Monday, November 5, 2012

Wild Wildlife

An Hourly Breakdown of the Fauna of Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park:



12:00--6:00 a.m.: Out-of-shape raccoons shimmy down their trees, sniff around for 15 seconds, then shimmy up a neighboring tree.  Each of these climbing excursions sounds like a sheet of cardboard being slowly digested by a pencil sharpener and takes about 15 minutes.

6:00--6:30 a.m.: Turkeys wander through the woods, gobbling in surprise at virtually every stimulus in the forest.  They may be defending their territory or calling to a mate.  Perhaps they're simply shouting "HELLO I AM A TURKEY."  Maybe they're reciting Turkey Shakespeare.  I don't fucking care, really, I just wish they would stop doing it quite so early in the morning.

6:30--10:00 a.m.: Adorable little birds.  Also, less-adorable giant birds (pictured).



10:00 a.m.--1:00 p.m.: Bugs (asst.)

1:00--2:00 p.m.: The Banana Slug Hour.  For-real, live banana slugs, looking for all the world like living boogers, slime their way across the forest like they own the place.  Punks.


2:00--7:00 p.m.: The most pissed-off squirrel I have ever met just fucking yelling.  Did you know squirrels could yell?  Yeah, neither did I.  Well, this squirrel just had some kind of beef with the rest of the forest, because it yelled until the sun went down.


7:00--8:30 p.m.: A skunk!  A skunk circled our campsite, its tail constantly twitching, apparently looking for some food.  This was not a terribly good night, but we got away with only minor bruises to Jenn's arm from my clutching it too enthusiastically (I scare easy, OK?).

8:30--11:59 p.m.: CENTIPEDES OH FUCK NO CENTIPEDES THERE'S CENTIPEDES YOU GUYS AAAAARGH.  I found this part of the expedition to be pretty elevating: my greatest fear (except for a Santorum presidency, maybe) is any animal that ends in -pede.  These guys squashed easily, though.  They were big, and they skittered out from the picnic table where we were set up.  I feel that this was something of a trial, like having to face one's greatest fear in the dark forest (see The Empire Strikes Back), and if nothing else I learned to flip my switch from "flight" to "fight while squealing."  It's a start.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

California 1: It Begins

And now for something completely out of date:

We stepped out on the road brimming with confidence -- well, moistened by it, anyway.  Damp with confidence.  We were also fortified with a parting shot of Limoncello, a boost as refreshing as it is short-lived.



It was immediately clear that touring in California was an entirely different animal than touring in the Missouri.  A bear, if you will, compared to Missouri's...hm, bad example.  Anyway, people are more considerate here, behaving as though the "Share the Road" signs are more than gentle suggestions.  Bike lanes are everywhere, as are signs indicating proper bike routes.  One thing that both places have in common: we are constantly being passed by athletic middle-aged unladen spandex-wearers who are 1. riding for exercise rather than to get around, and thus 2. cheating (more on this later).

We made it only four miles* (and two water breaks) before running into our first mountain.  Not being quite warmed up enough for a ride up a Californian mountain on our fully-laden bikes, we chose to push.  Hours passed, then days, as the towering skyscrapers of Redwood City shrank below us.  When at last we reached the top, having climbed hundreds of vertical feet and nearly tens of horizontal, it was already time for lunch, which we ate in the beautiful California weather.

Man.  I can see why the Red Hot Chili Peppers would spend 20 years complaining about this. 

From there, things picked up a bit.  We sped along Cañada Road, whizzing past miles of sagebrush and eucalyptus trees.  Imagine our dismay after such a pleasant afternoon's ride to discover that Rt. 92, our passage to Half Moon Bay and the first step of our tour to San Diego, was a war zone of tanker trucks, traffic twits, and tailgaters,.  And, of course, the shoulder was the width of a gnat's naughty bits.  Uphill.  In the rain.

Sure, we gave it a fair shot.  We made it a whole 300 feet before bailing, pausing by the side of the road to catch our breath, plan our next move, and wrap up our heart attacks.  After fifteen minutes or so (during which both the traffic and the rain worsened), a Good Samaritan pulled up in a BMW to offer us some sage advice.

"You guys goin' up there?" he shouted from his window.

"Yep!" we replied.  "Ha ha!" I added.

"You're fucked!"

The man, whose name turned out to be Tony, explained to us that this route was basically impassible to bikes during rush hour.  Clearly, I realized, the universe was giving us a sign: we had been wondering how best to proceed, and lo, here was a doomsayer telling us to give up.  No, wait--he's handing us his phone...he's calling us a cab!  He's explaining our position to the dispatcher!  Oh, hurrah, and well done indeed, universe!

The cab dispatcher told us it would be about 30 minutes.  We thanked her, then our rescuer, Tony, who told us that he was a cyclist himself and had a jar of mayonnaise on the passenger seat (odd touch there, universe).  Tony sped off and we passed 30 minutes going over what we'd learned on our first day of traveling in California.**  The next 30 minutes we kept warm by complaining about the rain.  After over an hour and no cab, we began to despair in earnest.  Finally, as things seemed they could grow no darker, a second savior pulled up, this one named John.  He, too, was a cyclist, and he carried us to Half Moon Bay in his pickup.  He also dispensed some intelligence regarding fish tacos that would prove invaluable (they are tasty).

John dropped us off at the campground, which was beautifully positioned right above the beach.  Tired, waterlogged, and finding no rangers or camp hosts about, we set up at an unoccupied site right by the sea.  From there, we passed a lovely evening, cooking our dinner of mac and cheese with salami (truly, a dish for kings).  When at last at 8:00 our tent had been set up, our dishes were washed, and our peppermint tea was brewing, we had satisfied our setup to the universe, who delivered a punch line in the form of a ranger pulling up to tell us that we were in an RV spot and would have to move.

