Sunday, November 29, 2009

Showa Memorial Park

Friday had no Bio Anthro class, so Isabel and I decided to bring our lunch bentos to the Showa Memorial Park to see the momiji (Japanese maple/fall colours) and enjoy an afternoon out in the park - and what a gorgeous place it was!

The park area used to be a military base and US airbase in the early 1920s till 1969, and the proposal was then put forth to have the area re-designed as a park project in commemoration of Showa Emperor's fifty-year-reign. The park is huge - 180 hectares in total - and there are so many things to do and see inside the park. Apparently we only covered a teeny part of the park too. But lunch was so enjoyable - sitting on a bench by the man-made lake, soothing sound of nature in the background and just nobody else's presence to disturb you - so different from Tokyo city centre areas even though the park is still within the Metropolitan Area. The transport cost was a tad expensive though, at 540yen 1-way (>.<) but some things are certainly spend-worthy.

Some pictures!


Friday, November 27, 2009

Nifty Thrifty

Earlier today I...

1) 'fixed' my favourite green suede autumn/winter coat.

2) fixed my broken brown bag

3) re-sewed and properly aligned the buttons on a 'new' secondhand navy velvet-ish dress.


The suede jacket (in the loveliest shade of green!) that mum bought for me from HK a few years back had pleather accents that had started peeling off in storage. So I aided the process a little since the peeling was really quite annoying (dropping bits of yellow 'dust' everywhere and looking quite ugly), but for the longest time, didn't quite know what to place over the ugly-looking yellow bit beneath the peeled-off-pleather. So today, I cut up a dark gray wool-blend tights that I got for 100yen, but in a size too large such that it can practically slide off my ass when I wear it. So I sawed a strip of the tights onto the jacket and kept the leg parts as legwarmers-cum-armwarmers! The previous crotch area part can even be a neckwarmer methinks! Killed 2-3 birds with one stone - great!

BEFORE:




AFTER:


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The strap of my usual brown bag that I bring everywhere, completely broke off whilst I was crossing the road yesterday! The bag's been with me for about a year I guess, since I got it last year in Taiwan with mummy. Such a waste that the strap broke, since every other part was still in very good condition! So today I attempted sewing the strap back on with normal needle and thread - and I actually managed to do it, much to my own surprise. The material was quite thick though, so every stitch was almost a painful struggle and now my poor fingers are now sore and thoroughly-poked. But look at my pretty stitches! Not too sure how well the bag will hold up though heh.



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In other thrifty news, I went back to Shimokitazawa again yesterday with Rachel, since the boots were only 987yen and I couldn't decide which pair to get the other day. Ended up getting a black winter coat too! For all of.... 700yen (10sgd)!! I LOVE SECONDHAND SHOPS! And my, there were tons at Shimokitazawa. I bought a black pair of boots too - very timely because my feet are starting to feel cold. Unrelated, but we were both so hungry at 7ish/8 that we tried a cheese niku (meat) maki (wrapped sushi). And it was DELICIOUS! A ball of rice flavoured with meat juices, wrapped in thin slices of roasted meat, topped with cheese which they blow torch to melt it just when you order one. Served with a leaf of cabbage - gastronimically satisfying!

Japan Culture #1- Game Centres & Pachinkos

Tuesday after Japanese class in the morning, walked back to the dorm with HY and by chance Hiro, the English Conversation Club's president, happened to be walking behind us. Said the "hi"s and the intros, and turns out that like me, he still had class a period after, and he was on his way to the game centre - aka arcade - so I decided to tag along. Arcades are not a place that I frequent, maybe like just only once a year if I happen to be so free after a movie or something. This was quite interesting though! Japan has some machines that seem so 'high-tech' for arcade games like horse betting game (you're the bookie, and plastic horses actually run around a miniature toy track), and the simulator flight fighting game (where you sit in the cockpit capsule with surround sound and digital), and the card game (where you use real cards with chips embedded in them to connect to the game machine), and many many more. Did not have my usual game of Bishi Bashi though.

