me. I’m just not the type, I guess, because most of the times that I went out, I didn’t really feel like it was ever really a success, or something that was good for me, even with all of the meeting people and the seeing things, but I did get stories, and those are always worth something. I did go out with Woo a few times, and every time I did, she would just get drunk and dance, and she would do a little wavy dancing, kind of just standing still and waving back and forth, like kelp in the ocean, just vibing out.
I’ll save my going out stories for later, I guess. I haven’t talked about Mao yet, who is the last of the main characters of Toyo, the main residents, who were there for the entire of my two months. You see, I learned from the hippie hobbit Matt, that you could actually live at Toyo, you could become a resident, and they would move you up to the top floor, the resident’s floor, and you had elevated status, and paid a monthly rate that was even cheaper, and the hotel was already so cheap. This hotel was so popular because it was so cheap, it was notorious for being cheap, because, I learned after I was there, from the hippie hobbit Matt, that we were living in the worst ghetto in Japan, called Nishinari. It was a famous place, and Japanese people knew the name, and when I asked some of my Japanese friends about it, they were like, “Eeee? Nishinari no?? Nande?” (“What? You’re in Nishnari? Why?”) And it’s funny, and I think about this a lot now, because I lived in the worst ghetto in Japan, and it is incomparable to New York City. The worst ghetto in Japan is by comparison the most blessed and greatest paradise on earth compared to New York City. That’s no exaggeration. I saw only one homeless man in Nishinari, and he was doing great. He had a fort of boxes, he had a nice spot on the curb, warm clothes. He wasn’t begging, he wasn’t bothering anybody. I passed by that man almost every day, on my walk to Tully’s, and Tully’s is the reason why I’m even writing about this at all this morning. Tully’s Coffee at Tennouji Park is the best place in Osaka, or if you want to include the whole park, Tennouji Park is the best place in Osaka.
I was thinking about Tully’s Coffee because this morning, I put a Tully’s coffee cup into our office Keurig machine. I fantasize about some of the best moments when I’m in shitty places, like a cubicle, and the New York City subway. So you can understand why I fantasize about Thailand and Japan almost every day that I’m here in New York. And when I think about my time in Osaka, and all of the things that I did, and everywhere that I went, the purest, most joyful memory I have, which is almost a physical sensation that I can feel when I conjure up the memories, is me walking around Tennouji Park, in the clear, blue winter sky, with all of the smiling, happy Osakans, and hanging out at that Tully’s Coffee. It was only a short walk from the Hotel, and I went there almost every day, in the mornings, for most of the two months of my Osaka stay. There was one period of time where I fell into the void that is League of Legends, where I completely forsook the outside world, and fully assumed the identity of Kindred, Lamb and Wolf, the hunter, and it was not worth it, and fuck League of Legends, but that’s what I did. And I knew I had given up on the physical world when I stopped making my Tully’s pilgrimage, because that was a very important part of my life then. It was a routine that brought me great joy. It was a sacred place for me, a place for me to be. And what was so special about Tully’s, and Tennouji Park? Nothing, really. That’s the magic of it. It was just an ordinary place, an ordinary park, with happy people, some futsal courts, some park events, a michi-no-eki with the local produce, a zoo nearby, a nice Italian restaurant, super popular place, and Tully’s. The nicest coffee shop in the world. This Tully’s was big, and the walls were all glass, so you could see outside. You could watch all of the people in the park walk by, smiling, living their lives. The coffee shop was always packed, probably 30 or 40 people could all be in there sitting at once. There was a table with plastic dividers, for covid, that could seat up to 8 people, and that’s where the computer people, the people that were there to do business, would mostly hang out. Next to that, there were six armchairs, with small square tables in between, for sitting across from a friend or with a group, and chatting. There were then all along the back and on the other side, small tables with two chairs across from each other, lining the store. And in the very back corner there was a low table with two couches on opposite sides. There were three ways in or out. The front main entrance, and then one entrance to the left side. The one on the right, nobody came in that way, but you could leave through it. The park itself was like a giant rectangle, with a large grass area in the center. Man, there was even a roller rink and a small dog park. I mean, when I really think about it, that park had everything you could want. It had just about everything for everybody. And surrounding the park was the greater Nishinari area, that had all of the shops, huge malls, the shoutengai (the covered, long outdoor malls, with rows and rows of shops), the zoo, Shinsekai to the west, and the tower, in the middle of Shinsekai that was like a small Tokyo tower, a giant Don Quijote, a huge, multistoried onsen facility.. Man. I miss that like crazy. It was this sprawling, exciting microcosm. To the north of the park there was a stately art museum that was unfortunately closed while I was there, and a Japanese garden, a big one. So, you could take your pick, where you wanted to go, what you wanted to do. There were so many places to play, just in that little few square miles of Osaka. And then we were right on the train line, the subway, and not far from Toyo and the park, you could ride the faster rails, that could take you the farther places, like Kyoto and Kobe and Nara. Those trains ran on the dime, they ran on the money, they never failed me once, and I rode them often. They never failed once. God, I hate to rag on New York City, I really do. It just makes me depressed. But, this city is just so fucked compared to Osaka. So fucked compared to Japan. I just can’t help but think about it.
I didn’t tell you what I paid to live at Toyo, either. It was 30,000 yen a month. Do you know much that is in dollars? I’ll tell you. It’s like $220. That’s how much I paid, in a month, to live there at Toyo.
I would go to Tully’s Coffee almost every day. If the weather was particularly bad I might not, but I would still try. The best memories I have of Osaka are of walking past all of those happy people in the park, seeing the soccer players, and the couples, and the parents, the kids, the groups of young guys and girls, living their lives, and then going into that Tully’s, paying my 300 yen for a coffee, and taking a seat amongst the Tullians. I was a regular for sure, and the staff knew me. I am charming, you know, and make small talk, and generally like to have positive interactions with people, so it wasn’t long before we were chatting, and they were regular friends to me. There were four staff members that I would regularly interact with, but my two besties were the manager, who was almost always there, a woman in her 30’s or early 40’s, and Kento, a young guy who lived in California for a year and had amazing English. We would always have a laugh together, over anything at all. He always had something fun to say to me. I remember he said to me once, that I was confusing the other staff girls, because I would sometimes speak in English, and sometimes in Japanese, and they didn’t know which was which. It’s common to speak in both languages when you’re both familiar with them, but for a low-level speaker of one of the two languages, the switching is quite confusing. The other two members were younger girls, who I never could get much out of, but they knew me, and they knew what I wanted, which was always a medium black coffee, until I realized that the medium was just too much for me, and I switched it to small, which was I remember a momentous decision, that I’m sure was talked about by all of them, when Kento said, “Medium?” And I said, “Make it small this time.” I’m laughing so hard writing this. It’s actually true though, that’s how it went. And he was like, “Oh!” I would always ask what kind of coffee they had today, and they would just start telling me, so I didn’t have to ask. It’s the little things, you know. I felt like I had really reached a certain status, it was like a badge of honor, when the manager came over to me one day, when I was sitting in the back, and she told me that one of the seats at the 8 unit table where the Tullians went to do their work sat, she told me one of those seats was available now. She knew that I always liked to sit there. She noticed that, you know. She knew my habits, she knew me. That was sweet. It’s really the little things.
They ran a perfect ship. It was always clean, people were always taken care of. That Tully’s was so popular for a reason. And they always played jazz, good jazz, like jazz trios, jazz quartets. That’s my favorite kind of jazz. I remember they were once going through a jazz Harry Potter CD, for maybe a week or two, they were playing Harry Potter jazz. I loved it. I mean, jazz, coffee, nice, happy people. Not hard to see why Tully’s Coffee was my favorite place to go. It doesn’t take much. And you could find anybody in Tully’s. There were often other foreigners. There were Japanese moms, girlfriends, couples, students, families, businesspeople, old friends, kids. Everybody was there, hanging out, living life, having a good time. Always good conversation and smiles. One of the young worker girls, she didn’t have much English, and was a little on the shy side, and I remember once walking in, and walking up to the counter, and there was a foreign family there trying to explain to her their complicated order with all these bells and whistles, and I could see the girl was having a tough time with them, and I thought, This is my moment. Leave it to me. And I stepped in and saved the day. The mom said, “Thank you so much, we’re from Hong Kong, I thought Japanese people would speak more English!” And I translated their complicated order with the bells and whistles, like no ketchup on the wiener, that kind of thing, and everybody was happy, and the shy girl was grateful, and I felt like I had performed a great service. It’s nice when you get to use your language skills to actually help people. It’s a very satisfying thing.
The only sad thing about Tennouji Park, and the Tully’s – the only problem with it, was that it wasn’t my culture, and it wasn’t my people. The Japanese never intentionally made me feel that way, but the language barrier did. And, I never felt this way when I was in Ozu, or in Kumamoto at all, because it was rare that I was ever surrounded by masses of people. I was usually in smaller groups, where I would be, you know, 5% of the population at the least, but I also had a role, like in the classroom, I was a part of it, being a teacher. I think that was actually the biggest difference, because while I was in Kumamoto, I had a role, and I had an identity, and that gave me a reason to be in Japan. There was something I was doing that tied me to Japan, and made me a part of it. But once that was gone, I felt that there was nothing now that really bonded me to Japan, and I didn’t have a place in it anymore. And I started to feel that when I would hang out in the park, and at Shinsekai, and at the mall, and on the giant circular crosswalk in the sky on the intersection between the park and malls and giant buildings, and I would be surrounded by Japanese people, hundreds of Japanese people, and then there would be me. Just me. And I would feel it, then, that I was different. It was like, wow, this is a lot of Japanese people. In fact, every one of them is Japanese. And, I’m not Japanese. I’m different from them. Sometimes that’s a fine feeling, and it comes with a lot of perks. Most of the time, really. It’s fun to be exotic. It’s just that, eventually, you don’t want to feel that. Or, you don’t want to feel that way all the time. You want to be exotic, of course, but you also want to just be normal. That sounds like something that celebrities could really relate to. You just don’t always want to stand out. Sometimes, you just want to be like everybody else. And when I wasn’t thinking about how I wasn’t Japanese, which was actually 99% of the time, the language barrier would often remind me, because even with the level of Japanese that I had, which was that I could have a conversation with anybody, I wasn’t nearly fluent. I would still make mistakes, I wouldn’t understand what they would say, I would have to ask them to repeat themselves, all of those things that just get in the way of normal communication, clunk things up, and remind you that you’re different. Those little, passing interactions, are very important for relationships. The fleeting interactions. You may have just a small moment to make an impression, to say what you have to say, to show some personality. Being unable to do that, it’s hard. Having something you want to say, but not being able to say it, right there on the spot, or trying and failing, it’s just hard. I had just been back to the US for the first time in years that fall as well, and I remembered, or really, I learned for the first time, that feeling of just being so easily enmeshed in a culture, of existing so easily in it, being able to understand everyone and everything, knowing what they’re going to say before saying it, being able to handle every interaction nearly effortlessly, was just so.. refreshing. So easy. Like being a fish in water again. That was really the only problem with Tennouji Park, with Tully’s Coffee. By extension, that was the only problem with my Japanese life, then. Otherwise, it was just about perfect.
Man, I really miss Japan.
It’s weird to say this, and it’s weird that I feel this way, but I do. I have very few regrets in life. I actually might only have one, and it’s this. They say you only regret the things you didn’t do, and so far for me in this life, that holds true. I wish I would have told my Tully’s friends that I was leaving Osaka. I didn’t tell them goodbye, I didn’t tell them I was leaving Osaka. And when I think about it, it feels like I just disappeared into the night, vanished without an explanation. Time passed, they wondered where I was, if I would ever come back, and then eventually, stopped thinking about me. I wish I would have taken the time to tell them goodbye, and thanks for everything. Thanks for running a great store, thanks for the friendly conversation, thanks for caring about me, thanks for giving me a place to go, a place to be.
When I think about Osaka, it’s those moments at Tully’s and in Tennouji Park that come back to me, but there was another place where great memories were made, and that was in the Toyo common room, where I made so many friends, encountered so many characters, had so many great conversations. I really did make so many friends. Genesis, the German med-student that failed her med school exam and was taking a haitus, Jean, the French beatmaker who quit his engineering job and was looking for a new lease on life, Ben, the Scot, the sustainability expert, Thal and Roy, the Israeli guys who had finished their mandatory military service and were now doing the customary world travel, all of the main crew of Toyo, Mao, the Tiger, Noah, Ken, and Derek, the photographer from Illinois.. there was a crazy Pakistani man, a guy from Florida, who, when we were talking about crazy Florida people, told me a story about a guy who taught his parrot how to say, “I consent” so that he could have sex with it, and when I said that there was simply no possible way this way true, no matter how crazy Floridians are, (because let’s be real, it is anatomically impossible to have sex with a parrot), and he Googled it and said that ok, it was a fake story, but he believed it because that’s how crazy the Floridians are.. Man, so many characters.
There are many stories here. There was a mystery man. In the lobby, in the common room on the first floor, where we all hung out, there was a guitar. It was a piece of garbage. It was mostly broken, but it had strings. You could make some sounds, but you didn’t play that guitar. It was mostly for the comfort of guitar players, to have a guitar around, and to look at, even if it didn’t work. But one day, after I became a resident, and they moved me up to the 5th floor (and I remember asking if I could just stay in my 2nd floor room so that I didn’t have to “move all of my stuff” (insert crying laughing emoji)(because I had like two suitcases) I started checking out the upstairs, and found a nice roof, and a secret lounge that no one was using. Inside of this secret lounge, there was a guitar, that was nice and actually functional, and I adopted it. I never saw anyone in the lounge, after hanging out in there for some days, and I figured that this was just a left-behind guitar, and started keeping it in my room, and somehow, Aya chan, one of the Toyo staff, a wonderful gal, knew that I had the guitar. A few weeks later, she asked me if I had the guitar, and if I could leave it in the lounge, because the owner had been looking for it, and I said, “The owner???” She said he used to live there and still comes around sometimes to play in that room, and he was glad that someone was using the guitar, but still wanted to play it too. So I left it in the lounge, and wondered about this mysterious man. Not long after that, when I went up to the lounge to play, as I walked up the steps to that 6th floor, I heard something. I heard music, string music, but it wasn’t guitar. It was something else, something like a sitar, some Middle Eastern sound. I walked up to the door and listened, and what I could hear was absolutely blowing my mind. Whoever was playing whatever in that room was a complete genius of the instrument, and I knew that must be the mystery man. I stood there in awe, listening to this master, getting a private concert, and waited. I didn’t want to disrupt him, obviously, but I needed to know who he was, and so when he finally stopped playing, I opened the door, and there he was. Sitting cross-legged on the floor, the mystery man, a Japanese man with long hair, playing his mystery instrument, made out of a gourd, with 20+ strings. (Google tells me it’s a kora, 21 strings.) I said, “Sugoi.” (Wow.) And then we became best friends. I apologized for taking his guitar, asked him about his instrument, he played some crazy stuff for me, told me all about the kora, asked me to play some guitar for him (which I was so embarrased about and have never felt more humbled) but he was encouraging and said I had a lot of feeling behind my playing. I felt like I was meeting a rare character, a magical being, like a unicorn, or Tom Bombadil from The Lord of Rings, something mysterious and ephemeral. I saw him outside of that room, once. He was a young man, but he had some problems with his legs, and walked with a cane. We met several more times, and played together, and talked about music, in that secret room, in a private space, outside of time, away from the noise and chaos of the world.
The ability to get away from the rest of the world, to have such a private, personal, untouchable space, both in that lounge, and in my room, was a truly amazing thing. And I had complete freedom at this time, with no one to answer to but myself. My time was entirely my own. Another rare, and powerful thing. But that’s a very precious thing, and you have to be careful with it. In the throes of winter, in this Toyo Hotel, I did for some time disappear into the void of League of Legends. It’s almost no different than if I had been sucked into an opium den. I disappeared from the lobby, I disappeared from the world, and I entered that magical, fictional world of the Rift. I hadn’t played in years, prior to this, I had nothing to do with the game. I was an addict. And I went back in. I had to relearn the game, a lot had changed. I had always been a jungler, a king of the jungle, killing monsters, surprising opponents, dictating the flow of the game, supporting the strongest members of my team, shutting down the enemy movements, controlling vision, territory, and objectives, and I gravitated to that role again, choosing as my character a new character, Kindred, Lamb and Wolf, a deadly archer with a spiritual wolf companion. I had to relearn the game, learn the new characters, learn this new character, her ins and outs, as she was a totally new concept, being a ranged hypercarry, but in the jungle – with no way to immobilize the enemy, easily killed, but a killer herself. Highly mobile, with an incentive to invade the enemy jungle, with the ability to mark targets for death, and hunt them down, growing stronger with each kill – she could fight early, she could fight well, if you knew how to handle her, and what fights to pick, but she couldn’t fight everybody. That didn’t come until later, when she had grown in power, and was completely unstoppable. She was conceptually entirely new, with a steep learning curve, and with massive potential for payoff, which made her fascinating to me, and that’s what I did. Day in and day out, for a week, for ten days, I hardly left my room, and mastered this killing machine. I will never forget one of the last games I played. Of course, I knew this was a problem, that I was playing League, that I was again disappearing into this void, but I didn’t care. I didn’t care at all. I was in. And in that last game, the final fight is burned into my mind. I had now mastered Kindred, I had perfected the killing machine, I played the entire game flawlessly, with no missteps, and in the end my total dominance from start to finish was complete, as I single-handedly cut down every member of the enemy team and ended the game, while my own team watched on. I decided that the game was over, and so it was. It was a flawless victory, my mastery was complete. After that, what do you do? Where do you go? Was I going to keep playing, to climb the endless ladder, rise to the top of the ranks, spending more precious time that I don’t have? I already didn’t have time for this. No. It was enough.