So...have you ever seen two grown adult people carrying a fully pitched tent 100 yards in the dark?  Well, you're not going to now, since neither of us had hands free to take a photo.  But believe you me, it was exactly as slapstick-y as you might imagine.

The rest of the night went by uneventfully.  Except, of course, for the fat old raccoon that shimmied down a tree and made off with our garbage.  And the stray cat that ate some of our bread.  And the other raccoon that almost invaded our tent until Jenn chased it off with her most powerful cusses.  So, like three events.  The universe clearly had more to teach us, but we were blissfully asleep by 9:30, so its lessons would have to wait for another day.

From Half Moon Bay, it would be off to the South in the morning.  Destination: San Diego, California, USA!

We paused only long enough to commit the crime of the century at HMB's Pumpkin Festival.  Carmen Sandiego, eat your heart out!

*It should be noted that nowhere among our impressive collection of heavy and very expensive electronics can one find a GPS.  Thus, any and all distances given in this blog are to be taken with a generous spoonful of skepticism.

**"Listen to the signs the universe gives you"; "Plan your routed thoroughly and check their accuracy with a reliable source"; "Google Maps is not a reliable source."  But of course we already knew all that.

Friday, October 12, 2012

Stand By

BRB, off to bike across California.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

This Page Is Under Consumption

As you may have noticed (those of you who are still out there), we've been a bit quiet for awhile.  Indeed, you are owed more summary of Japan, more exposition of what's to come around here...in short, more Amazing Tales.  And believe me, we've got plenty.  I was really hoping to ease everyone into Phase II, and I've already scribbled out some nice leisurely exposition that should bring us up to speed.  But seeing as we're about two hours away from embarking on a week-long trek on Missouri by bicycle (told you you've missed stuff), I'll just leave you with this:


Believe me, more to come soon.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Oh Yeah

We got our visas.  Forgot to tell ya.  "Oh well," ha ha, right?

More posts coming when we have time (ha ha ha ha ha ha ha).

Friday, July 20, 2012

Letter Rip

So, as you may know (somehow?), Jenn's job is finishing up next week, which means two things:

1. There will be much rejoicing (and knitting)
2. She's just taught her last high school English class in Japan evar.  Or for now, anyway.

Among the various intangible benefits Jenn has enjoyed during her time teaching at Kongo High School (Motto: No, the Other Kongo) such as educating the youth of today, seeing their smiling faces and watching them grow as people, etc. etc., she has received a bunch of very much tangible letters from the students.  Please enjoy this selection from them, painstakingly reconstructed from the handwritten copies.  Here, at last, is proof that I don't hold the monopoly on weapons-grade cute students.  Warning: these letters are extremely adorable, and should probably not be read while operating heavy machinery.

"Dear Jennifer.

After high school, I want to go to college school.
I enjoyed your classes.
I never forget you
Because I love you.
Very very thanks Jennifer."

"Dear Jennifer  .
After high school, I want to dream and happy life.
Jennifer, you are good teacher
I think really that
You are big.
It's a joke.
You will go home.
    That's too bad.
We feel sad.
I was enjoying with you.
You are very funny.
Do you know me?
How are you?"
Good bye Jenn.
See you again.

        Welcome
              to
           Japan"


"Dear ♥ Jennifer

After high school, I want to  ?
Jennifer lesson was very very funny!!
I enjoy every week ♥
I taught many English word and America song.
I'm very very studyed \(^o^)/  *
If I travel from America, I want to use teach English.
I was very very very very Enjoyed ♥
Someday, retune to Japan!!
I'm not forget Jennifer!!
I love Jennifer \(^o^)/
Thank you★ ありがとう!!"

"Dear jennifer.............

After high school, I want to be a generall person.
I think average is best.
Thank you Jennifer!
I don't foget to Jennifer."


"Dear Jennifer
After high school, I wan to study English in collage

I like a foregin countries.
I want to travel in foregin countries.
I like to talk a lot of human.
So I enjoyed talking with Jenn.
Really, I want to more more talk
So I become talk a English and meet in Jenn house.
I fun to best study unly the Jennifer class in another class.
See you again!"

"Thank you, Jenn

Thanks to you like English.
I was spurais** to meet you,
when went to Nanba.
Can you good albam?
I can good albam?
Jenn class had gamed,
smile, speaking, very happy

See you."

"Dear Jennifer
After high school I want to         collage        
You look is very happy all day
You teach is understand
You are work like a dog but school quite I'm sad
out country is fighting!
Thank you very much!
See you again!!"


This one may be one of my favorite.  There's something cummingsesque about it, don't you think?

"Dear, Jennifer                               I respect for you
Thank you for your help.               Love
Thank you for everything.                 Jenn!
Could you do me a favor?
Your travel is good and safe
and don't left your wallet.
When this situation,
call the police, please.
GOOD LUCK
After high school,
           I want to dancer.
I
  go
       to
            U
               S
                 A."

*Sweet Jumpin' Jesus, how are these a viable mode of communication?  It took me 3 minutes to find both the forward slash and the carat mark.

**"Surprised," Jenn informs me.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Japan Recap Part 1: Osaka

It could be that I've been so terribly pleased with Osaka because of confirmation bias.  When we first moved here, I easily cobbled together a caricature of this city (nickname suggestion #1: The Big Pancake) from the few stereotypes and rumors I'd heard on the Internet and from otakus back home: it's loud, it's crass, it's dirty, it's tacky, the people are rude and overly concerned with money, it's where gangsters and comedians come from.  Basically, despite its second city status, in my mind I'd always built it up not as Chicago but as Jersey.

