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Homesick

March 2, 2021

Blame it on the dreary weather we’ve been having, but I’ve been as homesick as a recruit in boot camp lately. It’s tempting to blow my meager savings on a ticket back to the States, to see my friends and, yes, even my family.

I miss it all: lazy summer evenings at the zoo, sitting on freshly cut grass and listening to live music; sweaty nights on crowded dance floors in the smoke-filled dives of Old Town; slow Sunday mornings reading the Oregonian over huge American breakfasts; and Bohemian afternoons loafing in cafes in Northwest Portland, sipping demitasses of bitter espresso, the pinky raised.

And my mind must be poisoned by nostalgia, because I don’t think I’d even mind being dragged along to the Sunday morning Mass at St. Cecelia’s. I could check out how the gorgeous Dougherty girls have filled out in my absence, listen again to the nonsensical sermon of our stuttering and apoplectic Father O’Brien, and, afterwards over the doughnuts and coffee, just to get my father’s knickers in a twist tell him what a bunch of crap it all was.

I want to borrow a car and take an aimless drive into the countryside, following the road as far as it will take me and talk with the nutty, loquacious hicks I’m sure to find out there.

I want to drop in at Escape From New York Pizza, stuff my face with greasy slices of pepperoni and wash it all down with a bucket of Dr. Pepper. I’d love to satisfy that craving for the Satyricon gyros that has been with me these sixteen months, to lick the yoghurt sauce as it drips down my forearm. Oh, to be able to sit on a bench outside of the Santa Fe Taqueria and pig out on carne asada burritos stuffed with frijoles, red hot salsa and cilantro, and put the fire out with cans of Tecate.

I long to spend an evening in the Dublin Pub, packed to the Reilly with the Irish Diaspora, to rub elbows with the good Catholic girls and rub up against a not-so-good Protestant one . . . introduce her to “Paddy”:

“Got any Irish in ye?” I’ll say. “No? Would you like some?” (Slap!) “Is that a no?”

I want to belt out Irish folk songs, keeping the throat lubricated with pint after lovely pint of pitch-black Guinness, sing until the bouncer tells me to put a sock in it and gives me the boot.

But, more than anything, I want to stop playing the role of brooding loner that was thrust upon me when I stepped upon the Japanese stage. I yearn to have my friends’ arms around me, to be embraced again by that motley cohort of slackers I parted with when I came to Japan. I’m starving for the conversations we used to have, the conversations inspired by cheap bottles of pinot noir and pints of microbrew that would keep us up all night laughing until our sides hurt and the neighbors got sore, and they could fuck off for all we care, so would you like another drink? All the conversations I’ve had the past several months have left my gut half empty.

Letters from America don’t come as often as they used to, the phone calls have stopped altogether. I worry more and more that I’ve lived for so many months cloistered in this silent vigil, that I am beginning to lose my voice. I feel it in the awkward self-consciousness that overcomes me whenever I talk to someone for the first time, in a new reluctance to break the ice, in the creeping shyness that has its hands around my throat and chokes me where I once sang.


This is an excerpt from A Woman’s Nails. Click here for Chapter One

© Aonghas Crowe, 2010. All rights reserved. No unauthorized duplication of any kind.

注意:この作品はフィクションです。登場人物、団体等、実在のモノとは一切関係ありません。

All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

A Woman's Nails is now available on Amazon's Kindle.

In Life in America Tags Portland, Oregon, Homesick, Missing Home
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Who would I be IMG_0262.jpg

Where would I be today?

February 5, 2020

While we were in Portland in the summer of 2018, my wife asked me where I would be if I had never come to Japan two and a half decades ago. Boy, what a question.

“I dunno,” I answered after a moment’s silence. “I really don’t.”

But ruminating on that question for the next few days, I came to a number of conclusions.

For starters, in that alternate universe where I remained in the U.S., I would most likely weigh twice as much as I do now. (And so, would my wife, whoever she might be. And I would love her to pieces all the same and never eversuggest she go on a diet, because, heaven forbid, I wouldn’t want to “fat-shame” the love of my life.)

I’d probably have somewhat maladjusted, yet overly confident kids. Although there would a perceptible gap between their inflated self-esteem and actual abilities, Daddy would never be able to tell them that. Wouldn’t want to prick a hole in that optimistic bubble of theirs. “Self-esteem above all” could be another motto for America.