It was rare that I ever had anywhere specific I actually wanted to go, as I was mostly just hanging out, going to Tully’s, and enjoying the company of the other Toyo people. They gave me plenty of things to do, they all had their own itineraries, they were full of ideas, and I could join them if I wanted, or just let them go out and do the excursions, and get the report when they came back. It’s fun talking to other backpackers this way, because everyone goes out, and they do their things, and then you all come back to the hostel and talk about it, sharing stories, sharing ideas, inspiring each other. Sometimes, you find someone you really like, someone has an idea that you want to get in on, and you do it together. You can always find someone to go out to eat with you, if you want it, either in the common room, or going out somewhere. You are like a little family, for the time you’re together. I was happy to go along with others, and for that time I was something of a tour guide, because I was one of the few in the hotel who was actually a Japan resident, and spoke Japanese, and knew about all of the things that they were learning about for the first time, and so I could introduce them to new things, show them some of the more interesting aspects of the culture, and I became a little bit of a local expert, and could take them to places that tourists might not get into. Most casual tourists, probably very few came to Nishinari in Osaka at all, and so you got a different and more adventurous crowd, more world travelers, more experienced travelers, and people who wanted to experience deeper elements of Japanese culture. Well, on one excursion, that was wholly my project, I convinced some of the other Toyoans, that was photographer Derek, French beatmaker Jean, and the Scot, Ben (his name is not Ben but what the hell was his name), to join me on an expedition to the Tower of The Sun. I had been enamored with it since I discovered it in a pack of famous-Osaka-things cards that I got in a vending machine. I still have those cards, and what an incredible purchase. That pack had all of the Osaka gems, all of the local treasures, everything to do, everything to eat. In a pack of cards. And when I flipped through them and saw The Tower of The Sun, I had the feeling that I had seen it before, somewhere in Toyo, and I started walking around and checking the walls, which were all covered in art made by the guests and staff, until I found it. There on the wall in the main lobby was an image of the Tower of The Sun. And so I looked this thing up, and I knew I needed to go there. It was kind of far though, about thirty minutes or an hour away, and I didn’t want to go alone. I pitched this trip in the lobby, and Jean, Matthew, and Derek signed up for it, and so we planned to meet the next morning, not too early, just something like 9:30, and all go together. And at this time in my life, I had no phone, and one of the biggest inconveniences about not having a phone, and you wouldn’t expect this, is that you actually don’t have an alarm clock anymore. I usually wake up early, and so I was sure it wouldn’t be any problem, but for some reason that morning I slept in. I woke up at 9:45 or 10:00. The day of the big expedition! Shit!! I called my friends on the Line app, no response. I rushed down into the lobby, but I didn’t see them. I wavered on what to do, and decided that they must have just left without me, hoping to see me there. So, I grabbed my camera, and I made the trip myself. The Tower of the Sun is an enormous art installation from the 1970’s world art expo, that was held in Osaka. The outside is basically an enormous, 100-150 foot tall concrete and metal cone, with two arms, and with a giant hybrid sun/moon face, with a quirky sun face painted on the front, and a quirky moon face painted on the back of the main tower. It’s like an enormous, modern, Japanese totem pole, in reverence to the sun and the moon. (Then you get inside, and it’s totally not what you would expect, and I knew you could go inside, but had no idea what was in there). It’s amazing. And it’s part of a huge, many-square-miles-large park. I took the train there, walked to it, and looked all over – but my friends were nowhere to be found. I went inside and picked up the four tickets that I had pre-ordered, and wondered what to do. Could they have gone ahead? Were they already inside? Did they give up on the trip? Did I somehow get ahead of them? Should I wait? And these are the fun kinds of questions you have when you don’t have a phone. These are the fun little riddles you have to solve. Because obviously if I had a phone, I would know. They would have told me. But I didn’t, just like the olden days, and I had to wonder what happened. This best part of the story wouldn’t have existed if I had a phone, so when people ask me what it’s like to not have a phone, remember this story. I asked the girls working at the Tower’s reception if there were already three young male foreign men in the Tower, and they said no. I didn’t know what to do, and I waited around for some time, probably fifteen minutes, and walked around the park. I think I had a time set on my tickets, that I was supposed to use them within a certain timeframe, from 11am-12pm, so there was some time pressure. After waiting, and explaining my situation to the nice girls working the reception desk, I decided that I wasn’t going to be finding my friends, and I should just give the rest of my tickets away. I went back outside, and saw a couple with two young boys entering, and offered them my tickets, but they already had some. Same with another guy walking in. I walked up the entrance ramp, and went out into the park. Nearby, there were three young girls, high school aged. I tried them. As soon as I started talking to them, they were shy as hell, giggling and alert, as this is a very rare occurance, having a wild gaikokujin start speaking Japanese to you, and I offered them the tickets. They were very apologetic, and thought carefully about it, but they had somewhere they needed to be, and wouldn’t take them either. So after that, I just said, well, I tried, and I went back into the tower. I updated the reception girls, and told them after all that I couldn’t find anyone to give the tickets to, and was just gonna’ have to go in alone, and they were sad to hear it, but shouganai! It can’t be helped. And then, not a minute after I had gone in, and was looking over the initial design sketches for the construction of this magnificent tower, one of the reception girls came running over to me, saying excitedly, “Sumimasen! Sumimasen! Tomodachi ga kimashita!!” (“Hey, your friends are here!!”) And I ran out, and there they were! And I said, “What the heck!” And they were like, “We were in the lobby the whole time!” I couldn’t believe it. Somehow I had just missed them. And so we went in together, and had a great time. And it turned out, externally the Tower was all about the sun and moon, but inside, it was The Tower of Life, and the thing was filled with giant sculptures of paleolithic creatures, protozoans, early man, dinosaurs, jellyfish, spiraling up to modernity, from the ancient times. The entire interior glowed red, and there were spiny things everywhere, and there was a whole section at the beginning that was just crazy tribal masks. Then, afterwards we went to a nearby mall, and gorged on amazing udon. God, I love udon. And while we were loading up our udon with all of the goodies, Jean was standing next to me at the counter, pouring the fried crunchy crispies into his bowl, and this whole time we had been speaking English, and then he says something to me, and I was like, “Bro, was that French?” Because I couldn’t understand him at all, and he was like, “Was it? Oh, sorry, my brain is so tired.” He was so tired that he had just defaulted back to French.
It has been stitched together out of several sessions of writing and over the course of several days.
Last night I slept in a tent. In my own apartment. It’s right behind me. I will sleep there again tonight. I am doing this because I am at war. I have been at war now for some time, and the war I have won. I am at war with mosquitoes. They have my apartment. They will never have my blood.
I’ve sold my car. Last week or two weeks ago. Just in time for the rainy season. This morning I woke up at my usual time of around 5:30, to my usual serenading by Tamanaga san’s rooster. That rooster does his job well. Too well. He cock-a-doodle-doos for about two hours longer than he needs to. He just has nothing better to do. He’s crowing for his harem, perhaps. His diminishing harem. I was picking berries with the Tamanaga children and the eldest, Riku, told me about his recent experience beheading one of the chickens. His younger brother didn’t want to hear any of this story. He’s a tough kid; he described to me the chopping and the boiling and the spurting of blood and he might as well have been describing to me how ice cream was made. This rooster though, I noticed some months ago, whenever I would wake up in the middle of the night to take a squizz, I would open my bathroom door, and he would let out a wild cock-a-doodle-doo! (Which is kokkigokko in Japanese, by the way). Every single time, he would do this, and he still does. And I think, does this man not sleep? Is he really ready to flex all 24 hours of the day? He must have incredible hearing, to be able to hear that door. My window doesn’t fully close, it just kind of closes, as it’s covered with a series of slanted glass plates, that I can open or shut, but it’s not airtight. Still it’s quite far from him. I told Tamanaga san about this recently, and Tamanaga san said, “Oh, he thinks it’s another rooster.” The squeak of my bathroom door does not have, to me, even one-tenth of the vigor of that rooster’s kokkigokko; but he will tolerate not even a peep of challenge.
While I’m talking about my bathroom….
Let me ask you this – have you ever wanted to watch yourself pee? Have you ever had the desire to stare yourself down while you took a nice tinkle? At some point before me, a vain tenant, a well-meaning landlord, I don’t know who, but someone had this desire, and they affixed a small, square mirror, at eye level, above the toilet. Every time I go into the bathroom to pee, I have to make the choice to either look myself in the eyes when I let my stream loose, or look somewhere else. They put it right in front of my eyes, so it is more effort to look away, and it is also instinctive to want to make eye contact, and so if I go into that bathroom not wanting to stare myself down when I pee, and I don’t, I have to find somewhere else to look. It irritated me to the point that I finally tried to take it down, and I found that whoever put it up was so confident in their decision that this was a good idea, that they had it welded to the wall. The mirror stays. Do you think that’s ridiculous? Is it just me? I think that’s ridiculous. I don’t need to watch myself when I use the bathroom. I don’t need to watch myself at all. I think mirrors might be making us narcissists. Phone selfie cams most definitely are. I already think about myself enough. Don’t put a mirror in my bathroom. That’s like putting a mirror above your bed. I don’t need my first thought in the morning to be a reminder of how crusty I am.
I will tell you about selling my car. There is a reason why I brought up the car. I woke up this morning, to the crowing of Tamanaga’s rooster, at my usual time, 5:30, to grey skies. The skies are only ever grey now, and will be that way for a month or two. I like rain, so I don’t mind this time. Today was a day at my special needs school. That meant two hours of biking today – one in the morning, one in the afternoon. I leave at 7:20. Somewhere in between that window, the torrents begin. I sat on my couch, eyeing the downpour, and played with the idea of just calling in and saying, hey, uhh.. not today. This was the first time I’ve biked in such a rain, and it went as expected. Halfway through I was soaked. Not from the rain, but from my own sweat, as the amagappa (rainsuit) is so good at what it does, that no water enters, and no water leaves. I sat on the bench, in front of the changing station, the one that does not exist in American establishments, perhaps in no other country’s establishments than in Japan’s, the outdoor-shoes-for-indoor-shoes, or vice versa, changing station. Do you know about this? At the entrance of every Japanese household there is a space, called a genkan, where you change out of your outdoor shoes, and into your indoor shoes, which are typically a pair of slippers. You can walk around in socks, if it’s a house. That’s fine. When you get the bathroom, then, you change out of your indoor slippers, and into the bathroom slippers. In some bathrooms, such as bathrooms that are inside of a building where you can walk around in your outdoor shoes, there are slippers for your shoes. These are the best kind. You just slide your shoe right in. I think for this reason, ease of transition, the act of getting into and out of a shoe, is of great consideration to the Japanese. They choose their shoes with the fact that they will be performing this act daily in mind. I think they also just have some innate talent for getting into and out of shoes quickly – for anywhere we go, if I am with Japanese people, and we have to do the shoe to slipper swap (or just take the shoes off, which is common at restaurants that have elevated seating, where you all sit around a table lotus-style, criss-cross applesauce, I like this), if it comes to any shoe business, I am always the last one finished, as there will usually be some staggering around involved, perhaps a sitting or squatting down, to struggle through laces, to jerk a resistant shoe off, and by the time I stand back up again, I am alone. Only Austin, the Ozu yakuba Kansas boy, has got me beat. One time he took so long to put on his boots, that even I ran out of witty comments to make, and the restaurant hostess and I were both resigned to watching him struggle through his shoes in silence. I got a good kick out of seeing a thousand parents, at Ozu High’s graduation ceremony, dressed in their best suits and dresses, from head to ankle – because after the ankle were the slippers, and it seems that either no one has yet capitalized on the formal slipper market, or no one cares enough to want formal slippers, for the footwear for this occasion was an anything goes slipper bonanza, and it was all there. Linen beach slippers, fuzzy pink slippers, slippers of a more athletic bent. It was like Ozu’s graduation ceremony had a theme every year, like how we have 80’s themed or Halloween themed parties, and the theme for this year was slippers. And of course, they didn’t come there in the slippers, or else they couldn’t be wearing them in the auditorium, and so every person was supplied with a large plastic bag, that they carry their outdoor shoes in, while they were slippered up. I’m writing about the slippers because up until today, I have had to wear a pair at Kuroishibaru, my special needs school, and it was terrible. I only go this school twice a month, and so I had always made due with the guest slippers they gave me. The guest slippers are the lowest tier of slipper. You wouldn’t think this would be so, given the Japanese’s exacting standards of hospitality. It may just be that guest slippers in the Kumamoto school system are the lowest tier of slipper; but at the three schools that I’ve been to where I had to change into guest slippers, my experience has been the same with all three pairs – too dang small.
We’re pivoting again here.
Last night was a strange night for me.
I felt like I was in the Twilight Zone. I’ve never been in the Twilight Zone, I haven’t even seen the show, but I imagine that what happens in the Twilight Zone is what was happening to me last night. There were just too many odd occurrences happening in such a short period of time that I couldn’t help but feel that I entered an alternate reality. The feeling was exacerbated by the fact that it was in the middle of night, where all sense of time vanishes, and I was only vaguely conscious. I was woken up by something. It could have been stomach pain, the buzz of a mosquito, a need to urinate. These things all did plague me in that Twilight Zone of last night.
I can’t say what it was, but I woke up last night, having not even a guess as to how long I’d been asleep. I was hot. It’s been hot here, and humid. The rainy season is here. I know this because it’s raining every day. And when you check the Apple weather app, and see rain forecasted seven days in a row, you get it. Rainy season is here. It will be raining almost every day for the next two months. It will also be incredibly humid. This is torture for some people – for me, it’s alright. I don’t mind a little sweat. Probably because I’m Swedish. I’m quite hairless. It is an annoyance, to be streaming sweat, to be moistening in your crevices, from the act of simply sitting – but some people have it much worse than I do. I’d take sweating over frostbite and dry skin any day. The real torture of this season is the mosquitoes. Evil, evil creatures. It probably started two weeks ago, that was the start of the real hell season, mosquito season. One night, as I slept peacefully, I was awakened by a high-pitched whining in my ear, like the whirring of an incredibly tiny, powerful drill. That was the beginning of mosquito season. I am now assailed by mosquitoes on most nights. Last night was one of those nights. I say mosquitoes, but I think it is always just one. That’s my feeling anyway, that just one of these hellions manages to sneak into my apartment every few nights, and engages in a dangerous game with me, trying to sneak that precious lifeblood out of me. The mosquitoes are winning. You can see that by the number of large red welts that mark my left forearm and right bicep. We are not prey for any other animal on this earth, not consistently, except for mosquitoes. They still devour us. I wonder how many hundreds, how many thousands of gallons of human blood are sucked up by mosquitoes daily. That would be a powerful statistic to use in any good destroy-all-mosquitoes campaign. They just released genetically modified mosquitoes in the US for the first time, this week, I read, in Florida. There are something like seventy-three species of mosquitoes and not all of them feed on humans, so we don’t need all of them to go extinct. Just the ones that stab and drink us like we’re big monkey juice boxes.
Anyways, last night I was plagued with diarrhea. I’m sorry if you’re eating anything right now, like chili. This is the second night I’ve woken up with such extreme gastrointestinal discomfort. I know the source. I have a bean problem. The problem is that I eat too many beans. I think we’re going to have to go our separate ways. This is very sad for me, because that means I have to find another source of protein, and I don’t know if I can find something as cheap or convenient as black beans. I was cooking up half a kilogram in dry weight of those babies every Sunday, in what I called the “death pot”, would freeze them all, and secure a week’s worth of daily bean rations, to utilize in my quest to become a mukimuki man. That has been one of my recent genius, is picking up the adventure again, in the quest to become a mukimuki man. I’m working out at the Ozu school gym with the soccer players. They think that I am the strongest man alive. It’s incredible, going from my local gym in Indiana, being at the near bottom of the totem pole of muscular men, to being number one, the king, without having to have really done anything at all except fly across the world. It’s all relative. Surrounded by hulking American men, I am weak – surrounded by puny Japanese high school soccer players, I am Hulk. They’re not puny, I’m just kidding – especially in the leg department, many of those guys are stronger than me. But weightlifting culture is not big in Japan. It’s fledgling, I would say, although that implies that it will be growing, and I’m not sure if it will be any time soon. When they first started coming to the gym, they would see me lift my weights, and it would just blow their minds. They would huddle around me, and make exclamations, “Wow! Wow!” “Oh my god!” “Very, very strong!” and cheer me on. It’s been a great ego booster. Recently in class, they asked me if I’d be in the gym that day, and they were excited to tell me they would be too, and they asked me what my max bench press was. The time before, they had asked me if I could bench 50 kilograms, and I actually laughed, and they said, “5 times,” and I was like, they’re gonna like this. (For the Standard Measurement users, you know who you are, (Americans) one kilogram is 2.2 pounds). That’s about 125 pounds or so. Even for me that is laughable. I laid out on that bench and just started pounding them out. I may as well have been lifting a barbell with stuffed animals on the sides. And with each rep, they’re realizing my true power, realizing why I laughed at 50, and they told me at fifteen, “Ok, ok.” So in class, when they asked me what my max bench was, I said, “I don’t know, maybe 200.” You should have seen their faces. It blew their minds. And these kids really think I am so strong, that they believed it. That’s 200 kilograms, almost 450 pounds. Obviously that is impossible for me. But I’m truly flattered you guys think I can do it. Really, imagine that you go to the gym and struggle to pound out your six or seven pull ups. You’re probably following in the wake of some lean mean pullup machine who just cranked out fifty for a warmup. You step up, and you’re doing okay, until you get to the fourth, or the fifth, and now it hurts, and your form is falling apart. The sixth destroys you, and you fall to the floor with flaming arms. The imagine of the lean mean pullup machine is fresh in your mind. You do not feel strong. Now, go to my gym at Ozu high. Ask if you can do some pullups. You may have seen a group of young bucks standing around it, eyeing it cautiously, perhaps one of two of them with courage having just given it a go, struggling through a few, probably with terrible form, doing the fish-flopping thing, where you buck your legs to give you extra momentum to lift yourself up. You now step up to struggle through your measly six or seven reps. On only the first rep, you’ve caught the attention of anyone watching. On the second or third, they are now openly commenting on your pullup strength, turning more heads. Sugoi, sugoi. By the fifth, they’re all in, cheering you on, many oh my gods have been exclaimed, someone has probably started counting for you. On your final pullup, they are enthralled, they will beg for one more, and you will fight for it, and you will fall to the ground; and this time, you fall down as a hero, a champion, to the cheers and celebrations of onlookers, who are thrilled to have just born witness to such a remarkable feat of physical strength. This is what it is like to workout at this Ozu school gym. When I sit down at the lat pulldown machine, I move the peg from somewhere around 20 kilograms, to double that. The soccer players see this, and their eyes immediately widen. It’s really incredible.
It has been a great way to get closer to them. Some of these guys have excellent English, and some of them don’t even speak enough English to use the escape card, “I don’t speak English.” when I start talking to them. It’s bad enough that I have to try and gauge the level of the student before I approach them, because it might be that to whatever I say, they will have absolutely no response at all. But it’s easier to bond in the weight room. Sports have that power. Last fall I played in a little Japanese-Vietnamese-American (me representing America) international soccer scrum. Those Vietnamese guys spoke almost no English and close to zero Japanese, and we left good friends.
Typing “believe” makes me want to share something I spoke with a friend about yesterday. We were acknowledging the nightmare that is spelling in the English language. That is one aspect in which Japanese has English thoroughly beat. Japanese is consistent, and the only problem I have with Japanese spelling is whether there is a small つ or an extra う。For the Japanese it’s obvious, but for non-native speakers, it’s not. English speakers learning Japanese have it much easier than Japanese learning English. They have to struggle to discern even between letters of the alphabet. It is nearly impossible for a large percentage of my students to tell whether I am telling them to write b or v. When you make a v sound, if you do it right now, you’ll notice that you do a little buzz with your bottom lip. It’s fun. Try it. The Japanese don’t have this, and so they can’t pronounce v, and if they can’t pronounce it, it’s very hard for them to hear it. The same is true for the th and l sounds, among others. So, that is already a hurdle, and then put the fact that English has all kinds of nonsensical and inconsistent spellings, that it is pretty torturous for the Japanese to learn to spell anything. I showed you before how many different ways they could incorrectly spell frog. (Like, a million different ways.) Blue and vegetable are two other ones that frequently devastate my students (and the greater Japanese community, for at many restaurants, where they have their menu written on a chalkboard, which is a popular thing to do, if they’ve written “vegetables”, 98% of the time it’s spelled wrong). I am sympathetic to all of this. I think English speakers all recognize that English is a bastard sometimes. Look at tomb and bomb – it took me less than five seconds to think of such an example. Another one – close. How did you pronounce that? Close can be pronounced two ways, two words with entirely separate meaning. Japanese is at least consistent. But anyways, my friend, while we were bonding over the horror that is English spelling, asked me if I had any problems with spelling, and I am proud to say that at this point in my life, I’ve worked out almost all of the kinks (one that was kinking me for a long time was restaurant, and when I spell this word I now actually pronounce it incorrectly in my head to confirm that I have it right, as in, I pronounce the staur as you would the saur in dinosaur) but there is one that still kinks me, and that is the dreaded ie vs. ei debauchery. What reminded me of all this just now was that I typed believe, and I actually typed it wrong the first time, perhaps because my core has now been shaken and I am now subconsciously evaluating every ie ei word that I use. I think you all probably know what I’m talking about – is it theif or thief? It’s thief, but I often want to spell it theif. That one is a fifty-fifty for me, but the worst, is receive. I have made the mistake of writing recieve and correcting it so many times that I fear it is now engrained in my muscle memory – for me, writing the word receive is an act of writing receive and then thinking, “Is that right? That doesn’t look right.” And then rewriting it correctly. And it’s a bastard because you have relieve and believe, achieve, sieve, basically everything receive, conceive.. I know, it’s “I before e, except after c.” I know. I just hate it. I’m just pissed about it. But I guess that does solve our thief problem. I before e except after c.
Here are all of the ways that I have seen blue misspelled by my students: bleu (common), bool (only once), belu (common), brue (surprisingly uncommon), blu (uncommon), bloo (uncommon), and blow (only once). And I think this illustrates exactly why English spelling is so evil. To an English speaker, three of these would be pronounced nearly identically with blue: bleu, blu, and bloo. They’ve never written it, but there’s another, blew. You could also write blueue, couldn’t you, if you queue is a word? Bastard language. To the average Japanese who does not attempt to model true English pronunciation when they speak, beru and brue are also correct spellings of blue, in that it models how they hear the word.