To recap: when we first moved to Japan, we were placed in an apartment right by Jenn's school, out in Tondabayashi City -- basically the Chesterfield, MO of Japan (or, in keeping with my earlier analogies, if Osaka is Chicago, Tondabayashi is Aurora or possibly Deerfield).  It seems like a fine place for people with children, dogs, and/or cars, but it was a bit sleepy for our tastes, so as soon as I found a job, we moved into the city proper.  Our apartment here is in Namba, certainly the happening-est part of one of the two most happening wards in Osaka, which means we got to be right in the heart of the big city (nickname suggestion #2: The Big 'Saka).  Despite having an hour-long commute each morning and evening, we haven't regretted moving to Namba at all.  We're a ten-minute walk from any of Osaka's best bars, restaurants, karaoke boxes, and gaijin hangouts...we want for nothing.  Truly, it is, as the Japanese say, la dolce vita.  Plus, the commute has given Jenn a chance to hone her sleeping-on-train skills to an almost Japanese level of expertise.

I guess, all said, I haven't learned much about the character of Osaka beyond those initial stereotypes, largely because I haven't lived anywhere else in Japan.  By Japanese standards, I guess it's dirty, but it's still Japan; people here sweep up the street in front of their businesses and wash the trash cans every day, tasks that no amount of money would persuade an American to do.  I suppose Osaka is dirtier than Kyoto, but then, Kyoto is so clean I'd be comfortable getting open heart surgery in the Kyoto subway.

Though there is the occasional fish head by the American consulate.  Ominous!

Some people are loud and crass, sure, but...yeah, again, Japan.  This is the country, if you'll remember, where you can get in trouble for demonstrating an insufficiently apologetic bow.  Crass for Japan is still more polite than any given...hm.  Well, I was going to give an example of something notoriously polite or helpful in America, but I find myself at a loss for examples.  More polite than a Minnesota wedding?

For instance, this man in Den-Den Town was nice enough to pause for a photo.  He said something about having plenty of...time.

Side note: I'd hoped that by studying Japanese here in Osaka, I'd learn to speak Osaka-ben, the brash, slangly Osaka dialect favored by Yakuza.  Thus, whenever I encountered a Japanese person outside Osaka, I would impress and intimidate them with my tough-guy way of speaking.   Unfortunately, having worked in a kindergarten for more than two years, I've been told that I speak more like a three-year old than a gangster.  *Sigh*

The toughest gang in town.

On the few occasions when we've gone to Tokyo, we were able to see what weirdness is native only to Osaka, and not to Japan as a whole.  Tokyo felt pretty boring, actually; everyone was wearing conservative clothes in conservatives colors (and let me just say as a word of warning to friends and family in America, I've gotten very used to dressing ridiculously).  Ultimately, I would say, Tokyo is much, much more ghettoized than Osaka, which makes the city feel...well, boring.  Everyone dresses the same because the freaks with the punk haircuts and the Lolitas with their boyfriends don't ride the same trains as the sarariimen going to work -- they stay in their ghettos in Akihabara or Harajuku with their own kind.  There's no Tokyo pride, no Tokyo Strut, as far as I can tell, because there's pride or a sense of identity within the smaller communities that sprinkle the megalopolis.

I gather that this is what makes Osaka so special within Japan, this sense of regional pride: rich or poor, old or young, all of Osaka comes together to take pride in their fried foods, their garish lit-up streets, and their terrifyingly powerful old women (Osakaobachan are described in guidebooks as "vigorous," "robust," and many other euphemisms for "loud, obnoxious to the point of violence, and generally badass").  After only three years here, I have more pride than I've had in anywhere else I've lived, though that may be due to St. Louis and Kirksville not putting up the stiffest competition.  I'm gonna miss this place, for sure.

To close, I'd like to share a couple of videos that capture the spirit of Osaka.  First, the outsider's perspective on our fascinating city, summed up beautifully by one of the best travelers out there (do watch part 2, as well, if you have time):

Osaka viewed from the vantage point of a boozy, coarse, sweaty old man.  Pretty much spot on!

...And then, the ultimate Osaka-poi video, full of plenty of Osaka dialect, food, and of course, the ridiculous clothes and hair that Osaka is famous for.  Most of this is set about 5 minutes from our house!  Sadly, the version with English subtitles has been taken down by some evil bastard, but trust me when I say that this song is as awesomely, authentically Osakan as it is impossible to sing at karaoke.  Ladies and gentlemen...zis izu Osaka Sutoratto!


I want that coat!

Friday, July 6, 2012

Just 'Cuz They're Crucifying You...

(Note: hilarious and wildly inaccurate reflections on Japan will begin next week.  Please stand by for an important rant.)

I love hyperbole.  It is, clearly, the greatest thing that has ever been invented by God or man, and it accounts for roughly 3000% of my daily speech.  Among its many, many daily uses, hyperbole is good for adding melodrama to one's life, and what is life without melodrama?  (Answer: boring.  Life is boring without melodrama.  Moving on.)

However, one subject I don't like to inflate too much is the persecution of myself by others.  I don't really like to claim to be persecuted by anyone; again, to remind our readers, I, Harry Althoff, am a heterosexual white middle-class American man, which automatically makes me a member of the least persecuted group in history (though we are one of the most prone to complaining).  Assuming that slights against me are the result of persecution by people who desire to make my life worse out of nothing more than sheer malice -- I have some friends who are of such an outlook, and it's almost like they have some kind of...I don't know, complex of some sort.  Napoleonic complex?  I'll come back to this.

Anyway, when life's little hiccups and bad turns come my way, I try my best to assume that no one has it in for me in particular, but that my own personal preferences and goals are just worth so little that they get trampled unnoticed in the great scrum that is the world.  It's a personal philosophy born of equal parts Occam's Razor and low self-esteem; why would the world bother to waste their time and effort on a harmless chump like me?

And now, at long last, we get to:

The Point!      (Fanfaaaaare!)

One of the less glamorous parts of the glamorous expat lifestyle is dealing with visa issues.  There are many millions of forms and visa-related procedures that expats must wade through at regular intervals.  Conveniently, there are a plethora of websites dealing with Japanese visa issues, none of which are applicable to you, and none of whom know who, if anyone, can answer your particular question.  Whoever said "Bureaucracy is the deepest pit in hell" wasn't kidding around, and also he is probably very handsome (hint: it was me).


