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  • And the Shinto Spirits smile on me for my admiration for them.

    Kat 4:27 pm on October 7, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: japan, , ,

    If you go to Kyoto you’re potentially looking for traditional Japan.  Geisha spotting, an invitation to a tea ceremony, admiring carefully-altered-to-perfection gardens, visiting the shrines and tasting all the detailed nuanced flavour of this ancient culture are the activities on the traveller’s agenda in Kyoto.  Some of these things you can pre-arrange but some are pot luck and sometimes you need the gods to smile on you…
    Which is what happened to me at the Yasaka Shrine.  At the top of the main traffic street in Gion, Shijo dori, most tourists will be tempted by the bright red gate of this shrine by default because it’s right there and enter to find a shrine kept carefully lovely – it’s role in the important Gion Matsuri festival guarantees it’s gorgeous up keep.  It’s main focus as a shrine is keeping people safe from illness, but it has other practical uses – namely as a wedding venue.  And I was lucky enough to see two beautiful, traditional Shinto brides on their big day.  In her heavy, heavily embroidered white kimono, with its long train, fan and head gear one bride was pleasant tempered-ly having her photo taken with her new husband, also dressed beautifully, and I was totally taken in an stared at here like she was some kind of exquisite artefact – which in a way she was.  A thing of great beauty which totally distracted me from admiring the temple…  But I’m sure it was lovely if this wonderful creature would choose it for her nuptials.

    May the Shinto spirits smile on her as they smiled on me when arranging that I come out the nearby Maruyama Park at just the right moment in the gentle Autumn rain.

     
  • Shinkasen time travelling

    Kat 3:02 pm on October 7, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: japan, ,

    Arriving in Kyoto from Tokyo is at first not much of a shift.  The station is ultra modern and the sign-age points you in a thousand different directions, to the bus, the train, the shops, the coin lockers, the toilets the JR station, the Subway station, the rail line…  You get the idea…  But one you’re out of the station it is almost unbelievably different to the Tokyo I had just come from.  Narrow houses, traditional style houses with bamboo shades and wood features line narrow streets running along beside twinkling canals and you can see the top of temples and shrines peeking over the top of the houses behind high gates.  It doesn’t seem like a city in the same sense of the word, but a slower, gentle old town.
    Walking beside the canal on the ‘Philosopher’s Walk’, named for the university philosophy lecturer who used to partake in this stroll every evening, it is peaceful.  There may be tall buildings and traffic, but all I can see is those narrow houses on either side of the canal with it’s draping trees and fat, happy carp.  Tea houses, and shops – some of them no doubt lures for tourists, but it’s out of season so the shop keepers are leisurely – and the tori gates which signify a shine is near, or a particularly nice tree or bridge are the landmarks.
    I wander humble and peaceful as a cloud… when suddenly I see a man accompanied by a woman in one of the most beautiful kimonos I have ever seen.  I could be on a film set for a film I’d love to be in.  How lucky I feel at this small encounter – you can see that I’m getting into the tea ceremony ethos of making each moment its most lovely.  I wonder if I can move here….

    P.S. TRAVEL TIPS:  The new section of Kyoto station is a massive rabbit warren and it’s difficult to find the Subway - accept that you may have to follow the signs into what feels like an entirely different postcode…  And try the vending machine coffee…As well as having a choice of hot or cold and it being about a quarter of the price of a cafe version they have very entertaining names.

     
  • Neon lights and Tokyo sights

    Kat 5:11 pm on October 5, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: japan, , ,

