Feeling at home in Japan

I was last in Japan a couple of months ago, and I visited my old home of Kawamoto, in the remote mountains a couple hours away from Hiroshima.

The first time I ever experienced "returning home" was when I visited home after 6 weeks of college. My mind was blown. I very nearly forgot how to actively navigate my own home town, and I just let my hands do the steering automatically until I got to where I was going. I was like a Roomba: soon as I hit a dead end of something I knew was the wrong way, I picked a direction and turned, and repeated this process again.

That sensation dulled itself during my college career as I got used to being away from places for a long time. In Kawamoto's case, however, everything had just gone so unchanged that it was all still familiar.

There was a lot that had at least an air of newness to it, but that was from bringing my very good friend and old college roommate along for the ride. All the newness was going in his direction - I merely caught a whiff of it as I was left to knowingly smile at the discovery of the incredibly clean air, or the beauty of the natural scenery, or to laugh along with a sake-induced drunkenness.

The real shocker of the familiarity was returning to the school where I taught. Everything was working as normal, but I was removed from this process that used to involve me day in and day out. So removed, in fact, that I was welcomed with the same procedure used for guests ranging from random parents to local politicians.

It would prove impossible to do what I wanted to do: walk into the teachers' room, make rounds, offer American candy to everyone, chat it up with my old team-teacher and my replacement Jeff (who, on an aside, is a pretty cool guy).

What I got instead was a guided tour from a surprisingly hasty vice-principal, who managed my tour around the school with the same looking-over-my-shoulder closeness that visitors to North Korea get from their tour guides. From the door, we went straight past the teachers' room, into the principal's office. The principal, who once made it a point to stop by my desk and chat in an incomprehensible mix of rural Japanese and elementary Korean, spent no more than 60 seconds out of his own desk to quickly down some tea at a table across from me.

Mind you, this is a school so laid-back that teachers often start classes 5 or 10 minutes late. But now that I was no longer a cog in the works, we would not speak of such informality.

From there it was straight to the classrooms. My oldest class had just graduated, to my chagrin, so I was left with two classes of kids I knew. The younger ones had only been my students for about three months, and they were disastrous. So my visit was short-lived, but long enough to disturb the class with my mere entry. Rather than talk to the kids for a few minutes, I was relegated to the back of the room and asked not to interrupt the ongoing class.

I had completely become an outsider in this process. I was a mere observer, not an old friend who had only been gone for eight months.

My favorite kids, who were the youngest when I first started, were now the oldest. Walking into their class was a completely different story.

They screamed. They barely managed to finish the last few minutes of their class, and the instant they were given the closing bow (yes, Japanese schoolkids bow to begin and end each class) they rushed to the back of the room where Adam and I stood.

It was a short conversation, which eats me up inside. Leaving that school last August was one of the more difficult events I've ever put myself through, and to come back from halfway around the world to talk to them for 5 minutes was far too little time. They likely didn't care that I was moving to California, or that this here was my best friend Adam. There wasn't time to tell the girls whether or not I had a girlfriend, nor did the boys get to learn what the latest and greatest American video game was.

I could have conversed with those adorable little buggers for hours on end.

That's the first story. With this next one, I'll offset my emotional squishiness with some extreme geekiness:

Back in Tokyo, Adam and I were exhausted on a Saturday night and just wanted some neighborhood dinner and a couple quiet drinks. That's the kind of place where I feel most comfortable: a local hole in the wall with some very un-Tokyo quietness combined with some half-Japanese half-Western food and a nice selection of whiskey.

We walked into a place that I had liked the look of the day before, and were greeted by the sounds of Crazy Ken Band.

I know about two people anywhere in the world that appreciate CKB, so let me link you to a YouTube video to give you an idea of the sound. It's a Japanese take on funk music. It's 31 flavors of cheesy, and I love it for that. Song after song idolizes Japan's low-brow: cabarets, the Navy town of Yokosuka, muscle cars and the kind of Americana that produces motorcycles with ape-hanger handlebars and American flags. Long story short: the odds that a random 24-year-old American would walk into the bar, recognize the music, and like it are kinda slim. (Personally, I have an old Japanese TA to thank for this completely worthless knowledge.)

As Adam and I were doing the post-game report on the previous evening's festivities, I stopped him mid-sentence. The music had just changed over, and it was the third or fourth CKB song in a row. By the fifth song, it was obvious that this place was all CKB, all the time. I had to know: was this a CKB theme bar? There was a poster of the band on the wall, after all. I asked the waiter, who consulted with the bartender.