This guy.

In short (if that isn't too offensively incorrect by now), Jenn's visa lasts until the final day of her contract here on the JET Program, July 26th; basically, she is allowed to stay until her last day of work.  The norm for JETs when they return to their country is to stay for another few weeks or so to tidy their affairs, carefully pack their goods, and ritualistically perform the time-honored gaijin tradition of selling their dirty, broken possessions and nasty furniture to the next gaijin to come off the boat.  The JET Program even acknowledges that this is the case -- JETs are reimbursed for their ticket home as long as they leave within a month of their final day of work (please note that they are given 30 days, rather than 0 days, the alternative that some characters who shall appear later in this narrative will suggest).  The only time this procedure is kinked up is when the JET in question leaves after three years of work: JET visas and visas issued to their spouses are good for three years from the date of entry into Japan, at which point JETs who plan to stay for longer must apply at the Immigration Office to extend their term of stay.  A bureaucratic formality, all said, which requires a very straightforward filing of paperwork that is seldom if ever rejected or challenged.

Our situation, however, is far from straightforward, apparently.  Having bought our tickets for August 22nd, about three weeks after Jenn's final day of work, we went about figuring out how to gain permission to extend our visas by an extra 30 days.  First, Jenn utilized the resources available to her from the JET Program, the organization that had brought her to Japan, found her an apartment, offered a social and legal support system, and otherwise been a boon to our lives here.  They told her, in a word, "Iunno."  Or, in slightly more words, "Gee, yeah, that's hard.  Only 3rd-year returnees need to worry about that.  You should probably look into that."

Inspired by this complete lack of assistance, I called the Immigration Office directly.  Summoning all of the facility I've earned by six long years of Japanese study, I asked if there was anyone there who spoke English.  When the man told me that there was not, I proceeded to explain our situation in the most polite, respectful broken Japanese that I could muster.  The man told me in rather obscure, technical Japanese that there was no such thing as a visa extension, and the best option would probably be to go fuck myself.  Fair enough, I thought.  There must be someone else to ask.

Looking through the pile of resources that Jenn was given when we first came here, I found (among a trove of useful information we accumulated about what to pack and what to do about Japanese foot fungus) an English-language help line for CLAIR, the organization that runs the JET Program.  Giving them a call, an American explained to me that all we needed to do was apply to change our visas to a tanki taizai, a "short stay" visa that would cover us until our departure date.

Encouraged with a new vocabulary word, I tried Immigration again and was connected to the same employee.  Once again I did my best, carefully explaining that we needed a couple of tanki taizai, and could we please have our tanki taizai already?  The man considered for a moment, then replied that he had no idea what I was talking about.  I explained again, using even simpler words that I was surer of.  Also, I gestured a lot, though I don't think he saw it over the phone.  Now he was clearly frustrated, and told me to call back when I had someone who could speak Japanese with me.  I pleaded with him to let me try to explain one more time; now approaching tears, I threw up random information about our status, mostly implicating the JET Program in letting us believe that this was what was done.  Finally, he grudgingly informed me that maybe we could apply for our tanki taizai maybe possibly, but he couldn't guarantee that the request would be accepted.  He recommended that we wait until July to come in and apply.  I thanked him copiously, grateful beyond words that I had won him to our side.  I should note that I was about 70% confident that I understood his instructions, but I figured that asking for further clarification would probably infuriate him enough to get me deported.

Time passed.  We worked, we played music, we ate okonomiyaki, we saw the worst, campiest performance of Romeo and Juliet I'd ever seen in my life.  Finally, on July 5th, the day that we had planned to take off from work to go into Immigration, it hit me at about 6 in the morning: how bad an idea was it to apply for something as complex as a visa change with only three weeks to go on our visas?  I was a wreck that day until we got to Immigration: I photocopied every document we owned, I printed out three copies of our plane tickets, I called CLAIR twice and spoke to a different employee who gave me radically different information -- apparently now we didn't want tanki taizai, we wanted to apply to extend our visas, and that was what all 3rd-year returnees did.  There is no metric that can fully capture the sweat stains that I had worn into my clothes by the time we got to Immigration.

When we got to the office, we sat down at the information desk for a consultation.  The man instantly understood our situation, and he politely, carefully explained in simple Japanese that we would have to fill out a form to apply, after all, for tanki taizai.  Another man, a foreigner full of smiles, answered some questions we had about the forms.  We turned in the paperwork, took a number, and sat down to wait for it to be processed.  I was relieved beyond measure at this point.  As far as I was concerned, we had won the day, and it was all smiles and rainbows and unicorn farts until August 22nd.

Which is why it came as such a blow when we were called to another consultation after turning in our paperwork and waiting for our number to be called.  This man, a hard, middle-aged businessman-type who looked exactly like I had imagined the man I spoke to on the phone would look, spoke to us at length in some high-level, technical -- nay, sesquipedalian -- Japanese.  We both gave him shocked looks, mine of non-comprehension of his words, Jenn's of disbelief.

"Do you understand what I just told you?" he asked, and I shook my head as Jenn nodded.  He sighed, then repeated in English: "You have to leave Japan before July 26th, you can't extend your visas or stay any longer than that date.  You must change your plane tickets to leave before July 26th."  My various internal organs shrank and emitted whimpering sounds.  The rainbows and unicorns disintegrated.  Now, we were looking at losing thousands of dollars or being thrown in jail.  I was now almost positive that this was the same man I had spoken to on the phone.