Hiro was a great host/tour guide and entertained me throughout even though I was prepared to just watch him play whatever he wanted to play. So we tried DDR (Dance Dance Revolution - the one where you have to step and dance according to the arrows on the screen) and I was so bad at it I got grade "D" for beginner's level 3! Despite the DDR craze back in Secondary School, I've never ever tried it, so unsurprisingly I couldn't coordinate my 2 left feet. Then it was race car driving, except it's not the usual race track Daytona, but like mountainous road as though in Initial D. Hiro was way ahead of me; and the replay showed me bumping the car from side to side throughout the WHOLE way - evidently I'm not too good a mountain road driver. Rest of the time was spent looking and learning about the other interesting arcade games.

Seems like game centres are everywhere in Japan though, almost like Pachinko areas. Interesting how Pachinko is like the "public" gambling though not exactly gambling, since you only win items like pens etc, and you have to go to another shop to exchange such items for money - ie, your winnings. What a roundabout way haha.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Post-Asakusa-Dinner Walk Around Ginza

Post-dinner at Asakusa, we all split up for further engagements and obligations of the night - Wf went with Nobu to drink with Nobu's senpai, Isabel to her church cell group meeting, Jf to a birthday party, Alicia back to study. Despite the deceiving darkness, the night was still young at 7.30pm, so Rachel and I spontaneously decided to take a walk around Ginza. Had heard that the light-up is pretty at Ginza especially nearing Christmas. I think it's funny how Japanese always use the word "illumination" in English to mean like Christmas light-ups.

Managed to browse the H&M shop for a while before it closed at 9pm, then made our way into the much-beloved Uniqlo which was having a late-night closing and sale because of its 60th anniversary. Didn't get anything from either though. Bought peach jelly that was on sale at 49yen at a supermarket and ate it whilst ambling through the streets lined with big-name brands. Prada, Gucci, Ferragamo, Cartier, Bvlgari, Chanel - you name it, it's probably there somewhere. Ginza is the high-end shopping area of Tokyo after all. More random ambling and some pictures with small xmas trees later, made our way back to the dorm. Home sweet (heater-ed) home yay. It's been really cold lately, with my computer weather widget registering a 4degC night a few nights back. Autumn is fully here and heralding her Wintry sister.

A collage of pictures from Ginza:

Dinner at Asakusa with 5 Singaporeans + Nobu

After Yasukuni, all the 'followers' (the 5 who tagged along to Yasukuni except for Jon - so basically all the Singaporeans) trooped down with me to Asakusa to meet Nobu for dinner. Nobu just graduated from Toudai about 1 year ago or so and he was on a 1-year exchange to NUS during which he stayed at Eusoff (yay). He just got back from a business trip in KL and he got me KARI, which then became the basis for the meetup.

First time in Asakusa for me, though I've always heard it's pretty and a more traditional looking part of Tokyo. It was dark already when we got there at 5.30pm (the sun sets at 4.30pm) but the streets to the temple were prettily lit.

So pre-dinner snack at a tentage stall - amazake (甘酒), oden () and some bean paste soup. The bean paste soup and oden were okay - Yong Tau Foo is still nicer hehe - but the amazake was yummy! It reminded me very much of the peanut soup in ahballing (glutinous rice ball dessert). Contrary to its name, amazake actually has no alcoholic content, so even children can drink it.
(Pre-dinner in this temporary stall under the tent.)
(Oden - very similar to Yong Tau Foo but alot less tasty and soggier too.)
(Delicious amazake! Yoshi recommended it to Isabel and me the last time on Takao-san. Have to say he's right that it's yummy!)

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Then dinner. Walked into one of the many izakayas lining a street and what a feast it was. A feast of novelty. Take a look at the menu:

(Beer - Nama biiru; the first thing to order at an izakaya, then "kanpai" or cheers.)

(Buta kimchi - Grilled pork with kimchi. First time I've had kimchi in Japan and contrary to its fiery red appearance, it's actually not spicy at all! Sweet and tasty, and went really well with rice. I like!)

(Toro sashimi - Raw tuna fish. Yum. Again my first ever sashimi in Japan. Sigh.)

