Thursday, February 16, 2012

PROJECT TWO: THE DISCO SCARF

The wool for this baby was bought with Super K about 18 months ago.  We were originally in the haberdashery for something else I can't remember and we saw it on the way out and got giddy because it was super soft and super sparkly and was on super sale!  I had already started Mr Stripy and only had one pair of needles, so was waiting to finish that project before starting a new one.  What's that you said?  Why didn't I just buy another pair of needles at the 100yen store?  Because, that would be crazy!  Put down the bottle of sake and walk away from the computer before you post something silly on Twitter.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Finishing Things

When I was living in South Africa, January and February were always filled with this rush of new energy.  You're still in the yummy afterglow of the holiday season.  The weather, though occasionally more enthusiastically sticky than you would like, is super fine.  I always felt pumped with the prospect of new projects, or at least, long days to soak in.

However, here in the uninsulated depths of Sendai winter, it's the time of hibernation and hibernation breeds getting into ruts.  It seems almost impossible not to fall into a routine of battle against the cold to get out of bed - go through the motions at work - make plans to do something affirming after work, which you ignore five minutes of stepping out into the steadily approaching twilight - go home and hide under your kotatsu and watch ridiculous amounts of TV thanks to your super fast Internet - pass out to the thought that "Tomorrow, I WILL do something other than watch six straight hours of Top Chef".  Wash, rinse and repeat.  Then, there you are a month later with a very intimate knowledge of the TV schedule and a sinking feeling that your life is being sucked out through your eyeballs.  And it feels like there is nothing you can do to stop it.

This hibernation sickness, combined with an idea that's been brooding since I read Scarlett Thomas's "Our Tragic Universe", has led to a new project that embraces the desire to be somewhere warm and comfy, whilst also trying to prevent a spiral into soul crushing self-loathing.   I've also recently listened to Caroline Myss's lectures on self-esteem (which I give a High Recommended Awesomeness Two Thumbs Up) and she has this whole deal about earning your own respect by getting things done.  So, boom!  Finishing Things it is.

What I think this might be about:
1.  Minimizing
Several spiritual practices that I've come across in the past few years advocate a process of learning to do with less.  Whilst some may take this to extremes like never using their heaters, I believe this is rather a process of discovering what is really important TO YOU, to find the things that give you joy and focusing your energy on those, rather than simply allowing your space - physical and mental - to be littered with stuff that you haven't consciously chosen.

2.  Gratitude (Yeah, I know, I've written before how the overuse of this word makes it stick in my throat with gooey self-helpness, but it does have it's place)
Sometimes (if you're unlucky, often) you have bought or are give stuff that you don't really care for or forget about, but it may seem wasteful to simply throw away and so you let it collect dust through several spring cleanings.  I guess the Gratitude idea comes from seeing what these things might be able to teach you.  Sometimes that's a "Ooh!  I never thought I would like that, but I do!"  Awesome!  Aaand, sometimes it's a reminder that, yes, it's still not for you.  Lesson learned, or re-learned!  Also, Awesome!

3.Being lost
Sometimes you get a little lost.  You're not necessarily in a deep dark depression, but there is a vague dissatisfaction that follows you around. You've forgotten what inspires, excites  and interests you.  This is a way to explore your world as a stranger might and see what still fits.  Something in you drew these things to you and said, "Yes".

Ultimately, I have a habit of starting things and not finishing them and these little things - like not finishing a well-intentioned knitting project - niggle at me and it's been pissing me off.  So, in the next few months, it's about looking around, picking something that's been hanging around for a while and finishing it, and, hopefully, getting out of the rut.

And, yeah, I did consider starting another blog for this, but I have enough trouble trying to write with any kind of frequency on this one.  Also, there are enough travel/ living abroad blogs in existence that make it seem like you spend every day hiking to mystical shrines and then party the night away in a hostess bar, doing sake shots with Godzilla and Hello Kitty.  Yes, even after living abroad for a few years, things are still weird, but - just like everywhere else- after a while, things can get same old same old.  Just like everywhere else, you have to remind yourself that this whole Life thing is supposed to be fun, right?