Jenn protested that her contract required her to be at work until the 26th, so leaving would be impossible.  She then explained that the JET Program told her that getting a tanki taizai was SOP for their returnees.  The man, so put out that he looked like he might catch fire, rose and told us to follow him.  We rushed after him across the waiting room, dodging biracial children and cheek-kissing women, and he led us back to the information desk where everything had seemed so bright and clear.  After some silent rummaging through drawers, he gave Jenn a sheet of lined paper and told her to write the reason for our application.

"Can I write in English?" she asked.

"Can't you do it in Japanese?"

"No."

He grimaced and walked away, which we took as a reluctant assent to we pitiable wretches' plea to write in a language that we could use to express complex ideas.  Jenn stated our case plainly but urgently, and we turned in our form and took another number.  As we sat and waited for our number to be up, we seethed and discussed what Mister Fucking Important's problem was.  Evidently his strategy for petitioners was to tell them that what they wanted was impossible, and only under protest let them know that their request actually is possible, but you have to fill out a thing.  If we hadn't fought with him, our lives and our plans would take a serious hit.  For someone who seemed to so clearly dislike foreigners, this guy, this toad, this asshole had certainly chosen an odd profession.

When we were called to the desk again, a different employee explained to us that the application would take three weeks to process, at which time we'd have to come in again to (presumably) get our updated visas.  We pointed out that we only had three weeks exactly until our visas expired, realizing only at that point just how badly the asshat at the other desk had screwed us over by telling us to come in in July.  She reassured us that it would probably be fine.

Aaaaaaaand that about brings us up to speed.  We're now two weeks and six days away from either getting our new visas or going to jail and making several dozen new friends with tattoos and missing fingers.  If we haven't heard from them by July 25th, we'll have to make a run for the border that is even less fun than one that involves Taco Bell; if we go to Korea and stay for 24 hours, rumor has it, we can come back to Japan on a tourist visa that will cover us until our departure date.  For now, our futures rest on whether or not that Dickhead Who Shall Not Be Names intercepts our applications and, I don't know, sets them on fire or something.  I'm taking it a little personally, if you can't tell.

I was going to conclude this account with something profound about the immigrant's experience, about how all of the yelling and politics about immigration always overlooks the personal toll that the bureaucracy takes on immigrants who follow the system, about how bureaucracy allows for a lone douchebag who's having a bad day to sabotage a family's hopes and dreams at a whim.  Yeah.  Guess I blew that one.

Next week: either Japan Recap Part One or Gaijin Go To Jail!

Friday, June 29, 2012

The End of the Beginning

Welp, folks, that's it.  We're getting all set to pack it in here in Japanorama, at least for the time being.  The Gaijin Patrol are leaving the sunny beaches of Osaka and heading out on the road, in part to enjoy the sunny beaches of Kansas.  Which means, of course, that it's time for (fanfare please):

A Multi-Part Series of Vague Generalizations and Reflections on the Topic of Japan!

But first, to answer your questions, which are most likely "Wait, what?" and possibly "Huh?"  Yes, we are leaving Japan for good; I'll be working at the kindergarten right up until the day before we leave, which is on August 22nd.  Through some wizardry of temporal manipulation and airfare calculation, we'll have to fly to Korea, stay the night, and then arrive in Chicago an hour before we left, but still technically the next day, August 23rd.  From there, we fly to scenic Kansas City International (or MCI for short -- stay with me here).

So yeah, here's the important stuff for anyone hoping to get some hangouts/signed photos/high-fives, etc., and I curse the HTML gods who did not bless us with a double-bold option: we'll be in the States from August 23rd until December 14th, when we fly back to Asia for Phase II of the Gaijin Patrol.  In those four months or so, we'll be dividing our time among Lawrence, KS, St. Louis, MO, California, CA, and quite possibly other locales TBD (including a potential return to Kirksville, a city we left on the eve of a tornado that, as far as we know, levelled the entire town).  We will probably be without the sorcery known as "cellular telephones," but we are reachable here or on Facebook, and we will be available and eager for some hang-outs with any Americans game enough to listen to bemused, drunken ramblings about Japan in person.

The aforementioned Phase II will be explored in greater depth once I can summon the linguistic brawn to do so.  In the meantime, though, suffice to say that time with no work means more motherf***in' blog posts, yeeeaaaaah.  Our goal here is to wrap up Japan with some summary articles on a variety of topics -- more of the same of what we've written on, certainly, but even vaguer, like "food" or "people" or, I don't know, "things that are off the hook and/or bananas."

Look for a post by this time next week, come hell, high water, or Mothra itself (oh yeah, expect more poorly-informed Godzilla jokes, too).  ばんざい! Or as they say in America, Excelsior!

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Sumo: Sport of Kings, or King of Sports?

Hey, long time no blog, busy, blah blah blah, anyway: fat men in ridiculous costumes.  Not only is it an apt summary of Harry's Sophomore through Senior years of college, it's also how we spent an afternoon last March.  Osaka hosts the annual Grand Sumo Tournament at the prefectural gymnasium right near our house, and there was nothing that could keep us away this year!  The only thing that kept us from going last year was that the tournament was suspended due to some technical bylaws nonsense involving organized crime and match rigging.

 As if the inherent drama of all this wasn't enough.

Sumo has been much discussed in various professionally-written accounts of Japan, which would render useless any cursory effort on our part to encapsulate this centuries-old, highly ritualized cultural practice.  Still, that hasn't stopped us yet, has it?  Sumo is a sport where half-naked fat guys slam into each other (stop me if I get too technical here).

Sometimes there's singing.

Sumo is the preferred spectator sport of old guys, many of whom keep up with the latest sumo matches on their car TVs whilst driving (car TVs: one of those gadgets they have here that we really wish they didn't).  The old guys were there in force that Tuesday, filling the stadium to partake in Japan's twin recreational jewels of sumo and drinking.  Like most of Japan's cultural traditions, there is much, much drinking involved; the spectators drink, the wrestlers receive a drink of sake before the match, and we can only guess what the ref is on.  I mean, look at him.