On the beans.. I am not sure if I’ve adapted. I am sure that I’ve had to eat less of them, and to tell you the truth, I don’t want to eat them at all. I’ve come to even be afraid of them. It is a certain fact that if I consume any amount of black beans, I will have stinky farts the next day. But I have a dream, a dream that I will be a muscular, mukimuki man, and if I have to make such sacrifices, I will. The protein is too high, for too good of a price, and the convenience is hard to beat. I can whip up half a kilogram in dry bean weight, what I have called the “death pot”, and freeze it all, and now have a week’s worth of daily bean rations. My main protein sources are, along with the beans, soba, tofu, soy milk, peanuts, and a small fish called いりこ (iriko). I think they’re sardines. I eat soba every day, and I often tell this to Japanese people, when they ask me what my favorite food is, or what I usually eat. Soba is a perfect food. It is a perfect noodle. It has outmuscled every other food because it is simple, it is healthy, it is easy to make, and it has an incredible base flavor and texture. Direx has all but lost my business because they don’t carry it. I stopped at Direx this last week on the way home from Ozu High, to pick up some soy milk, which is ten yen more expensive at Direx than Trial (Direx losing on all fronts), and I checked, with very low expectations, as to whether there was yet any soba on the shelf, and there was none, and I left disgusted. Goto sensei, my old tantosha, who I really miss, gave me an amazing 図鑑 (zukan) (kind of a picture encyclopedia), meant for elementary school students and detailing all of the most fundamental aspects of Japanese culture, and it was actually thrilling to me to find that there were two pages devoted to soba, and the making of soba. How soba was made was something that had been sitting in the back of my mind for a long time, like many things, that I’m curious about, and would really like to know about, but just not so much that I’ll sit down and look into it on my own. This came to me, finally, and in the form of a beautiful, detailed, meant-for-children picture book, perfectly matching the level of my interest with the level of the explanation. Because you know, there are so many degrees of knowing something, as I could say, “Yeah, I know how soba’s made!” But if you asked me to make it, obviously, I can’t, so do I really know how soba’s made? Don’t push me on it. What I can tell you, which is what the zukan told me, is that the secret of soba’s power, being full of magnesium, and fiber, and protein, mainly comes from the ground up fruit of the soba plant. They take the fruit, which looks like (based on the zukan illustration) some tough ass raisins, grind ’em up, take off the shell, mix them in with a paste made of flour and yamaimo, a kind of root vegetable, roll it out, and chop it up into noodles. And viola, you have Japan’s greatest noodle.
This post details the events of May/June 2022. I have no idea how to write this like a normal person.
Shoutout to Derek Tepe for inspiring me to finish this post. Without him I don’t know when I ever would have. Thanks Derek and I hope you enjoy it.
Did you have fun today?
Make sure you have fun today.
Yesterday I got my fun by declaring that I would twist Mr. Parker Junior’s nipples every time he scratched himself. He’s been wearing shorts up to the mid-thigh, and all that exposed leg is being devoured by insects, and is now covered in bandaids because he can’t stop scratching his bites. In the ten or so minutes between declaring my intentions and moving on with life I got to twist his nipples several times. When I twisted them, he would curl up into a defensive ball and cry “Stop!” and then offer many and varied explanations for his unhealthy behavior, as is his custom. I would not have done this if I had not made a conscious decision then and there that I was going to have some fun, however I would get it. I did, and it changed the trajectory of my day. Sometimes a fun-jection is just what the doctor ordered. So, make sure you’re having fun. You’ve gotta have it. You should play every day.
I have recently spent several weeks of my life in the remote recesses of the mountains of Japan, in a lonely home with a wild Australian man, learning bird calls, following boar trails, hunting for owls, turning all faucets to the right, and unplugging all appliances when not in use. This home was located in a small town nestled in the hills of Kuju, Ubuyama, or the full name, Ubuyamamura, which means Ubuyama village. The kanji for Ubuyama is 産山, which could be interpreted as “Birth Of The Mountain”. I stayed under the good graces of James Cool, who we will henceforth refer to as Scrumpillion Wombus, or in full, The Lord Scrumpillion Wombus, as it is a perfect mix of regality and preposterousness that is the man himself. Scrumpillion Wombus was a gracious host – as long as I did not breathe too loudly, walked on the edges of the stairs so as not to make them creak, did not talk to him more than once every three days, set all faucets to the right and unplugged all appliances as mentioned, kept the royal laundry pole hanging, properly hid myself from the neighbors, showered at regular intervals, and blew my nose when necessary, I was free to do as I pleased, and come and go as I pleased. That is, until that fateful day when he said to me, “Well this has been fun, hasn’t it? You have until the 6th.”
A heavily edited view of the Kuju mountain range from the baseball field adjacent to the house
Ubuyama is right up around Kurokawa Onsen, a famous onsen town, and Mt. Aso.(This is an image of Kyushu.)
I lived in the other room on the second floor of The Lord Scrumpillion Wombus’s fine estate. The room that was not The Lord’s. Prior to my arrival it had been Scrumpillion’s workout room, where he would carry out a variety of royal workouts, such as shadow-boxing, tabata, and manic cleaning, and where he would hang his laundry from the royal laundry pole. He graciously gave me this room for my stay, on the condition that I keep the aforementioned pole, a long metal rod precariously resting on protruding edges of wall near the ceiling. This request I of course initially obliged, and continued to oblige even after the laundry pole had fallen, entirely to my fault, as I had forgotten to lock it in place with the royal safety hangers (hangers hooked onto the pole at the ends between where it rested on the blind racks above the windows – if you attempted to slide the pole off, the hangars would keep it in place, stuck between the bars of the blind rack) (an ingenious security system that none less than The Great Wombus himself could contrive), and it had crashed into my enormous, precious new photo-editing monitor, that thankfully was built with resistance to thick steel laundry pole attacks in mind, this being one of the main reasons why I was attracted to it in the first place – even after this incident I continued to oblige, now having been instructed in the ways of The Lord’s failsafe hanger security system, that immediately failed, as I went to open the blinds and released the hanger, and the pole fell down onto the only spot in the room that it possibly could have landed between the mounds of camera gear, computer equipment, human craniums, and precious monitors, to strike absolutely nothing, and I took this as a sign from the divine, a being higher than even The Lord Wombus himself (if there really could be such a being), that for the remainder of the duration of my stay, the royal laundry pole really must go.
During this wild recursion at the Lord Wombus’s great estate, my best friends and greatest source of amusement, Scrumpillion aside, were not actually human. They were the feathered, flying, frenzied denizens of the woods – the avians. Yes, there is a whole ‘lotta bird goin’ on over in them mountains of Ubuyama. I could talk at great length about these birds, and I would love to do so, but I fear at the risk of alienating myself from those who are not as interested in these whimsical featherballs, like for example The Lord Scrumpillion Wombus, to whom I attempted to speak with about birds on many an occasion, and who would, in his very keen, very sharp intuition, understand immediately on what topic I came to him to discuss, and would upon perceiving it, reply, “Bird! Bird!” But, somewhat surprisingly, he did assist me with my bird investigations by sharing a find with me, when he sent me a photo of a bird that he dubbed the “fat stupid bird”. The bird that Wombus discovered was none other than the kojyukei, and I was personally aggrieved that in all my searching I was never ever able to find this bird myself; but alas, The Lord’s partridges reveal themselves only to The Lord himself.
The fat stupid bird (kojyukei – Chinese Bamboo Partridge)The fat stupid bird flees, undoubtedly from the Lord’s overwhelming splendor
I didn’t see this bird, but I heard it many times. This was a common with the birdfolk. You would hear them every day, hear them all around you, right outside the window, and yet, try as hard as you might, you may never see them. This particular bird, the kojyukei, I heard almost every single day that I was there in Ubuyama, and tried to track it down countless times, and never did I succeed. Then Scrumpillion, who couldn’t care less, see them, not only once, but several times, on his way home from work! What a scoundrel.
Had he known then the sounds this fat stupid bird is capable of, he may have labelled it a fat stupid shrieking bird instead.
Iconic kojyukei call Kojyukei scream, similar to the aogera, the Japanese Green Woodpecker, which was also around
We’ve now come to the point where I show you all of my bird pictures. These photos were almost all taken from The Lord Scrumpillion’s estate grounds.
Oriental Greenfinch – カワラヒワAshy Minivet – SanshoukuiAshy Minivet – SanshoukuiYamagara – Varied TitMejiro – Japanese White-eye, looks like male and femaleMejiro with a big catchMejiro callSoushicho – Red-billed LeiothrixDon’t know this one, think it was a babyEnaga – Long-tailed TitEnaga callHashibosogarasu – Carrion CrowGabichou – Chinese HwameiShijyuukara – Japanese TitOoyoshikiri – Oriental reed warblerHoojiro – Meadow BuntingKogera – Japanese Pygmy WoodpeckerAobato – Whistling Green PigeonAobato call
There is a story behind every one of these shots. Some stories are short. “I saw the bird and took a picture.” That would be the Wombus way of storytelling. Some stories are longer. One of these such stories is the Aobato story. The Aobato is the Whistling Green Pigeon. The Whistling Green Pigeon was one of my favorites. For one, because it’s a green pigeon. Do I need to say anymore? When all you’ve ever seen are the classic grey pigeon (we did have these in Ubuyama, I was surprised to see them), seeing a green one feels like finding a shiny version of a Pokemon. (Shiny Pokemon are a rare version of the Pokemon that has a different color scheme and is of course, shiny.) However, as if being green wasn’t enough, these pigeons also have an allure in they they are extremely shy, and will never show themselves to humans. They sing their iconic songs all throughout the day, just to remind you that they do exist, and they are out there, you’re just not allowed to see them. You can see from the photo however that not only was I able to see one, but I also snuck a photograph, although I will not say I was allowed to do this. That little green pigeon absolutely did not want to be seen by me, and as soon as it realized it had been discovered, it jolted up, and flew off in a hurry. I have never seen a bird more startled or panicked by my presence. I had really given up all hope of ever seeing this bird, after so many forays into the wild in search of it, and in the end, I had found it through a new bird-sighting technique I had developed after many such unsuccessful hunts. This technique I call looking-for-birds-by-not-looking-for-birds, and I will explain what this means. Of course, it’s not really a good name for the technique, and it should probably be immediately renamed, because the whole point is that you are in fact looking for birds. The secret of the technique lies in how you approach the looking, and I can give you analogy that you don’t need because this is very easy to understand, and I just love analogies. Instead of walking around your house looking on every counter and under every pillow in search of your keys, with this technique, you simply sit on the floor of the living room, and wait for your keys to come to you. Obviously this does not work with keys, (although when you stop and think about it you’re probably more likely to remember where you put them) because birds are really nothing like keys. Birds move around a whole lot more, and birds are more perceptive than you and I, and have better eyesight and the higher ground. They will always see you before you see them, and they will probably hear you too. So, I learned through experience that looking for birds by walking around and saying, “Here birdie birdie birdie!” is pretty useless, but if instead, you pick out a nice spot on the ground and sit there and wait, you will have great success. That’s how I found the aobato, and a whole lot of other birds. I would go out into the meadow behind the Lord’s estate, and sit somewhere where I could survey all, and just wait. I would do this in the mornings, most often, when the birds were at their chirpiest and most active. It was amazing an amazing place to be, on these mornings, to see and hear the incredible whirlwind of bird activity, and it really was a whirlwind. It wasn’t always at the same time of morning. Sometimes it was the crack of dawn, as early as 4 am, other times they seemed to take it easy and relax for a few hours into the day before starting up, but whenever it happened, when it was decidedly bird party o’clock, they were all in, and every bird in the forest was a part of it. All the action happened at this time, and you knew it was happening because it sounded like every single bird in the forest was singing its little lungs out, and all kinds of different birdies would be shooting across the meadow every which way, perched in the trees, flittering in and around them. It is an incredibly joyful thing. It’s really hard to watch a bunch of birds in their morning joy and not be delighted. On one morning, I was truly awake for the very first call of the day. It was the morning of my first solo camping. A major achievement, and I had successfully survived (at one point in the night I had doubts if I would), and I had woken up even before the dawn, the pre-dawn, and watched the sky brighten through the tiny screen in the apex of the tent, that I gambled with and left uncovered by the rain flap, so I could do just such a thing, and I swear not a minute after, even thirty seconds after I had the thought, “I wonder when the birds will start chirping…”, right on cue the first chirp came. Soon after that, the Hototogisu came, the “lesser cuckoo”. Then there was singing all night long.
On one of my Aobato forays I found something else that I had been looking for. But really, I should say that it found me. We found each other, out there, two wanderers in the woods. The Aobato (the green pigeon) call is distinct and there is nothing else like it out in those woods. It was also loud, and I could hear them often from the house. I kept my windows open at all times to hear all the calls, and many times I would hear something new or strange and run over to the window, or outside if I had to, to see what I could see, and in this way I discovered several birds, such as the Ooakagera, the White-backed Woodpecker, who I heard, from a tree 30 meters out in front of the house, all the way from my bedroom, by the pure force of their banging into the tree, and the Kogera, the Japanese Pygmy Woodpecker, who also has a very cute chirp, and my ears were frequently delighted with both the light hammering and cute chirping of this tiny bird. Actually it was good luck that there are two dead trees right outside the back of The Lord’s estate, both in clear view from the window, and so I got to see woodpeckers too. Woodpeckers like dead trees because they have little yummy bugsies in them. In total I saw three different kinds of woodpeckers – the Kogera, the Ooakagera, and the third, the Aogera, or the Japanese Green Woodpecker. On the second day of my arrival I beheld it in all its colorful beauty as I stood at the window with Scrumpillion himself – and then to my dismay, never again.
Aogera – Japanese Green Woodpecker
This woodpecker was hanging around though, as many of these birds were, even if they didn’t show themselves. I spent many hours waiting at the window, for many birds, but especially for this bird, gazing at my dead trees longingly, camera on the ledge of the window, bug-screen slightly cracked. I had to keep the screen cracked, even at the risk of Giant Japanese Death Hornets (Suzumebachi) flying into my room, so that I wouldn’t scare the birds off when I opened it to take a picture. Giant Japanese Death Hornets did fly into my room, but actually they have never concerned me, because they are so big and giant and deadly that they must have nothing to fear, and are very relaxed and self-assured, and so they don’t care about me. That Aogera never showed itself again, but I knew it was out there, because one day, as I sat in my chamber and listened to various bird calls, when I came to the Aogera, I played the call, and immediately from the woods outside came the same call in response. I probably could have used the call to bait one, but I learned that this is not a good thing to do, as you are deceiving the birds, and that is immoral. (Really it is a problem because birds are A. very territorial and B. looking for love, and so when they hear the call they will either frantically search for the intruder, or frantically search for new love, and waste energy doing so.) If you die in Japan, and have been naughty, you will be sent to one of many various hells as punishment for the crimes you’ve commited in your earthly debauchery, with a creative and relevant punishment to meet the crime. I have seen some of these firsthand as displayed with cutting edge animatronics and state of the art plaster demon sculpting. I can only imagine the tortures one would be submitted to in the Hell of Bird Deception. (They deceive you?)
Ooakagera – White-backed Woodpecker, loudbird that I found outside the houseMy friendly local Kogera scouring one of the dead treesDid you know birds blink?
My first video ever (kawaii chirping included!)
The thing that found me and I found it was a deer. I had wondered if and when I would see a deer. I thought some of these animals would be much easier to spy than they were. The boar included. But when I was least expecting to find a deer, I found one, which is the same with the Aobato, and maybe a general rule in finding things in nature, because you just don’t really get to have your way with nature. I was pursuing the Aobato call that I had heard from on the other side of the hill, down in a valley where some lumber work was being done, and I had just crossed the hilltop with the baseball field and the few homes and estate of The Lord and was descending a steep path that made an S-curve down into the valley. I heard the Aobato calling from here often, as well as the Aogera, but every time I had come through here I had found nothing at all. I was still at the top of this path, having just branched off the main road to the top of the hill, and was squatting there, peering into the trees, as I was currently on the same elevation with many of the upper-middles of the trees, where a lot of the branching begins, and I could see into the branches and up into the leaves, and would be able to see better if any bird flew into them, as that is a difficult thing with birdwatching, and why binoculars are so helpful, because at the bottom of a tall tree, even if you have good enough eyesight to actually spy a bird all the way at the top, you won’t be able to tell anything more than that it is actually a bird. I was just squatting here, peering out into the forest, waiting patiently for the Aobato to land on a well-lit perch right out in front of me and pose for the camera, when I had the sudden feeling that I myself was being watched, and so I turned to the right, looking down the trail, and saw just a few meters from me, coming up over the ridge, a large animal. It wasn’t moving, and it was standing in the shade, so I couldn’t make out what it was at first, and I thought initially that it was a boar, because I thought more often about boars, knowing them to be around, and not as often about deer – but then I saw its left ear flap down, just like a dog’s would, and I realized that it was a deer. This deer was staring right at me and seemed very much like it also couldn’t tell what I was, and was trying to figure that out, so we were both just stuck there, staring confusedly at each other. Only the top half of its body was showing, up over the ridge. I had my super bird shooter lens at the ready, and knew that if I could get the photo, it would be a real closeup, like the whole face filling the frame closeup, but I also felt that any sudden movements would scare this little deer right off, and I would have lost a magical moment, and for no photo, and so I just looked away (wild animals don’t like to be stared at) and continued to squat there. Another second passed, and I glanced over to see how things were going with my deer friend, and saw that not only was it still there, but it had even taken a step up onto the ridge, to get a closer look. I knew it couldn’t be long before it figured out that I was a big scary human and run right away. I decided it was now or never, and went for the photo. I swiveled, raised my bulky super deer shooter lens up, pointed it in the deer’s direction, looked through the viewfinder.. and saw nothing but leaves. I had totally whiffed, and now wiggled it around desperately, trying to catch a trace of brown, of fur, or snout, anything, and was still whiffing. I pulled my eye away to try and reset, just in time to see this deer wise up and bolt down off the ridge, into the valley, and out into the woods beyond. Actually I continued to squat there, both in sadness and in hope, for some time after. Yes, I was sad.. if that’s the right word.. I was pained that I had just had such an incredible opportunity to photograph a wild deer’s face and blew it, but I was also hopeful that it may have run only a short distance off, and then stopped to look back, as a curious creature might, and then maybe I could scavenge something out of the situation. But unfortunately I never saw that deer again, or any other one, in my time in Ubuyama.
Ikaru – Japanese Grosbeak
One of my first notes from being in Ubuyama (I write a lot of quick notes down in a journal) representing a typical Ubuyama exploration session: “Morning うぶやま (Ubuyama, written in hiragana because I couldn’t write the kanji.) explore. Rabbit poop. Spiders. Beautiful rock hill under birch? Not confident that it was a birch with that one plant and ladybug larvae. (Looking back on it this is a confusing sentence.) A grove. Fly? (It was a fly.) with long curved tail, red eyes, yellow stripe on tail. A grove. (Grove written twice, I must have been excited about it.) Crashing out at the end. (I decided to climb down a hill that turned very steep at the end which resulted in me jumping off into some thick bush and grass.) Wanting to poop but not wanting to desecrate the place. Also concerns about wiping.”
The fly was one of these, an Ocyptamus, which I think we can all agree is a pretty wacky looking fly (source: Maryland Biodiversity Project)
Prior to the previous note in my journal was this one: “Set a trap. Got me with the MTG music. (YouTube MTG Arena music)“.
The Lord Wombus is cunning. At the time of my move to Ubuyama I was attempting to escape the extremely powerful orbit of the planet Magic The Gathering that I had again fallen into. Magic The Gathering is a nerdy card game for nerds. It’s very fun though. The physical card game itself is dangerous, but mostly in that it compels me to play the virtual one, which goes by the name of Magic The Gathering: Arena. The Lord knew that I desired to free myself from this planet, yet we had some good fun in the narrow space between the boundaries of Magic’s snaring gravity and the liberating void beyond. It was dangerous, but would bring me some small thrill to even speak the relevant words (“Magic”, or “The Arena”, or “Mono red”), and I would at times turn to The Lord Wombus and say, “Something something Lizard Blades..” Or, “Something something Experimental Synthesizer..” Or, “Can I play Magic now?” And he would of course say no. But The Lord himself, he was allowed to play, having the rock solid self-control that you would expect of such a noble and lordly figure (there is no weakness in him), and was a fan of card games, and so for some time, before we saw that it was simply impossible, would dabble in it (I had a brief stint as his MTG coach), and so it could occasionally be heard, wafting over from his quarters, the sounds that have become ingrained in me. The sounds of the Arena. One day, and I believe by then we had already established that no Magic was to be had in any possible form, no reference of any kind and no utterance of any related words, I was lounging in my room, safely, with the laundry pole out on the stairs, and I heard something that stops me completely. It is a siren song, piercing down to the very depths of my soul. Its power is overwhelming, and almost automatically I surrender to it, and seek the source. It comes from Wombus’s lair, and so I enter. I see no Wombus – just an empty chair, and a computer in front of it. A familiar sight, a familiar glow. Beckoning. I step further in, and the screen comes into view. I look at it excitedly, anticipatingly. Before me is not the home page of Magic The Gathering: Arena, but instead a YouTube page, with the words “MTG Arena music” in the search bar. The MTG Arena main theme is playing, and I see now that I have been snared like a rat by the cheese. A rat in the full throws of a cheese-crazed mania. In both rage and shame I call out, “You bastard!” Gleeful cackles emanate from the royal poo-chamber below. The cackles of a Scrumpillion thrilled at his success. Only a mind so devious and intricate as his would devise such trivial mischief for his pooptime pleasure.