"Just for tonight," was the answer.

Huh? (In Japanese: "Ehhhhhhhhhhhh?" in a rising tone of confusion.)

"We pick a band every night and play just their stuff."

The bartender and the waiter were people I don't know and may never see again. But between the lovably cheesy soundtrack, the Japanese comfort food, the delicious whiskey and the pleasure of sharing it with one of my best amigos, I felt more at home there than at my old stomping grounds of Kawamoto Junior High.

A lot of guides introduce Japan as a nation full of such confusions. It's yin and yang at the same time. Nudity is a crime or an expectation, depending on where you are at the moment. Tokyo is the world's loudest, brightest, craziest place and yet you're never more than 40 minutes from the silence of Yoyogi Park, where the trees are thick enough to block out much of the sun.

"Home," in such a land, is a pretty relative thing.

California!

Man, what a bizarre place I'm headed to. I feel strangely like an outsider as I zoom by spots like Pacific Beach, full of surfers and failed auditioners for The Hills.

I was in San Diego this week to find myself an apartment for my upcoming jaunt to grad school. After a stressful full day of bad apartment tours and sketchy property owners, I found myself a Taiwanese lady looking to rent her furnished place in a complex I like right by the UCSD campus. I used my Asian Studies skillz to beat the competition, secure the place, and at $100 under her asking price for each month's rent.

How does one use Asian Studies in finding an apartment? The following two ways:

-Say that I'm staying a long time. OK, on second thought, any landlord would prefer a guy who says he'll stay two years to someone who doesn't know how long they'll stay, but at least I get a few points for connecting that to Confucius in my head, right? I also used my long stay as leverage to get the rent to come down.
-The lease starting date was earlier than I wanted, so I asked for a discount on the first month's rent... by invoking my mother. I don't even know how I did it, and I'm not sure it was grammatical when I asked, but it broke the ice on a negotiation where my then-tentative landlady was starting to hold firm. OK, so in all fairness it wasn't a massive discount and she knew I was agreeing to pay for earlier than I wanted to.

Still, I'm holding to my theory that my extremely skewed and limited knowledge of Chinese philosophy helped me get a place that I actually like.

Don't have pics yet, but it's a small studio with an OK bed, a wee little TV stand, a nice glass dining table, and a fully stocked kitchen (plates, knives, cooking ware, etc.) and even linens. This is nice, because I don't have to dig into my savings to go on a shopping rampage at Ikea or stress out over selling it all in a last-second rush upon my eventual departure from SD.

My time not spent apartment hunting was spent observing California. Here's what I found, which will no doubt contribute to an overwhelming sense of culture shock and possible depression come July or August:

-Yelling hobos
-More sushi places than all other cuisines' restaurants put together
-A linguistic melting pot not unlike Blade Runner. That is, tons of people speaking a huge variety of languages on the street.
-A taco shop [there's also tons of these] decorated entirely with the inspiration of Lucha Libre wrestling
-Nice weather with overcast skies called "shitty weather"
-Car pornography so nasty it's bannable in Germany: Ferrari/Maserati, Lotus, and Bentley dealers all in a 3-block radius, also next to private sellers with more Ferraris, a Ford GT and a Veyron. How you doin', La Jolla.
-San Diego staying classy

For posterity's sake

In the last couple of years, I've grown more accustomed to the idea of selling games back to stores or just renting them through GameFly (like Netflix for games) and never owning them in the first place. Occasionally, though, a game will be such a classic that it has to stay in my possession, and I have no problem shelling out the additional cash to buy a game for keeps.

It's not that I necessarily plan on replaying the game - going back to a game is something I very rarely do - but it's more like I'm keeping it in the family. I still have all my old video game systems, like my NES and Super NES, sitting in a closet, too. In the same way my mom has amassed a library that's too broad for a house full of bookshelves, I'm building a video game library for my family's posterity.

You laugh now, but I'll be the super-cool dad with the super-cool kid who's raised on the original Super Mario Bros. sometime around 2020 or 2025.

In the last year or so I've really only played two games that I intend to make part of the library. But beyond that, there's tons of great games that I hope to play with my eventual family, like pretty much any Mario or Zelda game, Donkey Kong Country, Chrono Trigger (man, what a fantastic game, even today), Mario Kart, Metal Gear Solid, and a whole stack of PC games that won't be playable 10 or 15 years from now.