Sumo may seem strange and exotic to our Western eyes and ears (and, unfortunately, noses), but it has a great deal in common with many of the sports we enjoy in America.  For instance, did I mention the drinking?  Also, much like baseball and football, about 90% of a sumo tournament is spent standing around and performing various meaningless rituals.

Here, the wrestlers perform a ceremonial "Wave." 

The tournament's daily schedule began at 8 a.m., when pre-tournament rituals to sanctify the arena ran until the first matches at noon.  When the first group of wrestlers enter the ring, they perform a group ritual to honor one another and their respective houses.  Then there is a ritual word from their sponsors.

And here we see a sumo wrestler still in its pupal state. 

Then, at last, time for some action!  Having stretched, prayed, saluted their trainers, salted the ring to purify it, drank some water, had some snacks, and taken a nap, the sumo wrestlers are prepared for this, the most important match of the year.  The wrestlers square off in the ring, ready to collide in brutal combat like the powerful titans they are.  They slam the earth menacingly, preparing to begin their grapple...


...And then retreat to their corners for a drink break and some more salt.


According to the English pamphlet helpfully provided to us at the door, this can happen as many times as the wrestlers choose, usually around three or four false starts before a match begins.  Though, it adds, matches of greater import demand much more gravitas, delivered in this case by even more salt, drinking, high-fives, etc.  You can see where the audience finds time to get its drinking in.

Finally, the match begins, this time for sure, no backsies.  They charge at one another like enraged beasts, slamming together thunderously, each hoping to best the other in a contest of pure muscle and will and--


Aaaaand it's over.  After all the buildup, the match goes on for between 3 and 10 seconds.  Just in time for another round of rituals!

 We think this guy might have been in the wrong room. Involuntary sumo, perhaps?

Well, the minutes blurred into hours, getting significantly blurrier with each passing hour (if you'll recall the earlier mentions of drinking?).  So, enjoy this documentation of the Agony of Defeat, the Thrill of Victory, and the horror of Sumo-on-Sumo Violence.



And the crowd goes wild!

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Karaoke Spotting

Sorry, another short one today.  This is the view from Kama Sutra, (formerly) one of our favorite bars in Osaka.  It's generally known as a gaijin bar, meaning it's typically frequented by foreigners and those who enjoy hanging out with foreigners and/or singing songs in English.  Kama Sutra is about the size of a standard American SUV (or, say, one and a half times the size of our apartment), which makes it nice and cozy.  It's here that we spotted this gentleman, a real-life Drunken Japanese Man Belting ZZ Top Songs Incomprehensibly, in the wild.  Enjoy this uncensored, brutally honest look at the Osaka nightlife fauna:




Before, after, and during his song, this guy claimed to be a music producer. As far as I know, he's still there, hogging the mike for all time.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

And Now for an Important Message

I know that blog posts that are nothing more than links to other blog posts are somewhere between "lame" and "typical," but this is one we really can't pass up: Japanese Fart Scrolls.

Ultimately, I agree with the author's conclusion that farts are totally funny.  However, to offer my own smarty-pants English student twist: it's extremely likely that this stuff is meant to be pornography, protected from detection by being unrecognizable as such to most people.  Google James Joyce's letters to Nora Barnacle, for instance.  Or don't, actually, if you're planning on eating anything today -- know that the best line (and the cleanest) reads, "I think I would know Nora's fart anywhere. I think I could pick hers out in a roomful of farting women."  I think my thesis mentor would agree that Joyce has something in common with the artist of He-Gassen.  The fact that Japan produced a lot of porn in its history, especially the weird stuff (tentacles and the like), only confirms this hypothesis, as far as I'm concerned.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Korea Party Three: Gaijin on Parade!

And now, back to your regularly-scheduled (ha ha ha) photos of weird stuff from abroad.  In this installment: marvel at the unique and yet eerily familiar sights of Korea!


Eh.  Close enough.


Kenny Rogers' official Karaoke Establishment!  It was decorated in a faux-Medieval village motif inside, strangely, the walls painted with scenes of cute wooden hamlets and roads winding off into the hills.  I believe Kenny Rogers may be from the Shire.  Incidentally, there were no Kenny Rogers songs on the karaoke machines.


We can take a hint.  This specially designated area for foreign shops was well stocked with knock-off merchandise and what I can only assume was an abundance of brothels staffed by Eastern European women.  So...this dude's friendly expression might be a tad inappropriate for the situation, is what I'm saying.


Some of the better graffiti I've seen.  Commentary on the club culture and its adherents?  Or...dude who thinks rats are cool?


Entry number 6 in my collection of pictures hung above toilets in Asia.  This one is evocative if confusing.  Personally, I think the warning would be more effective if it acknowledged the dangers of soju.


The Women's Lounge at a subway station in Seoul.  As you can see, it offers all the amenities to which women are accustomed to, provided there is no more than one woman waiting for the toilet.


Seen all over the subway in Busan.  Your guess is as good as mine.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Korea Part 2: Jenn and Harry and Friends

We've had a fair amount of experience traveling in unfamiliar countries, and over the years we have learned a few inescapable things about traveling that nobody warns you about.  For your enlightenment, here are some of Jenn's and Harry's Rules "'O" International Traveling:

RULE ONE: You will get sick.
          1a. Daaaaaaaaaaaaaamn.
RULE TWO: You will be freezing cold all the damn time (this may have something to do with our choosing to travel in winter).
RULE THREE: You won't really have much of anything to do after the sun goes down.