Kakesu – Eurasian Jay
What I wrote the morning after my first solo camp experience: “I have returned. What did we learn? やっぱり (yappari, meaning, “As I thought”) it got cold. Had no rain cap. (For the tent.) But no rain until the morning. Lucky. Choosing the spot is very important. My spot was not very good. Not flat at all. And despite the thick grass, quite hard. I heard things. Soft squeaking. Thinking it was mice. And at one point something dashed right by the tent. Then there was the boar. Or boars. Hard to tell how close they got but the grunting was unmistakable. Was that 2, 3, 4 am? I was nervous, even scared. Imagined myself in the middle of a curious and aggressive pack, out prowling for the night. I thought about them coming right up to my exposed head and sniffing it, kicking it. (My head was not actually out of the tent but was bulging out of the side because the tent was so small, and so felt very exposed.) Thought about them trampling the tent. About what I should do if any of that happened. Was thinking I could run to that “tree.” Good thing it didn’t come to that because there was no climbing that thing. Went out of the tent headfirst to pee. Not a good way to greet any マムシ. (Mamushi are an aggressive venomous snake living in these parts. The internet says their strike range is about 30cm. We will not try and test this number.) Hungry last night, hungry this morning. Smiling after the first bird [chirps]. (Accidentally wrote chips.) I feel alone in the middle of human town. In that apartment in 大津 (Ozu), in the middle of human world, I was alone. In the middle of the woods, when I am actually more distanced from anyone, and there are simply less people around, I feel completely connected. Because I am. Connected to the source, connected to what I know, what we all know... What you have been doing here, is research. Research into alternate ways of living, research into meaning, research into loneliness; very core, very essential components of the human experience. This is some of the most important research you will ever do. I wonder if putting up boxes would lead owls to come to this area. (I had been wondering if there weren’t owls because there wasn’t anywhere for them to roost.) Last night there was a moment where I realized exactly what I was doing, and I felt deeply, wholly, completely free. And I also felt that I wanted to play guitar.”
Directly before that particularly lengthy summary I have the two short notes. “The unexamined life [is] not worth living.” Followed by, “Black t-shirt fashion. Only black t-shirts.“
A Hayabusa (Peregrine Falcon) or Tsumi (Japnese Sparrowhawk) divebombs a Kumataka (Mountain Hawk-Eagle)Return strike
The difference between hawks and eagles was not confusing enough, and so all-knowing ornithologists created the mighty hawk-eagle, and we all became confused again. The crow-raven is coming.
Kumataka call
I found this action again by listening. I heard this call come in through the windows of my bird box. It was a totally new one to me, and that was rare, now that I’d been here for two or three weeks. I immediately grabbed the camera and raced outside. An incredible scene greeted me. I had learned soon after my move that birds are territorially aggressive and will attack other birds that fly up in their space. Aerial turf wars are very real in bird world. Once when Wombus and I had taken a trip into the big city (that is compared to Ubuyama), Aso, we watched a pair of crows kindly escort a buzzard out of their airspace. Birds have such nice manners. I also saw a Hiyodori attack and kill another Hiyodori.. but Hiyodori be crazy.
Hiyodori – a crazy birdIn English, Brown-eared Bulbulしゃれとんね!
Actually I have a lot of love for this bird. These are the noisiest and most fidgety birds in Japan. At least in Kyushu.
Hiyodori callA familiar sound
There were few birds I could count on seeing every single day, and the Hiyodori was one of them. These fiesty buggers were out fighting, squeaking, chittering, swooping, diving, sailing, soaring, and wiggling in the trees and meadow just outside The Lord’s Manor, at almost all times of the day. I couldn’t spot it (although I tried), but I think they had a nest in one of the tall cedars right behind the house. When the other birds had cooled their jets, the Hiyodori jets were still running very, very hot. I witnessed the bird murder at the spot I had chosen for my first camping, in the woods back behind the house, following the sounds of aggravated chirping, the bird equivalent of screaming, and at first only saw a scuffle, and not in clear view. When I walked over to investigate, I thought everyone had flown off, and stood there longer only to play peek-a-boo with what I think was a baby Mejiro. It was a teeny-tiny and unusually curious little Mejiro (but I read that young birds are typically more curious and less shy), who was hanging around and maybe a bit startled by the murder, which had happened right behind me, and I only knew so because the victim then spasmed a death spasm, and I spun around to find, having been initially obscured by low hanging cedar branches, a Hiyodori that was perfectly intact, and with a neck at a ninety-degree angle. That took the Hiyodori from being in my regard the bird with extreme ADHD to the murderous bird with extreme ADHD. I went and searched about this, of course. Apparently male Hiyodori are extra wild during mating season.
For what reason this Hayabusa (the Peregrine Falcon) was divebombing a Kumataka (Mountain Hawk-Eagle) I do not know, but it was happening, and it was a sight to see. The bird equivalent of David and Goliath. This little divebomber was giving big mighty hawk-eagle a heck of a time and big mighty hawk-eagle wanted none of it. Probably the most memorable takeaway I have from this experience aside from just the general emotional imprint that was left on me from witnessing such a bird battle was that more birds than just owls can turn their heads 180 degrees around behind them. And you can in the same photo see why this would be useful. (In that first photo, the Kumataka has turned its head directly around to spot the diving Hayabusa.) I wish I would have recorded some of this scuffle, but I hadn’t learned about recording video yet – that would not come until Ryoka’s great wisdom (“You should take videos!”) and the Kogera.
Luckily my special friend waited to appear until after I was a cinematic master. One day, as I stood in the Lord’s kitchen preparing my daily oats, I for no particular reason glanced out of the sliding glass windows to the right of me. You are extremely unlikely to see anything of interest out of those windows, so thought I, until that day – because what I saw then took my breath away. Right behind the house, in full view, snuffling around the base of a tree, was a large, furry, Anaguma – AKA hole bear, AKA badger. Boom, right there, a freaking badger. This was a lot for me to process. I had not expected to see a badger, I had never seen a badger, I had forgotten all about badgers, and without warning, here was a badger. The all-knowing Kihara sensei had prepped me for this moment by having shown me a video of a badger that she recorded, a badger that frequented her yard, and so I could recognize it at once. Upon seeing the badger, I had two thoughts. 1. badger, 2. camera. This badger had to be digitally recorded in the annals of history. I ran upstairs and grabbed my camera, while briefly debating over whether to change the lens or not, as I had the super zoom lens on (a 400x, so actual photographers will laugh when I call that a super zoom, but still that’s a lotta’ zoom) and I knew the shots would be closeups, but I didn’t know how long I had with this badger (and who doesn’t love a good badger headshot, am i rite fellas) and so I just went with it. I tried to open the window, and the screen, as gingerly as possible. The window was the easy part; the screen was the real challenge. It wouldn’t slide easily and made way too much noise. The scuffling of the screen would have certainly scared away any bird, but this badger was not nearly so timid. Actually, it really did not seem to give a hootenanny. It looked up, which really means it was just looking out. I don’t think that badger could have looked up at me if it wanted to, not without sitting down at least. I at once stopped sliding the screen, holding my breath – and then it went right back to snuffling. I then had a full two minutes, maybe three, to photograph this lovely badger. I think I did pretty good.
Anaguma – Eurasian BadgerDelicious barkGimme this delicious bark
As you can see, it was really liking that bark. In the first photo especially I think our little friend looks almost boar-like, and on showing this photo a few people did think it was a boar, with that bristly fur and long snout. Look closely and you can see a tick on the right ear. It really bothered me that our little friend was being parasitized, but you will be pleased to know that in a photo just a bit later, as it trotted off, there was no tick to be seen. I’m sure that it just felt bad about parasitizing such a lovely creature as this badger, and decided to renounce its bloodsucking ways, as we all eventually do, and definitely did not crawl deep into the ear canal. I’m sure that’s what happened.
The badger mulled around outside the back, enjoyed some stump gnawing and grass frolicking, then meandered off to a thick bush behind the neighbor’s house, and presumably went down the hill and into the forest. I do not let special first time forest creatures go so easily. I pursued this beast to see if I could get any more shots. I was doubtful as it now must have heard me, as stealthy as I was being (not stealthy), but I had to try anyway. I was right that I had alerted it, because after leaving the house, I spied it between a gap in houses, having upgraded from a meandering trundle to a brisk trot, as it trotted along the trail that led into the forest. The way that it trotted, combined with the look on its face, and the fact that it did not bother to look my way, made me feel very much that it was still totally unconcerned with my presence, and had only picked up the pace because it knew it was still probably the smart thing to do. Because, you know, “Humans.” I put that in quotes because I’m imagining the badger rolling its eyes and saying to itself then, as it heard the door opening, and the footsteps on the gravel, and the smell of my musty mountain man self filling its piggie snouter, “Human.” Or maybe it was more of an, “Oop, gotta go!” I adopted a similar air of nonchalance and walked through the gap in the houses onto the trail, looking to the right, and saw nothing. It had ducked off into a patch of thick, tall grass on the edge of the forest, and was safe in badger world again. I would see this badger again, a few more times, before I left. It made me quite happy knowing that I had a loveable creature like that hanging around.
I also saw a cat. Look at those eyes. This is a crazy-eyed killa.
All in all, out there in the Ubuyama wilderness.. there were some tough days, where I was feeling lonely, when the weather was crap and I couldn’t go out, and I was stuck inside. I think that was the second week. For the most part though, I really enjoyed staying at this cabin in the woods, and with my pal Scrumpillion. What I miss the most is how easy it was to make cool nature discoveries. Mostly insects. Never in my life has it been so easy to find insects to photograph. It became a routine with me, that sometime near late afternoon early evening, I would pop on the macro lens and the flash, step outside, and go a’hunting, and after ten, fifteen, twenty forays into the wild, I was still able to find something new, several things new, every single time. I didn’t have to drive anywhere, or make any plans, I just had to walk outside. Having nature so accessible, being right in it.. When I reflect on it, that’s what I miss the most. Going out for a walk and coming face to face with a deer, looking up from your oats and seeing a badger in the yard, having an owl hoot right outside your window, hearing a wild new bird call and wondering what it could possibly be, trying not to step on newts during your stroll through the forest, finding a crab in the middle of the woods.. it’s an exciting life.
It’s very interesting, loneliness. You would think that living with so few people around, spending so much time alone would make you lonely, but actually, even though I was much more removed from human contact during my stay in Ubuyama, I wasn’t lonely. My almost sole source of face-to-face social interaction was Scrumpillion, and that wasn’t much – but it was enough. I did not feel lonely at Ubuyama. It might sound crazy to say it, but the birds and the bugs, the boars and the badgers were my friends. It comforted me to know that they were around. Also the Australian. They sung to me and entertained me. They did tabata and watched meme compilations on 2x speed. Their existence alone was enough to satisfy me.
White Ermine
There is something certain about nature. Something secure in it. Humanity doesn’t have it. We’re anxious and existentialist. We have emotional baggage. We don’t know what to do with ourselves. We crave meaning. How tiring. I imagine that simply by not having thoughts an ant spends its entire life in some state of Zen. Honestly, that must be pretty nice. And then you get super strength and the ability to feel no pain. Sign me up.
Call it a wrap? We can call it a wrap. Let me do one more scan through the old notebooks.
I really wanted to see an owl. I really wanted to see an owl. A few days into my Ubuyama stay, I heard one hooting. I went back to that spot on many nights, and once on a day, scouring the area for whitewash (white streaks on the trunk of a tree), a sign that an owl is roosting there. Never any luck. And then, on my second to last night, an owl started hooting right outside of my window. There were several hoots. I threw on clothes and raced outside. But of course, the hooting stops, and there is no owl to be seen. These birds were messing with me man.
Before I was brave enough to do the solo camping, I had set the challenge for myself to walk through the woods alone at night. All the way through. There was a path behind The Lord’s estate, that cut through the woods and went down into civilization. (The center of town, which was a school, a post office, a local city hall, a small general store, and like six houses.) Walking it didn’t take long, only about ten minutes. In the dead of night though, the forest is the forest, and it doesn’t matter how far you are from civilization. As you soon as you’re out of range of the nearest home or human, you’re alone in the woods. That was really spooking me, and I wasn’t able to get very far from the house at all before I got the hibee jibees. It was bugging me that I would get so freaked out by these woods just because it was dark, when I had spent so much time in them during the day, and of course you know logically that there’s nothing out here that’s going to hurt you, right. But still I got the hibee jibees. All those horror movies did something to me. But one night, after chugging my red wine and working up a good buzz, I grabbed the trusty flashlight and out I went. I powered through, no fear. Alcohol is a helluva drug. And after that, I was never scared again. I was a man of the woods. Until I tried to sleep out there. I was a little scared again then.
One day, I “went for a jog”. I really meant to do that. I ended up on a four hour excursion deep into the woods. That just happens out there. And once I’m on the trail, I can’t give it up. It’s a little bit addicting that way. I took it all the way to a clearing of trees in the middle of a few sizeable hills, and exhausted, with no clear trail to follow, finally called it the end. Then I spotted the most magnificent tree ever. There are some trees that just hit you right. They are the kings and queens of the forest. Older, bigger, thicker, gnarled, shapely trees. They’ve got a story and some secrets. This was one of those trees. And it was growing right out of the side of the hill, the steepest hill, angled out at about forty-five degrees, so that it could spread its massive branches out into the open space away from the other trees, and become a lord. This tree was an absolute boss, and when I saw it I had an overwhelming urge to climb it. Along that forty-five degree angle of the trunk, not far up there was the first of many thick branches, and that extended out horizontally over the valley below. If there were any big cats around, it was pretty much the most perfect spot ever for a big cat to lay and survey its kingdom, as big cats are inclined to do. I pushed my way through the tough bush at the base of the hill, slipped and slid in the soft dirt while scaling it, and finally monkeyed my way up onto the trunk, where I then, extremely cautiously, scooted myself up to that branch. This was high enough up where if I fell I would almost 100% break something important to me, if not die, and without a phone, would have to crawl pathetically for too many hours to someone who could help, and that was on my mind. It was very slow scooting. But when I got up onto that branch, and layed across it, I felt exactly like a big jungle cat would, secure on their perch in a tall tree, and looking out over all. I stayed there for I don’t know how long, just enjoying that feeling, and it was an incredible one. I was hoping to see anything come down into the valley below, unaware of me, a deer or boar or bird, but nothing did. Then I stayed up there a little bit longer, after I had wanted to go back down, because I didn’t have the nerve yet to attempt the descent. That was much harder to do. I tried to reverse-scoot my way back down, until it got too steep, and then slid the rest of the way down, clamping the trunk with my thighs, and tearing up a good amount of skin in the process. So that gave me something to remember the trip by.
Other highlights.. James gave me his thick canvas jacket to wander around in. It was dark green and had some faux fur hood. That thing was tough and warm, an absolutely perfect adventurer jacket. I’m sure no Australian would be caught without one. Behind the house, in the meadow where I would watch birds and bug hunt, there was some dense, springy grass on the side of a slope, underneath a line of trees. One morning, after going out there to see what was up with the birdos, wrapped in the jacket, I threw up that faux fur hood, plopped down in the grass, and took a nap. That was awesome. And I see how cloaks were so useful. Basically a wearable blanket/sleeping bag. On another foray, I found a crab in the woods. Yes, in the middle of the woods, I found a crab. It was peeking out of some lush grass down in a ravine where a teeny tiny stream ran through. That was an incredible thing, that forest crab. When you think of creatures that you’d expect to find deep in the middle of the woods, does crab come to mind? Not for me. But there it was.
I also spent a rainy day following boar trails. I was prepared to come face-to-face with one or several boars at any time. I stumbled on a trail inadvertently, when I was looking for newts. There were these little black newts with red bellies everywhere. They were very cute, and they liked it moist. Then I found a mud trail and followed it. There was a lot of slipping and sliding. Those boars like it steep. Nothing really interesting happened here. I was on edge the whole time, wondering if and when I would find the boars. And what I would actually do when I did. I knew that they don’t like surprises, and basically any boar that saw me out there would have 100% been surprised. I guess the reason why boars are particularly dangerous is because their tusks are right at about the average adult’s thigh height, so when you get gored, you get gored in one of the worst possible places. My plan to avoid this goring was to attempt to scale something nearby. It was a flimsy plan. I was really able to experience the boar life, traipsing around out here, but I did a very poor job of following these trails. They were low, so I was squatting most of the time, and it often became incredibly steep, and with the mud I would completely obliterate their tracks, turning those parts of the trail from stairs to a pure mudslide. I’m sure they came through later and saw the carnage, and smelled the dirty human, and were like, wtf mate.
I think that about wraps it up – my time in the Ubuyama wilderness. Thank you to The Lord Scrumpillion Wombus for hosting me, and thank you to you for reading all the way to the end!
I have returned to you after this long and grueling haitus with an expansive new vision for the future of this blog. It’s been half a year or more now, I believe, and I’m sorry to have kept you waiting, but like everybody, I’ve been busy, and (mostly) I have been putting my time to good use, and it is in your interest, because I’ve spent the past few months enjoying my newfound photography life, and thus I’ve had the brilliant idea to merge my photos with my blog, and this means that I’ve had to do some heavy lifting with this blog, much heavier than you would imagine (than I did, at least), for just wanting to combine photos and writing, but heavy lifting it has been.
Let’s take a moment to enjoy some photos.
East Okinawa CoastlineCool Black And White Rendition Of A Building That Is A Big Street ButtholeAdorable Akahige (Ryukyu Robin, called Red Beard in Japanese, but, why..? Japanese joke)Cycad CliffA Couple Of Bingle Boys And A Shisa
Do you enjoy them? Please tell me you enjoy them.
This post is long. You have been warned. It is so long that a table of contents has been requested. I’ll put that right here.
I have stuck with this all because I know that in the end it will have all been worth it, for you and for me, who this blog is both for. I don’t know if I can still even really call it a blog, as I feel that we have risen up in the ranks, because I am now armed with the all-powerful WordPress Business account, and that means I am a business man, and can do all the business things, like download plugins that prevent people from right-clicking on my site to download my photos only to install it and see that it doesn’t work, or buy plugins that will give me really great slideshows and find out that the plugin crashes my site, and I can’t see the photos in the slideshow anyway, because something is wrong with my DNS cache, and all of the photos are grey, which I can fix by going into WordPress classic mode, but then I can’t use the new block technology, and also, none of my edits will save unless I smash the save changes button with my forehead while screaming “Save it you bastard!!” Of course that last part is a joke.. but given all that I’ve been through up until this point, I wouldn’t be surprised if they asked me to do that. And by they I mean the WordPress support, who are wonderful people, and are only a chat away, offering 24/7 support, and you can see why that’d be necessary, because without it everyone would cancel their plans and flee the site after the 3rd incomprehensible popup that tells them “Sorry but you can’t do this thing you would like to do!” I think I am just having a particularly tough time because I have literally no idea what I’m doing. And YouTube hero Tyler Moore made it look so easy… I have stuck with it all, and we are finally going to see the vision played out in reality, a vision which is basically just me writing, but then also with photos. I feel that I have spent so much time “working on the site” and so much time thinking about it, and every time I visit it, I think, how, how is it possible that so little has been done? I am getting a rough introduction into the world of website design, and the larger computer world in general, I suppose. I have to say that I don’t really like it at all, and I wonder if that will ever change. I do now have a great appreciation for the engineers of the world, the digital masterminds, because they are doing the work of wizards.
Before we get into the meat of this real meaty post, I would like to share with you a little episode that happened to me a few weeks ago, to give you a familiar jumping off point, and to show you that while my life has changed in many respects, it also is basically the same, here in my little Ozu town.
