Sunday, August 26, 2012
Even more pictures!
If you just love viewing thousands and thousands of pictures, you'll love the fact that I just added a link on the side of my page to my friend David's images. Between the two of us, I'm sure there's enough pictures to last a lifetime so enjoy!
My visit to Kyoto!
So, last time I wrote about how much time I spent getting to kyoto and going from place to place around it. Despite the difficulties, I still did get to see a lot of the things I wanted to. I had to cut some cool things out of my list to see because they required reservations, but otherwise we got to see a great deal of what we wanted to.
The first day was nearly pointless. We got to our first destination so late that it was closing time for that, so we had to move on. It's unfortunate since we never did go to that place despite it being a big attraction. Another day we tried to go back but it was closed that day and it was just our bad luck. Anyway, we moved on to go near the imperial palace, however we couldn't really go inside it. We just walked around the park that surrounded it. Since we got a bit lost during our trip from the first destination to the imperial palace, we arrived a bit too late and most people were leaving or gone. There wasn't too much to see but at least we did go near the palace.
After that day, we learned how to use the train system better and woke up earlier so that we could see more things in a day. However we never did get to see a few things ( for example,
http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3941.html http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3929.html http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3907.html for example ) because of their location. Kyoto was similar to Nara in that it had a lot of old shrines and temples to see, but it was different in that everything was spaced farther apart and trains did not always have stops near the things that we wanted to see. So, of the things we missed, there not only were a few that had reservations we never made, but there were a few that had no train stop near them so it would have taken a long time just to walk from one to the next.
There's two good examples of how I wasn't able to see something due to its location. The first is the day where we wanted to see three locations that were, relative to everything else, nearby each other. On that day the closest train station to the first location resulted in a 40 minute walk from the station to the gold pavilion, and then from there we walked another 20 minutes or so to the rock garden, after which we were going to walk to the last place but didn't have the time and had to turn back. And boy, all that walking was not very fun. Especially not in that high humidity, high temperature weather. I'm reminded of how I thought I wasn't going to spend a lot of money on food every day and that while I didn't, a lot of the money that I did spend each day was on things to drink to stay hydrated.
Anyway, there were about two other places that I wanted to go to, but instead of one long walk from place to place to place, there was simply no train anywhere nearby an isolated place and it would have taken a large part of the day just to travel to the one place and back. One of such places was the silver pavilion. Just look at this map, and see how much of a distance a train station was from the silver pavilion (ginkakuji) , compared to the gold pavilion (kinkakuji) which took over a half hour to walk to! Of course, it wasn't really that travel would take up a whole day, but that most famous locations would close at 5PM so our "days" were shorter than I'd have liked.
We did still get to see some pretty nice places. Heian Shrine was a nice, free trip.. although we must have made a common traveler's mistake since we tried to get there by walking down the main street from the station closest to it, and stopped at the first fancy, old looking building we came across only to find a sign that said this isn't the heian shrine.. we ended up at a martial arts school if I remember correctly. Oops.
We also saw, but did not go near or in Kyoto tower. It wasn't nearly as tall as the sky tree or as cool looking as the tokyo tower so we skipped it to save time for other things. By the way, the gold pavilion and rock garden I mentioned earlier were very beautiful. The gold pavilion was quite the sight to see, from the nice pond constructed around it to the gold-covered building itself. Both it and the rock garden were very peaceful places to be. Another beautiful place I saw was Byodoin temple. Yet another temple, like the golden pavilion, that was surrounded by a sort of pond. Very iconic perhaps, as it's the only building on the coins they have, being on the reverse side of the 10 yen coin.
Oh yes, and among other places there was also the world's longest wooden structure, Sanjusangendo. I have no pictures of the inside since there were 1001 sacred statues that nobody could take photos of, but it was interesting to read about the significance of them, and it was quiet and peaceful despite the many people there. I did manage to get a few pictures of the outside of it however, showing how long the building was. Apparently it used to be used by archers to practice by shooting arrows from one end of the long building to a target on the other end. Judging by how long the building was when I saw it, I thought that was pretty impressive.
I might still be leaving a few locations out, for example a famous temple I went to with my friends during a school trip, rather than on my own. I'll be sure to add more if I did forget anything, but in the meanwhile I'll write about my trips up a mountain, and to an island, next post.