So, in the spirit of beginning things
PROJECT ONE:  THE SCARF THAT TOOK A YEAR TO KNIT
I am not a particularly slow knitter, but this was a stop-start project that began when I was ill last year and I forgot about.  Then summer came and what's the point?  Knitting to me is a cosy winter past-time and doesn't belong in the sweaty months.  I like knitting because it's something, especially when doing a straight forward project like a scarf (which, quite frankly, is probably all I'm actually capable of), can be done whilst watching TV, but you can see that you have achieved something other than eat the entire contents of your fridge.  This project was a double whammy because all of the wool used was hand-me-downs from friends that left a year or two go.  It finally got done during a bout of bronchitis over Christmas.  It is snuggly and impractically long and vaguely reminiscent of Dr Seuss and that's why we like each other.


Monday, January 30, 2012

On purification rituals and running around in your shorts


SATURDAY, 14 JANUARY 2012 - DONTOSAI FESTIVAL

Ok, so I've been sitting on this post for two weeks.  I'm not one to make New Year's Resolutions, preferring the more short term approach of "Claudine, we need to do something about (insert self-destructive/ lazy behaviour here); totally commit to the change for a week; tell everyone how amazing it is to live life this way; get bored by Day 11 and realize that it really doesn't matter if I'm skinny enough to fit into a Japanese small or that I quite like waking up to dishes scattered all around my apartment".  However, I did mentally promise myself that I would spend less time watching Castle and more time keeping this up to date.  Although it was never an official Declaration, it was a mental pinkie swear and I've been feeling bad about it.  I guess I was hoping that a spectacular perspective about this experience, glittering with wit and intelligence, would produce itself, but it hasn't.  I'm starting to feel like my Comic Zing Generator is  depressed.  She needs company to bounce around with and that's not always easy.  One of my banter partners is hiding under the covers at the moment and although there are several witty people within the little community I live in, sometimes your respective Comic Zing Generators just don't match up and it feels less like banter and more like waiting for the other person to finish proving how fucking intelligent they are, rather than just having a conversation involving both parties and seeing what gems they can co-create.

Whew!  Woo!  Sorry, to have ranted all over you.   Back to this festival thing.  Dontosai is the festival where peeps take their New Year's decorations to their nearest shrine and burn them in the communal fire.
Part of the festivities include a pilgrimage in which participants walk to the shrine dressed in skimpy clothing in the name of purification.  For the past two years, our board of education has been gregarious enough to allow the foreign teachers join in.  Last year, I was too cool for school to join in and regretted it.   This time around I decided to stop the silliness.

Warning: this post might include some moaning about how cold it was (What did you expect, Claudine, running around in minus weather in the equivant of gym shorts and a bathrobe?), that doesn't mean I'm not glad I did it.  I'm not saying that there aren't better ways to spend a Saturday night, but this one gets super awesome points for originality!

4pm We had to arrive ridiculously early to put on a pair of shorts and kimono.  When you have to wrap 10 m of cotton around your waste, 2 hrs suddenly becomes a fairly reasonable amount of prep time.

Everyone was layering sneaky thermal underwear and heating pads where they could hide them.  At first this felt like cheating, after 3hrs in the cold, it was the only sign of sanity.



Ooh!  Look at that super flattering ensemble!  
Practical footgear!


Pre-departure, when we still had the energy to smile.


Walking down the street to the shrine.  We got lots of gawking for being foreigners doing this.  At this point, I was trying to be all zen and use the ritual as a meditation exercise, where you observe your discomfort rather than try to ignore it.  However, after two hours , taking my attention to my feet that were on fire just made me want to throw up.


I discussed this ritual with someone back home who asked, "Why do people in cold places feel the need to prove how much cold they can withstand?"  The pilgrimage is a purification ritual (part of why we were in the cold for three times the amount of time we were supposed to be was because there were so many people there this year- no doubt a result of last year's earthquake).  Although the whole thing now means a zen-ish ritual, I suspect that it may have been a purification of the gene pool - make them run around in silly outfits, if they don't die of hypothermia, they can move onto spring and the joys Hanami and hormones bring.

It's also a ritual of perspective.  I think it's safe to say that that night was the coldest I'd ever been.  The silly little heating pads were useless.  I thought the pain in my feet would eventually go from sever icy burn to numbness, but it never did.  By the time I got back to the school where we had gotten changed, my knees were blue.  Sure, my first winter here, I thought I felt as cold, as I sat beneath my kotatsu, wearing three layers of thermals and building my natural heating system with large doses of melted cheese.  How wrong I was!  When you've run around the streets in minus weather, you understand that the rest of the time, you just think you're cold.  It could be far, far worse*.

