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Monday, June 1, 2020

Finding those damn Pokemon!

I thought that was a pretty ingenious title.
I hope you don't expect a post about "catching them all". Its about catching you all, and keeping you in my pokey balls for the duration of this blogpost (wait what!? That sounds perverted..... as it should)

No this post is actually more about how I'm idiot, but then, that is what most of my posts are about.



When I was young and in Japan, we didn't have Android and Apple cell phones. Everyone had these crappy things that you can type texts on and play radio (some TV too actually) but no Google MAPS etc (not the huge Zack Morris type phones, they are tiny but don't do as much as today's phones with exceptionally crappy graphics like original gameboy vs PS4).
I never knew where I was (not that I do now most of the time) and no one had GPS like we do now.



I wished I had that phone... when I was 10!


Try Tokyo by yourself. Its like a puzzle with half the pieces missing. You probably think this sounds like a joke, but unfortunately its the truth.

I ripped this from Google regarding street addresses in Japan.

Most Streets in Japan Don't Have Names. ... In Japan, they use a very different addressing system than is used in most Western countries. Rather than streets having names (the space in between blocks), they give blocks numbers and leave the space in between the blocks, streets, nameless.

Key is nameless, remember that. Trying to find a nameless space.

You might say you could be Lost in Translation (funny because there is a movie about it and it involves Japan, Billy Murray and Black Widow). On a sidenote if you have seen it remember "lip my stalkings", very funny. L and R are a big issue for Japanese, never discuss Obama's election, ever!



Typical Japanese map, only with Chinese characters and lots of random numbers.



I quite literally came across an old email today which sparked this post. Looks like I wrote it to a friend after I got back from the Tokyo trip.

This is the original email. Remember I'm writing it to someone so its supposed to be in a voice in your head, like its a letter (but actually an email, as no one sends letters anymore).

"Tokyo was the shits. Literally and figuratively. I got lost looking for John's (damn) apartment.
He was in Osaka at the time while I'm in Tokyo and texted me that he hid a key to his place outside. The problem was finding his (damn) apartment. He gave me an address that looks like random characters thrown together with some random numbers (I wasn't even sure its even a real address). He gave a cross street that doesn't exist and characters I couldn't find. I was convinced he might be messing with me at first.
I did the only sensible thing I could and went to 7-11. Grabbed some niku man (hot Chinese buns full of meat) and asked the workers there where the address was. Seems like they didn't know either. They pointed in a general direction. Saying that way its West. I was like thanks, that's so exact..... ;-(


It was like this, only looked better. This one looks sorta nasty.


This lady, I guess a customer kept looking at me. Finally after like 10 minutes, she said in Japanese are you lost? I said ya (I considered making a joke about Lost in Translation the movie, but I didn't). She said what's the address. She looked at it, "kinda that way, 'West' ish" . I responded everyone likes to point that out to me.
It was super cold outside and I carried too many bags. The lady offered to bike while I ran behind her. I felt like I was a rickshaw puller, without the rickshaw but just as exhausted. I was hoping she would offer to rig up a way to pull one of my bags behind her attached to her bike.

I didn't have any fans and I was only pulling luggage, but it was hard work pulling & catching up to a bike.



She finally found it the address for me. It required a pass-by of the same place 5 times. "I don't think he wrote the address was quite correct she comments or its nameless (F!) , but ya its West I guess."
I couldn't find the key where he told me it was going to be. I was gonna knock on the door of the building, but I tried one last brick and I found it (how many loose bricks define a building as safe). I entered his apartment and it was sickly gross. There was sh%t falling outta his toilet too! Clothes strewn everywhere. I remember a few times he told me how he had girls over often. I couldn't believe it, they must be really drunk (and in retrospect leaving his place was probably like a maze (not corn maze but similar) too, hopefully they found 7-11 like me assuming they would point "East" to escape.
It was no surprise to me that none of his relationships ever lasted (as in more than one night haha, mean but funny).

His apartment was as cold as F (colder than outside, how is that possible?) and he seemed to only have 1 single electric heater which had one setting "on". Couldn't find his usual aircon / heater unit, but it may have been under clothes, boxes and the rats (or beavers, I didn't want to lift the clothes to find out, at least its not human bodies this time since moving occasionally).

As for things the other interesting parts of the trip beside that.

We lost the English competition... the Princess' English were flipping amazing! British Oxford style! Ill do her impression for you when I see you next. I took some pictures where the sign said don't take any pictures (a rebel without a cause, it can be used as proof I was within few metres of the Princess).

Anyways I feel like I've been pulling a rickshaw around all day, so I'm going to bed. G'night m f*^ker."

End of letter (actually email).

