So Golden Week is a week in early May with many holidays, so many people have the entire week off and travel or just take it easy with their families. There is a lot of traffic; all modes of transportation are booked and more expensive than normal, as are hotels I believe. With my belongings all packed, Maruyama and I began this most golden of weeks getting me settled in Tokyo. We drove around to some random train station in Saitama Prefecture then boarded three trains before coming to our final destination to meet up with Goseki-san. We walked to his apartment and I dropped off my bags there.
Then we walked around the neighborhood for a bit and finally had dinner at an Indian restaurant nearby. I have since returned to that restaurant and have chatted with the three workers, none of whom are Indian. The owner is Bangladeshi and has been in Japan for 22 yrs, so unsurprisingly his Japanese is fluent. The other two workers are Nepalese and have been in Japan 3 and 4 years. They are very friendly and I think they enjoy talking to their customers, which may not happen too often. Anyway, they gave me a free mango lassi, which was delicious.
After getting settled, Maruyama-san returned to Tsukuba, and I went to get some shut eye while Goseki-san stayed in his lab to continue working on his polymer syntheses.
The following day I walked around Tokyo some more and revisited places like Yoyogi Park and Shibuya. I also made plans to meet up with my friend Ryu who is originally from Tokyo and now lives/works in Saitama Prefecture. I met Ryu on Kibbutz Lotan in southern Israel when I was there for four months. He was a regular volunteer and worked primarily with the goats.
I met up with Ryu-chan in Asakusa and we walked around just talking about life and Japan. We went to the temple, which was crowded, prayed, and then went off in search of a good place to eat lunch. Most places were crowded, but eventually we found a good udon place with a short wait. I forget the type of udon we had, but it was thicker than normal udon.
I had hung out with Ryu on several occasions while on the kibbutz, but never really had an extensive conversation with him. I am not sure why because he is a very interesting person. I learned that he studied linguistics, but he ended up not liking it, so he went on to fashion school and also to a hat school. He then worked for a design company as a professional hatter, but decided to quit when the market was becoming unstable. He traveled for a bit and is now working with an IT company and makes hats in his free time. He has an exhibit in late summer where he says he plans to show 50 or so of his hats. I told him that I would definitely purchase a custom-made Ryu-chan hat.
After Asakusa we went to Akihabara to check out the electronics and the maid cafes, since he had never been to one. We went to one where you can pay to get slapped in the face by a maid. We didn’t buy this since it was expensive and I told him that I would slap him for free, but it was still an interesting experience, albeit weird.
Our last stop for the day was Ikebukuro, which I had never been to. He said it was known for its liveliness and he took me to one of his favorite restaurants. The food was spectacular (I feel like I keep writing that the food is good by using different adjectives, but I am not really sure how to adequately explain the actual tastiness of the Japanese cuisine, so bear with me, or come experience it for yourself). Afterwards we went to a pub nearby and after more great conversations he said he would skip work then next day and that I simply had to return to his house so we could hang out more. Unfortunately I had already made plans to go to Fukushima Prefecture with the Sakurai family, but maybe before I leave I’ll go over, and maybe learn how to make formal hats. We parted ways and I returned to pack for my three days in Fukushima.
Fukushima Prefecture is north of Ibaraki Prefecture and is pretty rural. We first drove to the capital (taking longer than expected because of traffic) and met up with some of Sakurai-san’s friends. He gave them fresh bamboo shoots from his garden. Everyone was very happy to see him and still referred to him as shacho (company president). We had a great dinner, and I was surrounded by smokers. Although everyone kept apologizing for smoking, nobody stopped smoking. The addiction must be terrible.
Anyway, the first night we stayed in a hotel and I had a great view of a large 7-11 sign with some mountains in the background. We then drove around the city and went to a park to check out all the koinobori. We also drove up a nearby mountain that still had a lot of snow on it. I even saw a group of cute little wild monkeys, but unfortunately I did not have my camera on hand to photograph them. The place on top of the mountain reminded me of Iceland because of the rocks, moss, and all the minerals and the smell of sulfur. For lunch we met up with Sakurai-san and the kids. We ate at this ramen place that had really good spicy ramen. If was a huge bowl however, and I was unable to finish it all.
Once we were all together, we drove to the small village of Hurudono, where the Fujitsu plant is located, and dropped our bags off in the small hotel where we were staying. The owners of the hotel and the Sakurai family have known each other for several years and they were pretty much family. Everybody was really nice and at dinner I met more people who used to work with Sakurai-san’s father. After dinner they decided to take me to a local karaoke joint, which was the coolest thing ever. It was a smallish bar, with a waitress maybe in her 60s sporting pigtails. There was an older couple sitting at the bar, and three young men sitting in the booth in one corner. The waitress brought us edamame and the karaoke book. I chose a song, I think by Linkin Park, and the other people chose mostly enka songs; the youths were mostly singing Japanese rock and pop songs. After my song which everyone applauded me for (nobody listens to this music and their English isn’t good enough to realize how terrible a singer I am, maybe) I decided to try my hand at a Japanese song. The only two Japanese songs I sorta know the words to are the theme song to Neon Evangelion and Bluebird by Ikimono Gakkari; they only had the Evangelion song. I told one of the people to help me, especially with the faster parts since my reading skills are not very good. The song went by well and I enjoyed it. I sang several other songs in English, Spanish (they had Juanes), and even an Italian song (“Volare”). A little later three more young men came in and sat in a different booth. As the night progressed one of the guys approached me and greeted me I a mix of English and Japanese. He asked if I knew any Backstreet Boy songs because he would like to sing a song with me and that’s the only English songs he knew. I said that I probably remembered some of their songs and so he chose the one he knew (“You are my fire” or maybe that’s not the name, but something like that). So when the time came for us to sing, two other guys joined us and the four of us stood in the middle of the bar sharing two microphones and rocking out to the Backstreet Boys. One of the guys also knew a Linkin Park song so we also sang that as a group. In the end I asked if I could take a photograph of everyone to remember this most awesome karaoke experience.
The following day we toured the Fujitsu plant and went to the park so the kids (me included) could run around. We then drove back home, still with a lot of traffic, and then they dropped me off at the TX station so that I could return to Tokyo.
Overall it was a great Golden Week. Fukushima is a very awesome place and I could see myself living in a place like Hurudono, which lies in a valley surrounded by really green hills and mountains.