The first day was nearly pointless. We got to our first destination so late that it was closing time for that, so we had to move on. It's unfortunate since we never did go to that place despite it being a big attraction. Another day we tried to go back but it was closed that day and it was just our bad luck. Anyway, we moved on to go near the imperial palace, however we couldn't really go inside it. We just walked around the park that surrounded it. Since we got a bit lost during our trip from the first destination to the imperial palace, we arrived a bit too late and most people were leaving or gone. There wasn't too much to see but at least we did go near the palace.
After that day, we learned how to use the train system better and woke up earlier so that we could see more things in a day. However we never did get to see a few things ( for example,
http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3941.html http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3929.html http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e3907.html for example ) because of their location. Kyoto was similar to Nara in that it had a lot of old shrines and temples to see, but it was different in that everything was spaced farther apart and trains did not always have stops near the things that we wanted to see. So, of the things we missed, there not only were a few that had reservations we never made, but there were a few that had no train stop near them so it would have taken a long time just to walk from one to the next.
There's two good examples of how I wasn't able to see something due to its location. The first is the day where we wanted to see three locations that were, relative to everything else, nearby each other. On that day the closest train station to the first location resulted in a 40 minute walk from the station to the gold pavilion, and then from there we walked another 20 minutes or so to the rock garden, after which we were going to walk to the last place but didn't have the time and had to turn back. And boy, all that walking was not very fun. Especially not in that high humidity, high temperature weather. I'm reminded of how I thought I wasn't going to spend a lot of money on food every day and that while I didn't, a lot of the money that I did spend each day was on things to drink to stay hydrated.
Anyway, there were about two other places that I wanted to go to, but instead of one long walk from place to place to place, there was simply no train anywhere nearby an isolated place and it would have taken a large part of the day just to travel to the one place and back. One of such places was the silver pavilion. Just look at this map, and see how much of a distance a train station was from the silver pavilion (ginkakuji) , compared to the gold pavilion (kinkakuji) which took over a half hour to walk to! Of course, it wasn't really that travel would take up a whole day, but that most famous locations would close at 5PM so our "days" were shorter than I'd have liked.
We did still get to see some pretty nice places. Heian Shrine was a nice, free trip.. although we must have made a common traveler's mistake since we tried to get there by walking down the main street from the station closest to it, and stopped at the first fancy, old looking building we came across only to find a sign that said this isn't the heian shrine.. we ended up at a martial arts school if I remember correctly. Oops.
We also saw, but did not go near or in Kyoto tower. It wasn't nearly as tall as the sky tree or as cool looking as the tokyo tower so we skipped it to save time for other things. By the way, the gold pavilion and rock garden I mentioned earlier were very beautiful. The gold pavilion was quite the sight to see, from the nice pond constructed around it to the gold-covered building itself. Both it and the rock garden were very peaceful places to be. Another beautiful place I saw was Byodoin temple. Yet another temple, like the golden pavilion, that was surrounded by a sort of pond. Very iconic perhaps, as it's the only building on the coins they have, being on the reverse side of the 10 yen coin.
Oh yes, and among other places there was also the world's longest wooden structure, Sanjusangendo. I have no pictures of the inside since there were 1001 sacred statues that nobody could take photos of, but it was interesting to read about the significance of them, and it was quiet and peaceful despite the many people there. I did manage to get a few pictures of the outside of it however, showing how long the building was. Apparently it used to be used by archers to practice by shooting arrows from one end of the long building to a target on the other end. Judging by how long the building was when I saw it, I thought that was pretty impressive.
I might still be leaving a few locations out, for example a famous temple I went to with my friends during a school trip, rather than on my own. I'll be sure to add more if I did forget anything, but in the meanwhile I'll write about my trips up a mountain, and to an island, next post.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
Kyoto : unfortunate transportation
After getting to Osaka and realizing there wasn't really much to do in the area that was worth the time, we took most of the remaining time to visit Kyoto.
Kyoto had a huge amount of famous places to visit, but I quickly found out that unfortunately I wasn't going to be able to visit everywhere that looked nice. There just wasn't enough time to do everything. The first problem was where we were staying in Osaka. We were located in a place that wasn't convenient for people who want to travel to kyoto. Even though kyoto is located nearby if you were to look at a map, there were many trains required to get from our hostel in osaka to the kyoto station, and that took a bit of time every day.