In my experience, this third rule is one of the biggest challenges we've faced while traveling: most touristy places close up shop around 5 or 6 in the evening, leaving few options for entertainment in a foreign city save going out to dinner (the way I'd usually get around this dilemma is to go to dinner, then second dinner).  Sure, checking out the nightlife in a new place might be fun, but...well, Jenn and I aren't really club rats.  As such, our typical daily itinerary in a foreign city goes roughly like this:

8:00 - Wake up
10:30 - Wake up for real this time
11:45 - Leave the hotel to take in a new culture and new experiences
11:50-1:30 - Lunch
1:30 - Try to figure out what we should go see, wrangle with public transportation, get lost
3:30-5:00 - Sightseeing
5:00-6:00 - Wander around, putter
6:00-7:00 - Coffee break
7:00-8:00 - Dinner
8:30 -More puttering, wonder if it's too early to go to sleep
9:00 - Sleep

This is all an extremely roundabout way of bringing up Couchsurfing.  Simply put, Couchsurfing is a website for getting free lodging.  It's a lot more than that, but that's the basic premise, anyway.  You make a profile, and when traveling to a new country, you can search for available couches to crash on for free.  It's kind of beautiful, really: people who have space and time volunteer it for groovy people in need.  You're free to refuse anyone whose profile (or face) you don't really like, no obligations, no pressure, and no money exchanged.  We've hosted 15 people now from all over the world; some of them have been like new best friends, kindred spirits who've taught us about travel and cooking and art and all kinds of neat stuff, and some of them have been...tools, I guess.  Still, having the opportunity to meet and talk to people from all walks of life with all manner of out-there experiences is definitely worth it.

The best part of traveling by Couchsurfing, though, isn't the free lodging, as we discovered on this trip to Korea.  What's really fantastic about it is having access to the knowledge that you can only get by living in a foreign city.  Our hosts introduced us to their friends, taught us how to get around, and took us to neighborhoods and restaurants that we wouldn't have found on our own if we had been there for months.  Plus, having a host (who, for the time of your visit, is essentially your new best friend) means having plans in the evening...

...Which brings us screaming back to the beginning of this post (barely).  Couchsurfing meant seeing a lot of amazing things with some very cool people.  It also meant staying out until 4 a.m. and starting the day with a hangover (once or twice, anyway).  


The only way to travel!

And now, here are some of the kind-hearted souls who took us in over our trip, along with some of the interesting people we met in Korea:


Nathan, our second Couchsurfing host, seen here at his most Spielbergian.  Nathan introduced us to all kinds of sights in Seoul that we never would have found on our own -- such as a multi-story musical instrument market -- as well as things that we probably would have found but never should have (soju: see picture of the results above).


An artist acquaintance of ours, Pang Hyo Sung, at his gallery in Seoul.  We ended up meeting him by passing some time in his sister's cafe, a beautiful little place in a neighborhood packed to the gills with galleries and beautiful little cafes.  Hers was empty save for us, and we vowed to stay as long as she kept giving us free pots of tea and snacks.  This proved to be rather a long time, at least an hour or so, when we were rescued by Pang Hyo and his friends.  After starting a friendly conversation with us (an event that shocked us -- such things never happen in Japan), he invited us to check out his gallery down the road, which we did gladly.


While we did not meet her in person, we did encounter some of the Supreme Master's works on this Earth: some truly excellent vegan Korean cooking in her restaurant in Insa-dong.  Among Her various paraphernalia in the restaurant, which included Supreme Master Web TV blaring from every corner in 40 languages at once, were numerous copies of Her various books.  This was the only one in English, and it contained nothing but pictures of Her with Her Dogs with cute captions under each photo.  It was over 200 pages long.  If you're unfamiliar with the Supreme Master (as we were), check out her website, which captures all of the unnerving weirdness of Her holy restaurant.


Tyler, our host in Busan, taking us to one of the great marvels of Korea: the soju tents.  Soju, as you may have guessed, was a recurring theme on this trip.  Soju tents are wonderful little shelters with all the street food you can imagine and little that you can remember the next day.


These ladies, whose names I will never know, ran the soju tent with the mastery of true professionals.  They kept giving us plate after plate of spicy chicken, kimchi, and this mystery substance on sticks.  They graciously allowed us to buy them a couple of drinks, too.


We met this lady, a Buddhist nun, on the ferry back to Osaka at the very end of our trip.  Her English was a bit shaky -- we couldn't tell if she was going to travel the world by train and by sea, visiting monasteries all across the globe...or if she had just finished doing that.  From what we understood, though, she visited Buddhist monasteries all over the place and programmed their websites.  Probably one of the most interesting people we've ever met, well worth the sea sickness incurred by the ferry ride.



And last, please enjoy this very special Amazing Tales of the Gaijin Patrol Belated New Year's Wish, starring Jenn, Harry, Nathan, Mi Jin, and an extremely tall tech guy at LG named Owen.  Owen, surprisingly, is a bit of a lightweight.


Happy Continued 2012!

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Mochi Mochi

A quick interlude in the Korean vacation account, brought to you by the letter N (for Not enough time to sort through our millions of photos):

Late last December, I was party to what is apparently a time-honored kindergarten tradition called Omochitsuki.  You guys know mochi, right?  It's that delicious (if flavorless) gummy rice cake that you can sometimes get stuffed with red bean paste or ice cream at Japanese restaurants -- adding ice cream makes mochi far less traditional but much, much more worthwhile as a dessert.

This stuff.

Anyway, apparently it's something of a tradition to round up a school's parents, make them take a day off from work, and impress them into service as mochi chefs.  The result, while extremely laborious, is something pretty interesting for the kids: they get to see they rice that they washed cooked, then mashed by their fathers into a paste.  Then...that's about it, actually.  That's mochi.  Behold the fearsome might of the fathers of Pudding class!


...And the kids of Donuts class take a whack at it, too.  Cuuuute.


The only thing of note that really happened at this thing was the amusing English of Ace's father: when asked if he was tired after swinging around a big hammer for a few minutes, he flexed and replied, "NO, MUCH POWAA."  Awesome.

Additional kindergarteny note: please join me in my illiteracy and check out how I made the school's webpage!  Well, the vice-principal's blog, anyway.  In the post about the English teachers.  At the bottom.  Woo!