Japanese kids, I find, tend to be more modest (and perhaps realistic) when assessing their own capabilities; the parents more demanding. Ask a Japanese girl if she can play the piano and she might with some coaxing say, “Yes, a little” only to go on and perform Chopin’s “Nocturne in C Minor”. An American boy will boast that he was pretty good at the piano and then bang out “Chopsticks”.

Those alternate universe children of mine would probably be in college by now (rather than in elementary school) and I would be worrying myself sick (not to mention bald) as I struggled to pay the extortionate price of tuition there.

I’d have a mortgage double what I currently pay in rent. On the plus side, though, I would have: a large yard maintained by Hispanic immigrants, rather than a berandā cluttered with drying laundry and recycle bins; a gorgeous kitchen (that seldom got used); and loads of storage space filled up with useless crap. I’d have a car—perhaps three—instead of a bicycle, and I would be driving everywhere instead of walking, cycling, or taking public transportation as I do now.

As a result of all that driving, I wouldn’t be nearly as fit and healthy. And speaking of health, I would be paying through the nose for mediocre healthcare insurance and be on my knees praying to my Catholic God that I never get sick and actually have to use that insurance.

Because of the running costs of being an American are much higher than those of living as an expat in Japan, that alternate universe doppelganger of mine would probably be one more of that hapless class of Yanks who are considered house-rich, but cash poor.

I would probably have a more relaxed work schedule, though. I would finish early enough to have dinner with my family in the evenings. Eating together as a family just doesn’t register as importantly here as it does in America. Weekends would as a rule be off. (I have always worked on Saturdays ever since coming to Japan, even when my head was screaming with a hangover.) On the other hand, I wouldn’t be able to take as many long vacations as I do now which I hope compensates for the back-breaking sixty-hour work weeks.

I guess I’d be tossing good money after bad in the Catholic Church’s offertory on Sunday mornings rather than pocket change into the saisen bako at my local shrine. My parallel universe kids would have been raised Catholic out of inertia more than any deep-seated feelings towards the religious tradition I was steeped in. Meanwhile, my flesh-and-blood sons’ views towards faith, if they have any at this stage in their lives, are more syncretic—a blending of Buddhism and Shintō with hints of Christianity (and Santa Claus-ism). How they will eventually be able to resolve these mutually contradictory beliefs in no god, eight million gods, and One Almighty, Omniscient Father in Heaven, is anyone’s guess. I really don’t care so long as they don’t end up boring me and others with their beliefs.

I suspect I would have continued writing no matter where I settled or what kind of career path I took, but I may have had more access to people in the business had I remained in the States than I do today like a literary castaway in Japan. What I would have ended up writing, however, is anyone’s guess. One thing is for sure, my writing would never have been influenced by Japanese aesthetics and literature.

I wouldn’t have become as keenly attuned to things like the changes in the seasons as I am today. And I’m not just talking about the flowers and foliage, but the insects and the noises they make, the winds and their names, and all the different rains, the seasonal delicacies such as the pungent smell of sanma (Pacific saury) being cooked on the grill and filling the house with oily smoke in autumn. I would not have learned that the year can be divided up into more than just four seasons. The East Asian lunisolar calendar has 24 points, with each divided into a further 3, giving 72 kō (候), or micro seasons, in a year. As I write this, we are experiencing the 49th micro season, Kōgan Kitaru, “The Geese Arrive”.

I would not have been exposed to Japanese literature, film and art, which has definitely influenced my sensibilities. Likewise, I would have never experienced teaching Japanese literature and culture to students from all over the globe at the university level. (How on earth did that happen?) It is through this study that I have learned more about Japanese history, culture, language, art, literature—you name it—than I could have ever imagined possible.

I wouldn’t have traveled throughout Japan and come to fall in love with some of her regions—Kyōto, yes, but also Kagoshima, Kamakura, and Okinawa. Oh, Okinawa! What would my life be like today without traditional Okinawan music or the local firewater, awamori, in it? Bland!

And speaking of saké, had I never come to Japan, I may not have ever been exposed to shōchū, a drink distilled from a wide variety of ingredients depending upon the region, from saké lees in Saga and sweet potatoes in Kagoshima, to barley in Ōita and sesame seeds in Fukuoka. In the alternate universe, I am drinking local microbrews and wine and thinking the world of it. Ignorance is bliss.