    Walking through the Ginza district I saw a line of people in carefully arranged and put together outfits queuing for something.  I hate queues but this one was a quiet, patient double file of people at the most outrageous whispering quietly, so the guards wearing sea blue Army uniforms with badges saying TaskForce and white gloves were having an easy time of herding them in line across roads and keeping them out of the way of the pedestrian public.  Turning a corner and walking a couple of blocks  (250 metres) down I found out they were queuing to be allowed into H&M.  And even more surprisingly, unlike the Topshop sales, people were exiting sedately carrying only one bag.  Who could queue for over an hour to go into a store then only buy a few things.  Apparently the well behaved, gracious Japanese Ginza shoppers.  I immediately set my behaviour drive to very good and smoothed out my dress – luckily I packed for a city rather than trekking holiday but still…  When in Rome and all that…
    People not bumping you with their umbrellas and patiently waiting their turn aren’t the only charms of Tokyo, you’re also asked to turn your phone onto silent on the train and not answer calls, so the subway is quiet peaceful, clean and free of smelly food.  The city seems to be pretty clean as well, and the girls dressed in their long socks and boots all look to me like they’ve made an effort – I love it.  Even as I fumble though my poor knowledge of the language people have been politeness personified – am I lucky or is this city really this gracious as a whole?  How can it be?
    Earlier in the day I’d been at the fish markets, probably getting into people’s ways with my camera, and possibly even making a face at the sheer scale of marine carnage around me – I saw a tuna longer than I am tall have its massive head cleaved from the rest of it.  It was enough to put me on to vegetarian sushi and ramen for the rest of the day and possibly tomorrow as well…  I have never before seen the things that I saw there.  Have you ever seen a fish turned inside out so its roe are showing?  No?  Me neither.  And I used to hang out at the Sydney Fish Markets all the time.  It was as manic as the guide books say it will be and then a few slivers more.  The main mode of transport is a drum engine lowered on to the top of a four wheeled tray which looks like the kind of truck a five year old would make out of lego, and these are driven wild with abandon.  I don’t think there are any road rules.  There certainly aren’t any rules about not smoking around what will be food – some of it won’t even be cooked, though there is so much ice and water around that it shouldn’t matter – I’m just trying to make the point that these guys work to rules of their own.  Even if you’re only in Tokyo for one day you should see this.  Seriously.  It’s definitely worth getting up early for.
    My afternoon was spent with Mr. Fuji (actual name.), who was my guide around the Edo Tokyo Museum, he was a child in WW2 when the allies were fire bombing Tokyo and one of the most graceful, reserved men I have ever had the pleasure of meeting.  The perfect guide he gave me just enough information to go on with and let me ask questions.  He knew a lot about samuri and Edo period wood block printing and let me ring a big old bell – he could tell I wanted to – as well as play some musical instruments, even though I think they were really only for children to play with.

    This blog was written while travelling at 300km p/h on the Shinkansen from Tokyo to Kyoto.  I’m typing rather than writing but if I was writing you’d think I was sitting at a desk which was travelling at much lower speeds – beside me sits a rather classy looking woman with one of those ‘this-years-must-have-handbags’ who begun the journey working on her laptop on a marketing presentation but is now playing her PSP.  I love Japan.  It’s so full of easy metaphoric comparisons – people, like my charming chair-mate just keep dropping them into my lap.  And I just saw Mt. Fuji outside the window.

     
  • Getting there is all the effort.

    Kat 3:59 pm on October 5, 2008 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: japan, , travel tips

    I’m standing in Tokyo Central Station looking at a map asking myself “How do I get to ‘pregnant lady standing beside a tree and square lantern’ via ‘man’s head in a hat, water pump and tree on a box’?”.  I step outside myself for a minute to ask myself “What’s wrong with this picture?”.  Literally.
    Japanese has three different character sets.  I know this from studying this at school.  Hiragana corresponds to particular sounds like our alphabet, Katakana, which are broken up parts of the more complicated Kanji (Kanji’s the third one in case all this Japanese is reducing my ability to be understood in English.) - which are basically one picture for one word.  Since being in Japan I have come to discover that there are no useful maps of the city where roads are all marked in any language…  which is how I found myself at Kyoto station looking to get to ‘pregnant lady standing beside a tree and square lantern’ via ‘man’s head in a hat, water pump and tree on a box’.  I meant to mention this tip earlier but this is the best advice I can offer about travelling in Japan – don’t try and read the script – half the time sentences are made up of characters from all three alphabets – but when place names are concerned make up little stories for each character – they’ll probably be in Kanji and untranslatable into anything other than the place name…  How sorry do you feel for Japanese children now? Especially when I struggle to say even the simplest thing in Japanese and people rush to my rescue to help me in their best English…  I could do with some help learning languages from the smallest kid – but this is a nation that could do with some help with their mapping.  Beware – up is not north by default…  I’d like to be able to recommend where to get the best map from – if anyone knows can you tell me…  Until then is ‘pick up sticks beside a waffle, fork with the middle prong the longest’ near ‘man’s head in a hat, water pump and tree on a box’?

