You are currently browsing the Japan category

I Love…

§ March 29th, 2011 § Filed under I Love Mondays, Japan § Tagged , , § 2 Comments

Japan.
July rice with water filled padi II

In my three and a half years in Japan I spent some time in Tokyo and Osaka, but the majority of it was spent in a small rural community very much like some of the ones affected by the recent earthquakes and tsunami. Farming communities which, like farming communities around the world, are struggling to survive against cheap imported food and a young generation who no longer wants to be stuck out in the inaka (countryside). Communities of people who do not represent what the neon, high-tech, modern image of Japan portrays to the world. People who live in beautiful old farm houses that have been in families for generations but have heavy tiled roofs which are prone to collapse during seismic activity.

As I watched the videos streaming of the tsunami engulfing the patchwork countryside of Japan I thought of all the people I used to cycle past on my way to work. I thought about how people who were too shy to speak to me would leave bundles of vegetables, still covered in soil, on my doorstep. And I thought about the day I went for a cycle ride, but ended up stopping to watch an old rice machine plant up a tiny (by New Zealand standards, at least) field. I vowed to stop complaining about the shocking price of rice in Japan after that.

I feel fortunate that the only person I knew personally who lived in that area was OK. But I have friends who are in pain over lost friends and relatives. I hate this. I have friends in Tokyo who are enduring blackouts and can’t drink tap water (not even boiled) or even buy bottled water because all the shops have been stripped of just about everything.  I worry about radiation and aftershocks as they do. It changes how you watch the news when you have a connection. I am learning to scan the sensationalism to find answers about what’s really happening.

As with Christchurch, what is needed is money. It’s important that that money is not allocated to one place and one type of aid so that it does not become tied up with bureaucracy. Within a few months there have been life-altering earthquakes in half a dozen places. Some of these places get media attention and some, sadly, do not. If you can give to the Red Cross in your own country or another large organisation that you trust and which does not allocate its collections *, please do.

*After the 2004 Boxing Day Tsunami in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Sri Lanka it became apparent that funds collected specifically ‘for housing’ or ‘for food’, for example, became problematic. If one allocation had leftover funds, those funds could not be used in other areas where they were needed because they had been labelled for just the one, specific use. Money was wasted. There are rumours that oversized houses were built along the coast in Sri Lanka, because leftover money raised for housing could not be used for other situations.

I Love…

§ November 2nd, 2010 § Filed under I Love Mondays, Japan § Tagged , , § 1 Comment

Japanese lollies.

I don’t even eat lollies except for chocolate, but something about the design of Japanese sweets sucks me in every time. Then I open the packet, eat one, and pass the rest to my husband. Kawaii desu yo!

I Love…

§ October 26th, 2010 § Filed under I Love Mondays, Japan § Tagged , , § 6 Comments

sleeping commuters.

Nobody sleeps at night in Japan…only on trains. It’s like riding the Narcoleptic Express to work.

And, yes, sometimes they snore…and drool.

I love…

§ July 26th, 2010 § Filed under I Love Mondays, Japan § Tagged , , , § No Comments

Bunashimeji

Japanese mushrooms. I really miss the variety and they were relatively cheap. These are bunashimeji.

I love…

§ February 7th, 2010 § Filed under blessings, I Love Mondays, Japan, wishes § Tagged § 5 Comments


wooden blessings, originally uploaded by Shanti, shanti.

wishes and blessings and people thinking about other people.

Funky little Japanese MAFF video

§ June 4th, 2009 § Filed under food, Japan, MAFF, video § No Comments

Christmas in Japan

§ January 8th, 2009 § Filed under chicken, christmas, Japan § No Comments

What can I say, I wish I’d found this two weeks ago so it would be timely. But, it’s still worth posting. I have to say, I really didn’t know about the chicken thing. I must’ve lived in the “countryside” for too long. It doesn’t surprise me, though. These kinds of things just start to make sense and, in fact seem normal, the longer you’ve been in Japan.

Snow, pack, blog, pack, hot drink, pack, hot food, pack…

§ December 30th, 2007 § Filed under Fiji baby, Japan, packing § No Comments


07-12-29_17-18
Originally uploaded by Shanti, shanti.

Pretend it’s Fiji, baby!


Irony not lost

§ December 28th, 2007 § Filed under earthquake, Gisborne, Japan § No Comments

What’s with all the shaking? Last week Gisborne had a pretty good sized earthquake that did more damage than had been previously thought, and then a few days later there were a couple in the Aluetian Islands off the coast of Alaska. Thinking how ironic it is that I can’t wait to get back to slightly more solid ground after living in Japan for three years, and then finding that my “solid ground” isn’t so solid, I started looking into this. Yes, it is the same plate. I looked it up. I know it’s the ring of fire and all, but I didn’t realise that it was the same monstorous plate. So, just for good measure and not to be left out, it starts shaking round here. Just a quick jolt…after lunch, but before afternoon tea…you know. Apparently it was in Yamagata which is next door to Niigata Prefecture. As always, you just hope it stops, and it did (touch wood). So now today I fire up the internet and there is a report of an earthquake in Taupo. Let’s just all calm down and talk it through, OK?!

I've been spending a lot of time doing this lately

§ November 21st, 2007 § Filed under books, chocolate, Japan, reading, shinkansen, Tokyo, travelling § No Comments


And then another person I know has been sitting next to me in sports reading, chocolate eating heaven!