In order to get to kyoto we would have to take a train from one end of osaka to the other. We were nowhere near the osaka station, which is the best way to get to kyoto. The first set of trains we took to get to osaka station would take between a half hour to an hour since one connection came pretty infrequently. Then, we would need to take another train for a half hour to get to kyoto station. However, before we did that every day we would stop for lunch in the underground mall of osaka or somewhere nearby.
Once we did get to kyoto station, depending on where we wanted to go we sometimes had to take a local train to the station nearest to our destination. However, the two problems with kyoto was that most things we wanted to see were between 10 minutes to 1 hour away from the nearest train station, and that most things were not located close to each other. There was a bit of back and forth walking to get from a station to the destination and back before heading to the next place.
So, due to our location in osaka, trains, and walking time, it was hard to see as many things in kyoto as I would have liked. It wasn't absurd so much as that I had an unusually quick and easy time getting from one place to another in the other cities that it was slow going in comparison. If I knew this ahead of time, I could have picked a different hostel to save some time. But even then that wouldn't change how kyoto was laid out, and the only way I could have seen everything was if I had stayed in Japan longer.
Kyoto had a huge amount of famous places to visit, but I quickly found out that unfortunately I wasn't going to be able to visit everywhere that looked nice. There just wasn't enough time to do everything. The first problem was where we were staying in Osaka. We were located in a place that wasn't convenient for people who want to travel to kyoto. Even though kyoto is located nearby if you were to look at a map, there were many trains required to get from our hostel in osaka to the kyoto station, and that took a bit of time every day.
In order to get to kyoto we would have to take a train from one end of osaka to the other. We were nowhere near the osaka station, which is the best way to get to kyoto. The first set of trains we took to get to osaka station would take between a half hour to an hour since one connection came pretty infrequently. Then, we would need to take another train for a half hour to get to kyoto station. However, before we did that every day we would stop for lunch in the underground mall of osaka or somewhere nearby.
Once we did get to kyoto station, depending on where we wanted to go we sometimes had to take a local train to the station nearest to our destination. However, the two problems with kyoto was that most things we wanted to see were between 10 minutes to 1 hour away from the nearest train station, and that most things were not located close to each other. There was a bit of back and forth walking to get from a station to the destination and back before heading to the next place.
So, due to our location in osaka, trains, and walking time, it was hard to see as many things in kyoto as I would have liked. It wasn't absurd so much as that I had an unusually quick and easy time getting from one place to another in the other cities that it was slow going in comparison. If I knew this ahead of time, I could have picked a different hostel to save some time. But even then that wouldn't change how kyoto was laid out, and the only way I could have seen everything was if I had stayed in Japan longer.
Friday, August 10, 2012
On Osaka - not much
After Nara I made my way over to Osaka, which is the place that I planned to stay the longest after Tokyo. The original plan was to stay in Osaka because of its close location to Nara and Kyoto, so that we could just take a train between the 3 places and only need one hostel. However, the hostel in Nara looked so nice that I changed that plan and reduced the time that would be spent between Osaka and Kyoto so that we could stay in the Nara guesthouse. That worked out really well, since I had exactly as much time as I needed to see Nara, had a great time there, and really enjoyed the place that I stayed at. I can't say much of the same about the Osaka hostel however.
I was misinformed when I picked the hostel for Osaka so I ended up picking one with less than perfect ratings even though the reviews of the place didn't really say what was wrong with it. When I got there I found out that there were a few things that made it inconvenient. Unlike the old house in Nara I stayed at, this building was no antique and so I thought it might be more comfortable. However, the stairs in this building were very steep and narrow which made it very hard to get luggage up. David tried to get two suitcases up at once and was about to fall down the stairs because it just wasn't possible, but I was below so that didn't happen. We got our suitcases up to our 3rd story room and checked out the place.
The whole time we had poor internet and owners who really never talked to us - they seemed unfriendly. Unlike the other places we had been to before, we were the only white people in this hostel but it seemed that almost everyone else was korean, which is odd. The first few nights there were difficult because the air conditioner in the room was turned on so low on purpose that I couldn't even feel it. Someone must have said something since after that we had proper air conditioning for the rest of the stay and I could sleep without trouble. There wasn't much else to say about the place. Nothing special happened there. Nobody talked to us and there was nothing interesting about the hostel.