I was sitting at my desk in the teacher’s room (big room with most of the teachers, open desks), with Kusuyama sensei sitting at her desk next to mine. She turns to me, opening a bag, and says “Miyamoto sensei brought apples. Do you want one?” And I was very surprised and pleased, because I haven’t had an apple in a very long time, I’m sure many months, could have been half a year, perhaps not since I’ve lasted posted. The reason for that being that apples here are, like strawberries, too pricey for my “poor man budget mentality” (budget is the incorrect word here, as apparently I am not poor, bur rather have the mindset of a poor man (i.e., frugal); as a rich man has recently told me) and so I go to the other fruits. In apple season they’re about 100 yen (one US smackeroo) which is reasonable and I will pay that. Off season they’re more. But this apple was a free and delicious-looking apple and I took it gladly. I said, “Thank you to Miyamoto sensei!” who then at that time happened to be walking right up to our desks. Kusuyama sensei says, “She’s right here, you can thank her now!” And she tells Miyamoto sensei that she just gave me one of her apples. And Miyamoto sensei looks at me, and I look at her, and I say, “ありがとうございます!はだを食べます!” (Arigatougozaimasu. Hada wo tabemasu.) I decided to add the hada wo tabemasu as a little bonus at the end, because I thought it would be fun, and she would enjoy it. I made a conscious decision to do this. However, as soon as those words left my mouth, I had a strong feeling that I had made a mistake. Miyamoto sensei’s reaction, of “Oh, that’s nice dear!” that you may give to a child who walks up to you and starts babbling incoherent nonsense, helped me to feel that, and my knowledge of the Japanese language helped as well; but it did not, however, help enough to save me from saying what I said. The moment passed and I immediately turned to Kusuyama sensei to confirm my suspicions. I said to her, pointing at the skin of the apple, “Kusuyama sensei, what do you call this?” She says, “Kawa.” And I said, “If I say, hada wo tabemasu, what do you imagine?” And Kusuyama sensei, laughing, pulled her arm out, and pantomimed biting it. And my suspicion was confirmed, that I had just said to Miyamoto sensei, “Thank you for the apple! I eat human skin!”
My mistake was that there is a specific word for skin, in Japanese, for human skin, and that is hada. What I was trying to say was that I would eat the skin of the apple, as Japanese people often don’t eat the skins of fruits, and I thought it would be fun, to say that. That I will be enjoying the skin of this fruit. I wanted to try and be fun. What happened instead is that Miyamoto sensei returned to her teacher’s room, and says to the other teachers, “Well, our ALT is a skin eater.” And someone probably replied with, “Yappari.” (I knew it.) And this is why I am still so wary of speaking. I just never know what exactly is going to come out of my mouth. But what I thought was quite interesting was that, if I had not realized my mistake myself, I never would have known I said anything wrong. I feel that Kusuyama sensei has some duty to protect me from making such grave mistakes, but she had already turned back to her work, and Miyamoto sensei had already given me a confused smile, and the moment was over. If I hadn’t personally recognized my error, I would have told Miyamoto sensei that day that I was grateful for the apple and I would be eating human skin, and I would have been entirely none the wiser. It just makes me wonder about all of the similarly incorrect things that have come out of my mouth. They must be innumerable. I have been here now for over two and a half years, and my Japanese is only recently not terrible. That is a lot of time to have been telling people I eat human skin.
So there you go. I still can’t speak Japanese (coherently). Now let’s get to the good stuff.
(For some context, these writings and accompanying photos are all in reference to a seven day trip to Okinawa I took with friends Juicy James Cool and Mr. Parker Junior in the first week of January this year.)
For Reference: Okinawa Bottom Left (The Main Island In The Ryukyu Islands), I Am Living in The Center Of Kyushu
Lessons From Okinawa
On the eleventh day after our return, the trip felt to me like a distant dream. I looked at my photos and felt that I could hardly even remember when I took them. It felt like it could have been years ago, and I think I felt that way mainly because I had by that time fully reintegrated into my standard, pre-Okinawa way of living. That way of living has been, since the start of the covid times, relatively formulaic. The people have changed, some of them, and my work has changed, some of it, and my hobbies, and various events have peppered it throughout – but the scenery – where I live, where I work, shop, play – has all been the same. And so, on this now well-trodden landscape, you could pick out the Okinawa trip, and move it around, at any point on this treadmill, and drop it down, and it wouldn’t really matter. It would still only delineate itself by the primary fact that it just wasn’t here, where I’ve been for so long now, here in Ozu machi, Kumamoto.
I absolutely reveled in this freedom, the freedom that comes with travel. Freedom from the ordinary. From the plain dullness of my everyday life.
I’ve thought about this. I still think about it. In the days coming back from Okinawa, I was shocked. Shellshocked, I’ve been saying. The first night back, I drank a liter of wine. Alone, in my apartment. It was a coping mechanism. I was coping with the shock. You see, I had just tasted that freedom. I had just tasted joy, adventure, excitement, thrill, warmth, stimulation.. I had just spent over a week, ten days, free from this ordinary. Ten days in different places, and with people. Sleeping together, laughing together, exploring together, talking, bonding, arguing, eating, drinking. Doing what people do. I got ten days of it, glorious sociality, and upon coming back to my Ozu apartment, finding that I wanted still more, that I was just starting to find its rhythm, this new way of living, and it was gone, as quickly as it came. The social stimulation was one thing, and the joy of travel, and all the excitement.. New places, new culture, new sights, sounds, tastes, all of this, panoply of fresh experience, to be taken in. Okinawa shattered my monotony. And then, I was brought back. I resisted. I held out for as long as I thought sensible, taking another week of vacation. I schemed ways of escape, of protection, of deliverance, taking more time off, taking every single day off, quitting the job entirely, and getting out of dodge – but I deemed it all too drastic, too desperate, and my old life reclaimed itself, dragging me, at first kicking and screaming, then more dejectedly, back into the normal. It hurts, but each day that passes, it hurts less. So quickly I forget, forget the freedom I felt, the creativity and the imagination and enthusiasm, and richness, that had so infused those days.
In those days, after the trip, I really struggled to understand what it meant. What was happening to me. I reached out to friends for insight. On that first night back, the liter of wine night, I wrote to James and Parker, a drunken ramble, but all true, and with surprisingly coherent phrasing and with correct grammar (proud of this), that I found it just so incomprehensibly strange, that we all just, having spent all that time together, having becoming what I felt was an intimate tribe, that we just separated, and went back to our respective boxes, cordoned ourselves off from each other, us, as humans, social creatures, that we did that willingly, and that it’s not considered lunacy, but the exact opposite, in fact; it’s normal. I woke up the next morning with only a single message in response. “Health check?” I ran this all by Ryoka, the shellshocking, and she told me, “That’s called vacation crisis.” And she’s right. I read about it, that many people consider quitting their jobs after getting away on a vacation. I understand what is meant by vacation crisis. I don’t know if I would call it a crisis. I don’t really like how commonly that word is used. It feels flippant to me. But I do think that that this Okinawa trip laid bare that there are some things fundamentally wrong with my current way of living, and that may be what’s at the root of all vacation crisises, that once we are free to step back, get some distance, and with a fresh perspective, we take a good look at the lives we’re living, and find that we don’t really like what we see. Sure a vacation should be fun, but even at the end of the greatest vacation you shouldn’t find yourself recoiling in horror at the thought of returning to your pre-vacation life. If you do, then you must have a problem. For me, I have come to the conclusion that my problems are two, and common ones: lack of purpose, and loneliness. Loneliness is crippling, as they say – it undoubtedly is what has driven me to drink too much on those worst nights, and living in a small town, living alone, already having tenuous ties to the community as a foreigner (although I have always felt very welcomed and integrated here), and during a pandemic, as we enter a new phase of lockdowns, and yet another state of emergency, and it’s winter, and finding myself with an increasing feeling of uselessness at work.. it’s not a real shocker that I do feel isolated. I suppose the real shocker would be if I didn’t. Simply living alone is enough to put you in a high-risk demographic group: People who live alone have an 80% higher risk of depression. Anyways…
So yeah, Okinawa made me happy. Loneliness is my problem. There is great gaping hole in the spot that human connection is supposed to occupy in my life. In the days leading up to and on the Okinawa trip, that hole was filled right up. I spent ten days paired with companions, ten days surrounded by friends. Before leaving for Okinawa, we had a New Year’s party at Parker’s, and although I fell asleep early, and was woken up, harassed, forced to celebrate, shuffled around, finally landing in the middle of the floor, next to Mudra who refused to share the blanket, on a heated carpet that was too hot, listening to Rossi’s Mongolian drum ensembles, that I eventually, late into the night after all others besides myself had managed to fall asleep, had to turn off, then having to smush myself against the wall to let Daniel through to piss, Mudra now snoring, somehow drifting off, waking up to find heated carpet unheated, shivering, and yet upon waking, still feeling perky enough to join in the morning conversation, where I was immediately shouted down, silenced at once, (my voice being too powerful and masculine and loud); still, with all of that, inconvenience and irrationality, still I preferred it to being alone. I thought of families and communities where communal living was or is still practiced, the Iroquois in their longhouses, and the Moravians that all slept together in one big house, and I thought about how completely different that was from my way of living now, and what it would be like to do that every night, day in, day out. I thought it’d be nice, living in a community like that. And whenever I think about this, I think about a study that was done, a study on heart disease. Doctors were curious as to why the rates of cardiovascular disease were so low in a certain community, probing for secrets that they could take to the world, and what they found was that it wasn’t anything in the diet, and it wasn’t anything in the way of exercise – it was simply that they were all living together, with entire extended families parked together under one roof – and this constant belonging, constant social interaction, protected them more from cardiovascular disease than anything else. We know too that social interaction does more to lower rates of morbidity than anything else – exercise, diet, even quitting smoking – more important than anything else, are people. We have the data. We have the anecdotal evidence, I believe, as I’ve just gone through a period of constant sociality, and returning to my private home, depressed, isolated, and miserable. So why do we isolate ourselves? Why do we not view it as insane, as the actual health risk that it is, that we go off and willingly move into empty apartments and homes, alone? I think we should.
Let’s continue.
Shisa
First impressions of Okinawa. At one point, on our first day there, I said to Parker and James, “I had a dream that I was in America, and everyone was Japanese.” That is how I felt on that first day. Not only that I was in some kind of surreal Japanese America, but also that I was in a dream, or some kind of computer generated, synthetic reality. For as we walked, first through the park, seeing homeless people, many of them, mixed with families strolling right on by, with a man crawling out of his wheelchair to relieve himself in the grass, cats everywhere, coming to a beach, with people playing in the sand, a man with a metal detector hunting for treasure, the water just beyond the beach under an overpass, then walking out into a festival, now, surrounded by people, all kinds of people, the people of Okinawa, dressed in all manner of ways, eating cotton candy, and throwing darts, and frying food, with a woman giving strange eyebrows to Parker and James, then coming into another small park..
The dream. The first day there was like being in a dream. You know how in a dream, it feels purposeless, often, and you’re just wandering, guided by something, or rather something is guiding you, the dream is just unfolding out before you, with no real plan to its construction, or no indication as to why what’s happening is happening, and you’re just kind of in it, along for the ride, wondering where it will take you, and how it will unfold? I felt that way, all day, that first day. I just couldn’t shake that feeling. The gray, overcast sky did much to help evoke it. The lax, unhurried, meandering movements of all the Okinawans helped as well. The strange dress, the cats, the unfamiliar sights, of the man relieving himself in a bush, of a large woman with a metal detector scouring a small strip of beach, of an overpass placed over the water just in front of said beach, from the festival stalls, selling all kinds of treats, games, snacks, the festival filled with all kinds of people, with one of them making strange faces at James and Parker, guesticulating wildly with her eyebrows, to the large family, boisterously sauntering down the middle of the street, fanned out to span it in its entirety, the cousins, aunts, uncles, children, young couple in matching Fila jackets, carrying on as if they were in their own living room, the abandoned bike on the side of the road, the trash, and more cats, and now a procession of people waiting on a long stone staircase, waiting to pay their respects to the gods, some of them in t-shirts, some of them in parkas, short skirts, and suits. This entire time, taking in all of this atmosphere, taking in one strange sight after the other, bizarre and surprising visuals generated on repeat, one after another, I just couldn’t shake the feeling that this just wasn’t real – it was so familiar, and yet so unfamiliar at the same time. Perhaps, if we had just come from America, it wouldn’t have felt so strange, so off, that air of looseness, where nobody seemed to really care what anyone else was doing, as opposed to mainland Japan, which has a much more controlled, buttoned up, constrictive air about it, everyone so consciously aware of the face they put forward. It’s hard to describe this, as it is so intangible, this atmosphere, and what exactly it’s comprised of. Even the architecture was off – the worn, blocky buildings, the pastel colors, the strange shapes and designs, the plants growing out of the cracks, corners, and verandas, so that half of the houses looked like they themsevles were alive. The American, I saw in the homeless people. The variety of fashion, or lack of it – that was American (at least, Midwestern, suburban American). The relaxed air about the people. The large and loud family, parading down the street. The metal detector, even, was American to me in a way, as I haven’t seen one anywhere else. The Subway – American. But then, Japan was on display as well – in the cats, in the shrines, in (some of) the fashion, the food, the large, blank, yellow stare of the smiley face stuck to the side of the Smile Hotel, gazing out over the city. That was all Japanese. So what of the people? And the people, I didn’t know what to make of. Many, probably most were Japanese by nationality, but in behavior, not like the Japanese in Kyushu, or Tokyo, and in appearance, on a spectrum – for some of them looked like any Japanese you would have plucked right off the mainland, but others, if you saw them anywhere else, you wouldn’t have thought they were Japanese at all. And that’s because, I would learn later, many of them are not descendants of mainland Japanese, or are to varying degrees. Many of them are native islanders, the Ryukyu people. Many of them are of Chinese descent, or Phillipino, or Taiwanese, or another Eastern Pacific country. Some of them are American, and they’re often conspicuous, especially when dressed in military fatigue, and some of them are Canadian, like our friend Dan. And it is this strange hybrid of cultures, primarily the Ryukyu, Chinese, Japanese, and American, that forms the bulk of what is Okinawa today.
We got to know Okinawan culture more intimately over the course of the trip. We were quite lucky to have been able to see the people out in force, and to get a good look at them, celebrating the New Year. I learned quickly about the Shisa, as well. I had heard of that word Shisa, only a week before embarking, at a mochi making party with the Higashi family in Kikuchi, our first reunion in a long while. The Higashi family had just been in Okinawa, for the two youngest boys’ volleyball tournament, and in talking to English Number One about it, he mentioned the Shisa, and I said, is that an Okinawan greeting, and he said no, but Makisan laughed, and said yes, and then Eichi struck a pose, like a tiger bearing its claws, and said I had to do this when I say it. The conversation was quick, and I didn’t leave it really knowing what a Shisa was, only that it may be some form of Okinawan greeting, and if I say it the Okinawans may laugh at me. Well, it turns out that Shisa is not at all the Okinawan way to say hello – that’s haisai – but rather, the lion guardian spirit of the Ryukyu people. The Shisa, also called Shishi, meaning lion, come in all shapes and sizes (though they’re always.. lion-shaped, although with some of them you couldn’t guess it) and they always come in pairs, one with mouth open, and one with mouth closed. I would learn more about their history and significance only later – at that time, on the island, I only knew that they were special, they were funky, and they were everywhere. Shisa are stuffed into every nook and cranny of Okinawa, and it brought me great joy finding them; a great Okinawa scavenger hunt. You may wonder, really, how many different ways can you portray a lion guardian thing, and thanks to the boundless fountain of creativity that is the human mind, there are many – although there do seem to be some standard, convergent forms. Two types of Shisa, ones that looked like they were just made from fried clay, and another that had been glazed, seemed to be consistently made in the same form.
A Common Variety ShisaAnother Common Variety, The Blue And Green GlazeA Less Common Variety, The Screamer (Or The “I Can’t Believe You’ve Done This”)Really Having A Good ScreamA Small And Wild ScreamerScreaming Into The VoidBeholding The Sun God
You will also notice this beautiful white and red roof, and this also I’ve only seen in Okinawa. Mainland Japan does not have Shisa, not commonly, but their own version of them, the komainu, which are typically seen guarding the entrance of shrines. They are not lions like the Shisa, but dogs. Both the shisa and komainu have their origins in China. Okinawa, or I should say the Ryukyu kingdom, at that time, ended up with the Shisa, and mainland Japan with the komainu, although mainland Japan does have the shishi in its culture, in the shishimae, the lion dance.
The RoovesAnother ViewThe White LionThe HobgoblinPokemon?The Demonic LionA Traditional Home (Note The Shisa)It’s Alive
Let’s take a moment to enjoy some more Shisa photos.
Guarding The SanitizerThanks For Keeping DistanceKing Of The HoodBrother’s FavoriteSquad PicDevious IntentionsGreen GuardiansLaugh!CavedShellsaAquaboyBirds Of A FeatherMask Up (鼻出し状態)Floral
I still felt like I was in a dream when we wandered down to the park under the underpass by the beach. It may not sound like the most likely place to be poppin’, but it was poppin’. Here too I felt strong American vibes. Maybe it was the Blondie blaring from a city PA speaker. Or was it the rollerblades? The b-ballers? It was a hive of activity. Skateboarders, tennis players, slamming the ball against the most indefatigable foe, concrete columns of the underpass. Parker gave a gasp and pointed. “Do you guys see that?” and ran away. We were strolling the beach when he recovenvened with us. “RC cars!”
So yes, those first days were spent in Naha, acclimating ourselves to this strange new place, and its strange new culture.
We got our first real Okinawa schooling from a Canadian. We met Dan as we were checking out of a local supermarket. He started to chat us up, and he asked us where we thought he was from. I made the mistake of saying American. James said I should never call someone an American, (reflecting our standing in the world, at least in the eyes of the Australians), but especially not a Canadian (which Dan was.) In my defense this was early in the conversation, before the “eh”s and the accent started popping out. Dan told us all kinds of things about Okinawa – about where to buy good Shisa souveniers, about why the Okinawans love Spam (they do love Spam, this was a major surprise), about how there is strong anti-American sentiment because of all the crime committed by American soldiers in the 80s and 90s. (I read about this crime, after returning. It seems that not only was there crime, but there was also a lack of justice. Many of the perpatrators were given meager fines, discharge from the army, or got off scot free. Nothing that you could call justice for someone who ran over your four year old. All enforcement and judicial affairs related to American military personnel were and still are carried out by the American military. This has been a great source of tension for the island.) About Okinawa’s economic struggles, being the poorest prefecture in Japan, and being a more popular tourist destination than Hawaii, having some ten million tourists annually, with four million of them being Chinese (Dan’s numbers). As for why Dan was here in Okinawa now: Love, baby. Dan met an Okinawan woman and got married. They spent some time in Canada and then came back to Okinawa. He said he liked talking to foreigners – he struggled to make friends in Okinawa because he doesn’t speak Japanese (which may be surprising to hear, given Okinawa’s diversity, but probably has a large part to do with his age, as in Japan, the higher up you are in age, the less likely you are to speak English).
Bark If You’re My Dog – Something You Will Not See On Mainland Japan (American Influence?)Another Okinawan Sight (Offering Of Fresh Fruit)Veggies As Well (Health Food For The Gods)Okinawan Glass Artえま (Ema) For The Baby GodThe Baby Bodhisattva (Buddha?)An Offering Of BibsMaccas Delivery, We’ve Got ItFree PCR Testing Site (Closed At That Time)Corals Under The Underpass (Growing Over Wavebreakers)Man Poses With Spam Sandwich (おにぽー、Onipo)
Touching on the history of Spam in Okinawa, will lead us to covering everything I learned about Okinawa’s recent tumultuous history, which was this – the Ryukyu kingdom was subjugated by the Japanese in 1609, and Okinawa prefecture officially founded in 1879. The people of Okinawa were forced to fight along the Japanese in World War 2, to defend the island against the Americans, who were making it the last stop before the mainland, and everybody died tragic, horrific, senseless deaths (at this point in the war it was entirely senseless, for everyone except the emperor and his people, who just wanted to maintain as much control over Japan as they could after the war was over). The Okinawan people were forced to support and fight for Japan, and suffered greatly. I don’t know if I need to recount all of the horrible, gruesome details that I learned from visiting the various war museums, but I did feel that I learned something particularly important, which is that war memorials are necessary, and everyone should go to them. I have thought before, when visiting the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb museums, why we need these, why should we keep dwelling on such horror, why keep these gruesome images and facts alive and in our consciousness. And I think I felt the answer this time around, which is that, yes, we know war is horrible, conceptually, many of us – but you need to know, exactly, to see as best as you can, without actually experiencing for yourself, how horrible it really is – the black, charred flesh of crying babies, the journals of the high school girls holding down the arms and legs of soldiers as they’re amputated off, the journals recounting the moment when they were hit by mortar fire, seeing their friends blown to bits, seeing the videos of endless dead bodies and ruined buildings, ruin everywhere, everything black and grey and destroyed, all smoldering wasteland. The photo of the POWs, over a hundred men in a barbed-wire pit of mud, some of them standing, some of them dead, none of them smiling for the camera.
