Friday 31 July 2009

Asakusa


I managed to take a stroll down here late afternoon today. I passed the Asahi Flame (AKA "golden turd") then wandered over to Asakusa Park to see the Senso Temple (Senso-Ji) which enshrines a statue of Kannon, the Goddess of Mercy. Unfortunately it didn't look quite itself (it wasn't visible due to rennovations) but I also passed Asakusa Temple and several other shrines and statues which made up for the disappointment. The Buddha is ominpresent. I particulartly liked the twin Buddhas that sit side by side, the left representing wisdom and the right mercy.

The park itself has a fantastic atmosphere. It's not a place of greenery. It's full of the above-mentioned features and the tourist shops that have emerged as a result. Yet busy though it was, it was still peaceful and relaxed. You can sit on stones with flat, shiny tops like marble under the shade of trees. Then, you can stroll over to a stall selling sweet pastry delights with various fillings - mine was sweet potato, although pumpkin appeared to be the crowd favourite.

After fulfilling my tourist duties at the park, I took a leisurely stroll round the area. I have discovered that vending machines are like weeds - if there's the space on the pavement, they'll pop up and fill it. They seem almost organic. Also bikes are everywhere. And that's all over the pavement but I have not observed any near collisions. Thirdly, what strikes me about Tokyo with its ultramodern image is the amount of homeless people there seem to be. Maybe I'm just in the "wrong" area but I've seen perhaps thirty old men sitting about in the street. Maybe they're not homeless, although the beer can piles seem to suggest otherwise. Lastly, the noise emanating from trees is phenomenal. It's electric and violent - I was looking at the overhead wires but it has to be crickets. Move over cicadas of the Mediterranean. This is on a whole new scale.

Thursday 30 July 2009

Twenty-two hours and several nude scenes later...

I made it. I am currently sitting in a box room at a nevertheless very friendly backpackers' place, New Koyo.

My travels began at 4.20 am - see me cheerfully posing by the car in which I was chauffeur driven to the airport. Things don't end quite so grandly - no post-travel photo is being published.

Check in went without mishaps (I was not searched for drugs for once...) although one lady did hold up the queue by trying to take several pots of yoghurt through the "no-liquids" zone. It made me wonder though, at what point does something stop being liquid enough to count? Yoghurt is fairly gloopy but if you had ice cubes....?

Aboard my flight, I heard two Japanese girls next to me converse in English with the air hostess. Being eager and keen, I spotted an interview opportunity which was sadly not carried through for two reasons:
1) I heard you're not supposed to blow your nose in public in Japan and just sniff....but my nose refuses to obey so I had to do some swift furtive actions. I suddenly noticed that one of the girls had moved away completely and the other was asleep with her eye mask on...over her mouth. Am I paranoid?!!
2) I chose to watch "Babel" as it was recommended as a film for good shots of Tokyo. It also had a mute-deaf sex-crazed nympho Japanese schoolgirl who spent a large proportion of the film graphically exposing her nether regions...I don't think this particularly made a good impression to the two potential interviewees. To dig the hole deeper, the second film I chose to watch also had particularly prolonged sex scenes that made me squirm in embarrassment as my subconscious projected disapproving eyes onto the back of my scalp.

But to move on to Japan itself - the glimpses I got from the window of the Narita Airport to Ueno connection have been superb. It's so green! Far much more than I imagined, although I appreciate it's August. The next thing that struck me were the overall ramshackled style of the clusters of dwellings. No space is wasted. Buildings lean together and stretch apart in ways that don't look physically possible. Even if the gap is about foot wide between one house and the next, you can guarantee that they'll be some green plant bursting it's way upwards and making its presence felt.

Surveying the crazily packed structures and their elegant curved roofs, and even the maze of thick wires connecting them, I fell instantly in love. It also possibly had something to do with the sleepy Buddha lying outside a graveyard. For me, it's real life anime. I know it's early days but watch out for my emerging inner Japanophile....

However, it's nap time for me now and I'll update after my undecided adventures of this afternoon.

Wednesday 29 July 2009

Setting off



It's 10pm, I've got to be up at 3.30am, still more to pack...

Check out my organised chaos...

...see you on the other side...