Had I never “immigrated” to Japan, I wouldn’t have traveled around Asia nearly as much or become as familiar with the region’s cultures and languages. For my friends back in the States, traveling to, say, Vietnam is a once-in-a-lifetime adventure that must be documented on Facebook and Instagram. For us in Fukuoka, though, it’s just a five-hour flight away. Shanghai is closer than Tōkyō for us; Seoul, less than an hour’s flight; and, Taipei and Hong Kong, about two to two and a half hours away. Europe is, of course, much farther, but no more remote than it was when I was living on the West Coast of the U.S.

Had I never come to Japan, I wouldn’t have a national holiday or local festival to look forward to every few weeks. In the past month alone, we had Music City Tenjin, a free outdoor music event downtown, the equinoctial week which happened to coincide with the moon-viewing festival Jūgoya, Oktoberfest—yes, complete with lederhosen and yodeling—Shinkōsai, a six-day long Shintō festival with lanterns held at Dazaifu Tenmangū shrine, another Shintō festival at Kushida Shrine called Hakata Okunchi, a number of light-up and lantern events in late October, and the 3-day long Kunchi festival in Karatsu City held around Culture Day on November 3rd. I could go on and on. I used to get so depressed when Christmas came to an end as there was very little but darkness separating that very festive time of year and Easter in America. Here in Japan, though, Christmas is followed by New Year’s which is just as merry, if not more, and lasts five days rather than only one. And right on the heels of o-Shōgatsu is Seijin no Hi, or Coming-of-Age-Day, when twenty-year-old women dressed up in elaborate kimono are a feast for the eyes. And that is followed by Setsubu, which is followed by . . . Well, you get the picture.

And though you don’t need to be patient when it comes to waiting for the next holiday or festival, thanks to my coming to Japan I have learned to be patient and courteous (I hope) towards others, never raising my voice or bursting out in anger. Do I ever get irritated? You bet! On a daily basis, no less. But, I have mastered the Art of Gaman and seldom let my feelings get the better of me anymore. People sometimes say I am a cold bastard, that emotion doesn’t register in my face anymore, and perhaps that’s true. I certainly don’t smile as much, or as naturally, as I did before. But, I would never explode in a fit of apoplexy over something so inconsequential as a parking space, either.

What else? Like many of those interviewed, I am more punctual than I imagine I ever could have been had I never moved to Japan. I am more detail-oriented. I’m more honest, too. If I found a cash-filled wallet on the street, I would take it to the nearest police box because that’s just what you do in Japan.

 

So, the short answer to my wife’s question is this: I wouldn’t be me had I never come to Japan. But more importantly than that, I wouldn’t have found my wife who I adore. I wouldn’t have had my two sons who fill me with so much love and pride, yet manage to run me into the ground all the same. I just wouldn’t be me.

In Family, Life in America, Life in Japan, Writing Life Tags Portland, Living in Japan, Leaving Japan, Expat Life in Japan
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Once Upon a Time in Portland

January 29, 2020

   I wander Northwest Portland and look at all the things I can’t afford—cars, Victorian houses, fashionable clothing, beer, girls, hope . . . I wander Northwest in search of someone who can sympathize.

   A friend of mine recently moved to Germany to begin working as an analyst for an English securities firm. He’ll be making $55,000 a year which sounds like a fortune to me, considering I’ve only got two dollars in my wallet and some change in my pocket for the bus home.

   I go to Brian’s apartment on NW. Irving. Or “Oiving” as the Boston native calls it. Brian is always good for a laugh, always listens and soothes if only because he knows what I am going through. I doubt he’ll be in this early in the afternoon, but I’d rather wait on his front porch than head home and face my parents and their questions, their disappointments, and their unwelcome advice on how to get a job.

   I walk up the rickety wooden steps. I fell down these steps a year ago when I was drunk and cracked my skull on the sidewalk. I sometimes wonder if I did permanent damage.

   To the immediate left of Brian’s place is a shabby halfway house for mental patients. The windows are covered with a filthy film of neglect. In each window hangs a different set of mismatched curtains from the Nixon era or soiled sheets draped across to conceal the depravity within. Though many of the patients seem content to sit on the porch day after day in a lithium-induced daze, there are others bursting with energy; one paces back and forth like a caged animal, another is prone to outbursts of profanity. We have come to call him Pally.

