Alec in Japan

Life in Japan through the eyes of Alec, a teenager on a working holiday gap year.
17th Oct 2007

Sorry it’s been a while since my last update. I recently made the big move from Okinawa to Tokyo and of course made a video documenting the whole thing! I’ll let the video speak for itself. After the video are some photos.

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24th Aug 2007

A few days ago two coworkers and I went sightseeing around Okinawa. We went to the Sweet Palace, Okinawa’s famous aquarium and Nago Pineapple Park. It’s the first video I’ve made outdoors so I didn’t realise how important a quiet setting is. I’m also umming and aahing a lot because I didn’t plan what I was going to say before I turned on the camera.

 Anyway, below is the video. Below that are subtitles because it was too time-consuming to put them in the video.

Alec
Good morning!
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02nd Aug 2007

This July, so much as happened with me settling in Japan for my working holiday, starting my first full-time job, and living away from ‘home’ for the first time.

 Here are the events which shaped July 2007:

  • Being able to put into practice and use all the phrases for shops and restaurants which I had so dutifully studied.
  • Drinking on beach with Tristan and Attila.Going out to dinner with most of the foreign staff at the hotel. We had Korean BBQ and then went drinking on the beach. I remember the smoke from the BBQ being so strong, and laughing because it was all blowing in Attila’s face … then the wind changed and it wasn’t so funny anymore.
  • With an Okinawan performer at the hotel.Watching Okinawa singing and dancing at the hotel. At the end I was called up on stage to dance with them, and then I had my photo taken with one of the performers. The great thing about being alone in a foreign country, is that you can do any silly/stupid/embarrassing things, and no one will really ever know about but you.
  • Typhoon Man-Yi. My very first experience of a natural disaster.
  • With my co-worker at Unna Matsuri.Going to Unna Matsuri with a co-worker and Natalie. We had a fantastic time and I’m sure I sweated out all my natural moisture. They had a massive hot pot which everyone took servings from, and there was also an old man who kept stepping on his poor little chihuahua.
  • Italian dinner in Chatan.Celebrating George’s 20th birthday. We had an Italian dinner in Chatan, and then went to Naha to go clubbing. Had an amazing time and we all ended up sharing a cheap hotel room with no air-conditioning. We slept in our jeans and woke up dripping with sweat. We were all too exhausted to care though.
  • Watching the YouTube version of my Top 10 Half-Japanese Celebrities article reach more than 8000 views, 70 comments, and 40 favourites.

Here are the funny anecdotes which made me more …


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17th Jul 2007

We recently got hit by the big Typhoon Man-Yi here in Okinawa. It was about Level 5 and came straight through Okinawa and even hit the mainland pretty badly.

Before it came I’d not experienced a typhoon, earthquake, volcano or any other serious weather like that so I wasn’t really sure how big it was going to be. There had been such a build-up to it that I expected chaos, cars rolled over, roofs thrown off and things like that. Fortunately for Okinawa, that didn’t happen, even though this it was the biggest typhoon to hit Okinawa in two or three years.

I took some photos documenting what happened in the the leadup, during the typhoon, and in the aftermath.

Rizzan beach before typhoon

This first photo to the left is one I took on the day before the typhoon was due to hit. It’s a photo of the hotel beach and you can see the dark clouds hovering overhead. There were black clouds like this for two days before the typhoon and even people who’ve never experienced a typhoon before (eg; me) could tell something big was coming.

TyphoonThis photo on the right was taken from my balcony at 10.20. The only cars on the road were of people who absolutely had to travel as in serious typhoons like this, holidays are declared so no one Typhoon (2)has to risk going to work or school. We weren’t sure if our minibus to work would come because of the weather, but sure enough it did and I went to work where shops and restaurants were open, but no one was allowed to use the beach or pools. This pic on the left shows more …


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01st Jul 2007

Monorail in Naha (2)
I’ve been in Okinawa for a few days now and it really does feel like a different country from Japan sometimes! The Okinawan culture is blend of Japanese, Chinese and American cultures with a generous helping of island spirit. And whilst on the one hand Okinawa has been the object of international disputes for hundreds of years, it feels like a little island that no one’s discovered before.

When I first arrived at the airport, I noticed that everything was so amazingly clean. Riding the monorail to the centre of Naha I don’t think I would’ve been surprised to see people eating off the pavements! That side of Okinawa was very Japanese; the cleanliness. Once I arrived in Naha at my hotel, I began to see a bit of a more different side to Okinawa.

The budget hotel I was staying at was in a very non-touristy shopping area around Heiwa Douri (Peace Street). The shops seemed pretty basic and were run, for the most part, by little old ladies. As I walked around Heiwa Douri a lot of people were looking at me with what seemed like a mixture of curiosity and hostility. I’ve been around a lot in Japan but I’ve never been the object of such looks. I don’t know whether it’s because I’m a foreigner in a small city, or because they think I’m one of the many American soldiers stationed on the island (or perhaps because I’m just so damned good-looking!).Rizzan Sea Park Hotel

Last night I was walking to the beach and walked past a house which was really a bit of a shack. Inside the tv was left on and there was an old woman lying down who’d obviously just fallen asleep with the door open on to the road. It reminded me a lot of a kampung house in Malaysia.

The weather is really hot and really humid; again a bit like Malaysia. I suppose Okinawa is so far south that it’s not surprising it reminds me of South-East Asia in a lot of ways.


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