After that, a few days later we went to Tsukiji the fish market. The funny thing was I didn't prepare proper shoes so I wore my dress shoes there, bad idea.
As you can imagine a fish market isn't exactly clean and you are basically standing in guts and runoff from seafood. I noticed everyone else there, had proper rubber boots on, with steel toe boots.
The dress shoes stank for another month or so after.  I only had 2 pairs I could alternate at work. I think the kids wondered if the smell was my body odor or something else. If I noticed their nose twitching, I'd do the same thing, so they didn't suspect me.




When someone said it stinks outloud I'd blamed a different student and pointed. Its good to have trust as a teacher, it can come in handy at the most inopportune time.


My Youtube Channel, wearing red tights and jumping around as Deadpool (but I say Dadpool to avoid copyright. Smarter than I look!)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1NwwCyK_ZPA


Other funny stories from this blog 


My blog about everyday life (not Japan related/ and maybe less amusing )



My Youtube Channel (makes no sense just like my blog)




Sunday, May 31, 2020

Masks for Foreigners



If you have been following the news, we have a slight issue with corona virus (by slight I mean like totally life altering and totally crappy). I myself have been laid off, which in all fairness my job is not fitting for this sort of thing, not a lot of tourists coming to a hotel during this time.

My post isn't about that, though there is tie in (this is foreplay as my topic also involves tying, you may think this is about to go sexual, but its going to go asexual. If you add "a" to word it means "not". Asymptomatic, aleprehaunsit, athiest, anyways the words go on and on and my examples don't).

I'm going to assume you have read all the other 200 blogposts on this blog, if you haven't let me remind you of one of the stories.



I was wondering if Aliens had entered our world but just found out this is the new norm.



Whilst I was in Japan as a young man (a high schools student to be exact) I was doing a short exchange in Kyoto. When we boarded the public bus I looked up to see some people with masks. I was a little concerned. I'd never seen anyone wear masks and by masks I mean medical style tied behind head except in hospitals. I asked my hostbrother "Hey, there is masks, is there some sort of issue I need to know about, like air quality issue?". My hostbrother looked around like he didn't have a flipping clue when I was talking about. I pointed directly at two people that had masks on (probably exceptionally rude in Japan to point). Also I stand out like a sore thumb, so they are probably wondering why I'm pointing directly at them while mumbling something in a devil tongue.


The masks on the bus looked absolutely nothing like this, actually opposite, but I thought its funny. Hopefully Twitter won't write a note stating this is a falsehood, it is, but its funny.


My hostbrother leaned over to me and whispered "The mask is because you". I was thinking, the English isn't far off but I don't get it still. I asked him "What do you mean?". He looked at me with a grin "You are gaijin (foreigner), they don't want to share air with you, its dirty, sort of pollution". I was shocked, and thinking maybe its deodorant related and I didn't put enough on. After a quick self sniff, I realized the "Secret" deodorant I had on was fine (ya strong enough for a man but made for a women, I don't want to hear your opinion, don't judge. Its what my mom supplied me with so I used it.).

I looked at my hostbrother and said "I can't believe it, does this happen often?" My hostbrother leaned over again this time covering his mouth as if he was also scared "This is joke, they sick from flu and don't share to other people". I was thinking, wow this is so considerate, no one in Canada (or USA) would ever wear a mask, probably even if there was a valid reason I don't see everyone doing it.
BAM, here we are 25 years later (yes I'm old now which sucks), and I see all these weird masks in public.
I've seen fruit, veggies, panties, tampons. Its quite amazing.
I didn't see this ever in Japan. I guess in theory its possible.

As we continued on the bus, I saw someone get on the bus coughing. Yes they had a mask on. Each cough they put their hand up over the mask as if they were catching the tiny particulates (that's a big word for particles, cause I know a lot of big words). They didn't touch their mask but seemed liked a courtesy to pretend cover their mouth, how polite.
I thought what a great thing to do, maybe one day I'll do it.

A few days later I got a cold in Japan, my nose was running nonstop, snot literally dripping on my fingers and hands. I also used the back of my hand many times to push the snot back up.
As the random Japanese kids bowed to me, some new faces I was introduced to or just hello's I'd put my hand out to shake them. It didn't occur to me, they probably say the devil foreigner with his snotty nose and no mask. At least they didn't know my hands were dripping with it too. Just remember, that was old a cold back then, these days might not be, wash your hands, use a mask and don't use the back of your hand like a caveman.

There is no way this one would work for me or my kids. Its freaking deadly in our shoes.  Just ask my wife who often picks our dirty shoes off the floor.

If you found anything above amusing or even slightly funny help me out and click one of those boxes above or give me a Google +1 or something. Might come in handy in the future.


Other funny stories from this blog 


My blog about everyday life (not Japan related/ and maybe less amusing )



My Youtube Channel (makes no sense just like my blog)








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