   I twist the aging ringer on Brian’s door.

   “Goddamn cock-sucking sons of bitches!” shouts Pally next door.

   I give the ringer another twist. The door has a large single diamond-shaped window in it that is cracked. The building is in an appalling state. Paint is chipped. The floors creak. The carpets are stained and funky.

   Across the street all the houses have been bought up and remodeled by not-so young anymore, but definitely upwardly mobile professionals. Before long, this side of the street will also be cleaned up and both Brian and his roommates, as well as Pally and the rest will be told to shove off.

   Brian appears at the top of a flight of stairs that rises just behind the door. He waves me up.

   “Yus! What’s up?” He says as I’m climbing the stairs, and then noticing that I’ve gotten my hair cut exclaims, “Yus! What happened to you?”

   I had been growing my hair out for over two years, but this morning went and had it all whacked off.

   “You look like a human being! Respectable, even. What’s with the suit? You gone Mormon on me, Yus? Cuz if you have, you leave NOW! None of that missionary crap in here.”

   “It’s worse than that, Brian,” I say as I plop down on a third-hand couch that came with the apartment. Dust billows up. “I had a job interview.”

   “What for, Yus? President? Yus for President, ninety-two! Yup, it’s Yus! How about that for a campaign slogan? ‘Yup, it’s Yus!’”

   The doctor is in. A smile cracks across my face. All you have to do is listen and laugh your cares away.

   Brian sits down on the floor next to the TV. “So? You had an interview?”

   “Yeah, with my exploratory committee. President of the U. S. of A. I’m running, goddamnit!”

   “Where?”

   “Small company,” I lie, too embarrassed to tell him the truth. “It’s downtown . . . Didn’t expect you to be home.”

   “Oy gevalt, Yus!” he exclaims, wiping his weary eyes with his thick, short fingers. “Uncle Milt was in a historically bad mood today.”

   Milton is my former boss on “The Hill”, the medical university and its related research facilities. It was on The Hill that Brian and I first met, experimenting with mice while we were still students. The two of us continued to work there after graduation despite Milt’s choleric disposition, which kept all of us research assistants constantly on edge.

   In many ways, I did enjoy my time in the lab, I even liked Milt on his good days. But it was exhausting watching out for the old man’s wild mood swings. Add to that the suspicion that my chosen career, Medicine, wasn’t for me, and well I felt I had no choice but to leave when my contract was up. Brian remains, though, working part-time. Until he can find a full-time teaching position, that is.

   “Yus, I was trying to do the experiments that you did, and failed, because Yus doesn’t take very good notes. See, I’m reading Yus’s wonder lab book: ‘Page forty-two. And the method for extracting the protein from the cell is as follows:’ I turn the page, page forty-three. And, it’s BLANK, Yus!!! You didn’t write down any notes, Yus. Let me tell ya, Uncle Milt was really happy about that one. Oy veh, he yells at me and he’s shaking and red in the face. He says, ‘Chemsz, did you have your head up your butt?’”

   Brian starts laughing and I can’t help but laugh too.

   “Yus, you know what I say? I says, ‘You’re right, Milt, as a matter of fact I did have my head up my butt. See, I was only following Yus’s brilliant notes right here on page forty-three. Yus, I’m tellin’ you, I’m sending your lab book to Stockholm. That’s Nobel Laureate material you did on The Hill.”

   We laugh hard and the darkness of that dim living room lifts as if the roof has been torn away from the rafters.

   “Yus, I sometimes feel I ought to be next door with old Pally. After today, I almost went there instead of home.”

   “Well, the way I’m going, me too, Brian.”

   Brian’s apartment is a mess as always. None of his roommates seem to care. The Escape from New York pizza box with a half-eaten peperoni pizza is still on the coffee table where I saw it three days ago. The grease has congealed, the cheese has grown hard. There are plastic cups with flat beer in them. The Oregonian is scattered in piles throughout the room. Finding today’s paper, I pick it up and open up the classified section.

   “By the way, Milt said if you want, he’d hire you back on, but only part-time, like me, Yus.”

   “Great, Brian, but what’s the catch?”