More or less, my caption says that I am skilled at ukulele, that I am one of the Fun Fun English teachers, and that I am playing hockey with some children.  All true.

Next time: back to Korea!

Friday, January 13, 2012

Korea Part 1: In Which Harry and Jenn Eat Bugs

Hey, belated Happy New Year!  Also, belated Merry Christmas, belated Happy Hanukkah, belated Happy Boxing Day, etc. etc.  Also, sorry it's taken so long to get this blog post up.

So.

Three days ago Six days ago Last week we got back from our winter vacation to Korea, and we're still recovering from it.  I'd say that we got enough blogworthy material to give up the Japan game altogether and just post about our trip for all of 2012.  To spare everyone the most boring of vacation recaps (a chronological recounting of where we went), this time we'll switch things up and group our trip by theme.  Today, the most interesting of any trip: the food!

Korea and Japan, despite being so (relatively) close to one another, are very different places.  Everyone with me so far?  Cool.  I think the differences between Japanese and Korean cultures are most obvious in their cuisine.  Japanese food, in general, makes use of very little spice or seasoning, making use of fresh ingredients to highlight the taste of each component with great subtlety.  In other words, it can be bland as fuck, especially after eating it for 2 1/2 years.  Korean food is the yang to Japan's yin, or, alternatively, the Evil Mirror Universe Spock to Japan's Regular Spock.  90% of the Korean food we ate was slathered in chili sauce and raw garlic, which made for 10 days of tasty times (and uncomfortable trips to the bathroom).

We dined out for pretty much every meal during our vacation, a habit enabled by the dizzying strength of the yen, which made it seem that the whole country was having a half-off sale; we would regularly eat enormous, delicious dinners for about $6.  We tasted many delicacies, none of which I can name.  TANGENT ALERT: the time that it takes the human brain to begin to comprehend the syllables of a foreign language can be represented by the formula t+1, where t=how long you'll be in the country.  As such, every dish, neighborhood, or person's name I heard entered my ear and traveled to my brain, where my brain promptly squinted, shrugged, and forgot it entirely.  END TANGENT ALERT.

After 8 days of deliciousness, the Puritan genes that lay dormant in our American brains began to flare up and demand some form of penance, which we found in one of Korea's less well-advertised specialties: silkworm larvae.


Yep.  Bugs.  We ate just a big ol' cuppa bugs.  One of our Couchsurfing hosts assured us that the smell was far worse than the taste.  This provided some small comfort, as they smelled like wet socks.


Screwing our courage to the sticking places (which, we found, was located right in our stomach lining), we asked this nice lady for "one."  Sadly, "one" unit of stewed larva means about 100 individual bugs.


You may ask, "Why?"  We certainly did.  The short and easy answer: because it was there.  The longer answer: because eating weird, scary foods is something we can be proud of, something that we can say we've done.  Most of all, "eating bugs" can provide a comfortable worse-than scenario for any crappy day, a point that we exploited often for the rest of our trip.  Ex.: "Hey, climbing this mountain totally sucks.  But you know what it's better than?  Eating bugs."


Not to put too fine a point on it, but beondegi (as I have since learned that the dish is called) smells and looks nasty, and it tastes about as bad.


Here, Harry can be seen wondering if he now has eggs in his brain.

As with most foods, however, stewed bugs taste considerably better when washed down with good old American Coca-Cola.  Though it must be said that Silkworm Larva Belches are a nauseating experience in their own right.


Again, we can see Our Heroes quickly undergo the transformation from Seasoned Globetrotter, Ready for Exotic Experiences...



...to Weary, Cynical Traveler Who No Longer Thinks Such Bad Things About Wendy's.


And if you look really close (not recommended), you can even see the horrible little things' shriveled-up faces.

Having eaten enough of the paper cup's contents to consider ourselves sufficiently cool (I'd estimate 10% of the serving, or exactly Too Many bugs), we chucked the rest.  Culinary Rubicon crossed.  Y'know the great thing about Rubicons?  You only have to cross them once.

After a couple of days, we had stopped belching up thoraxes long enough to remember that we had unfinished business in Busan: on our first day in Korea, when we were literally fresh off the boat, we were looking for something to eat in the Jagalchi fish market, a beautifully gross area with tanks full of live sea creatures directly from our nightmares.  Seasick, sleep-deprived, and intimidated by our ignorance of the Korean language, we stumbled past a few restaurants, hoping to find something edible.  A lady yelled to us from the doorway of one of the restaurants: "Hello!  Sashimi?"  Though it wasn't quite as adventurous as we were hoping for, at least it sounded reliably delicious.

Our lunch was tasty if difficult: more yellowtail than we had ever seen in Japan accompanied by a collection of unrecognizable sauces and condiments, as well as several cloves of raw garlic and a plate of lettuce leaves.  Not knowing quite what else to do, we spread a little of everything on the leaves, wrapped it around some fish, and made little tacos.  We ate quickly and furtively, hoping to avoid offending anyone too badly (as it turns out, our table manners were correct if messy).

When we had finished, Jenn pointed out that everyone else in the restaurant was eating the same dish, and it was one vastly different from our tame plate of raw fish: drenched in sauce, grilled right on the table, it contained some pinkish fish that horrifically writhed through piles of onions as it cooked before their eyes.  It quickly became apparent why the proprietor lured us in with the promise of sashimi: if this dish were put in front of an average confused-looking American, the reaction might be one of fright and disgust (my thoughts went to Temple of Doom as soon as I saw it).  Jenn, however, realized that we were sitting on a golden opportunity that might pass us by forever if we didn't jump on it.  So, for our last meal in Korea, we returned to the little restaurant for what the menu called "grilled hagfish."  Hagfish is described by Wikipedia as "Lovecraftian" and "exud[ing] copious quantities of a slime or mucus of unusual composition."  Bon appetit!