(Liver sashimi - This was dipped in a sauce of sesame oil + salt and it was surprisingly yummy. The usual liver taste was not as strong and the texture was silkier.)

(Cow stomach/tripe sashimi - Another surprising find. More tender than the ones I've had in beef soup noodles in Singapore too. Those I used to chew on endlessly.)

(Stingray/Mantaray fin with mayo - This was yummy. A snack food more than anything, it tasted alot like the dried cuttlefish snack, but less fishy and alot more tender and tasty. Two thumbs up!)

(Nikujaga - Basically translates into "meat and potatoes". Done in the usual Japanese 'stew' style with the flavouring of soy sauce, mirin, sake and sugar.)

(Tanyaki - Grilled skewered tongue. Third time having tongue, but still tasty. Managed to force Rachel to try it too haha yay for adventurous her!)

(Hot sake - This went down surprisingly smoothly. The alcohol wasn't fiery at all like shochu hmm. What a nice drink to have on a coooold night too.)

~All pictures courtesy of Alicia, since I was too busy being greedy. Ahem I mean eating. =)

Yasukuni Shrine + Yushukan

Today was an eventful day - first a class fieldtrip to Yushukan, the Memorial Museum at Yasukuni Shrine; followed by dinner with Nobu at Asakusa; and finally a random (very cold) amble around Ginza with Rachel.

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Yasukuni Shrine 靖国神社

(Entrance into the Yasukuni Grounds - a 5 min walk from Kudanshita Station.)

Yasukuni Shrine 靖国神社 is probably one of the most well-known places in Tokyo, what with the controversies that have surrounded it almost yearly since the end of WW2. Hatoyama has yet to make his move, but Koizumi had visited it annually during his seat at the government, and what rising outcries that raised. In the past, Prime Ministers have been sued for combining state and religion, so to avoid that, Koizumi did shy off the usual Shinto ritual at the shrine - bowing once only, instead of the usual Shinto tradition of 2 bows, 2 claps and 1 more bow (Guardian, 14 Aug 2001). But he did sign the guestbook in his official capacity, so as to pacify his supporters and make the visit sufficiently official.


(The top part of the Shrine. The architecture is amazing - early ones were apparently made with high-quality timber and no nails which allowed the structures to move with the tectonic movements, thus it withstood the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923.)

So what is at the Yasukuni Shrine? 2.46million people enshrined to become "noble spirits" (英霊 = eirei), including the class A war criminals like Prime Minister Toujou Hideki, though they were quietly enshrined only several years after their execution. Well according to my Professor, this whole memorialisation and enshrinement requires a huge sum of money, which is thus funded by the government. Hence, the government becomes the authority that decides who get to be enshrined here or not. All the 2.46million selected had to have died in the battlefield, mostly during the 1931 Manchurian Incident/Invasion up till the end of WW2 in 1945. Civilians are NOT included. Apparently all those chosen to be enshrined are also thus entitled to monetary compensation of sorts, as given out by veteran associations. But the interesting thing is, apparently almost half of the families of these individuals did not want to agree to their relative being enshrined. Certainly puts a spin to the usual conceptions of this issue hmm.

(Right at the Shrine where people pay their respects. The enshrinement is within the Shrine itself though, and entry is not permitted.)

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Yuushuukan 遊就館

The Yuushuukan is located within the Yasukuni grounds, in a modern-looking building adjacent to the Shrine. Professor said that the name itself means "making peace", yet it is ironically the largest war memorial/museum in the country - and not free of charge. International Law apparently states that all war memorials or Holocaust-related memorials/museums should be free of charge, like the Auschwitz in Poland and the Yad Vashem (Holocaust History Museum) in Jerusalem. Well but Japan never signed this agreement, so.


(The entrance of the modern-looking Yuushuukan.)

