Friday, December 16, 2011

Kanpai And Other Marvels of Japan

I went to Tokyo last weekend to meet up with Maxwell, a good friend from home.  I left at 10:30pm on Friday night, aboard my first night bus.  It was scheduled to get into Tokyo at 7:30am, but somehow managed to get there just before 6...leaving me tired and wondering if I could just sleep on the bus for the other hour and a half I was expecting to have.  But alas, I wearily gathered my things, hoisted my backpack onto my shoulders, and moseyed down the steps, onto the cold, dark Tokyo streets.  I was freezing, tired, and facing the realization that I had nowhere to go at 5:45 in the morning, but as soon as I lifted my eyes and met them with the skyscrapers around me, I couldn't stop grinning.

I took the train around town, visiting Shibuya, Shinjuku, and Harajuku.  The train stations are humongous and bustling with people.  Though I spent most of the day walking through huge crowds of city dwellers, I found so much solace in being by myself as I strolled past them -- observing the new sites, sounds, smells, and everything else that came with this big city experience.

And as soon as I met up with Maxwell, all the joy of the friendships I have rushed back into me.  We explored, talked, ate, drank, got lost, photographed, laughed, laughed, laughed, envied, observed, and enjoyed.  It was immeasurably good times and left me feeling so, so rejuvenated.

When the time came for me to catch my night bus back home, we went to Tokyo Station where I planned to point at the map on my phone with its location and ask some conductors where it is.  That didn't work so well and time ticked by as we got more and more lost searching for the bus' whereabouts.  With ten minutes before its departure, I ran up to a conductor and asked him the same thing I asked all the other ones.  Only this time, he knew where it was, and though he appeared to be heading somewhere, briefcase in hand, he started leading the way there.  I thought he'd leave us and point us in the right direction once we reached the Station's distant exit, or once we reached the cross walk, or once we walked 3 blocks out of the way.  But he didn't leave our side until my bus was in sight, across the street.  It was so.far.away.  I tried thanking him many times and telling him how kind he was, but he only ever quietly muttered something along the lines of "no problem."  But not in an irritated kind of way...just in the kind of way where you knew it really wasn't a problem to him.  Where you knew he probably spent much of his time going out of his way for people and never needing anything in return.  Where you knew it was second nature to him.  We got to my bus exactly on time.  I was the last one to arrive and as soon as I boarded, it left.  If not for him, I certainly would have missed it.  Sometimes I'm so surprised by how kind people are, though Japan is certainly taking away much of this surprise.

Here are some pictures of my travels last weekend.  I can't wait for my next avenue of explorations.


Camera: Nikon FM10
Film: Portra 800

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a mall or a space port...
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my weekly calligraphy setup
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my sensei
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Until next time,
M

2 comments:

  1. dude you need to come back to LA and shoot with us asap haha

    your images are so good.. every time!

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  2. when you take a picture of a street person, do you ask them first? in english or japanese? when i was in japan, i asked people if i could take their picture, and they seemed kind of awkward about it, but they let me take their picture out of politeness. but then their portraits came out kind of awkward-looking.

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