About Osaka, we didn't spend much time around the area. When I got there I came to the conclusion that going to Osaka was a lot less important than I thought. It's the second biggest city in the country, but we had already been to Tokyo so it had nothing that we hadn't already seen. Beyond that, we had been to one of the more populated parts of Osaka before since it wasn't that far from where we went to school for 6 weeks. However that also meant that we knew where to shop and get food.
On shopping and food, we knew of a 10-floor electronics chain building that generally had one or three floors of the top dedicated to clothes and food. But in this particular building, the basement floors connected to an underground shopping mall that seemed to go on forever. One mall would connect to another underground and you could get lost in there. With all of the multi floor super stores, sidestreets of strip malls that go on for a great distance, and huge underground malls in various places I had the thought that if I knew how many places to shop there really were in any area, I might find that the whole country is just a very large mall.
Anyway, we spent the first day or two in Osaka. Finding out where we were staying and where there was to eat, as well as finding a movie theater so we could see batman, which we saw in english with japanese subtitles that we ignored. And that was fun. Speaking about movie theaters, I had seen two movies in total there but both times nobody left until after the credits. I think that's just how it is done there. Very patient anyway.
Instead of spending half of the time in Osaka and half in Kyoto like the plan was, we decided to spend most of the time in Kyoto since the list of things to see was long and it took a while to get there with all the connecting trains. Next post is on Kyoto!
I was misinformed when I picked the hostel for Osaka so I ended up picking one with less than perfect ratings even though the reviews of the place didn't really say what was wrong with it. When I got there I found out that there were a few things that made it inconvenient. Unlike the old house in Nara I stayed at, this building was no antique and so I thought it might be more comfortable. However, the stairs in this building were very steep and narrow which made it very hard to get luggage up. David tried to get two suitcases up at once and was about to fall down the stairs because it just wasn't possible, but I was below so that didn't happen. We got our suitcases up to our 3rd story room and checked out the place.
The whole time we had poor internet and owners who really never talked to us - they seemed unfriendly. Unlike the other places we had been to before, we were the only white people in this hostel but it seemed that almost everyone else was korean, which is odd. The first few nights there were difficult because the air conditioner in the room was turned on so low on purpose that I couldn't even feel it. Someone must have said something since after that we had proper air conditioning for the rest of the stay and I could sleep without trouble. There wasn't much else to say about the place. Nothing special happened there. Nobody talked to us and there was nothing interesting about the hostel.
About Osaka, we didn't spend much time around the area. When I got there I came to the conclusion that going to Osaka was a lot less important than I thought. It's the second biggest city in the country, but we had already been to Tokyo so it had nothing that we hadn't already seen. Beyond that, we had been to one of the more populated parts of Osaka before since it wasn't that far from where we went to school for 6 weeks. However that also meant that we knew where to shop and get food.
On shopping and food, we knew of a 10-floor electronics chain building that generally had one or three floors of the top dedicated to clothes and food. But in this particular building, the basement floors connected to an underground shopping mall that seemed to go on forever. One mall would connect to another underground and you could get lost in there. With all of the multi floor super stores, sidestreets of strip malls that go on for a great distance, and huge underground malls in various places I had the thought that if I knew how many places to shop there really were in any area, I might find that the whole country is just a very large mall.
Anyway, we spent the first day or two in Osaka. Finding out where we were staying and where there was to eat, as well as finding a movie theater so we could see batman, which we saw in english with japanese subtitles that we ignored. And that was fun. Speaking about movie theaters, I had seen two movies in total there but both times nobody left until after the credits. I think that's just how it is done there. Very patient anyway.
Instead of spending half of the time in Osaka and half in Kyoto like the plan was, we decided to spend most of the time in Kyoto since the list of things to see was long and it took a while to get there with all the connecting trains. Next post is on Kyoto!
Sunday, August 5, 2012
Back home!
I'm back in america now, safe and at home. It was a long boring series of flights which involved a lot of sleeping, followed by a lot of staying awake since I was stuck at an airport overnight. At least I found a place to use a power plug so I could use my computer all night while at atlanta.
Going though customs on the US side was as easy as it was on the Japan side. Airport security is still more obnoxious here but at least customs was not trouble.
Brought back my whole new suitcase of things I bought, and even the old suitcase made it without falling apart!