Naturally, most of the information tabs and plaques are in Japanese. But there is English translation, albeit very selectively. The wording is also very careful, almost shrugging off any blame or Japanese aggression in neutrality, whilst honouring the spirit of the very same noble spirits enshrined at the Yasukuni Shrine. In the English brochure, it states that the name "Yushu" means to "associate with and to learn from high-principled people". These "high-principled people" are the very same perpetrators and actors in the many brutalities and atrocities of the Japanese occupation and invasions. Hmm. Perhaps this museum may not be so much of an issue, if it was dedicated to all victims and victimisers of the WW2. Yet the sole dedication of such memorial space and cultural memory to militaristic actions and people, and the glorifying of their "true-heartedness" (English brochure), leaves much to be wondered.

(The afore-mentioned English Brochure.)

The translations are also very selective, with words like "daring", "brave" describing the Japanese soldiers, going up against "harsh" conditions and "being forced to attack others in order to defend herself". One example would have been the display for "Pre-incidents to the Marco Polo Incident" - where 3 pictures and accompanying Japanese texts were shown, but of which only 1 was translated into English; it was the one which had a number of Japanese soldiers attacked and killed. This easily implies straightaway that the Marco Polo Incident started with the other side's fault, no? Too bad there's no pictorial evidence, since photography was strictly disallowed in the museum.

Even the English brochure is couched in similiarly vague and glorified terms, describing the Yuushuukan as " a museum to inherit sincerity and records of enshrined divinities of Yasukuni Shrine" and it is the hope that the visitors "by touching directly the sincerity of enshrined divinities who dedicated their precious lives for their loving motherland, ... you may find something precious".