   “No catch,” he says, chuckling. “You only have to work just as much as the full-time staff, but earn less. See how that works? Uncle Milt, gets two people to yell at for the price of one.”

   Accountant, Accountant, Accountant, Accountant . . . 

   “Actually, Yus, you’re the only one who knew how to do all the paperwork on the hill. Now he’s got poor Anne doing it and of course she’s making all the same mistakes you used to make, but does Uncle Milt yell at her? Hell no . . .”

   Attendant . . . Appliance Salesman . . . Appliance Serviceman . . . Appliance Technician . . .

   “No, Yus, he yells at me. Me! What did I have to do with . . .”

   Barber, Barber, Barber, Barber . . . Bartender, Bartender . . . A friend of mine was laid off from Paramount Pictures and became a bartender. Good money, he said. Good tips and you can meet girls . . . Then again, his car was repossessed. Maybe the money’s not so good after all . . . 

   “Yus, you listenin’ t’me? Yus never listens to me. All he hears is blah, blah, blah, blah.”

   “Sorry,” I say, putting the paper down, but spread out on the pizza box so I can still see it. “Reading the classifieds has become an exercise in futility lately. At times, I just want to give up and say, Fuck it! You heard back from any schools?”

   “Nothing yet,” Brian says, lying down on the floor. “The subbing has been pretty irregular. Good money when it comes around, but it’s only September, so I’m stuck up on The Hill until then. Why don’t you come back? Not with Milty, of course, but in a different lab. It is a job.”

   “Thanks, Mom.”

In Life in America Tags Life Before Japan, Portland
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Ala Moana Beach Park, Honolulu

Ala Moana Beach Park, Honolulu

The Grass is greener . . .

March 30, 2018

Playing soccer with my sons in the local park, I tripped as I was dribbling the ball and face-planted into the ground. It wouldn’t have been half as painful if the goddamn pitch we were playing on wasn’t gravel.

Japanese friends and family, the above is what a park looks like in the U.S. Please note how the grass is cut regularly, perhaps as many as two times a week, and watered, yes watered, regularly so that it stays green even in the dry season. Lush, green grass, imagine that!

Diamond Head State Park, Honolulu

Diamond Head State Park, Honolulu

Inside the Diamond Head State Monument. Again, the grass is cut and watered. Looks nice doesn't it? Kind of makes you want to roll about on it, or spin aound like my wife is doing in the photo, or just lie down it and look up at the sky.

 But this is Hawaii, you might say. The climate there is just perfect for parks. 

 Okay. The next picture is from San Francisco:

Maritime Garden, San Francisco

Maritime Garden, San Francisco

Cute kid, if I don't mind saying so myself.

Admittedly not the best photo, but it proves that even in the middle of winter, San Francisco, which tends to be rather chilly and overcast most of the time, also has nice green grass in its public parks. This picture was taken near Ghiradelli Square where you'll find quite a lot of tourists and homeless people (many of whom have apparently gone off their Perphenazine--the homeless, mind you, not the tourists).

Also note the trashcan. Not only is the design pleasing to the eye, it is not overflowing with garbage. Why's that, you ask. Because they are emptied regularly. Novel idea, isn't it? See you don't have to wait until they are filled to overcapcity like commuter trains in Tōkyō.

 The following photo is from Portland, Oregon:

Park Blocks, Portland 

Park Blocks, Portland 

Again, this photo was taken in the dead of winter when the sun rarely shines, and yet the grass is still nice and green. A bit bald in spots, but that can'be helped. All the rain tends to make the ground soggy and prone to damage by pedestrians. Leaves are picked up at regular intervals, too. See, you don't have to drastically cut the limbs of the trees in autumn. Let the leaves fall as Mother Nature intended and then rake them up later. Revolutionary!

 And this is what one of the better parks in Fukuoka looks like:

Maizuru Park, Fukuoka

Maizuru Park, Fukuoka

Yikes!

I hiked all the way to the park with the intention of playing catch with my son, but . . . For crying out loud, when was the grass last cut?

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I wasn't so much worried about losing the ball among the weed as I was about losing my sons.

You know, when you don't maintain the parks, it's no wonder so few people visit them. Then again, that may be the idea behind the lack of maintenance. The fewer the visitors, the less work the parks administration has to do cleaning up after all those people. There's less litter to pick up, fewer garbage cans that need emptying . . . Hmm. Maybe they know what they're doing after all.

