Our trip to Hiroshima and the wrong places to bring electronics
It's good to be back home! We were only gone four nights, but traveling around Japan with your 65-year-old mother and two kids can be a lot of work. After seeing the sights in Kyoto, we rode the train to a town called Uji (OO-gee), famous for its green tea and for the beautiful Byodoin Temple, the 900 year old building which appears on the back of the Japanese ten yen coin. We then went on to Nara, a small city that was the capital of Japan hundreds of years ago, and took in the quiet beauty of Nara Park while feeding the deer that overrun the place.
In preparation for our trip, I had made sure to pack all the various electronic devices I'm accustomed to carrying with me: Powerbook, digital camera, cell phone, iPod, Canon Wordtank, PSP, and all associated chargers, of course. I have to admit, I felt a little odd, carrying electronic gadgets while going to see such beautiful and ancient places, such as Miyajima, a shrine established in A.D. 593, built above the beach so that it seems to float when the tide comes in. I wish I could have left all my electronic gadgets at home and gone on my trip with nothing to detract from the ancient beauty of what we were seeing, but I'm just too much a slave to electronics, I guess.
The last day we visited Hiroshima, something that's always a solemn experience for any visitor to Japan. Hiroshima was a bustling commercial port and wartime center when the first atomic bomb used against humans exploded over it at 8:15 on August 6, 1945. The destruction was devastating, killing at least 50,000 people instantly, including factory workers, soldiers, children, and Koreans and Chinese who were made to work in factories in the city. The Peace Park, located at ground zero, is a beautiful place to walk and reflect on what happened, and see the famous symbol of the city, the A-Bomb Dome, a former commercial building that managed to partially survive the bombing. It was important for me to show my children the site, as well as the sobering exhibits in the Peace Museum, which include before-and-after models of the city, glass bottles that had melted in the heat, and a wristwatch that had stopped forever at 8:15. My son asked me many probing questions about what he saw -- why did America and Japan start fighting? What happened to people like him, who were both Japanese and American, living in Japan at the time? I was glad that my mother and children were able to visit this important place with me.
Here are today's "really cool products" that I thought were especially noteworthy. Note: the J-List links below may be for adult products and should probably be considered "not safe for work." To see all the J-List products, check out J-List or the JBOX.com updated products link.
Shitsujun -- Sumire Ogawa All I can say is, wow. Something about this girl caught my eye when her calendar came out last year. Her face is pretty, sure, but also playful in a sexual way that makes you want to sit there and fantasize about her. Or am I going overboard? | |
Japanese Keychain -- Nozomi *Type300* ~ Shinkansen. Ha! I just rode this train almost to the other end of Japan, so it's funny that it would appear on a keychain on the Monday when I get back. Japan's Shinkansen (bullet trains) are really fun to travel on, although trying to entertain two kids for a long trip is always a challenge. | |
M ~ Katsura Masakazu. One of the best manga I've ever read was Denei Shojo, aka Video Girl Ai, by Katsura Masakazu. It combined a saucy girl-comes-out-of-the-TV sci-fi plot with real edge-of-your-seat love triangles between interesting characters. But through it all, the characters never really did the nasty, which was always kind of frustrating. Now the artist has done his first really erotic work, and I have to say, I approve. This may be based on I's, I'm not sure -- if it is I'll have to hunt it down and read it. | |
Glico Shall We? -- Chocolate Chips & Maccadamian Nuts. Glico's latest snack from Japan is titled "Shall we?" no doubt a reference to Shall We Dance?, a hugely popular Japanese film that was remade by Hollywood (blech). I thought this packag title was worth posting,. | |
Japanese Sake Brand Cap ~ Otokoyama. This is such a good idea -- take cool-looking logos from famous sake makers in Japan, and put said logos on hats, "scissors pouches" and so on. I am totally in favor of it, since I love the look of kanji, the way they are both a picture and a descriptive word. | |
SIX NINE - Special Love Toy for Adult. There are some darned innovative sex toys in Japan, among them this little ditty, a long snake-like thing filled with soft beads, with a mouth at one end and another type of oriface at the other end. God bless those wacky Japanese! | |
Decamelon vol. 10. In the past, Dekamelon (which means "big melon") was an exclusively Race Queen oriented adult mag, with girls dressed as F-1 circuit gals. Now they've done an all-OL issue, which may or may not represent a total change for them. OL means "office lady" and refers to female office workers, who can be pretty sexy when they want to be. |










6 Comments:
Hi, just thought I'd let you know I moved myblog from Blogger to my own webspace. I also updated my link to you. My new URL is http://ad2101.x82.net/blog
12:22 PM
Hi, just thought I'd let you know I moved my blog from Blogger to my own webspace. I also updated my link to you. My new URL is http://ad2101.x82.net/blog
12:22 PM
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
1:55 PM
Thanks, 988066, that's a nice site. I am dragging on Blogger myself, it's getting so slow, just when I've come to depend on it for a lot of stuff.
9:49 AM
The slogan "Ambitious Japan" amuses me. I think the young people I see here these days are the opposite of ambitious! The increase in number of 'freeters' lately is proof positive. Economic instability feeds back into society, leading to bunches of dissatisfied people feeling gypped by the system. It's either that or us Americans with our bad cultural influences.
Anyway, I'm a fan of puns, so the "Nozomi wa, kanau" bit on the shinkansen made me smile when I first saw it.
9:28 PM
Yes, I don't know what can change the tide of freeters (which are, for those who don't know, people who just work part time all their lives, and never desire to join a company and start a career). I've heard part of the problem is that land/houses are so expensive, people give up on trying to buy them, so they just choose other items like fast cars instead of more important things in life.
9:54 AM
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