The saddest thing? Apparently this museum is the supplementary education for thousands of school children every year, together with the highly popular war-time stories/mangas by Kobayashi which glorify the samurai bushido and highlight the aggression of the mean Westerners who in turn forced Japan to strengthen and defend herself.
~~~~~~~~~
I went through this fieldtrip today mostly through my professor's eyes - and I do acknowledge that she probably has presented it to the most biased other extent. Nonetheless, by getting a piece of each side of the spectrum, I've come to realised really how complicated and gray this matter really is. Learning never stops. But evidently, it does get remodeled and painted over in the pretty colours of vagueness, neutrality and vacuous spaces.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

CFC + Culture #1

Cultural Exchange #1
Wednesday's practice was not so good - the feeling of frustration and being a burden on the rest. But today was a nice way to start the weekend. I scored my first-ever goal in Japan; Tomoyuki-san said:" 日本に来てからJingwenさんがうまくなった。”Although I totally didn't understand what he saying until a few explanation attempts later, but I finally understood that he was saying... I've improved!! So made my day =).
After practice today was a teach-little-children-floorball day, and it's so amazing to see some of them holding sticks which are obviously too long for them (6~13year-olds) and yet handle them with such dexterity that belies their young age. Joined in for a little bit, and A's mother was so kind as to do the drills with me and Y-san kept asking me to join the small kids in groups. Nice. And then there's the chat with T-san and R-san, and learning about Unihockey (a sport probably only found in Japan), and just about many more random things. Both of them have been to Singapore before (T-san 4times, R-san once) and they were so funny; Singapore is known as a food haven, but the one thing that they said they kept eating there was.... MACDONALDS at Orchard Road! Gosh! Made me laugh so hard. Apparently because it was so tasty and slightly different from the Japanese Macs. Interesting haha. And they actually still kept the laminated floorball souvenirs that NUS gave them 2 years ago during the Christmas friendly!

I really liked this chat with them, because I feel like despite the huge language barrier, it's really nice to know that there are people out there who still try to communicate with you and sincerely so, despite the evident difficulties. =) Esp T-san. He's always been one of the first to actually call out my full name properly and talk to me (in Japanese). Appreciated!

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Cultural Exchange #2

I often got to practices with another teammate J - a Norwegian who has played for the Norway National Team before, and just moved to Tokyo last year after marrying his Japanese wife. Most of the team stay in Chofu, or nearby, and J is 1) the only other English-speaking person 2) the only person staying near me (ie, near Shinjuku rather than Chofu). So most travelling time is spent learning more about each other's culture and way of life and common mindsets. He made a comment today that he liked how I described Singapore as a "forward-looking country" and I found that so odd because I mentioned it a few weeks back so it must have really struck him to have stuck so well - and yet this was a very common notion and nothing special to me at all. Turns out Norway not only has 37.5hour weeks, (8 hours per day, 5 days a week, 0.5 hour lunch break), but it also has a flat societal system whereby most people get 5 weeks off per year, 1 week paid leave, many days of (singly occuring) unexcused (ie no doctor's MC) sick days, just 0.5 million population in Oslo, 6 lines that run through the central train station on ONE track, free healthcare - and yet people complain about things like not being able to get a single room for free hospital stay. The laidback pace and mindsets are worlds apart from Singapore's - but I guess the societies are in vastly different stages. Norway's a society that has probably already settled down comfortably and no longer sees the need to partake in the daily drearies of the global rat race, having found it's own niche. Singapore is so young; so eager to try everything new and have all the best and be the best. Each society faces its own perils though - the former is so comfortable that it borders dangerously on complacence, and the latter is so quick to move on that it never stops to look and appreciate its past, however short. Such striking contrasts, and SO interesting to learn about others! =)

Waseda Sai 2009

Seems to be a tradition here for universities to have a University Festival (大学祭daigakusai) - nobody I've asked so far knows why though. So Waseda's was held on the past weekend (7th and 8th Nov) and we dropped by on Sunday since Saturday was spent at Hadano (one post before the previous). Met Chuan and his girlfriend Yihe at the festival too. Haven't seen him in so long - he said 10 years? Anyway they were really nice but the Festival was so crowded that it didn't really facilitate much interaction. So what was there at the school festival? Food stalls, game stalls and alot of performances, even concerts which had sold-out tickets. We barely stayed an hour before the boredom and the crowded-ness took its toll. Pictures below:



(Angklung Performance - they played Bengawan Solo.)

(Just a peak at how many people there were at the Festival, seeing how this was only one small (and filled with people) part of school. Some of the soldout concerts were held in that building behind - Auditorium.)


(Saris and Indian dances in Japan!).


(Abit of Uzbekisthan in Japan).

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The Rain After The Sun

Past two days have been really mild weather-wise, mild enough for just a t-shirt and cardigan. Such weather never lasts too long though, lest we take it for granted. Started drizzling last night and still is now. Thankfully it doesn't seem as cold as the previous weeks when it rained - the winds on those days were amazing, seemingly defying gravity to carry the raindrops almost horizontally.

Still need to get an umbrella. And maybe boots or wellingtons. All my shoes are getting stinky thanks to rainy days ugh.