 To be fair, . . .

Shinjuku Gyōen, Tōkyō

Shinjuku Gyōen, Tōkyō

 . . . there are some nice parks in Japan. These photos were taken at Tōkyō's Shinjuku Gyoen, which is located betwen Yoyogi and Shinjuku stations.

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It's a great park. Unfortunately, admission is not free.

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What I'm getting at is this: if fat, lazy, and stupid Americans can maintain parks, then surely the Japanese can do it, to. Give it a try!

In Life in Japan Tags Ala Moana Beach Park, America vs Japan, Parks in Japan, Grass, Diamond Head, Maritime Garden, Portland, San Francisco, Japanese Parks, Shinjuku Gyoen, Tokyo
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KAMPAI Blog

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Feb 7, 2024
60 : 35 : 5
Feb 7, 2024
Feb 7, 2024
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May 15, 2023
Satsuma Imo Motogusare Disease
May 15, 2023
May 15, 2023
Seifuku Imuge.jpeg
Jun 22, 2021
Seifuku's Imugé
Jun 22, 2021
Jun 22, 2021
May 24, 2021
Kachaashii
May 24, 2021
May 24, 2021
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May 16, 2021
Destine
May 16, 2021
May 16, 2021
Apr 26, 2021
Moriawaro
Apr 26, 2021
Apr 26, 2021
Mar 3, 2021
Kampai Shanshan
Mar 3, 2021
Mar 3, 2021
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Jan 28, 2021
Mitake Genshu
Jan 28, 2021
Jan 28, 2021
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Jan 27, 2021
Kokubu Kikoji Kura
Jan 27, 2021
Jan 27, 2021
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Jan 15, 2021
Hakaio
Jan 15, 2021
Jan 15, 2021
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Too Close to the Sun

Featured
Feb 20, 2019
80. Why the long face?
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
79. The Itch
Feb 20, 2019
Feb 20, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
78. Soaring
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
77. Yaba Daba Doo!
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
76. Let's Make a Deal
Jan 3, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
Nov 22, 2018
75. The Pied Piper of Patpong
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 16, 2018
74. Ping Pong Pussy
Nov 16, 2018
Nov 16, 2018
Oct 18, 2018
73. Yaba
Oct 18, 2018
Oct 18, 2018
Oct 16, 2018
72. Lightning Strikes Twice
Oct 16, 2018
Oct 16, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
71. Contacting De Dale
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
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A Woman's Tears

Featured
Apr 2, 2018
18. Just When I Stop Looking
Apr 2, 2018
Apr 2, 2018
Apr 1, 2018
17. Catch and Release
Apr 1, 2018
Apr 1, 2018
Mar 29, 2018
16. Nudging Destiny
Mar 29, 2018
Mar 29, 2018
Mar 25, 2018
15. HAKATA RESTORATION PROJECT
Mar 25, 2018
Mar 25, 2018
Mar 20, 2018
14. Reversible Destiny
Mar 20, 2018
Mar 20, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
13. Graduation
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
12. Reading Silence Aloud
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 12, 2018
Mar 7, 2018
11. Shut Out
Mar 7, 2018
Mar 7, 2018
Mar 6, 2018
10. The Second Night
Mar 6, 2018
Mar 6, 2018
Feb 28, 2018
9. At the farmhouse
Feb 28, 2018
Feb 28, 2018

Silent Ovation

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Feb 27, 2024
11. High School
Feb 27, 2024
Feb 27, 2024
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Feb 11, 2024
10. Taichiro Remarries
Feb 11, 2024
Feb 11, 2024
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Feb 5, 2024
9. Death of My Father
Feb 5, 2024
Feb 5, 2024
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A Woman's Hand

Featured
Jan 24, 2019
52
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
51
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 24, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
50
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 23, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
49
Jan 3, 2019
Jan 3, 2019
Nov 22, 2018
48
Nov 22, 2018
Nov 22, 2018
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A Woman’s Nails