*In fact, Claudine is now often able to walk around without a hat or gloves, something she would never have attempted before.  She even states that she now wears fewer layers and it no longer bothers her when her shitty sneakers get soaked by mushy snow.  Of course, she should just buy better sneakers.





Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Christmas, Nikko, New Year's Eve and The Trip of Losing Things

On Monday, I returned home from a few days of adventuring and trains and fully intended to sit down and do the writing thingy and post photos and generally try to hold onto the head clearing and "why do you waste so many hours watching television, when you could be doing something USEFUL?" that comes with even a brief bout of gallivanting.  Needless to say, my bags still sit half-unpacked and I spent roughly thirty-six hours in my pajamas, barely moving from the same spot - except to acquire more refined carbohydrates/ wine/ cigarettes - binge watching British period dramas.

December was the bringer of endings, it seems.  Several couples/ relationships/ lovers/ fun partners I know have parted ways.  The cycle of my birthday-Christmas-New Years has had me re-evaluating many of my relationships (here I use relationships in a very general sense, not specifically for romantic entanglements) past and present.  It hasn't been the most super fun time, but it has been good in it's own way.  And so, the (slightly redacted - some things nobody needs to read) notes from my journal:

SATURDAY, 24 DECEMBER
Spiced chocolate cake.  Thank you, Nigella!  There were also black pepper gingerbread cookies and a whole roast chicken(I found the last one at Seiyu) that deserved photos but they were in bellies before I remembered.
We had a small gathering of some of the strays still wandering the streets of Sendai at my apartment.  At first, I was hesitant because it seemed like it was going to be me and a group of boys.  I used to think that I was OK with this, you know, cause I'm super cool and hang with the guys just like...well, a guy.  However, a disastrous trip during Golden Week in May taught me differently.  Let's just say that there were tears, a lot of them.  In a combini parking lot.  At 4am.

Anyway, Christmas was wonderfully civilized!  As requested, the boys all contributed real food.  The wine and conversation flowed.  There was only one incident of accidental self-mutilation involving my left middle finger nail and an over-enthusiastic potato peeler.  The roast chicken turned out ridiculously well, if I do say so myself.  The night ended with half an hour of YouTubing dolphin rape videos.

WEDNESDAY, 28 DECEMBER
Whilst clearing out my SMS inbox I discover that I should learn to read my messages properly, when I read a friend from South Africa's Christmas text and learn that a former mentor and someone who helped me out of a very dark period had died, but in the Christmas Eve cooking rush I hadn't read it and four days of bronchitis had interfered with my "I'll read it tomorrow" memory.   Although we had not seen each other in five years, I had always hoped that we would meet again, shoot the breeze, share cigarettes and coffee.

THURSDAY, 29 DECEMBER
The new smoking section at Sendai Station.  A glorious row of people staring out into the distance, like pilgrims watching a sun rise.
An unusually smooth morning in which I leave my apartment at the intended time and in an immaculate state.

For the first twenty minutes, I'm full of : Ah!  The thrill of travel!  Of moving forward and starting fresh.  A psychic cleansing!

Change over #1: Fukushima Station.  I travelled using the Seishun 18 kippu.  Highly recommended if it's the season and you have the time!
But then: I try to read but my head is filled with angry, unsaid words.  I try to write it out, devise strategies, attempt to see the positive.  All the words you wish you'd said but didn't because you thought you were done, but the Words clearly aren't and they waited until you're on the train - the moment when you're Going To Get Away From It All - and they decide they're coming to visit, all the shit that has littered your life for the last six months.  Things you hadn't thought about for a week, now, when you're trying to read your holiday novel, decide to come rattling around and they bring they're extended family too.

