Recently in Japan Category

It's been quiet here in Road Wisdom land, but it's the silence of distant places rather than the silence of inactivity that has fallen over my blog...


I've been on the road these past couple months. Exploring the rugged interior of New Caledonia in the South Pacific. Navigating the hectic city streets of Tokyo, and the quieter corners of northern Honshu. And more recently in the US -- the farthest steamy south at Key West, and then across the continent to Seattle to see The Church and hang with Steve Kilbey.


I've got a lot of new material for you: new adventures, new book reviews, new music, and new deep philosophical thoughts. And we'll get to it all in good time. But we've gotta start somewhere. Why don't we go for a walk to set the mood?


Let's begin with Tokyo...


How'd you like to join me for the day? We'll check out a couple places I've never been before. We'll stroll through history in the centre of the city at Hama-rikyu gardens -- the Edo period Shogun Ienobu's private retreat. We'll window shop the glittering streets of Ginza, Tokyo's 5th Avenue. And we'll wind it all up in the pulsing neon 22nd Century Shibuya night.


I just picked up a new camera in Narita. The weather's rather warm for December. Grab a light jacket and let's go. It should be a fun time...



Ahh, Tokyo. It's one of my favourite world cities. There's always something new to discover, and a new adventure around every corner...




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Happy Gnu Year!


It's been several weeks since I've had a chance to write. I've been offline in the South Pacific, and now in northern Japan celebrating the New Year Japanese-style. It's the big  family holiday here (rather than Christmas), with lots of amazing food and far too much to drink.


I'll write more about the foods and sites of Japan in the coming weeks, as well as the South Pacific territory of New Caledonia. I filmed a few videos for you too.


In the meantime, I want to share a short video I made for our fitness site about hangover remedies. I figured that, if you're anything like me, you might need such knowledge as the holidays draw to a close...




I hope you find it helpful. And remember, if you can't find fermented mare's milk, there's always ramen...


I wish you all the best in 2011. I hope you find happiness, prosperity, and maybe even a few adventures.


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Tokyo Pose

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A few more notes from my recent trip to Japan (and then we'll get back to North Korea)...

Today I'd like to talk about one of the coolest cities in the world, a place where I lived from 2000 to 2002.

Tokyo is a vast urban sprawl that spreads to engulf neighbouring cities and towns faster every year. The current population of the metro area is approximately 28 million. It bears mentioning that the population of Canada, an enormous country 26 times the size of Japan, is 31 million.

Imagine all the people of my vast nation crammed into one sprawling city, jammed together and stacked like cordwood. Then insert strange smells, unintelligible flashing neon signs, and a cacophony of screeching trains, shouting voices, and raucous pachinko parlours.

Tokyo is far too vast to present one unified face. It's a kaleidoscope that shifts and changes depending on where you focus your gaze. The original city was established as Edo in 1600. Over the centuries it grew and oozed amoeba-like across the Kanto Plain, swallowing up smaller towns. The intricate networks of trains and subways are the capillaries that connect these disparate masks; two train stops can totally alter your surroundings.

Plunge with me into the circulatory system of this great pulsing beast, as we take a look at a few of the places I wandered last week...

 

tokyotrain.jpg

Every day 2 million people pass through the gates of Shinjuku station, the busiest commuter station in the world. Shinjuku is probably the focal point of the city, though it isn't its geographical centre. Its station represents a physical veil between Japan's publicly agreed illusion and its darker national psyche. On the West side the skyscraper district pierces the grey sky with businesslike vigour. It's all very staid and matrimonial. But on the East side lurks Kabuki-cho, the red light entertainment district, where ties are loosened, words are slurred, and a thin line of spittle escapes the corner of a mouth. Neon signs proclaim illicit pleasures behind doors that in other neighbourhoods might be discrete... 

 

shinjuku1.jpgHarajuku is a claustrophobic alleyway strip of cheap clothing shops and jewellery stalls where trend-obsessed youth come to see and be seen--mostly to be seen. Fashion pioneers and design gurus flock to their inventiveness in the hopes of stealing it to conceal their own creative bankruptcy. But they can never steal the essence.

 

tokyo4.jpg

Akihabara is the electronics district. Its streets are lined with discount shops displaying futuristic gadgets magically snatched back to our present. Neon strobes flash the world in pale disconnected sci-fi fragments. Software sings and hardware hears. Geeks and nerds prowl the streets in packs like wolves. They are the bullies here. Rather than physically beat you to a pulp they sneer through flashing spectacles and talk down at you in scathing Help Desk fashion.

 

akihabara1.jpgTokyo is utterly unique. It's not Japan, any more than New York City is America. It's fast-paced, ultra-modern, overcrowded, and incredibly expensive. With so many aspects to its character, so many niches, exploring it would take decades.

 

shibuya2.jpgThrough it all, the dizzying pace of construction ensures constant change. It doesn't exactly invalidate your impressions, for they were subjectively true in another time. Rather, it solidifies them. The city, like life and the senses, is a constant flux, and you the archaeologist are simply responding to subtle cues buried in deep strata of time.

 

shibuya1.jpg

 

 

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Sumo Size Me

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My apologies for the long delay since my last update. I've been in Japan for the past couple weeks and just returned home.

We'll get back to North Korea very soon. But first I'd like to share with you a few images from this last trip...

Let's begin with sumo.

I got hooked on sumo while living in Tokyo between 2000 and 2002. As a martial artist the technical aspects of course impress me--the throws, the strategies, the sudden reversals. But it's even more interesting when you get to know the history of each wrestler and the particulars of their style. Who does well against who, who can be counted on to upset the balance by beating the big yokozuna, all of these elements factor in to the grand tournaments held every other month.

I had the opportunity to watch morning practice at a sumo beya when I lived in Tokyo, but I never had a chance to attend an actual tournament.

Last week I was fortunate enough to get tickets to the Aki Basho (Fall Tournament), which is held in the historic Ryogoku district of Tokyo. Here are a few images of Day 8...


Colourful nobori line the entryway to the Ryogoku Kokugikan

sumo1.jpgThe fighters perform the dohyo-iri ('ring entering ceremony')

sumo2.jpgYokozuna ('Grand Champion') Asashoryu performs the ring entering ceremony...

sumo3.jpgMy view from here...

sumo4.jpgYamamotoyama in action...

sumo5.jpgPreparing to fight...

sumo6.jpgToday's scoreboard...

sumo7.jpg

 

 

 

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About this Archive

This page is a archive of recent entries in the Japan category.

Imaginary Places is the previous category.

Middle East is the next category.

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