I'm now going to have some work with adjusting my sleep schedule 11 hours. But now I finally get to relax after 2 months of heavy studying and schoolwork followed by every day being busy with traveling. New York is also pretty hot right now, but relative to japan it is cool so I am glad for that.
I still have more to write about my trip, as well as thoughts and interesting things I saw in japan! My blog isn't done yet, but I wanted to let everyone know that I am home!
PS : I heard it's sort of hard to view my pictures online because there are so many and internet might be slow to get them one by one. So, when I have all of them online I will package them into one single file that people can download. It will still take a while but at least everyone will be able to do it at once overnight and then view each at your leisure.
Going though customs on the US side was as easy as it was on the Japan side. Airport security is still more obnoxious here but at least customs was not trouble.
Brought back my whole new suitcase of things I bought, and even the old suitcase made it without falling apart!
I'm now going to have some work with adjusting my sleep schedule 11 hours. But now I finally get to relax after 2 months of heavy studying and schoolwork followed by every day being busy with traveling. New York is also pretty hot right now, but relative to japan it is cool so I am glad for that.
I still have more to write about my trip, as well as thoughts and interesting things I saw in japan! My blog isn't done yet, but I wanted to let everyone know that I am home!
PS : I heard it's sort of hard to view my pictures online because there are so many and internet might be slow to get them one by one. So, when I have all of them online I will package them into one single file that people can download. It will still take a while but at least everyone will be able to do it at once overnight and then view each at your leisure.
Friday, August 3, 2012
Communication in japan part 2
In the Tokyo
hostel, we were one of the few who spoke Japanese although there were others so
we were not that special. Yet still, the
people at the front desk were very friendly and one of the most cheerful girls
had conversations with us in Japanese once or twice, like when she had
recommended us a place to eat.
At the
nara guesthouse, when I arrived I spoke in Japanese to the best of my ability
just as I have done everywhere else – even in situations where a Japanese
person says something in English, perhaps assuming we don’t know Japanese, I
will respond in Japanese unless the situation doesn’t call for it, just to be
nice. So in the guesthouse, I spoke in Japanese
as we were taking care of the check-in procedure and the girl staff member was
surprised and happy to find out that we knew Japanese and wanted to let all of
the other staff know as well. They were
very happy, and wanted to hear about our backstory about how we were traveling
after being international students. From
then on the staff tried to speak in Japanese to us but checked to make sure if
we understood some of the more difficult words they used. They kept saying how good we were at Japanese,
even to some of the other people but I tried to be humble and say that I’m not
quite good yet, still a beginner and still studying.
An
amazing thing happened the day after that, again in nara. That day we were off to see the first of the
shrines and temples I had planned to see in nara. Plans changed that day after meeting a man in
the local park. We were walking buy when
he said to himself “it’s hot out today isn’t it” in Japanese, and I had
responded something like that yes, it was hot out today, but thankfully not as
hot as it was in Tokyo where we just came from.
This basically shocked the man as he was like wait, you know Japanese? He was extremely happy to meet visitors who
knew Japanese and got up off the bench and wanted to talk with us while we
walked.
He eventually decided to give us a
tour of the area as we shared stories about our travels and heard about his
stories. He was a retired man, but took
it upon himself to study English in his spare time. He told us that he would watch tv and read in
English for practice, and he was pretty good!
He said that he would take walks in the park once a week so we just
happened to be in the right place at the right time. And just like that we made friends with a
stranger in japan, and had conversations in Japanese for a few hours. He eventually walked us to the local shopping
mall and gave us free lunch! Afterwards
he had to go since it had been a few hours, but before he went I made sure that
we all got a group photo! I never did
learn his name, but we talked about a whole bunch of stuff – even if some of
the more in depth explanations of some content in the shrines and temples was
impossible for us to understand. It
really made our day, and has been one of the highlights of our trip. Just to meet and talk to random locals. Befriend Japanese people, and exchange
stories. It was a really great thing to
do and it made us feel really awesome for the day.
We had another awesome experience
the next day when we traveled to the location of the original imperial
palace. There weren’t many people there
for like I said I thought nara was a lot less populated than it should have
been. Only like 5 visitors in the
building at a time, with maybe 5 or 10 volunteers or staffs and guards. One of the volunteers/staff had come up to us
and given us a pamphlet with information about the place in English. I thanked him in Japanese and said that while
I can understand a little Japanese, in a place like a museum it’s very useful
for me to have an English explanation.