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Feb 21, 2021
14. Nekko-chan
Feb 21, 2021
Feb 21, 2021
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Feb 20, 2021
13. Tatami
Feb 20, 2021
Feb 20, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
Yoko (Extended Version)
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
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Feb 18, 2021
11. Yoko
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 18, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
10. Yumi
Feb 17, 2021
Feb 17, 2021
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Feb 16, 2021
9. Mie
Feb 16, 2021
Feb 16, 2021
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Feb 11, 2021
8. Reina
Feb 11, 2021
Feb 11, 2021
mie-6.jpg
Feb 10, 2021
7. Mie
Feb 10, 2021
Feb 10, 2021
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Feb 4, 2021
6. Reina
Feb 4, 2021
Feb 4, 2021
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Feb 3, 2021
5. Machiko
Feb 3, 2021
Feb 3, 2021
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HOGEN/Dialect

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Uwabaki.2.jpg
Apr 17, 2024
Uwabaki
Apr 17, 2024
Apr 17, 2024
chinsuko.jpg
Apr 9, 2024
Chinsuko
Apr 9, 2024
Apr 9, 2024
Scan.jpeg
Mar 17, 2024
The Snack with 100 Names
Mar 17, 2024
Mar 17, 2024
Minsa Ori.1.jpg
Feb 26, 2024
Minsa Ori
Feb 26, 2024
Feb 26, 2024
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Feb 7, 2024
Taicho ga Warui
Feb 7, 2024
Feb 7, 2024
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Aug 17, 2023
Hashimaki
Aug 17, 2023
Aug 17, 2023
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Aug 16, 2023
Dialects of Japan
Aug 16, 2023
Aug 16, 2023
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Aug 16, 2023
Yoso vs Tsugu
Aug 16, 2023
Aug 16, 2023
IMG_0831.jpeg
Aug 13, 2021
Uchinaguchi nu Arinkurin
Aug 13, 2021
Aug 13, 2021
Mar 18, 2021
Kampai Shanshan
Mar 18, 2021
Mar 18, 2021
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Articles

Featured
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Aug 27, 2021
With Friends Like These
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
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Jun 13, 2021
2 Seasons
Jun 13, 2021
Jun 13, 2021
952-LW-illo.jpg
Apr 14, 2019
High Time for Summer Time
Apr 14, 2019
Apr 14, 2019
onomatopoeia.jpg
Jun 18, 2018
Potsu Potsu: Japanese Onomatopoeia and the Rain
Jun 18, 2018
Jun 18, 2018
point-card-lead.jpg
May 19, 2018
Point Break
May 19, 2018
May 19, 2018
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May 2, 2018
F.O.B. & A-Okay
May 2, 2018
May 2, 2018
Cathay.fukuoka-guide.jpg
Apr 4, 2018
Fukuoka Guide: Spring 2018
Apr 4, 2018
Apr 4, 2018
IMG_4503.jpg
Feb 12, 2018
Woman Kinder-rupted
Feb 12, 2018
Feb 12, 2018
expo_25.jpg
Feb 11, 2018
Summer of Loathing
Feb 11, 2018
Feb 11, 2018
Electtttt-2.jpg
Feb 11, 2018
Election Primer
Feb 11, 2018
Feb 11, 2018

Play With Me

Featured
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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018

Please Write

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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
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Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
Jan 21, 2018
1000 Awesome Things About Japan

1000 Awesome Things About Japan

Featured
Peas and rice.jpeg
Feb 26, 2020
8. Peas Gohan
Feb 26, 2020
Feb 26, 2020
Finders, Keepers.jpg
Jan 16, 2019
7. Finders, Returners
Jan 16, 2019
Jan 16, 2019
Things+Love+About+Japan.6.1.jpg
Oct 10, 2018
6. No Guns
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
Lockers+IMG_8310.jpg
Oct 10, 2018
5. Coin Lockers
Oct 10, 2018
Oct 10, 2018
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Sep 11, 2018
4. Sentō
Sep 11, 2018
Sep 11, 2018
manu.jpeg
Sep 10, 2018
3. Uprightness
Sep 10, 2018
Sep 10, 2018
IMG_2220.jpg
Sep 6, 2018
2. Manhole Covers
Sep 6, 2018
Sep 6, 2018
On+Board.jpg
Sep 5, 2018
1. Flying in Japan
Sep 5, 2018
Sep 5, 2018
Featured
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Dec 5, 2021
5 December 1941
Dec 5, 2021
Dec 5, 2021
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Dec 1, 2021
1 December 1941
Dec 1, 2021
Dec 1, 2021

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