Enough with Pain and Anger! I write.  Travel!  I try to focus on.  The cleansing of the system, the getting out of routine ruts and stale boredom.  Waking up and setting off before the world has been used up by other people.  Scaling down your consumerist life to what you can carry on your back.  To feel, physically, the weight of all that you carry with you.  Like when you're hiking: you can only take what you can carry, but the more you carry, the stronger you are when your muscles recover.  The more strength you gain from having walked the more difficult path.
Change #3: Utsunomiya 

How those who do not take the time to travel alone cheat themselves!  The space to think and explore, to pit yourself against The Unknown and realize that it's not as frightening as you thought.  Hiking alone, although generally not recommended, is such a thrill - to have to pull yourself up when the road is hard and you're sweaty and tired and want to turn back; to have to break through those blocks, even when every part of you is screaming, "NO! MORE!";  having to face the experience rather than running from it or distracting yourself.

AAH! Trains!  The best of all travel!  Invented at a time when the idea alone must've blown people's minds.  Granted, I do have an affinity for steam punk, but the clackity clack!  Fast enough to be efficient, slow enough that you have time to absorb the distance you are travelling.

We're up the mountain and I feel like I could be anywhere, watching the purple haze of winter forests and villages below, ears popping and locking with each whistle as we enter a tunnel.

Nikko is just too lovely!  Yes, I got lost because I relied on my shitty map from the lodge where I was staying and ended up walking 40 minutes in the wrong direction from the station.  But!  I saw a steakhouse called Enya that made me laugh and the air is full of wood fire smoke and the calm of Hogsback.  I think that the smell of wood fires will always have a hold on me - all that bliss on top of a mountain with Ruby.  And here I have brought myself to the opposite end of the world and lost my hat along the way.

Book into the lodge.  Bunk beds: the top is such a hassle, but how you gonna choose anything else?

Nikko Park Lodge.  Super highly recommended!  Great food!  Great fireplace!  Don't trust the online map.
A wonderful vegan dinner by the fireplace.  Mr S and I always complain how difficult it is to get good, wholesome food when travelling in Japan, but Nikko did not disappoint.

My head continues to jabber through the evening.  I try to sift what are other people's issues and what are mine, what are the things I need to work on and some resolutions are made. 1.  Need to speak up earlier about things that bug you, instead of hoping they'll magically right themselves, 2. Giving people time to digest what you've said, 3. Acknowledging want you want and deserve in relationships rather than judging and trying to suppress, 4. What people DO should be assessed before what they SAY

Again, I try to read, have some cozy Claudine Time by the fireplace, but, well, replay the paragraphs above about thoughts and their extended family.
The walk to the temples.


A nice chat with a Frenchman on a cigarette break eases the inside of my head.  Also, I totally scored the dorm to myself for the night.  Can I get a whoop whoop? (This actually happened both nights.  Double whoop whoop?  Whoop Whoop Whoop Whoop!)

FRIDAY, 30 DECEMBER
A morning of gaudy temples and people taking pictures of all the same things.  Mr S's words drift up through the mess, "You're so afraid of being alone that you accept shitty relationships, which, because you eventually realize are not good enough for you, leave you alone."  For someone who thought that they were totally cool cool with Aloneness, these words from a few weeks earlier came as a shock. So, amongst the shrines and cemeteries, a solution presents itself: embrace being alone, learn to love it hard and deep, and realize that in it you are both totally alone and not.  That way, you don't have to settle for second best in any kind of -ship, hoping that it will lead to love.

I think I'm all shrine/ templed out!  But, slowly, the heart is feeling lighter and the thoughts cleaner.

These temples are crazy!  Hoards of people, boxes where you draw out lucky charms -  the pre-mechanical vending machines, everywhere!  People rolling their 100 yens into collection boxes before the statues of gods.  When did they all get so poor?  What, no money, no luck?  At first I thought, "Shrines are expensive to maintain.  All that gold!"  But, it's a National Heritage site and you pay over a 2000 yen to see all the main spots.


People waiting in line to take pics of the famous monkey carvings.  Google them and you'll get better pictures than these people did.

Red Jacket Girl is taking pictures OF PICTURES of the monkeys 
Man!  After a while, no matter how glorious, shrines and temples all start to become a bit samey.  Though, I'm sure the people who lugged massive blocks of stone and wood up the mountains, or who spent years carving and painting might disagree.

One of them, Fu...something something, though, had a completely different atmosphere.  So much more fun!  There were old timey games and a wall full of hearts, prayers for love, I suppose.

