The Gulf Oil Spill at Your Doorsteps

tokyo oil spill

This is the Gulf Oil Disaster superimposed on a map of Japan if the spill had originated in Tokyo. The website, If It Were My Home, allows anyone to ‘bring home’ the catastrophe to their doorsteps to better understand the scale of the catastrophe. As you can see from the map, the spill would smother the entire Kanto region, stretching out past Nagoya, over to the other side of Honshu to the East Sea.

The oil could easily drift down to Kyoto and Osaka. Yokohama and Tokyo Bays would be thick with petroleum far out into the Pacific.

I was curious about some of the other places I’d called home. Continue reading

A Tokyo Rail Survival Guide

Meditating Wind no. 39

In a recent post I wrote about the stress of urban living and blaming a lot of that on the sometimes inhumanely crowded stations and trains. Well, as crazy as it gets sometimes I’ve gotten to know the Tokyo train and subway system pretty well now and I’ve accumulated quite a few strategies and tips.

How the Rails are Organized
The rails around Tokyo can be separated into three sections. It’s best to orient yourself from the Yamanote Line that circles around central Tokyo. On maps, it’s a green circle. In real-life, it’s shaped like an upside down pear. Conceptually I like to think of it as a square with four major stations as its corners, kind of like a castle wall with four corner gates. On the west, the wall stretches from Ikebukuro in the northwest corner down to Shibuya in the southeast. This is by far the busiest length with Shinjuku, the busiest station in the world, in the middle as the west gate. The north wall stretches from Ikebukuro to Ueno. The west leg is a short jaunt between Ueno and Tokyo stations, and in the south it’s Tokyo to Shibuya, with Shinagawa in the middle as the south gate.

Enclosed in the Yamanote are the subway lines that zig-zag about like a gopher colony.

Radiating out from the Yamanote are the private train lines that feed Tokyo all the suburban commuters that double the city’s population during work hours.

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How to Move through a Busy Station

Get a pass. The public transportation system offers two passes, called the Suica or the Pasmo, that you can use on all trains, subways, and even buses. You add credit to it and just zip through turnstiles by hovering the pass over the electronic sensor. You can even use it at restaurants and shops in the stations. It’s brilliant and convenient. However, if you harbor any paranoia about the government tracking you, you can always just register it under a false name. Or tediously pay for each ticket every time you hop on.

Know your exit strategy. If you are a daily commuter, try to get in the train car that directly empties into your exit. This is the difference between being jostled by a slow-moving crowd to just zipping out of a station unimpeded. Also, know which side will open at your stop. Sometimes I wait for everyone to get in before standing right in front of the door, poised to surf ahead of the wave of people.

Slip through the cracks. In American football, the running back is the player that runs with the ball through the defense. The most successful are ones who can anticipate seams in the wall of people and slip between them. This makes it a game and makes it more fun than just slugglishly shuffling with the crowd.

Go with the flow. Get into the stream of people going in your direction. Otherwise, wading upstream is both a nuisance to yourself and all the other people going the opposite way.

Be aerodynamic. In bicycling, one strategy is to ride behind someone to cut down on wind-resistance and conserve energy. It takes a lot of energy to get through a crowd. So whenever you see a big person successfully plowing through a crowd, get behind that person and ride his or her wake. Let them do all the work. This is good for the surrounding people too because it’s one less person getting in their way.

Don’t block the flow. If you need to use your phone, or stop and figure out which way to go, get out of the stream of people. Stand against a wall or beside a pillar and get yourself sorted.

Take a stand. When using escalators, it’s customary to stand on the left, and walk on the right. I hear it’s the reverse in Osaka.

Inside the Train.

So now you’re inside the train or subway. Where do you stand? If it’s not that crowded, anywhere is fine. I like to stand beside the doors because I can lean on two sides, and I’m poised for a quick escape. I generally avoid sitting because I often end up with two people falling asleep on my shoulders, while having to stare at some guy’s crotch standing in front of me.

In a crowded train, the best place is to be that guy standing in front of the seats. Because the people in front of you are seated, you have some empty space around your head.

In general you won’t run into many problems on the train. It’s surprising how well-behaved everyone is on the trains and subways in Tokyo. No one eats. No one talks on the cell phone, except in brief hushed tones with the mouth covered. There’s no litter, not even newspapers. And except on weekends, no one really speaks loudly. There’s some controversy about young women applying make-up in public, but geez, why is that a big deal?

Of course, groping is frowned upon. There’s been greater awareness about sexual harassment on the trains. So I’ve noticed guys generally try to face away from women and keep their hands up in a visible place. I don’t know how prevalent a problem it is but I do know that under similar crowd conditions, it’d be a lot worse in the US or Europe. During rush hour there are separate women-only cars, which was begun just a few years ago. So that helps.

It seems most kinds of behavior are looked down upon. What seems to be acceptable is: sleeping, listening to your music player, playing handheld video games, sending texts on your cell phone, reading small books with anonymous dust jackets, and most acceptable of all, doing nothing.

Or maybe it’s just meditation.

