These stories come mostly from my early days in Japan working as an English conversation teacher out in Tottori Prefecture (2003~2006).
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New Year's was great. I got 10 days off, so my mom, dad, and sister came out to visit. We toured Tokyo, Kyoto, then ended up in Tottori. Sarah and I went a New Year's party at our hotel in Kyoto. It was fun despite the fact we were by far the youngest people at the party. I even got the hammer to smash open the New Year's sake barrel.
Nabe Party
I recently went to a "nabe party" hosted by a friend. 4 people including me gathered around a small table with a large hot pot of nabe (a dish made by steaming veggies and other goodies in a mixture of soy sauce, sake, and water). It was a great challenge for me cuz none of
Read more: January 2004 - My First Flu and Subsequent Trip to the Hospital / Meet the NHK Guy
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* I went to a Japanese movie theater for the first time. I saw "Matrix Revolutions." I was the only one in the theater that didn't have to read the subtitles. Whoooo! Decent flick, but I kept
Read more: December 2003 - My First Haircut, Movie, and Live House
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* I went to Tokyo a few weeks ago and had a total blast. I went clubbing in Roppongi till 5:30 am, had a great dinner in Shinjuku, and did a little shopping in Ginza. It was really cool being in that town on vacation for once. I had previously always
Read more: November 2003 - My Name is Debu
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I dig this town. Way different from LA. People are really nice, but they still stare at me (I guess I kinda stand out). I stare at other foreigners too thinkin', "What the hell are YOU doing here?! This is MY town!" The bar scene is kinda funny cuz everyone just kinda clears out around midnight. You gotta rush over there by around 9 or else you're gonna miss everything. I see people trashed outta their minds stumbling back home around 10:30 or so. The scary part is that the foreigners in Tottori are high-profile, so everyone seems to know what I did over the weekend. This town is small, so everyone seems to know someone that I know. For example, the bartender at a bar I frequent told me that his mother-in-law is a student at my school. 150,000 people in the town and 300 or so go to my school. I guess I'd better behave myself, eh?
THE JOB -- AEON
I also dig this English teachin' gig. My coworkers and I
Read more: October 2003 - First Impressions of Tottori
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Read more: September 2003 - I've Arrived in Tottori, Japan
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Before moving to Tokyo, I taught English in a countryside prefecture known as Tottori. I loved it there. My only complaint was my noisy neighbor that liked to play taiko drums early in the morning (usually between 5:30am – 6:00am). He would open all the doors and windows so that it could be heard by all. He would play to no discernible rhythm and consistently modulate the tempo making it all the more irritating.
Unfortunately, the place where all the noise was coming from was a Shinto shrine.
But why should places of worship and the fallible men and women that run them be exempt from criticism? If church and state are indeed separate in this day and age, then I should be able to proceed as if I were complaining about noise from a dance club or pachinko parlor. I had always been told that Japanese almost never complain directly. For example, a noisy neighbor would hear any complaints via the apartment building landlord.
But what about a foreigner? Could a foreigner even complain in Japan—let alone about noise coming from a shrine? This was going to be an interesting social experiment.