Actual horror. Hell on earth. By the last museum we made a stop at, I didn’t even want to go in. My suffrometer had been maxed out. I couldn’t take anymore.
Why keep the horror alive?
So that we don’t forget.
Because someday, the events of WW2 will no longer remain in any living person’s consciousness. There will be no one left to tell their horror stories. And that is why we need these museums. They’re also necessary, not only so that we remember, but so that we can understand. I think many of us feel intrinsically that war is horrible, and those of us with more active imaginations can perhaps to some degree simulate what it may have been like, or kid ourselves that we can – but I’m sure that it can still never get anywhere near the thing itself. Our imaginations on their own just aren’t powerful enough – but when aided with photos, videos, testimonials, journals.. with some help, we can begin to understand.
What repeatedly struck me was the senselessness of it all. High school girls being blown apart so that the Emperor of Japan can potentially stay in power after the inevitable defeat of his nation. What kind of leader, what kind of ruling party would ever trade power for the lives of their innocents? One who believes they are God, perhaps, and so have a right to decide how lives are lived, and how they are spent. One who is a madman. One who is both.
Yanbaru
Now, let’s take a look at this photo.
This photo won the mystery award from Ryoka. When I showed this in class, all the students would, in unison, squint and lean forward, intensely focused on the screen. I took the photo already knowing what it was, so of course I know what this is a photo of. But I’ve been surprised that most people who look at it can’t tell. What do you think? If you can read Japanese, there’s a clue for you down at the bottom right. If you can’t read Japanese, or can’t read this yet.. Stevie’s here for you.
It says, “危険!手をふれないでください。マングース防除事業。”
Danger – don’t touch this – death to mongeese.
It’s a dead mongoose in a mongoose trap.
Now let me tell you a little bit about what was one of the most interesting parts of the trip for me.
The animals of Yanbaru are so threatened with extinction for, I think, two primary reasons: land development, and death by mongoose. In 1910, 17 mongeese, known to science as the Herpestes auropunctatus, the Small Indian Mongoose, were released in Naha, southern Okinawa, to wage war on the Habu, Protobothrops flavoviridis, (a particularly fun one to say), a venomous Okinawan snake. I regret not taking a picture of any of the numerous warning signs placed in the habu hotspots (or the people hotspots, as they were ideal places to share the good word, that these snakes will mess you up), but I do have pictures of habu sake. The students were very interested in this. According to Wikipedia, the habu are often stuffed into the jar alive, and drown, or are stunned and gutted alive. Gruesome stuff.
Habu Sake ($300)夫婦 – Husband And WifeHabu Whiskey
Unfortunately for everyone and everything on the island of Okinawa, the habu are nocturnal, and the mongoose, diurnal, and so the two rarely ever meet, and so the people of Okinawa simply added one more problem animal to their list of problem animals. To me this just shows how little we understood about animal behavior and ecology, just over a hundred years ago. Although there may have been people who knew better and weren’t consulted, or someone just really got the idea into their head, that our snake problem could be easily solved if we just brought a pack of mongeese to the island. I do wonder how this ended up happening, but apparently the idea was a common one, because according to a pamphlet I received from the Kuina Conservation Center (we’ll get to this), the Small Indian Mongoose was “introduced into about 70 islands in tropical areas, including the Hawaiian, Fiji and West Indies Islands, during the late 1800s, in order to control rat and poisonous snake populations.” The rats were also brought by the humans, and were also extremely detrimental to island flora and fauna, like on all other islands they’ve been introduced to. Instead of hunting the habu, like intended, the mongeese hunt everything else, and because the top predator on the island was the habu, and no carnivorous mammal like a mongoose, the animals adapted only to defend themselves against the habu, and perhaps birds of prey, and had and have no adaptations against mongeese, and this is the same sad story on so many islands around the world. Feral cats and dogs are an issue as well, on Okinawa, to a lesser extent, but still enough that the government had to initiate policies limiting the freedom of cats and dogs in the Yanbaru villages, and institute a tracking program, requiring all pets to be chipped. The mongeese have thrived since their introduction, and have steadily pushed northwards, until they made it up into the Yanbaru region, where the rarest and most sensitive of Okinawan species live. It wasn’t until recently that people caught on to what’s been going on, that mongeese are eating all their special animals, and this is now an ongoing struggle, between the people of Okinawa, to save their endemic wild things before it’s too late, and the mongeese. When reading about the Kuina, in the same pamphlet, I’d read that it had first been described in 1981, which I take to mean that it was given its scientific name, as the Gallirallus okinawae, and I couldn’t believe it. I thought that must have been a typo, but no, it’s true. So this animal that is now the flagstone species, the centerpiece in the campaign to protect the wildlife of Okinawa, had not even been officially documented, known to the larger ecological community, until a little over forty years ago, which to me seems like just yesterday, as whenever I read about particularly interesting species like the Kuina, they’ve all been documented much longer ago, in the 1700s, by Carl Linnaeus, or some French guy (my history is weak here), and maybe the 1800s, but not EVER in the late 1900s. But so it is, that the wildlife of Okinawa has flown under the radar for so long, and once it got some attention, it must have been found that these animals are in serious trouble, and would be gone soon, some of them gone already (potentially the Okinawa Spiny Rat), without some intervention. The initiative started only in 2000, after 15 years of basic research, when the prefectural government started capturing mongeese, and they’ve since passed legislation, constructed three fences, many kilometers long, and have even started up a real life Okinawan Avengers, the Mongoose Busters. So what you see in the picture is a mongoose caught in what is listed in the pamphlet as a “kill trap”, deployed by the Okinawan Avengers. We found it down along the mangroves, where there were two traps, the first one being empty. When I spotted the second, I saw flies, then a tail, and knew we’d gotten lucky. (The mongoose, not so much.) We were witnessing history, really, a glimpse into the ongoing war between a slinky, furry destroyer, the repercussions of the misguided intentions of over a hundred years ago, and the people of an island, in a desperate attempt to protect their dorky, charismatic, flightless bird (and everything else threatened by the mongoose, like the Okinawa Spiny Rat, the Ryukyu Long Haired Rat, which is actually more a possum, the Ryukyu Black-breasted Turtle, the geckos, newts, frogs). The misguided acts of the past. Ignorant humans attempting to rectify an order that is beyond their understanding.
The Glorious KuinaA Majestic BirdA Glorious BirdHe Blinks!
These photos are all from the Kuina Conservation Center. Although I desperately desired it we were not able to see a Kuina in the wild. Thank you to the center for having Kuina on display to satisfy the burning curiosity of animal people such as myself. This bird, I first heard of through the great omnipotent internet. I found, from some very brief perusing of the great omnipotent internet, that there was a forest on the northern end of the Okinawa mainland, and that there were wild things there. On searching Google Maps, I found the Kuina Conservation Center and knew right away that was a place I needed to go. I had to fight for it – after four days of letting James have his fill of parks and museums and McDonalds, when I said that we were going to go see the bird today, his response was, “No we’re not.” His reasoning being that we had already explored Yanbaru yesterday, and I got one day, and one day was enough. I had to put my talons down for this. I said, “James, we are going to go see that bird.” And we did go see that bird, and made friends with a nice man, knowledgable on all things Kuina, and friends with just about everyone in Japan, Kobayashisan, who spoke to us the entire time in good English, answering all of our questions, and educating us on the history of the project, to save the Kuina, and the Kuina behavior, diet, mating, about the Mongoose Busters, and about the lessons he was designing for classrooms around Japan. I felt that the Kuina is in good hands if there are people like him looking after them.
The Only Bird To Wear Underpants (Fashionably Dressed)Communicating With Party (Kek)The Small Indian MongooseOkinawa Avengers
The Kill Trap Is What We Saw
Trapping SuccessKuina (Okinawa Rails) Recovering Their Range As A ResultThe Line Of Defense (Buffer Zone) Using Fences, Dam, And Natural Barriers
Driving up to the center, we saw many signs that warned of Kuina, and at the center itself, a sign that listed how many Kuina had been hit by cars last year, and this year. That is unfortunately another killer of these birds, as well as construction – death via car, and via falling down into places they can’t get out of, like trenches and ditches.
The Kuina is a dorky bird. Something about a bird without the wings is just funny. It is very much a bouncing, bobbing blob. It’s face is entirely expressionless, a face that has you wondering, just what, if anything, could be going on in that round nub of a head. The secrets of the universe. Certainly something is going on in that little nub noggin.
I guess you know I’m a nature lover when I say that the highlight of my trip was seeing a bird.
Did someone say birds?
BirdsAnd Non-Birds
Ryukyu Green Pigeon – Only extant species of endemic pigeon in Japan
Japanese White-Eye
Ruddy Kingfisher
Ryukyu Red Robin
Eurasian Kingfisher
How Can We Talk About Birds And Not Talk About Pigeonsやまがら – Varied Tit – Extremely difficult to photograph, sneak level highコゲラ – Japanese Woodpecker – Not difficult to photograph, sneak level low赤ひげ – The Ryukyu Red Robin – This bird modeled for me. Actually.イソヒヨドリ – Female Blue Rock Thrush – Chillin’ On A Traditional Okinawan Roofちゅうひ – An Eastern Sea Harrier (my guess) – A Local King Of The Skyクロサギ- An Eastern Reef Heron – There Were Several Out On These Rocky Shoresイソヒヨドリ – Male Blue Rock Thrush – This One’s Actually Blue (Males are blue with red stomachs)イソヒヨドリ – Female Blue Rock Thrush – This One’s Not Blue (Females are grey)めじろ – Japnese White-Eye – Note The White Eye (Love This Bird)むじせっか – Dusky Warbler – Not A Great Photo But I Worked Hard For It And You Will Enjoy It. S-Tier Sneak LevelThank You For Giving Me This Photo Bird
But I have not shown you the best one. And this bird deserves a story unto itself. First I will show you the photo.
I am sure that almost all of you do not know what you’re looking at. You do not know that this bird is a critically endangered bird and there are most likely less than several hundred left in the wild, perhaps less than a hundred adults. I did not know this, either, when I took the photo of this bird. The story is this (because I have to give you the story) (it’s the whole reason I made this blog): At the end of a three and a half hour hike to a waterfall and back, that could have been done in one, but you know, birds; at the end of this hike there was a trail going off down into a small, clear-watered stream, and we made the call to extend our hike “just a bit longer” (dangerous words) and venture down to it, thinking that we may get very lucky, and find some interesting critters. James had actually already spotted an interesting critter, a large, dinosaur-like newtbeast lumbering across a sandy spit in the stream, from the hiking trail – and that greatly peaked our curiosity. We ventured down to the waters, and immediately started making discoveries, which were, this beautiful butterfly, and these wiggly wet newts. When we had gone down into the streambed, I had noticed a bird fly out from above us, into the woods across the stream. I was hoping to see birds here, (I was hoping to see birds everywhere), particularly a kingfisher, and so was on lookout for them. We had our fun with the newts, a lot of fun with the newts, trying to feed them a sizeable many-legged thing, millipede or centipede, somethingpede, and finding out that it could crawl underwater just as well as it could on land. As we mozied back down the stream, I was constantly scanning the trees, hoping for any sign of birdlife, when I noticed a hole in the tree above where we entered the stream, and I formed a quick theory, that the bird that flew across the stream when we entered lives in this hole, and we probably spooked it off, and it probably wants to come back. And so, I having perhaps the most essential skill necessary for success in wildlife photography, decided to activate that essential skill, by standing still, and waiting. If I am close to getting a photo, or there is an opportunity at hand, I am extremely reluctant to let it go. I will hold out as long as possible. And in this case I had also got into that state. An extreme unwillingness to move. Parker did not last long – within minutes he was heading back to the car. James surprisingly lasted much longer – he is a man of nature but he also has limits on his patience, and when I broke my trance for a second to confirm if it was really alright that we were still standing here for so long, having now been rooted in place for at least fifteen minutes, (that time goes quick), and asked what he was doing, seeing that he was preoccupied with something on his phone, he told me that he was trying to get free Line Points from a bottle he had gotten from a vending machine earlier, and so I knew that we could press forward, both having a mission. Even then, I didn’t want to keep Parker waiting for too long, as I had already made them both wait quite a lot, extending that hike two hours past what would have been the norm if you did not stop to look for birds every ten feet, and so I was feeling so strongly that it was time to move on, but didn’t want to go without the photo, and I was locked in struggle, between acknowledging that I couldn’t stand here forever, and also wanting to stand there forever, and I had just started to move my feet, to leave, when the bird returned. It came right back across from the other side of the stream, and right back to that hole. And I couldn’t believe it, and I’m sure I audibly gasped, and most likely aggresively whispered, “It’s back!!” and whipped up the camera, and started shooting. And I really couldn’t get anything great, nothing pin-sharp, as they say, but it was enough to make out what it was, and that was all I needed, and we left there with a victory. And usually, if you wait long enough, it does seem that you will leave with a victory. I guess that the successful nature photographer really doesn’t leave without one. And so every time you leave, you leave with a victory. I did get lucky then, I felt it, but I didn’t realize how lucky I had been, until several nights after returning, when I started the long, long process of going through the three thousand photos I had taken, and culling them down, to the useable, to the edit-worthy. And that night, I had called it a night, and was sitting on the bed, flipping through some of the pamphlets I had taken from the Yanbaru Conservation Center, looking again at the cast of critters all at risk in the Yanbaru region, and my eyes landed on a bird, the Okinawa Woodpecker, and I thought, “I’ve seen this bird.” I had a strong feeling that I’d seen it. I knew that bird. And I thought, I think that’s the bird we saw at the stream. And I noted a big red CR posted under the picture on the pamphlet, CR meaning critically endangered. So, of course, I thought, well the chances are certainly against me, and I probably did not see that bird. Maybe a close relative. But those eyes looked so familiar. And that night, I went to sleep, wondering if I had really photographed the critically endangered Okinawan Woodpecker or not. Of course I could have confirmed it it right then, but a little anticipation can make things just that much sweeter, and again I thought I was probably wrong. The first thing I did the next morning was pop open the laptop, pull up the photos, and there it was, that I had seen the exact same bird, no question about it. And then I did the research, and learned just how endangered this bird really was, that it is on the fast track to extinction, and is very close to it already, and I had been able to not only see it, but photograph it, and I felt incredibly lucky. According to the IUCN’s Red List site, the number of locations where you can find this woodpecker is 1 (Yanbaru), the number of mature individuals is 50-249, and the continuing population trend is declining. The hole was a telling sign, as to why this bird is going extinct – it is meeting the same demise as so many woodpeckers around the world, that require old growth forests, with the gnarled and holey old trees, to make their nests, and the old growths of Yanbaru have mostly been felled, and so the woodpeckers have nowhere to make their homes. The Okinawans have done the right thing by designating Yanbaru a national park. I hope that they can continue to take the steps necessary to save this bird along with all of their other special critters, because it really is a beautiful bird. My guess is that the one I saw was either a juvenile or a female, as it isn’t as brightly colored as the one shown in the pamphlet photo.
Another Shot – ノグチゲラ, Okinawan WoodpeckerFrom PamphletThe First Page Of Pamphlet Showing Endemic Yanbaruansルリタテハ, A Blue Admiral – The Beautiful ButterflyAnderson’s Crocodile Newt – Listen As Vulnerable On The Above PamphletFish Mode Activated – Flattening Limbs And Using Tail To Swim
These are the animals of Yanbaru, but there were discoveries all across the island. Particularly, there was one insect that brought me much amazement, and it was this one.
The Mystery Bug
I have never seen a bug like this. I have seen a lot of bugs, but when it comes to bugs, there is always something that has not been seen, even for the bug expert extraordinaires. It is a great beauty of the bug world. This one I found essentially glued to a park sign. I say glued because as I hovered around, breathing all over it, running back to the car, grabbing my expensive and amazing SuperInsectShooter2000 macro lens, then coming back and shoving said lens right up in its face, this bug did not move a tarsus. The appendages, (legs?) that appear to have morphed into horns, were what were really throwing me for a loop. I spent some good time thinking about it. Guesses, anyone?
Top Down (One More Shot For Suspense)
Wow I can’t believe you knew that it was a Pterophoridaen (plume moth)!! Specifically a Stenodacma pyrrhodes!! You’re doing better than me. Actually I was very surprised (well, I was pretty surprised) that it was a moth. A lot of twists in this world of bugs.
Another member of Pterophoridae (credit: Wikipedia)
And Another One
This Is Not A Plume MothNice To See This In JanuaryVery SmolThere Be GeckosA Common Sight In Okinawa, A Spiny Orb WeaverRare Sighting Of A Wild Carted-Smallbeast Extremely Rare Sighting Of A Wild Furry ParktrawlerHide Action Attemped: SuccessSmall Okinawan Tiger In Repose
Humans
James is a very peculiar person. To give an example: After our first full day of adventure on Okinawa, a beautiful day, a day full of new sights, tastes, culturing, adventures.. at the end of this day, I looked over at James, lying facedown on the hotel bed next to mine, and said, “What did you think was interesting about today?” And I thought this was a good question, as we really had seen so much, and I was curious to know what about it had made the greatest impression on him. And James responds, after taking half a second to think it over, “The weather.” (said as an Australian, so, “Tha’ wetha’.”) I said, “Give me more.” This time, a second passes. “Getting the rental car.” Now, I know that I am just as much a peculiar person – but in his peculiarity, James is certainly very different from me, because if you had asked me that question, the two things I would have absolutely not put on my list of interesting events of the day, would have been the rental car, and the weather. What is even interesting about a sunny day? How can you actually even list that as an interesting thing? You may think that James was being sarcastic. He very often is. And a normal person answering in that way probably would be. But sarcastic he was not. I knew James well enough by then to know that his answer was a completely genuine one, and that after our first action packed day on this exotic new island, the two most interesting things for James that day really were the weather and the rental car. I needed more; I pressed further. “What else?” But that was it. “That’s it.” (His reply). And then, as an afterthought, to himself, as he’s already answered the question, done his duty to the outside world, and is now once again devoting full attention to obliterating his Legends Of Runeterra AI nemesis, he adds, “The stone road was nice.” And that was an acceptable answer. The stone road was nice.
The Stone Road
This entire conversation (if you can call it a conversation) was conducted over the sounds, over a cacophony of sword clashings, and spell castings, and customary catch phrases, and other such appropriate fantasy sounds.
A Topic Of Debate
This house, placed along the stone road, represented an aesthetic divide between James, and Parker and myself. Parker and I were on team yes, James on team no, and strongly so. What do you think? Attractive? Horrific?