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Time's flying by nowadays. Even had a midterm test yesterday and it just hits me: am I really halfway through 1 semester? Not quite yet I guess (5 weeks outta 15 weeks) but almost there. Friends back in NUS are actually almost done with their semester though; Facebook statuses have been full of exam-related comments heh. 時間が早く立つね!Translation: Time flies by quickly.Learnt this courtesy of Yoshi during the Takaosan hike.

My Japanese stillllllll has an unimaginably long way to go, but recently at Chofu, I've been slowly being able to guess more and more of what's being said. Still very difficult though - grammar is one thing, though usually the meaning can be guessed from the main word; but lack of vocabulary simply stumps conversations, because if you don't know the word, you just don't. Working on it though! =)

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Hadano International Festival

Isabel and I signed up for this event via Waseda - and made the 1.5hours trip there today. Interesting event held yearly by the Hadano Education Council and the festival seeks to provide a chance for internationals and local junior high school students (13 to 15/16 years old) to mix and speak in English. There were 2 english speech presentations by the students, a skit, free-speaking time, game time and it finished off with a song (Sing - by The Carpenters!). Interesting event and I don't know how but they managed to get people from Poland, Vietnam, Taiwan, Kazakhstan, Russia, Belgium, Israel, USA and even Africa! Didn't take that many pictures but here's a collage:



Best thing about the event? They gave us 3000yen to subsidise our transport fee (which was 650yen 1-way so 1300 2-way) Yay! =P


(P.S. To see a larger version of the picture, just click on the picture!)

Mt Takao + Dinner

6 Nov - Waseda Athletics Festival = school holiday yay! Not quite sure what the festival was about, but Isabel and I decided (last night, on the spur of the moment) to go to Takaosan (Mt Takao) and check out the fall colours instead! Asked Yoshi along and off we went! ... Except, there wasn't quite any magnificent fall colours as expected, but just the few solitary trees that have turned red. Oh well.

We expected an easy-peasy walk, only to be greeted by a crowd of elderlies dressed comfortably in full hiking attire and heading for the cable car lift. Whilst we - dressed in our casual clothes and footwear - huffed and puffed our way up the steep paved pathway all the 3.8km way up to the summit.


(Yoshi and Isabel on the climb!; The picture can't seem to capture how steep the path was...)


(There were information boards like this marking the path all the way. 14 boards in total - disseminating trivia and titbits about the flora and fauna of Takaosan.)

(A view of Tokyo from one of the lower checkpoints. On a good day, apparently Mt Fuji and most of Tokyo and even Kanagawa prefecture is visible.)

(At the observatory point @ halfway. Clarity today was pretty good - the board says 85%!)

(From the observatory deck - a range of lush green mountains and valleys visible in the vicinity of Takaosan. Apparently there are hiking trails through to these other mountains.)

(One of the small shops along the way. Tried dango for the first time here - nice! This was a little different from the usual - so says Yoshi- because this one had miso glazing. So yummy though. Also had a pork bun - so remniscent of da bao in Singapore - and a black bean pancake in the shape of Tengu.)

(One of the many manyy statues of Tengu on Takaosan. Tengu is a sort of bad goblin/demon that has evolved through folklore to become a mountain spirit. The name comes from its similar Chinese counterpart 天狗 and one distinctive feature is its long nose.)

(Almost at the summit...!)

(2-3 hours later... yay! Except, there were just 2 (small) trees that were standing proudly red in their fall colours. =/ Yikes.)

(Nonetheless, a pretty fall picture =) Tada!)
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After such extenuating efforts expended on Takaosan, we journeyed back to Tokyo (~45mins train ride) and headed into a random izakaya - Amatarou - in Shinjuku for dinner! Had:

(Deep fried soft bones - either chicken or pork can't quite remember but so yummy!)

(Beef tongue slices, served on heated black pebbles. Yummy too.)

(Left: Tako (octopus) sashimi with wasabi on grated radish. Soooo good.
Right: Deep fried tofu - one set of triplets with shoyu and the other with butter.)


There was another dish of beef slices with onions and poached egg over hotplate. Great accompaniment to our bowl of rice.


(Finally, dessert! Shared a hot bowl of something-choco-banana. Basically sliced bananas, with chocolate syrup, caramel, whipped cream and some sponge-like pieces and a scoop of ice cream - served in a big, hot stone bowl and even the little bowls they gave us were warmed!)

Yum in my tummy and a nice day out at the only natural forested area/moutain in Tokyo. What can I say =)

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Yakiniku @ Kabukicho

Today was Culture Day - Japanese public holiday. Went to Shinjuku with WF and JF - had ramen (tried pork cheek meat - so tender!), queued for Krispy Kreme (the free freshly made glazed one was the best of the lot!), dropped by Kinokuniya and then had Yakiniku at Kabukicho. Not a cheap day, but quite an interesting one! Tried alot of things for the first time:


Edamame. Tried it for the first time today too. Not bad. Just like snow peas actually.


Darker red one is black pork liver and the other pile was a mixture of intestines, stomach walls and whatnot.


Pork tongue and pork meat. Pork tongue was surprisingly yummy!


Hoppy + shochu. Hoppy is a malted beverage that tastes exactly like beer just without the alcohol. The shochu comes in the glass and you mix the two to drink. Interesting. Apparently common amongst the salarymen.


JF and WF kanpai.

Foggy Breath!

Yesterday was the coldest it has been since I was here - so cold that for the first time I could see my breath condensing when I breathed out!

Brr. 10 degrees I think. The cold isn't the whammer though, but the strong, strong winds. Need more cold-resistant clothing for sports =/ Sigh. Went to check out the sports warm tights at Odakyu Department Store today but they all cost about 150sgd per piece. Sigh.