A Neighborhood of Unentered Doors

spoonhead

After a discussion about favorite places in Tokyo, one of my students told me about her favorite neighborhood, Nishi Ogikubo. The student, Kyoko, is a super sweet, hardworking, single mother. She has a great funky style. Like once she had a handbag made of Heineken beer cans that was surprisingly chic.

When she learned that I had never been to Nishi Ogikubo, or even heard of it, she excitedly told me of all the cool shops there, and charming cafes. And on the last day of class she gave me this hand-drawn map, with recommended places to visit. That was about 5 months ago and I’ve been itching to go there since.

ogikubo

Yesterday I had a free morning and hopped on the Chuo Line to pay a visit. At first glance it seemed like any other newly renovated local station area: chain restaurants, discount bag stores, pachinko parlors. The map appeared to be separated into 3 main areas. I went to the smallest one first where there was a natural food store, an organic restaurant, and a new age bookstore. Unfortunately, only the food store was open.

So next I went along Fushimi St. By then it was 11am but most of the stores were closed. I noticed that many of the stores were closed on Wednesdays. This is similar to many restaurants in the U.S. that are closed on Mondays. Although in Japan, a neighborhood can decide that day off to be Tuesday, Wednesday, or even Thursday.

Nevertheless, along the side streets there were numerous cafes, most closed. But I got lots of great shots of interesting doors. Nishi Ogikubo definitely has the best collection of intriguing cafes in Tokyo.

Mr. Shallows

Among the few cafes that were open I ventured into Shallow’s Café, which is just out of Kyoko’s map (go to the end of Fushimi St. and turn right). It had been open only two weeks. What drew me in were the displays of 60’s and 70’s rock album covers in the window.

The café concept is to listen to an album from the owner’s collection and drink coffee or eat lunch. I requested something by Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. And he pulled out a Stephen Stills solo album that I’d never heard. Awesome! I enjoyed the clean, wood look of the interior, littered with bits of Americana. The owner, who spoke very good English, explained that he wanted to share his collection of music. When I asked him about the name of the café, he explained that his Japanese surname translates to “the shallows of a body of water”.

Also in the neighborhood were many antique shops. North of the station there was a cute street with a great bookstore with lots of children’s books, and folk crafts stores. I found a lot of import goods and furniture that were a fraction of the price in more trendy neighborhoods. I’m definitely going back. But not on a Wednesday. Although, I like the mystery of a neighborhood filled with colorful unentered doors.

Click on any of the pictures to see more from the neighborhood.

The Invisible Neighbor

I’ve used quite a few different textbooks to study Japanese and what’s worked best for me has been the popular Japanese for Busy People. The revised third edition is a huge improvement over the previous edition. It’s easy for self-teaching, clearly written, and builds the language, grounded in every day use. It’s well illustrated and well-designed. I use the kana version which has the exercises written in Japanese. Because of how much I like using the book, I was taken aback by something that I realized: this book is nationalistic propaganda. And I’ll tell you why.

The first chapter helps you introduce yourself and lists several countries and nationalities. I found it odd that Korea and Koreans weren’t listed. I thought that perhaps they were just focusing on English speakers. But they also list German, Chinese and Thai. Perhaps the glossary and supplemental tables in the back would list it, but no. Although, Egyptian and Indonesian are added to this list. At this point I realized this was just a straight up snub. How could Japan’s nearest neighbors not be included in the list of nationalities, nor their country listed? Out of curiosity, I checked other Japanese language textbooks at a bookstore and they all list Korea and Koreans in their chapters on self-introduction. This is a clear case of politics trumping education and common sense.

There is also a map of Japan in the front inside jacket and I found it bizarre that on the map was “Take Is.” Take Island, or Takeshima, is the Japanese name of contested islets called Dokto in Korea.

takeshima?

The dispute is of course more than about this set of rocks, it’s the economic zone of rich fishing and possibly oil and gas around the islets. In any case, South Korea has controlled them since the republic was formed in 1945. And a Korean state probably had claims to them since the Yi Dynasty.

It’s odd to see it on a map of Japanese territories because none of the other islands that Japan has disputes with are on the map. Not the 56 Kuril Islands that Russia controls, nor the uninhabited Senkaku Islands that Japan controls but both China and Taiwan claim. Dokto’s area, at 0.186 km2, is tiny in comparison to these substantially larger archipelagos, and would hardly constitute a pin prick on the map above. What’s more odd is that actual Japanese islands that are much larger and, well, significant, are also not named on the map. We see just their silhouettes. The only conclusion is that the writers of AJALT, the book’s “non-profit” writers just want to send a big middle finger to its western neighbor and make it disappear, except for Dokto. I find it terribly pathetic and petty. And worst of all, it’s academically dishonest.

The True Size of the Earth

If, like me, you love maps, you’ll love a website called Worldmapper. Worldmapper is a collaboration between a British and an American university. They have created a series of cartographs, maps that represent statistical, rather than geographic, parameters. For instance, if each country’s size is based on its population, then you’d have something like this:

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