When it comes to friendship, James can be a demanding individual. I was banned from driving the car because I drive too aggressively. I couldn’t play music because my music is displeasing. I couldn’t lay on his bed because I’m filthy. I couldn’t have a Calorie Mate (a quintessential Australian food) (“Want a calorie, mate?” James once said – not to me of course) because he has to order them off Amazon (for the best deal). Parker has a catchphrase, and it’s “Sheboigan” (not sure if correctly spelled). James has a catchphrase, and it’s “No”. I tried to convince James to start saying “Badabing badaboom” (I thought that would be fun for an Australian). He wasn’t into it. A tangent, but Australians really have an infectious way of speaking, perhaps in part because their words are so fun to say. I say their words, but actually the really fun ones, like Billabong, Diggereedoo, and Kookaburra, are all Aboriginal words. I had never thought of Billabong as being a word having origins in Australia, but after spending some time with James, I fancy that I could recognize it now. And fun fact, (I had always just though it was the fun name of a company, nothing more) a billabong is a kind of oasis located in the Australian outback. Words like wallaby and dingo are also Aboriginal. I’ve noticed that people (at least, Americans), are so tickled by the Australian accent, that when they meet a real life Australian they can’t help but to try it out, that most people when meeting James can’t resist unleashing their inner Australian, and James always takes it in stride. I’ve asked him if this ever bothered him, and he says no. I think he knows that it’s not done mockingly; we just can’t resist it. When with James I confess that something takes hold of me too, and am often seized by overwhelming urges to blurt out words and phrases in the Australian tongue, one of my favorites being “A dingo ate my baby”. Sometimes I’m able to surpress these urges, and sometimes I’m not, and whenver I’m not, James is right there with me, joining in to rant about dingos, and throwing in some “Aw yea”s, and “croikeys”, and other quintessential Australianisms. Once when asking James about Aboriginal words, he started listing some off, and on the fourth or fifth word, I was fascinated, and commented, “Wow.. I haven’t even heard some of these!” and he says, “Well, I was just making them up.” They all sounded like perfectly real words to me, I suppose because they all sounded like nonsense, and not being Aboriginal or Australian, I can’t tell the difference.
Another worthy tangent – James doing karaoke sounds like a horribly wounded animal in its death throes. There are times when you may accurately level the charge of hyperbole at me but this is not one of those times. It is something unearthly. Hearing it will touch something deep inside of you. His favorites are “Breaking The Habit” by Linkin Park, and “You Raise Me Up” by Josh Groban. And this is why James is such an enigma. He is a fun guy, while simultaneously being anti-fun. How does it work? He belongs to a very rare class of people who can pull this off. (Luka is another member of this class; but Luka is for another time.) On the drive home from the airport, I was doing some verbal painting for James, laying out for him a fantasy I was having, of me going to see him, in Okinawa, his future home, where he wants to move (for the weather), where he is now a successful Maccas magnate (Maccas, Australian for McDonalds; James sees great opportunity in opening McDonalds in Japan, “printing money”) and in me borrowing a fancy car from his fleet of fancy cars (he likes cars – flicking through Tinder for the first time, he swiped right on two profiles, both including pictures of cars), and I said, looking over at him in the backseat, “Doesn’t that sound like fun?” And he said, with a light touch of agony in his voice, “Not really.”
At another point on the trip, I turned to James and said, “Are you having a good time?” (At this moment, I was having a good time. It was ideal conditions for having a good time.) James was stoic, as usual, and so it was and is very hard to tell, if and when he’s having a good time. His response: “Better than being at home.” And that bar is very low, because James lives in the middle of the woods, surrounded by empty houses and tall trees and the bloodcurdling screams of deer (I’ve heard these), where he is this winter perpetually engaged in the existential struggle of trying to stay out of a hypothermic state at a reasonable price (the electric bill is quite high in his middle of nowhere).
I’m writing a lot about James here. Our relationship has been a great source of amusement to me, and hopefully not too much of exasperation to him. I am only scratching the surface, the surface of a very large and very fantastic iceberg, and however much I would like to, we just don’t have the time or energy for me to expound on every single peculiarity or instance of peculiar behavior on James’s part – but I can give you one more. James and I had a moment of conflict, of true conflict, laid bare, a moment of us forcing our up-to-this-point dysfunctional cogs into some kind of synchronicity, a more working order, and it was tense, Parker wide-eyed and mouth-shut, and after the climax, and tensions had relaxed, and consessions made, James made a comment, a pained one, one that suggested he had been harboring a deep and dreadful grievance for a long, long time; and James’s comment was: “Please no more jazz.”
Music was one of our greatest sources of tension. We had listened to jazz only once on that trip, as I was only in the mood for it once, that warm, relaxed morning, at the start of our drive up to Yanbaru, and because I had then been allowed to drive, as this was before the ban (I was banned for driving “too fast”) (our car liked to scold, and was quite quick to do so, and this was another great source of amusement on the trip, as Parker in particular did not handle the scolding well, and would respond to the car’s gentle robotic suggestions of “Please slow down” and “Stay in the lane” with a rising exasperation, gripping the wheel harder, and shouting various “God dammit!” and “Shut up!”s, which helped to load him with all those neurochemicals necessary for safe and proper driving, like adrenaline and cortisol), and we had a working rule that the driver got to choose the music (although I did have the ban revoked, and was allowed to drive once more, and yet Parker played the music – funny how that works). I had played jazz, stuff from the Vince Guaraldi Trio, only that once – but out of everything I did, out of all the atrocities I had committed, playing jazz in the car was one of the worst.
James is so particular about his CalorieMate that he knew, after a period of several months, spanning the full length of our history, since I had started making trips out to stay with him in his Ubuyama wilderness, during which I would often request to be fed (it feels weird to even write that, requesting to be fed in a friend’s house) and he would occasionally yield, some frozen vegetables, or a pack of instant ramen, and rarer still, a precious CalorieMate. After several months of Ubuyama visits, I had made a comment about my “consuming” (he likes that word; “All you do is consume!”) his CalorieMates, and he surprised me by stating the exact number of CalorieMates that I had swindled from him, and it was five. He had this entire time been keeping track. They’ve recently gone on sale, I noticed at the supermarket, and I have bought him four, one of each of the flavor’s he’s never tried (he only buys chocolate), to attempt to compensate for my wanton consumption. Around this time James messaged me, unprompted, about their going on sale. (I have since eaten one).
James and I had one more source of conflict, and it was McDonalds. It was not about his future ambitions as a Maccas magnate. I fully support those. Rather, it was about me not wanting to eat there, every day, if I could help it, and him wanting to eat there every day, if he could. James is undoubtedly a Maccas man. He usually would limit himself to Maccas once a week, on Sundays after he goes grocery shopping – but this vacation meant freedom, for the both of us, and for James specifically, it meant freedom to eat all Maccas, all the time. This was in direct opposition with what I had desired, which was to try as much of the local food as possible, as well as that McDonalds, even if I did want to go there, did not have anything for me, besides a pitiful ebi fillet. (Shrimp burger). I consider myself to be a compromising individual (James will laugh at this), so I humored them on the drive to the airport (I say them because Parker was always willing to climb aboard the Maccas train). I even humored them again in Okinawa, curious about whether they had any Okinawa specials, and they probably did, and it was probably just a Spamburger. But then, the second time it was proposed in Okinawa, I proclaimed that I would not eat there again, and so we debated, and settled on the plan, that we would first go to Maccas, where James and Parker would get their fix, and then we would go to a local place, where I could get mine (which was champloo). This was not ideal, but we both got what we wanted. It was a compromise of sorts, but James stayed in the car, for my meal, and it took twice as much time for us to eat, and so obviously was not better than us enjoying something we all liked together. The next time we were deciding where to go to eat, and the suggestion of Maccas was once again floated, potentially even by me, in jest (still a mistake), and I said I will absolutely not go to McDonalds, but if you must, we can separate again, to which James replied, “No more split meals. It makes me feel like I’m with my divorced parents.” And that made me think that while James and I have a great friendship, we probably would have a tough marriage, with such fundamental differences in culinary desires, opinions on the interest of rental cars, and loves of jazz music.
Spending time with other people has a usefulness in that it can help you to round out edges of your personality, fill in gaps in your knowledge, or help you to realize some of your personal quirks or habits that are or are not so useful. I say this because I learned a lot from James and Parker during these ten days, and I think (I hope) they learned from me too. At least I know that Parker made two lifestyle changes as a result of this trip. I have thought for awhile, and so has Parker, that he is too easily and too often flustered, and I thought that this was in some part related to his caffeine habit, which can be summed up as, he is a fiend for the feine. Parker’s natural state of existence had been, prior to this trip, a caffinated one. I had been trying to convince him to give up the caffiene, or at least cut it back, for awhile now, and I think he had tried it once or twice, but on this trip, we really went for it, because I was there to help. It’s harder to police yourself than to be policed by others. So we agreed that Parker would have no caffiene on this trip, and then many, many times a day, (basically at every vending machine, which, because we’re in Japan, was anytime we ever stopped or went out for a walk), I would listen to and weigh the strength of Parker’s relentless stream of requests for a caffinated beverage. Parker came up with many various reasonings as to why he should get his caffeine, including, “What am I supposed to drink?” (implying that he had to drink something and if he couldn’t get any other suitable option it would have to be something caffienated, because of course, he had to have something to drink, and of course it couldn’t just be water) (and this is how he became somewhat of a mugicha man, mugicha being wheat/barley tea, which I really love) and “Well if it does have caffiene, it can’t have much.” (this was for the apple tea, which we weren’t sure if had caffiene or not, because it wasn’t written on the bottle – and after a few days of steady drinking, Parker says, “It does.” He looked it up, after the few days of steady drinking) and “It’s for my can collection!” (which was him trying to get me to let him have a Dr. Pepper, which we’ve never seen in Kyushu, and to which I responded, “You have a can collection?” And he does. We settled on him having a few sips (they were gulps) and pouring the rest of the can out.) And during this trip, as we progressed, I swear that Parker had started to noticeably relax, except when he was in the car and being scolded. Parker also asked me, at one point, when I told him he shouldn’t pick his nails, what he was supposed to do when he sat, and had nothing else to do, and I told him, just don’t do anything. Because he had the habit, like so many people, myself included, the long habit of picking or chewing his nails down, and there was nothing left but destroyed stumps, and I told him about how if you just make the conscious effort to stop, that is half the battle, as it’s something that you picked up a long time ago and are most likely only doing it now as an unconscious holdover, an autopilot function, (although for him having a lot of tension it could still have been a response to relieve that tension), and it is a habit you can break, and he has recently sent me pictures of his new nails, and told me that the other day he scratched something with them, which was an experience he hadn’t felt in a very, very long time. I think that’s a good example of why it’s helpful to have other people around, in correcting bad physical and mental habits, because we fall into these patterns, and carry them out without even thinking about them, and because they’re so normal to us, we don’t realize that they’re not normal at all, or we don’t have the ability to pull ourselves out of them by ourselves, but could with a little help from another, who can see it objectively. Having people with different perspectives around you also helps you to cover some of your personal deficiencies. After spending time with James, and another friend of mine, Ikkei, who are both engineers, (machine people), I see that they view things, especially the machines, in a very different light than I do. Physical, mechanical things just come to them in a different way than they do to me. I saw the true similarity in them when, seperately, in their presence I complained about the issues I had been having with my laptop, and without any asking on my part, or even desire to have them fix it, they were both sitting down with it, having a look, and tackling the problem. I actually asked James, and this is a very rare thing for me to say, when he was sitting there deep into my computer’s bios, or whatever he was doing, “Are you having fun?” Because it seemed like he was. And he said yes. He was. And I realized then, that what is agony for me, which is solving computer related problems (I could see it only as a complete waste of time) is for them an enjoyable experience, like solving a puzzle. I think in part because they enjoy the problem solving component, but also because they just get it. They just get mechanics. And being friends with them has clearly shown me that I don’t get mechanics like they do, but I do see why they like it. I say this because on the Okinawa trip, I had made another comment, about how my boots had been giving me blisters, and I wasn’t sure why, whether it was too much walking, or they weren’t made for that much walking, or they just weren’t a comfortable pair of shoes, and James said, “Just wear two pairs of socks.” And since then I’ve only ever worn two pairs of socks with those boots, and have never had a problem since. I think it was very obvious to James, that it’s a friction problem, and there is too much empty space in the shoe, and wearing two pairs of socks will fill up the space, eliminate the friction, and there will be no more blisters, and I understand that too; but it was much clearer for him.
This makes me think of my newest friend, Luka (we’ve got to him), a big burly Croatian-Canadian bundle of joy and love, who also has the engineering mind, and who, on a drive to James’s for a hybrid Christmas/Thanksgiving party, when I asked about crumple zones, as we were talking about cars, and crumple zones, I think specifically because he had made the comment that old cars were much more dangerous because they didn’t have them, who replied to my honest question of whether a car needed crumple zones with, “Of course you need crumple zones, dumbass!” Of course you do! A car without crumple zones! What a joke! James and Ikkei both probably would not have to ask the question of whether you need crumple zones or not. They would immediately see the value. The mechanical mind.
Worms
There is one more story I can leave you with. Okinawa was a gift that just kept on giving. One night, about a month after, Parker gives me a call. I answer the phone, and can tell immediately that he is exasperated, which is common, but I could tell immediately that in this case he was in a state of flustration of the highest order. I said, “Hey buddy,” and Parker says, in between hurried, panicked breaths, “Oh my god Steven. I think I pooped out a worm.” And Parker proceeds to send me a picture of a long, skinny, pink thing in his toilet. It does look like a worm. He then begins to tell me about how he had recently done the deed, gone off to a friend’s house, and had come back to find this worm in his toilet, that it must have been in his poop, and swam back up. He had come up with the working theory, with some help from another friend, Matt, that this worm was an Ascarid, and he may have gotten it in Okinawa, and he was now filled with them. It was alarming stuff, but still, I played the role of the soother, the de-hype man, telling him, ok, just relax, we don’t really know if you are filled with worms yet, and even if you do have worms, people get them all the time (not that I knew anyone who did), and dogs get them all the time, and I’m sure it’s not a big deal, and everything will be fine. He had sent me a link, to what he thought it was, an Ascarid worm, a type of roundworm, and the more I read, the more I was convinced of the probability that this was the correct worm, and that Parker did have worms. They were common in certain areas, specifically tropical and sub-tropical regions, as well as regions where sanitation was low. Okinawa was a tropical/sub-tropical island, and as far as sanitation level, who was I to say it was sanitary? The trash, the feral animals, the urinating homeless man, all flashed through my mind. It was said that one common mode of transmission was through eating unwashed fruits and vegetables. I thought, “But we didn’t eat any of those did w-“. And then I remembered the starfruit. I had wanted to stop at what’s called a michi no eki, which are fantastic places that carry all of the local flavors and trinkets, produce and sweets and mascots, and while there we had found ourselves the saataandagi, the Okinawa doughnuts that I had been hunting for, and after making the purchase, I had continued to meander, all the way around the perimeter of the store, with Parker anxiously hovering over me, concerned about making James wait for too long, but I was enjoying all of the uniqueness of Okinawa on display, when my eyes landed on some peculiar, star-shaped green and yellow fruits, and you know that I am sucker for exotic fruits, and so I went back to the register and bought them. And I was thinking now, how fateful it was, that I had ended up buying those fruits, the vehicle for our first worm infestation, and had taken them back to the car, and had opened up the back, so excited, offering one to James, who says, no kidding, “Are they washed?” His foresight astounding. I said no, but they had probably, maybe washed them before they gave them to us. “Aren’t they supposed to do that?” To myself, I thought, washed? Ha! My body can handle anything that nature provides. I really thought something like that. Seriously, I can handle a little unwashed fruit. But when I thought that, I was not including the malicious eggs of human-targeting parasitic Ascarids into my definition of nature. I was thinking about some dirt and maybe a dead bug. Me, the biologist. It’s pitiful I know. And so Parker and I happily scarfed those crunchy, juicy starfruits down. And now, flash forward a month, and I read, transmitted through unwashed fruits and vegetables, and I thought, my god, the starfruits! It was just like when Bill Murray eats the egg that he took back from the monkey in Osmosis Jones. The moment of compromise. So we had a vehicle. And I thought, alright, but how long does it take for the worms to mature. Does the time frame match? And it did, to the T. I read, what I did not want to read, on several sites, that it took about four weeks for the worms to mature – and it was just about four weeks since. The prognosis was not good, and I said to Parker, “The prognosis is not good.” I advised that he should go to a doctor the next day, tried to tell him again not to worry, that a lot of people do have this, over a billion people in the world have been infected, and that they’re not dangerous, usually, unless there are so many that they literally block your intestinal tract (I decided to leave that out), that everything would be fine, and try not to think about the small slithering creatures that are now sapping your vitality and infesting your bowels. But I too was now shaken, thinking the same thoughts that Parker had been thinking, but with less certainty – were these worms in me too, now? Just a few hours before I had noticed some intestinal discomfort, and boy it felt like it was really ramping up now. Like the worms knew that they’d been found out, and they had limited time to do their worm work. I gave James a call, and said, “Well, Parker’s got worms.” And I asked James if he had had a starfruit at all, and he said, yes, just one, and he washed it first. And I thought then how foolish I had been, how filthy I really was, going to bed filthy, because I prefered to take my showers in the morning, and being infected with worms, because I ate risky fruits, and how exonerated he was now, standing righteous, a night showerer, a fruit-washer. I said he should check his poo just in case, and then went to bed thinking that night about if, and how many, worms were inside my body. As much as I tried to suppress them, my powers of imagination led me to imagine myself, as I lay there in bed, completely bloated with worms, pushing against the confines of my intestines, as I was experiencing now what I believed to be great intestinal discomfort, and upon waking up tomorrow, going to the squatty potty at the school, and unloading them all, the great big mass, into the trench. I’m sorry to spell out such a graphic image for you but this was really what was going through my mind, and I think it’s only fair that I share it with you. My mind also flashed with images from the worst chapter in my entomology textbook – the chapter on parasites. I thought about the screw worms, the botflies, and the Leishmaniasis, and hook worms, the brain infesters, the wigglers, the burrowers, the devourers, and how one of those parasites that I had read about in my textbook was now giving me the honor of a private lesson, carrying out its life cycle in the most unfortunate host. (Me.) My primary consolation was that I imagined Parker going through similar things. We would be together in this unwanted adventure. And I did also think that it gave us a kind of badge of honor, an explorer’s badge, proof that we had been to exotic and foreign lands (I know this is a very romanticized way of looking at it), and I thought about how I could use it when playing Never Have I Ever, except that game is for things you haven’t done, and I have now had worms, and so actually I had just gotten worse at the game. I also thought about how we had taken a small risk in going to Okinawa, because it was during COVID times, and so all traveling is somewhat of a risk, even if case counts are low, but how while we were there, omicron began its rampant rise in Japan and particularly in Okinawa, and how we started to get messages, from loved ones, and coworkers, concerned for our safety, now being in the middle of the hottest place for COVID in Japan, with Okinawa receiving national attention, and everyone thinking, “Oh, my ALT is there!” and that we would now return from COVIDLAND to spread it all throughout our hometowns. And that was bad enough, dealing with the stress (mainly on Parker’s end) of being in a COVID hotspot, and then having to do the testing, upon returning home, and the quarantining, and that alone may have had us questioning whether it was worth the trouble or not, (I think for Parker, it may not have been, as we were reflecting on what we had learned from the trip, on the car ride back from the airport, and Parker says, “I learned a lot too. I learned that I like Taketa.” This had been his first real trip, which I was very surprised to hear, because I imagined that everyone who comes to Japan is hot for travel, but Parker has kept this entire time close to his Japanese home, which is Taketa, and his comment made me feel that the only thing he really learned from his big adventure out into the world, barring that initial move to Japan, was that he shouldn’t leave home at all.) And now, not only did we end our trip with testing, the quarantining, the concern, that we had been hoping to avoid, but now we really had something to cap it off with, the greatest omiyage yet, our very first worm infection. These were the things I thought about that night, as well as, well isn’t life interesting.
Now, the worm experts reading this, must have quickly settled on their own theory. Having read the clues: worm in the toilet, no excrement, long, skinny, pink; they are now proclaiming, “Why, it’s nothing more than a tubifex worm!” And they are entirely right. It was a tubifex worm.