Sacred tree where people were praying.  The green sign is an add for lucky charms that YOU TOO can own.


Had a great second lunch in a tiny restaurant covered in Thank You notes from around the world.  They were cool enough to seat two women at my table, because there wasn't one free one for them.  The Thank You notes are fascinating, like all those people taking photos of things that they could easily find better pictures of online.  That need to leave your mark.  Some proof THAT YOU WERE THERE.  That your existence mattered in some way.  That you did something, went somewhere and even when you go home, there is a small part of you there still.  Did I mention that I had been reading "Slaughterhouse Five" on the way down?
Futara-san Shrine, my personal fav

Later that night, back at the lodge.  Oh my god!  I'm watching two deers walk through the trees, maybe 5 or 6 meters away from me.  And now, they're gone.


I took two pens with me on this trip.  The first one ran out of ink.  I lost the other one.



An impractically big sword









Your luck in a vending machine
The Shinkyo Bridge. 


The awesome thank you note restaurant






















SATURDAY, 31 DECEMBER
JR Nikko Station, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright
Waiting for my first train to Tokyo.  I appear to have lost my water bottle.

The trip into Tokyo was pleasant and generally without incident, except for Purple Jacket Man at Tokyo Station who bumped the wheels of his rolly bag three times against my ankle.  The last bumped me into an on-coming bag.  He barely "Sumimasen"-ed past as I cursed myself for not turning around and not "What the fuck"-ing him, a bird flipping being my only small revenge.  But then, a station person of importance ran after him and berated him loudly for what he'd just done and all was right with Tokyo Station again.

Check into the capsule hotel.  It's not somewhere I wish to spend a lot of time, but charming in a sleazy kinda way.

I had bought a pen in Nikko due to the previous loss of the others.  I lost it sometime on this day.


The Golden Donut at Kinshicho Station


MONDAY, 2 JANUARY
Well, New Year's Eve was what it was.  An OK dinner at Alcatraz, drinks at a standing bar, debate with Mr S if we should go to the pre-organized club or not, ended up with "Yes" after being coaxed by another one of our party, awesome train ride to the club (seriously, I think the train rides on my Tokyo party nights have been the best part of every time there - beer buzzed and still full of hope before you reach the OK, but let down, of the PARTY!).  Reveled in the pretentious fun of the club for a while.  It reminded me of all the shmodel clubs in Cape Town that I hated when I was there, but made me giddy with the easing of a little "Aaaah Home!"  Somewhere around 3 am I started spiralling into Anger and Sadness and left in a pool of tears and self-pity.  While I was waiting for the train, I hung out with a rat trying to eat a plastic bag, then ended a friendship that I'd been trying to make work for the better part of a year, but being some one's warm blanket has never been my style.  Get back to the capsule hotel and try to cry as quietly as possible.

Most of what I was able to capture of Alcatraz
The New Year is rung in with a raging hangover and a not-worth-the-calories-burger.

On then, on the train home, a realization and culmination of weeks of searching: the source of so much of the recent sadness - the sadness for the person who decided/ believed for so long that this was all she deserved in Ships; cool people, that were awesome to hangout with, but careless and selfish.  This was a wee bit of a shock to someone who considered themselves to sooo not be That Kind Of Girl.  And I cried again on somewhere between Tokyo and Ustunomiya.

It was the trip of losing shit.  Ruby and Mr S would probably say of "letting go".  Mostly of pens.


The Capsule





















And, because it's the Year of the Dragon 
HAPPY NOT-QUITE-SO-NEW NEW YEAR!










































































Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Soy Joy Syndrome

Well Dears, it's been a while.  Spring and Summer have been filled with duties and distractions, but Mr S has nagged me to start digitalizing all my notebooks, so, hopefully, some of their pages will make their way here.  However, I'm working on my propensity for indulging in avoidance of the blank page.  Thus, today's post.

After work, I headed across town to Donkihote - a psychedelic trip of a store; no chemical additives required.  The butt-brush aisles are packed with everything from Halloween costumes to sex toys in colours last seen at a 90s rave, whilst jingles and J-pop induce headaches from speakers that require a health check.  I usually avoid Donki, as it is more affectionately called, like politicians avoid the truth.  Although it's an experience, I value my eyesight, hearing and sanity.  However, Halloween is just around the corner and some things only the Don can provide.

