This was a blog post that I wrote for Denverpost.com in 2005, when I managed that Web site (I now live and work in Jersey City, NJ). I traveled there with my mom for only the third time since my family moved from Japan when I was a child, back in 1966. I now host the DenverPost.com posts on my own Nikkeiview Blog, and thought you all mioght enjoy this one for Japanophiles. I write quite a bit on my own blog and Nikkeiview Web site about being born in Japan but raised in the U.S. I've started a gather.com group on this topic, Asian America.
You might also enjoy this long article (originally a series of online columns) about my 1994 trip to Japan, when I went searching for my family roots. - Gil Asakawa
I'm in the middle of a two-week trip to Japan, and it's been a fascinating visit.
I was born here in Tokyo (an Army brat — my dad, a Nisei from Hawaii, was stationed here and met my mom during the Korean war) and moved to the states when I was 8. But as an adult, I've only been in Japan twice — in 1994 and 1995. This time it's for a family trip, and I'm traveling with my mom.
Here are some observations:
It's been a pain in the butt to find Internet access. In Sapporo, a big city, the hotel staff looked at me like I had five heads when I asked if there was Internet access in the room. One man finally said there's dialup. I rolled my eyes. I asked if they knew of any Internet cafes nearby, and I got the ol' five heads look again.
Amazingly, a few days later in the tiny fishing town of Nemuro (my mom's hometown), the East Harbor Hotel near the train station not only offers Internet access, it's broadband cable access, and for a mere 200 yen a day — that's less than $2 per day, cheaper than that company that offers WiFi at Starbucks for $10 a day or whatever the price is. By the way, I asked at a Starbucks in Sapporo if they had Internet access and the girl at the counter gave that look again.
Technology is a funny thing in Japan — they're ahead of the U.S. in some ways, like cell phones. But not with Internet.
However, they're way ahead on bathroom tech: I've had the pleasure of having a heated toilet seat in my tiny hotel room's tiny bathroom, and I'm not sure I'll be able to come home to that cold seat in Colorado anymore. Not only is it heated, it cleans you — back and front (if you're a woman). I tried the "back cleaning" and found it, well… weird. But maybe I can get used to it. I certainly like the heated seat. Many state-of-the-art Japanese homes are equipped with these fancy toilet seats.
The women here don't have black hair anymore. I think 90 percent or more now dye their hair a reddish brown. Some of the men (young men, anyway) bleach their hair and some dye their hair brown. But almost all the women seem to prefer the reddish brown, and it's not just girls but older women too.
The food is to die for — especially if you love seafood. In fact, I've had so much fish and other stuff from the ocean in the past week that my skin's starting to smell fishy. But the food's been undeniably amazing.
The highlight so far has been a special catered meal at a ryokan, or inn, after the memorial service for the one-year-anniversary of my grandmother's death. It had small servings of over a dozen delicacies, many of which not even my mother — who grew up with this stuff — could identify. I didn't ask after a while, I just ate everything put in front of me, even if some of it had some squishy, yucky textures.
There are some remarkably tiny cars here. Many of the brands are familiar: Honda, Nissan, Toyota, Mitsubishi, Mazda. But the models vary wildly from their American brethren. Many are small to the point that they look like toys. But in a country where space is at a premium and parking spots are especially tight, these small, sub-subcompacts seem right. I love what I've come to call the mini-minivans. They're just so cute!
The Japanese obsession with hygiene sends decidedly mixed messages. They hand out packs of facial tissue on the sidewalk to passersby, and people with colds are polite en0ugh to wear face masks so others won't get sick. But most public bathrooms don't have paper towels or any way to dry your hands (some now have blow driers, which is an improvement), and some public bathrooms don't have doors, so you can walk by and see the men lined up at urinals doing their thing.
There are signs for picking up dog poop that don't order people to do it, they suggest politely that it might be nice if they do it, and mention that if they don't pick up their dog's poop, others will be watching and know. Shame is still a strong motivator in Japan.
I found musical kindred spirits in unexpected places in Nemuro, the easternmost town in Hokkaido, the northernmost state of Japan.
My cousin, Masahito Mori, introduced me to his childhood friend, Shohei Kotaki, a rabid Beatles fan in his late 30s, in Dorian, the cool little coffee shop that Kotaki owns. He brought out a custom-built replica he had made, of the Rickenbacker electric guitar that John Lennon played in the early days of the Beatles. He also proudly displayed a cover of Lennon's "Imagine" album that he had Yoko Ono autograph for him. In the window of the empty shop next door, he placed a replica of a Ludwig drum set with the Beatles logo on the bass drum, and the cover of the Beatles' 1964 "Something New" album.
His coffee shop played good music, too. I recognized the sound and asked him if it was Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions, a soul group from the '60s, and he seemed delighted that I knew the music.
Across town near our hotel, I was taken one night after dinner with my uncle Kazuya and aunt Eiko to the Satin Doll, a "jazz and coffee" bar owned by Kazuya Yachida. One wall of his tiny establishment was lined with shelves jammed with jazz albums organized by categories such as "vocals," "saxophone" and "guitar." The music played on his sound system, though, he pointed out, was from a CD. A cool regular customer sat at the bar, reading a magazine and chiming in when I asked questions about the local jazz scene. I guess Nemuro is known as a hotbed of Japanese jazz. Who'd a thunk it? Maybe it's because hot jazz is perfect for such a cold place.
Speaking of cold, Nemuro is one of the last places in Japan every year where the cherry blossoms bloom. This year, they seem to be blooming especially late, since it's the end of May and the trees are just now blushing.
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by
gil asakawa
Member since:
August 28, 2006 Notes from Japan
September 10, 2006 09:56 AM EDT
(Updated: October 20, 2006 01:37 AM EDT)
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Comments: 4
One of the most difficult things about Japanese is learning Kanji faster than forgetting Kanji. I can learn 8 a day but I forget 7.
http://nikkeiview.com/nv/archives01/030401.htm