I am embarrassed to say that I made the critical mistake of not ever confirming what an Ascarid worm actually looked like. But we would not have thought for a moment that we had them, had we simply asked the great omnipotent internet to show us what it was. We would have saved ourselves much consternation and exertion of imagination, had we only done this simple step. But I was duped; convinced, simply from reading, that we had found our worm. I blame Parker for this, having not done this step himself, and passing on his fear and his certainty to me, but when panicked, it is much easier to jump to conclusions, to make lapses of judgment. Because, later that same night, Parker went to a party, and told me that, while he had tried his best not to talk about the worm, that he wanted everyone to have a good time, and not dampen the mood with the lively talk of parasites, he was found out, not having a very good poker face, and his worm problem brought to light, to which his story was, he told me, scoffed at. “They scoffed at me.” (The Japanese). And they scoffed because they knew better. They knew better than us, that while Okinawa is exotic, and is sub-tropical, “It’s still Japan”, and so it would be almost impossible for it to have the lack of sanitation procedures necessary to harbor Ascarids, that it was an insult to the country to suggest it, and that Parker’s worm was probably a worm that someone had heard of that was a common worm that traveled through the sewers and occasionally popped up in people’s toilets. And this was the worm. The tubifex worm. Which to me sounded much more sinister, and is why as soon as I heard the good news, I sent James the message, “Don’t worry James. Only a tubifex worm.” Parker’s call prompted me, finally, to actually search images of the worms themselves, on which I found that the tubifex worm was exactly identical to Parker’s toilet worm, and the Ascarid was not in any way, and seeing the images of the Ascarid actually brought me back to the lab component of a zoology course, where we got our hands dirty with various members of the many-branched tree of life, and this worm was one of them, and I remember it so clearly, because my professor had said that when we cut into it, it would pop, as it exerted a strong outward pressure to match the pressure imposed on it when inside of the host’s body; and it did pop. So, like the pressure inside of an Ascarid when cut open by the sharp steel blade of an exactoknife in the hands of a curious young biologist, upon hearing that at the end of our worm story, none of us were bloated with worms, none of us needed to go to the hospital, and none of us needed to wash our fruits in Japan; we were relieved.
In the aftermath of this I thought about two things, which were 1. That my intestinal pain that fateful night may have been entirely fear or anxiety induced, which is interesting to see the effect that your mind can have on the body, as if my fear of having something in me making me feel bad itself actually made me feel bad, a self-fulfilling prophacy (although thankfully I can’t self-fulfill worms into my body), and 2. That we were lucky enough to not have been parasitized, but now had some small idea of what it actually would be like, which is horrible, and yet for many people around the world it really is a reality; it is happening to them right now, many of them children, and the psychological trauma of knowing that you are actively being parasitized aside, there are also obviously significant negative physiological effects. We were lucky enough not to have been infected, and I felt that this would be a good time to pay our luck forward, and give thanks, and help someone else to feel the relief that I felt when finding out that I was worm free. I made a small donation to Parasites Without Borders, although I really wanted to donate to the Schistomiasis Control Initiative, because they are directly supplying infected people with medicine. The Parasites Without Borders seems to be more focused on education. If you find yourself in a generous mood, and did want to donate anything as well, someone out in the world, many someones, do really have these worms, and would appreciate it. If you are just curious about parasites (hey, some people are) both websites have some good information regarding them. Be warned of course, there are graphic and potentially disturbing images (on the PWB site), especially if this would be your first introduction to Leishmaniasis.
We can finish with some photos I took of skies and sunsets.
Some Photography
Sky On FireBetween The RocksDouble Layer (Triple Layer?)Guiding Lines
There was also a very interesting building, the big street butthole, that became somewhat of a subject for me. (It was a decorative and magnificent exhaust port for a street running under the channel.)
And I had fun shooting buildings in general.
(Not A Building)Okinawa Has Great Mexican FoodA Church With A Water Collection Tank (Many Homes Had One)首里城 – Shurijyo – A Famous Castle In Naha Naha From ShurijyoIn The Strangely RocksThe Lion KingA Colony Of CycadsIn The Groves (The Mangroves)乳首島 – Nipple Island (What I Told My Students It Was Called) (Not Sure If Good Joke To Make In Class) (Looks Like Nipple)
This title was inspired by one of my student’s responses on a worksheet I gave them. It’s the end of the year and we’re doing About Me Bingo. The students had to fill out some things about themselves, the basics you know, favorite color, artist, food you like. One of the questions was, “What’s your special secret?” This got some good answers, and I enjoyed reading all of the students special secrets, like “I have an older sister,” and “I don’t like English,” but the one that really tickled me was, “I’m happy.”
And these days, I am happy! The Happy Light is here, the White Knights have made their charge, and the Cruel Mistress is vanquished. Today it was a bright and sunny day. My friends and I were sweating in the sun as we played soccer. The first trees are starting to bloom, the plum trees, and I am blooming with them. They resemble sakura but they bloom earlier. Last year I actually did mistake them for sakura, not knowing any better. As the days grow longer, so my mood is uplifted. It’s amazing how much of a difference a little bit of light can have on your disposition. We are not so different from the plum trees.
There’s a lot going on in my mind these days, and a lot of it is scattered, and is not so much good story material – but I think that enough time has passed and I owe you guys something. Every day that passes I feel a stronger urge to write, and I think that at this point there’s no better way than to just start and see what happens.
I’ll try to tell you some interesting things..
One thing that has been a fixation of mine for some time now is fasting. Like a fly buzzing around my head, it has floated around in my thoughts, always popping up during those periods of time where I’m free to think about whatever I’d like to think about, and my mind is wandering. In the beginning I wasn’t thinking about fasting. I was just doing it. I had gotten a little chubby, had a nice chub-chuberoo going on, and I had pretty much gotten sick of looking at it and talking about how I should do something about it, and so I did. Losing chub is not complicated – I started burning more calories and eating less. This was around November I believe, and I’m sure I also ate less because of the effect that winter has on me. I went from eating a hearty amount of food, as I acquired a habit of eating larger portions as I went through a muscle-building period, because I wanted to look like Captain America, to eating probably half of that, and spending a good deal of time hungry. And after awhile, I noticed that I had started to feel sharper, mentally and physically. I hadn’t given that much more thought beyond, “Hey this is interesting!” until one day, when I was at Shoyo, and I ordered the bento lunch. I used to eat the bento lunch every day at Shoyo. I would give the office 400円 in the morning, and at around 10:30-11am, I would find a big, beautiful bento sitting on my desk. (The hungrier you are, the more beautiful it is. In actuality the palette is a rather lackluster spread of grey-brown-white, not the most visually appealing thing to eat). I stopped eating the bento, partially because it was pretty lackluster, and partially because I was trying to cut down on food. But one day, I came in and had forgotten to bring anything for lunch. I knew I would need to eat something, and so I ordered the bento, and when it came, I did what I always did, like what everyone does, and I ate the whole bento. And why that was significant was because after I ate that I went from having a mind like a razor sharp katana to a should-have-been-thrown-away-three-months-ago disposable razor. I was a souped-up sports car who had just driven over a spike strip. Basically, my mental acuity, along with my productivity, was completely obliterated. And I thought, holy crap, what is actually happening? I used to eat that bento every day! I wondered if I had always felt that way after eating the bento, or if it was just because of the sharp contrast between my two states, going from fasted to stuffed, and it left a lasting impression on me. That was really the moment when I realized that there was something to this.
So, that was my anecdotal evidence. After that, what kept rolling around in my brain was a single sentence, coming from Obama’s “Dreams Of My Father.” After moving to New York, to study at Columbia University, he briefly mentions some of the habits he had adopted during that time. One of those habits was fasting on Sunday. There was no explanation as to why, and that kept coming back to me. Obama’s a smart guy – why’d he do it? That stuck in my brain, and so after this had simmered in my mind long enough, I took a dive and did some research. What I found was pretty interesting.
When I first had that epiphany, the bento-inspired one, I had done a bit of research, but very surface level. I got as far as the words “intermittent fasting” and popular fasts. I got a list of the reputed or empirically supported benefits, I thought, seems good, I’ll keep eating less, and so I did, and that was the extent of it. I knew that it was good, but I didn’t know why. Apparently that wasn’t enough, because fasting continued to stay on my mind, and so last weekend I sat down and I took a deeper dig. Quickly, I found my way to a TedX talk that I believe is about eight years old, by a researcher for the National Institute of Health in the US, named Mark Mattson. This fifteen minute talk was totally fascinating to me. People knew that eating less was good for them as far back as 3800 BC, based on an Ancient Egyptian quote, “Humans live on one-quarter what they eat, and on the other three-quarters lives their doctor.” But what people couldn’t do back then, that they can do now, is understand the biomechanics of why. I won’t say much here – I think it’s worth it to watch the talk – but I’ll say a bit. People have known for some time that restricting calorie intake results in greater longevity. Mark Mattson became interested in fasting, because his primary area of research is age-related neurological diseases, like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, and was looking to fasting as a way to help treat or prevent such diseases. What he found was why fasting does have a significant positive effect on the body and brain. To my understanding, this is why. Your body stores glycogen in the liver, and uses this as a primary energy source. It takes about twelve hours for your body to exhaust this glycogen store; less if you perform rigorous exercise. People who are relatively sedentary and eat three meals a day almost never exhaust this glycogen store. When you do, your body needs a new source of energy, and it turns to ketosis. Maybe you’ve heard of that before, that might be what the keto diet is all about, I haven’t done any research on that. Ketosis is a process where your body turns fat into ketones, and it turns out that ketones are really good for your brain. Ketones are used to produce what are called neurotrophic factors, which are, to my understanding, proteins that stimulate mitochondrial activity in the neurons in the brain. They also stimulate neuron growth, and do good things for your synapses and dendrites (increase the number of connections or increase connection speeds perhaps, I’m not sure exactly). Basically – you get smarter. This is not the only benefit of fasting – another benefit is that it encourages apoptosis, which is programmed cell death, which is where your body kills off and clears out old cells, making room for new ones. Mark Twain wrote, “A little starvation can really do more for the average sick man than can the best medicines and the best doctors.” That may be why! There are other measurable benefits as well, reducing inflammation in the body is another I can think of. Inflammation is a primary cause of cardiovascular disease. Who doesn’t want to reduce a little inflammation in the body?
When I learn about things like this, it just makes me realize that I still have yet so much to learn, that we have so much yet to learn. I just wonder, how much is out there that if I knew about it, it would change the way that I live, now, today? I think about all of the things that are already known, that are already discovered, but are yet undiscovered to me, things that I’d love to know, and have yet to find out.
I have now adopted an intermittent fasting strategy that seemed appealing to me – I’m eating from eleven in the morning to seven at night. I was already not eating breakfast, so this has been easy to do, I just delayed when I started eating by a bit. What’s really interesting is how at first I would find myself so hungry in the mornings, and now, while I do still find myself hungry in the morning, it passes quite quickly, and I can go on without a problem. It seems that our bodies tell us we’re hungry more out of habit than out of true need to eat.
The other things I’ve been thinking about.. I’ve been dabbling in public transportation and I hadn’t shampooed for twelve days, until today, as I got a haircut. I thought about telling Funai san, “Leave off the shampoo,” but in the end I let him suds me up. That’s another thing – the shampoo. Apparently there has been a “no-poo” movement around for a few years. I guess I’m doing that too.
I could keep writing… it’s been an eventful time. I can tell you a little story – there has been a little bit of drama in the prefecture in the past week. On Friday morning, I was at my desk at Shoyo, and I was greeted by a genki older teacher, in his usual genki fashion, saying “O-hayo!” He is the only teacher who greets me with an Ohayo only, as it’s more casual, and the way I understand it is he’s older and he’s earned the right to say Ohayo to whoever he pleases. And this reminds me of a joke that I also learned recently, from Sakamoto sensei, who is also a sensei of great interest. Sakamoto sensei is a kind and caring teacher, but he has that special talent that might be bestowed upon all kind old teachers, where he can put a third of the class to sleep within the first three minutes of class (these are the students who have decided from the beginning that it was nap time) and the next third to sleep by the end (the students who tried valiantly to stick it out, but succumbed along the way). I think only the final third survives with my help, or by having a true love of learning and/or the English language. Sakamoto sensei has a peculiar trait where he will start the class with a greeting that is totally unpredictable in its cadence, intonation, and volume. I have thought long and hard about why this happens and I don’t have an answer. It may just be an uncontrollable outburst of the raw joy he feels at being able to start another English Conversation class. When I first had class with him, this initial proclamation would burst out in such an unexpected and irregular way, but with such enthusiasm, that it was nearly impossible for me not to laugh, and many of the students would. It’s generally a variation of a phrase like, “Good morning everyone, how are you today?” And it would come out in a way such as, “Good morning everyone, how ARE you today?” with the ARE being the climax of a curve of increasing enthusiasm, or the crest of a wave of vocal energy within the sentence. Or perhaps, a “Good morning everyone, how are yoU TODAY?” Starting off seemingly normal, but ending with an explosive finish. What is even harder to catch in writing is the way he will stagger the phrase, on top of the already random surge of energy within the sentence. Comedy is funny because it’s unexpected – Sakamoto’s class greeting is comedy for this reason, coupled with the fact that he is so completely unselfconscious. To all appearances, he does not recognize that he is doing a humorous thing, and the fact that he struggles to read his crowd may be a big part of why so many students fall asleep in his class. But he does mean well, and his heart is certainly in the educating of his students, and he frequently will bring props into class (recently he brought in his new shoes, they were about six different shades of brown, he scored them for about $20) as topics of conversation, or focus on local or global news. Anyways, as we were walking to class, I told Sakamoto sensei a joke I had learned recently, and he chuckled. Then he surprised me by responding with a joke of his own, and here it is: A man says, “Minnasan, Illinois gozaimasu!” He meant to say, “Ohio gozaimasu.” Get it? Let me break it down. Ohio is one of the only states that most Japanese people know, along with New York, California, Texas, and Los Angeles (one of the most given responses when I ask a class to name US states), because ohayo gozaimasu is “good morning” in Japanese, and it sounds like Ohio, so it’s like there’s a state named “Morning.” Minnasan means “everyone”. Minnasan, ohayo gozaimasu is a common way to start a morning class or meeting. Illinois gozaimasu is what you say when you get the state mixed up. You can insert any state, Illinois, Kentucky, Florida – but you’ll have more success if it’s a state the Japanese person you’re telling the joke to knows; otherwise there will only be confusion.
Alright, that was a tangent. Where were we..
I’m at my desk, teacher comes up, says his “Illinois!” Shoot, I mean Ohio. (funny?) He says, “Ohayo!” And I reply with the usual diligent, “Ohayo gozaimasu!” And as that’s usually the end of it, I turn back to my desk – but then I notice, he’s hovering. This is a very rare occurrence. Perhaps only once before he’s stopped to talk to me after the ohayo, after many an ohayo. I turn to him, seeing that he wants to talk. He’s looking down, and I give him a “Genki desuka?” (how are you) and he quickly responds, “Genki.” And I can now see clearly that there is something on his mind. He looks up at me, with a somewhat somber face, and says, “Ima, toraburu.” (Now, there’s trouble.) And of course, whenever someone comes to me talking about trouble, they’re talking about America, and so I immediately reply, “America?” And I’m already steeling myself to have a conversation about the latest American atrocity. He says, “Yes. ALT.” And now I’m really on alert. So there’s been trouble with an American ALT. I’m already thinking of what and who it could be. My mind conjures up a list of names. As far as American ALTs in Kumamoto, I know most of them. I’m thinking, oh boy, do I know them, are they a JET, and what did they do. He tells me it’s big news, on the front page of the Kumamoto newspaper, and he’s got my full interest, and I tell him I don’t know about it. He looks around and asks if anyone has a newspaper, and then tells me he’ll bring me a copy of his, and then leaves me momentarily to my imagination. I realize that I could probably find this online, and so I turn to the computer and search up the Kumamoto newspaper, which I had never thought to look up online before, but will now be checking it frequently, and I found the article, #1 on the ranking of popular articles. I scan the headline, but the kanji are difficult, and I can’t read them. I give the article a click, read it through, and come up with this: he was a guy, he was working at Luther High School (a private Christian school in Kumamoto City), he hadn’t been in Kumamoto for long, and he wasn’t a full time teacher, so he wasn’t a JET, and he had imported 3 grams of something. What that something was, it was now time to find out. I copy and paste the first four kanji of the headline into my dictionary, and I come up with two words: liquid, and marijuana. Yikes.
Right after that, Ohayo/Ohio sensei returns, and shows me the newspaper, and sees that I’ve just looked it up. And then, I didn’t really know what to say. I said, thanks for telling me, I didn’t know him, and it’s a good thing it wasn’t me right! I thought that would get a laugh, because I think it there would be few things I could do that would blow the mind of my coworkers more than be arrested for importing liquid marijuana; but he was taking this all somewhat seriously. Marijuana in Japan is totally a no-go, so this guy really messed up. He will probably go to prison. The only thing I know about Japanese prison is from a conversation between the friend of the dad of the 6-year-old main character in the manga I’m now reading and the main character, when she told him that her dad had banned her from riding her bike because she rode without a license. He said, “It’s good that you didn’t get caught riding without a license, the police would arrest you. Do you know about prison?” and she says, “The place where you eat cold rice every day..” and he says, “Oh, you know about it!”
So that was my drama for the week! I wanted to write a bit about kanji, but I think this is where I’ll wrap it up this time around. We can save that for next time. We have all the time in the world to talk about kanji! Here is the link to Mark Mattson’s TEDx talk. If you’re interested in what I was saying about fasting, you should check this out. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4UkZAwKoCP8&ab_channel=TEDxTalks
And that’s it! I hope you’re surviving winter and if you haven’t seen the White Knights yet they’ll be there soon! I’ve just finished reading Thoreau’s Walden and.. man. Some books just find you at the right place, at the right time, and this was one. I could write a whole post, a whole series of posts on my takeaways from it. It seems like I found myself quoting almost every page. I can’t give you all of them, but I can give you one.
“Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth. I sat at a table where were rich food and wine in abundance, and obsequious attendance, but sincerity and truth were not; and I went away hungry from the inhospitable board.”
I was asked how long a fast can be before it’s detrimental to your health, and so I looked that up, mainly out of curiosity (I’m not trying to test that out; 18 hour fasts are long enough) I’m not sure what the exact answer is as far as when fasting is doing more harm than good – it must depend on the person, and when your body starts to break down muscle; but it struck me that in the opening lines of the article, the author is, just like I was, referencing Obama. He brought the big BO in for another reason; he was touching on the power of the fast as a way to reduce decision fatigue; yet another reason to give the fast-life a try! But I wanted to add a little disclaimer: I spoke with my friend Madeleine about intermittent fasting and she brought up a good point that the author also briefly touched on, that women, and specifically menstruating women, may have a different experience when fasting, and possibly not a good one, as it can affect their hormone levels. She mentioned to me that most of the studies that have been done on fasting have not focused on women, and so that would be worth looking into.
Another update: There is one more thing I want to say about Sakamoto sensei. Along with his glorious class greetings, he has another particular habit that’s interested me. Whenever he’s done working for day, before leaving the teachers’ office (the teachers work in a shared, open space) he makes a point of coming over to my desk and saying to me, “Goodbye Steven sensei, I’m leaving for the day!” Of course, the other teachers say goodbye to me, and I say goodbye to them, but unless I catch them on the way out, or in the hall, it’s not a personal goodbye, but rather a communal goodbye, an announcement to the entire office. Sakamoto sensei goes out of his way to give me a personal goodbye, at the end of each day. And I quite like that. Only Sakamoto sensei does this, and I think this act is a Sakamoto specialty.. but now that I think about, it could also be because literally no one else leaves earlier than I do. This is something I often feel very guilty about, my early leaving time. It’s hard not to feel guilty as I look out across the sea of hardworking teachers and give my “otsukaresamadesu!” (this is often translated to ‘thank you for your hard work’, and that’s more or less accurate enough) and they respond in kind, and I know that they will all be there for possibly several more hours, grading their papers, holding their meetings, while I am a free man, walking my five minute walk home, making myself a hot bowl of delicious soba, putting my feet up, going for a leisurely run, cracking into a good book. If any of them then, at that moment, think to themselves, as they give their otsukaresamadesu in reply, “Oh Steven sensei, leaving so soon! You must be tired after your long day of bingo and preventing students from getting any work done during cleaning time!” I have no defense. The life of the ALT is a blessed one indeed. My close friend Matsunaga sensei assures me that no one despises me for it – I hope that’s true. It’s probably true. Whether they do despise me or not, Sakamoto sensei certainly doesn’t.
One day, on a day where I left not soon after him, I thought, “I don’t do this for anybody. It makes me happy. It will probably make other senseis happy. I should give it a try.” And I hesitated for a moment, as I was struck with a counter-thought, “Ah, it’s not worth bothering anyone over. You’ve said your otsukaresamadesu; you’re a free man.” But after I had taken a few steps past that sliding office door, I wavered again, and Sakamoto sensei’s influence won out. Someone was getting a goodbye. I walked into the adjoining office, up to Matsuzaki sensei’s office, like I have many times before, to ask about a lesson plan, or to tell her thank you for a dekopon (delicious sour orange), or try out a new joke, or ask a Japanese question – but this time, I just said, “Hey. I’m going home! Have a nice night!” And she was happy!