After about five minutes (my usual cut-off time), I began to wonder when the migraine was going to hit.  Half an hour later, it hadn't.  And I was still inside the store.  "Huh," me thoughts to myself.

Then, on the way out, I was feeling a wee bit peckish and with errands still to be run, decided to grab a Soy Joy to tide me over.  Now, Soy Joys and I have a bit of a history.  When I first came to Japan, I gave them a try and after the first bite realized we were not going to be friends.  But, you know, you get stranded at combinis enough times having to choose between the cold deep-fried mystery meat, the sad egg mayo sandwich and the Soy Joy.  The Soy Joy starts winning.  Skip ahead two years and you find yourself saying "Nom nom nom!" as you bite into the texture of month-old cake.

So this got me thinking (I know, shocking!): when you're living in a new country, or just dealing with your life being different from what you knew before, and have been living it for a while, do you start suffering from Soy Joy Syndrome?  Were your first assessments wrong and you just needed to give unfamiliar things a chance?  Have you become more open minded? Or, do we just learn to make the best of the situation we're in?  When is acquiring a taste really just settling?  And, when should you stop over-thinking your snacks?

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Friday, 18 March 2011

First real downtown day and I'm drained.  The past week has been one of scattered sleep.  I'm sitting in an electronics store.  We were hoping to find a kettle, but they are sold out.  The kettle has been our main saving grace - a brief respite from cold as we splash ourselves in our antiquated bathing system.

The days of not writing are grinding on me.  This is one of the few moments I've had to myself in a week.  I'm getting grumpy and snappy, especially at Mr S, whose jokes are wearing thin - mostly because he has a bag of favourites that he enjoys using over and over again.  The words "It's a biological attack!" weasel their way into every conversation and now have the effect of making me want to punch him.  Also, I seem to have become gas and food controller, cook and dishwasher.  Being the nagging matron makes me loath every careless light left on that I have to switch off, every time I have to switch off the gas mains, every dirty tissue that needs to be thrown away.  Just want to talk to someone other than Mr S for a few minutes. Haha.  They've just walked past me.

The afternoon was a good break.  Saw people I hadn't seen since The Event.  An overly long hug.  A kind individual who has more than their fare share of work let me bitch for half an hour.  Now that the leavers have left the city, a little of the tension has eased.  Although I was super tired today and the spicy ramen lunch did nothing for my tum tums (eventually caved and took a painkiller), I feel a little less wound up with waiting.

Threw a tantrum this morning when I knocked over the water I boiled for my basin bath.  A few days ago, the first basin bath was so delicious, but it's wearing thin and I just want to take a proper fucking shower.  Ooooh!  I'm circling the bottom of a mug of hot wine and it's shot straight through my head.  Still bubbling with nervous energy, but it's comforting to sketch the symbols of words across the page.

Other scenes from today?  Stew for breakfast - all those veggies.  Just make me feel better, like light in my tummy.  Shower - we've already covered that screaming match.  The kettle is leaking.  But, we've found the source and will glue it up.

Craving a square of breathing space, but, at the same time, with the subway not fully operational (I feel like I'm in an episode of Star Trek writing those words), I don't want to be alone yet.

The floor is squeaking in new places as Mr S washes the dishes - high pitched screams timed to hip hop beats, but he has his headphones on.  The urge to punch bounces in my palm.

A gathering of the last stragglers here tomorrow night.  A little wine.  A little release.

Dreamed of Ruby last night - well, him merged with Neil Gaiman, leading me through a post-apocalyptic wasteland.

What is up with this constant need for cooking?  Wish they would just put me to work in a kitchen somewhere.  I really hope that people come through tomorrow night.  I want a lot of people here to clear the space of all the kak heaviness.

Mr S is watching cricket.  Even on Saturday, when we still didn't have electricity and were conserving cell phone use, he checked the cricket score on his iPhone.

Thursday, 17 March 2011

So many people have left.  Been restless all day.  Snacking all afternoon. Eventually started cooking and cleaning (I KNOOOW!  I turned into a gen-u-iiine domestic demon).  Should've been writing.  Snacks made my stomach churn.  Need to get out and downtown tomorrow.  Thoughts skittish.  Yummy vodka from M and G.