So, gamers, what's in your library for your kids?

I'm moving to...

San Diego!

I committed to UCSD a couple weeks ago after visiting the campus and finding that it alone, out of my selection of four potential grad schools, had the "laid-back state school" vibe I find so familiar.

Thankfully, in the last two years I came to my senses and decided against law school, and in its stead I'll be getting a Masters in international relations.

Well, technically, International Relations and Pacific Studies. It's a clever mix of MBA-ish business work, working-level economics, high-level language training, and a smattering of other courses like Globalization and policy stuff. All of it's given a strong slant toward Pacific Rim countries, which includes Japan, China, Korea, Southeast Asia and Latin America.

Long story short, it's much more my cup of tea than law school would ever be. My experience in Japan kind of slingshotted me into the gig, and most of the Japan specialists in the program are also ex-JETs like me.

It's two years of coursework with an all-but-required summer internship between the two years. There's also a chance to study abroad, which I don't know if I'll take yet, but if I do it'd be a fantastic chance to spend a semester at the University of Tokyo, which is a school for badasses.

In any case, students pick a regional specialty and a career specialty. I'll certainly be in the Japan region, but for the career stuff I'm still torn, but leaning towards International Economics. It's a pretty popular choice, and I can survive the mathematical work that seems to have plenty of people scared. Maybe I should be scared of everything else, given the lethargic pace at which I read.

Of course, there's the fantasticness of San Diego, which seems to enchant people around me with a mere mention. UCSD does have some fabulous scenery, and the IR buildings actually sit right above the ocean. I've had more people than I can count promise to come visit me. Oddly, when I was there I wasn't blown away by any of the scenery or ocean proximity, but in all fairness I was exhausted from my travel and still getting over the ugly shock of a city that was Los Angeles.

I take off sometime in July. In the meantime I'm doing all the playing and traveling I can, so hopefully I'll be visiting you soon!

Returning to regular blogging service

It's been a while since I properly told some stories about my life, hasn't it? I watched a Korean movie the other night and the main character kept a diary. Exact dates with exact memories were kept, and I felt guilty for not doing much of the same for the last few years. Seems like a lot of my memories from my 20s might just start slipping away, and that's no good. So here's what I've been up to today:

I caught up with a childhood friend.
Eric (and his little brother Jon) lived across the street from me when I was 4 until I was about 13. These guys were my biggest playmates. Everything I ever did outdoors, I did with them. Bicycling, playing in yards, that kind of thing. And because we were neighbors, they were playmate option #1. Almost every day turned into a combination of biking and Super Nintendo gaming.

Once they moved away, we lost touch, but I never forgot them. So it pretty much made my week when Eric found me on Facebook several weeks ago and the catch-up process began. His grandparents, who I also knew very well, are still here in Dallas, so he came down to see them and let me know that he was around.

I just got home from the catch-up dinner and coffee, when I learned all about his own business, his extended family's stuff (a bizarrely high proportion of his family is in international business; I could learn from these guys) and what his immediate family's been up to.

It made me think: my newer friends don't know my family. Are my older friends (like Eric) closer for knowing my family and for me knowing theirs? Even my closest college buds don't know my mom... but then again that's probably my mom's fault given that I know my buds' parents well enough.

I have a sportscar.
I don't say that to brag. I mean that out of all the different kinds of cars out there (sedans, SUVs, roadsters, sportscars, GTs), I picked a sportscar for myself and I'm reaping the consequences of that, for better and for worse.

Today was a perfect example. I had to drive from Austin to Dallas and then around town here with Eric. You get exposed to what you supposedly "sacrifice" for a sportscar very quickly on a long trip: comfort. My car is loud (it runs at over 4,000 RPM when cruising at 80mph) and getting stuck in stop-and-go traffic with a six-speed is just plain aggravating. And the suspension isn't exactly made of pillows, either.

The day before, I had to leave one buddy behind on a dinner trip because the car seats four, not five. And I dread the day I get a flat tire, because I have no spare and my inflating tire repair goo expired in 2007.

I should probably do something about that.

But the annoyances were worth it when I was on my way home after dropping Eric off and I decided to hightail it through town with the sunroof open and the new Prodigy album blaring. It's just a joy to drop a couple gears, hit the gas, and effortlessly throw it through a curve at twice the recommended speed. The five minutes of awesome were totally worth the five hours of monotony, and I'll keep the car for as long as that holds true.