     
  • Atmospheric enough to make me consider conversion

    Kat 5:20 pm on October 2, 2008 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: japan, on location,

    In the last two weeks I have been to the Forbidden City, the Temple of Heaven and the Summer Palace, and though wonderful I would recommend the simple temple of the Meiji Jingu over the others because it really is a place for meditation and contemplation.  It’s in the middle of a park, cool and dense with a wood of trees donated by people from all over Japan as a tribute to the Emperor Meiji who this shrine was built for.  The idea of that gesture is very touching when you learn about it sitting in the cool shelter of this wonderfully soundproofing wood in a the courtyard of a shrine which seems about as far away from the busy streets of Harajuku as it could be, and part of another, slower, more gracious time.
    Simple in design, the cyprus trees have been shaped in the same way as the temples I have quickly become familiar with, but unpainted they have a piousness the ornate bright and beautiful reds, greens, golds and blues cant match.  Two big trees grow in the courtyard spreading up to the green copper roofs, and though the gates are grand and cafefully designed they’re also simple and lovely.
    But the thing that really makes a difference is the atmosphere of genuine respect.  People come here to say their prayers and worship the Kami, the Shinto spirits, of Emperor Meiji and his Empress Shoken, Japan’s rulers at the beginning of the 20th Century, who really sound like open minded, honest rulers, if ever there be any.  This feeling of atmosphere may have been helped along by the fact that I saw a few monks, and a few people meditating in the grounds and there is a ring of wooden prayer tokens hanging all around one of the trees on which wishes and prayers are written in many languages.  Many of them are quite serious but some of them wish simply for a good result in exams or a passed driving test - I appreciate the honesty - many of us faced with the prospect of publicising our deepest wishes would have to opt for something less selfish.
    Worshipers wash their hands outside the courtyard grounds before approaching the main temple then toss coins, 50 yen is an auspicious amount, take a moment to pray clap twice then take another moment.  They seem un-bothered by the respectful visitors watching on, and for those of us who aren’t comfortable taking part in something they don’t quite understand you can still buy a prayer marker - like a wooden christmas tree decoration you write on - for 500 yen and make your prayer publicly or get a poem from the collection of 100,000 written by Emperor Meiji and 30,000 written by Empress Shoken.
    Mine, by Empress Shoken, reads:
    Ever downwards water flows,
    But mirrors lofty mountains;
    How fitting that our heart also
    Be humble, but reflect high aims.
    Enough to make me go home and learn more about Meiji and the Shinto faith, which must surely be a good result as far as Meiji’s Kami is concerned.

    This quietly spiritual interlude came between some of Japan’s most glorious, gaudy wonder, the twin towered wonder of its Town Hall, the crispy seediness of the clean red light district of unsubtle yet un-obvious love hotels where you rent by the hour, and the bright colours of wacky shopping mecca Harajuku….  Proving that there is no place more eclectic than Tokyo.   Assaulting the senses first with bloody minded precision and meticulous modernity, then asking me to reconsider what I believe in before topping it off by wooing me with sparkly colour and teasing my materialistic streak after I had began to reconsider what everything may be about.  So now I have no idea again, but as I write this at 1:35 in my hotel room I have that buzzing of thoughts that people talk about getting from Tokyo so at least I’ve proved the cliches right.  I’m going down to the bar to see if Scarlet Johansson or Bill Murray are down there whiling away the neon of the Tokyo night…

     
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