He must have been surprised that I knew Japanese at all since when he
went back to his table he must have talked with the people nearby to tell them
about how they had white visitors that spoke Japanese.
I say that because then later we had a guard
come up and start asking us questions in Japanese – the place was interested
about us. So we told him that we were
previously students at konan university which he knew of, and then we told him
about where we have been and where we are traveling to. He thanked us for talking to him and then as
we looked at some of the rest of the stuff in the palace we could hear him on
the other end of the room telling the others about how we were students at
konan university, and so on. They all
sounded very excited. On our way out as we
were about to walk off the grounds we saw the guard come out of some building
with more papers and pamphlets in Japanese about the place. He gave us these gifts and said maybe we
could use them for studying Japanese. So
basically, we left a great impression on the people there that day for us to
have been given gifts and be talked about just for talking Japanese. And once again that made our day and made us
feel awesome.
After these events we started
thinking that we had too high expectations on how much Japanese visitors would
know. It was a very disappointing thing
but also a very cool thing. It seems
that because almost no tourists know Japanese and all expect the Japanese to
know English, that by comparison we had become the coolest people around just
by having studied Japanese for only a year or two. I told david that we have super powers
now. That we can brighten up the day of
a Japanese person just by talking, since we are like the only white people
around here that know any Japanese. We
often get complimented, and received gifts, a free tour and a free lunch. Just by knowing a little bit of Japanese I
think we are really getting more out of our vacation than a normal tourist
would, just by the simple but powerful pleasure of being able to be friendly
and talk to locals.
Unfortunately the people in Osaka
didn’t seem to be as friendly. Nothing
bad has happened but the people of Osaka don’t seem to care as much or don’t
want to talk as much as the people of nara.
But then again, Osaka is a big city and either we aren’t as unique
there, or the people aren’t as friendly to tourists. So, Osaka had little talking involved.
In my next set of posts I’ll talk
about Osaka and Kyoto! Although, I’m
posting this from America already. My
trip ended! But there’s still more to
write.
Communication in japan part 1
A while
back I wanted to write a blog post about my interaction with Japanese people
after the study program had ended, but before I got around to post it online my
thoughts on the matter changed after events at nara.
Prior
to nara, I didn’t really get many opportunities to practice my Japanese, and
didn’t need to use it at all if I didn’t want to. In Tokyo, our roommates were from Canada and Australia,
and knew no Japanese and got by just fine.
So I could have been like them, and used only English and survived. But I feel like they didn’t leave the best
impression on people they met by doing that – it might be rude to go to a
country and expect them to communicate in your language instead of theirs. It’s not like the country and everyone in it
is just there to serve the tourists.
So, I used Japanese as much as
possible in an effort to fit in and be polite while traveling. But there wasn’t much that required me to
speak at all. During my time in Tokyo I
had used Japanese to talk to policemen/guards twice. Once was when trying to find that damn movie
theater, where we had asked for directions.
And the other time was when I was at a shrine and wanted to know the
characters to properly write one of my teacher’s names rather than writing it
in a less proper way. I was able to ask
a passing guard to write the character on a paper for me after explaining what
we were trying to write.
Beyond that, there was ordering
food. Sit down restaurants and fast food
places alike were pretty easy where I would just say the name of the item and ‘please’
in Japanese, or if I didn’t know how to say the name of the item I would just
point and say ‘this please’ in Japanese.
There wasn’t much to getting food.
Also,
when walking back from skytree and to Tokyo tower we must have went some back
street and stood out because some Japanese person walked up to us and just
wanted to start talking. It was as if we were special since on the main street
you could find many white people if you wanted to talk to one. But perhaps it was our apparent age that
shocked him, as if we looked like we might know a bit of Japanese to be able to
be out here by ourselves? So we talked
to him about how we were international students studying Japanese, and he
talked to us about how that was really awesome and that he was glad to hear it,
and how we was trying to study Spanish now – he could already speak English,
but we spoke mainly in Japanese. It
really made our day to get to talk to just some local guy on the street in Japanese
and have it go over well. He was a very
nice guy. We just talked for a few
minutes and then went our separate ways.
I’ve
had more than one encounter like that, especially back in my host family’s
city. But for the most part I hadn’t used
Japanese a lot, as there really wasn’t much of a chance to use it. But my thoughts on the matter changed when
going to nara.
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