In my 19th flight since I departed for Turkey in June, I arrive back
at home. I am happy to report that Columbus was right--the earth is
round, and I've come full circle.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
God Bless America
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Tokyo Anime Center
described in Japanese.
This is in the Akhiabara district, known for its cheap electronics,
comics and anime collections.
Japanese Businessmen
and everyone wears a white shirt--sometimes with designs--but never a
colored shirt.
Tokyo Stock Exchange
markets pilgrimage--I used to visit Alexander Hamilton's grave every
time I went to manhattan, till that became to onerous, living there
and visiting every month.
Sakura Hotel
right after the capsule hotel. It was great. I met some nice folks,
recharged the batteries (literally and figuratively).
Exhibition of New Sony Products
games, an none of the computers was hooked up to the internet. The 3-D
TVs were cool... but I'm still not sold on the idea...
Subway Pushers
full at rush hour these guys push people in to squeeze them in
tighter. I wonder if that'd even do anything in New York?
Zen Temple: Kenchō-ji
I thought zen fell under Buddhism, but my guidebook insists that this
is the first zen temple built in Kamakura.
So, it looked like this was the coolest one, but it was really far out
of the way. Somehow I took a wrong turn and ended up there anyway, but
it turned out to be my favorite, so I'm glad I did make it there.
Book Lover's Paradise
studying them, looking around, etc. Unfortunately, they're all in
Japanese...
Katsu & Raman
So, they have a display with a plastic replica of each meal--you
select the meal number, then input it in the little machine, pay and
out pops a ticket--voilà! You take it in to the main counter and they
give you your meal.
Delish'!
An Expensive Peach
$3.90 usd. I could have backed out, but it was gigantic. Luckily it
was also the tastiest peach I've ever had!
Trash Cans?
is certainly the most advanced, economically and technologically, and
yet there aren't any trash cans anywhere! They have bottle recycling
bins next to every vending machine, but nowhere to put garbage!
Buddhist Temple and Grounds
of a single piece of wood, tossed it into the ocean, and it floated
back to Kamakura 15 years later. The people took it as a sign of good
luck, so they plated it with gold and built a temple. This was all in
the years 721 / 736--amazing that the wood lasted 15 years at sea, and
that it's here 1300 years later!
Three Religions in one Day
was quite the feat.
Just for good measure I read my pocket sized BoM while resting at the
Zen temple.
Video Arcades
just want to be kids. Not only do they still all love comic books (the
comic book section of the bookstore I went to yesterday was bigger
than the rest of the bookstore combined), but they're all hooked on
video games.
Thank goodness! What would we do without Nintendo?
Meiji Shrine
the later half of the 19th century.
I really love the architecture here. I think it's great.
3-D TV
though, is I was never sold on it in the movies, so why would I want
to bring it into my home?
Tree lined streets
inhabitants. I was expecting things to be a lot more crowded than they
are, and the buildings to be higher. I mean, it's no Denver, but
Manhattan is way more intense than this place!
I think the trees add a lot. I've gone out a couple of times at night
and walked for five minutes without seeing anyone (9pm), which is
unheard of anywhere in manhattan. I try not to venture anywhere else
in NYC at night, so I can't comment, but I don't think you can compare
the places I've been visiting to Brooklyn. Just interesting.
Parasols
what these Japanese women would like to do. After all, while Americans
bemoan how pale they are, everyone else in the world wants to be as
pale as they.
(the parasols are black, so they're not readily visible. How many do
you see? Keep in mind that this picture was taken in the shade)
Vending Machines
people. Clearly that can't be true, or every surface space in the city
would be a vending machine, but the fact that someone believes it
enough to even say it is saying something. You can buy everything in
them--from drinks to iPods to underwear (sorry, no returns).
Department Stores
in NY. Maybe not as big as Macy's but up there. This one had two full
buildings. Actually, it reminded me more of Paris than NY.
Apparently all the department stores are owned by the same people as
own the trains, so they've build big department stores on top of all
the mail train stations to increase revenues. Brilliant!
The inside looks much the same as other department stores around the
world--Armani, Gucci and Prada clothes that cost more than the annual
salary of a Thai worker.
Monday, August 16, 2010
Shibuya Daze and Shibuya Nights
movies. Hoards of people crossing the street in every direction. It's
pretty cool.
I love cities and people, especially at night with the city lights.
Not that I'd go hang out in TS on a Friday night, but it's always fun
to walk in the city at night.