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The personal log of Peter Payne, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Monday, October 27, 2008

Barber Shops and Baths

I love getting a haircut in Japan. The barber shop I use rents space inside a lobby of a large onsen/public bath, making it possible for me to get my hair cut and then jump right into the bath immediately, washing away all the unwanted hair from my head. The guy who cuts my hair is very interested in English, having been to the U.K. several times, and he always asks me for advice on how he can learn more effectively. My main advice to him is to be "8x" like a CD-ROM drive in a computer -- that is, to attack the problem of learning from as many different sides as possible. In my own case, I augmented my Japanese classes at college by watching anime, reading manga I was interested in, translating songs for friends and writing fan letters to my favorite manga artists. (Some even wrote back, so bowled over were they at receiving a letter from an American fan.) Finding aspects of Japan that you are interested in -- be it J-doramas, offbeat music, martial arts or what have you -- is a great way to make it easier to learn the language. My barber is always full of questions about America, asking me things like what barber shops are like there, or what my first impressions of Japan were, and we have many interesting discussions. Truth be told, I wish more of the Japanese people I met were more curious about the world outside Japan, asking questions like him -- all too often, it seems, I encounter people who don't really want to be inquisitive and learn new things.

7 Comments:

Blogger Kenshin_desu said...

That's true! Even if I'm not studying Japanese in a proper way, watching anime and dorama sometimes I'm able to understand what they're saying, or to anticipate an answer during a dialogue. It's scary, sometimes, as I answer right but I don't really know what I've answered :D

10:26 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, that's good. Every little bit helps. And then you are laying the groundwork for going further, if you want to do that.

10:51 PM

 
Blogger smilydutchgirl said...

Peter, do you find that it depends on where you are in Japan whether or not people want to know about other cultures etc.? Personally I was born and raised in the Netherlands and have been able to travel to many countries. Not Japan yet though.. but it's on our wish list ^_^ When my husband and I moved to the USA we first moved to Chicago IL and I found that many people were interested to know more about Europe and other cultures, but when we moved to a suburb outside of Tulsa OK a few years ago I met many people that have never left their hometowns, nor are they interested to see or know more about their own country as well as others.

2:36 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Ah, it may be an urban-vs-rural thing. I'm in Gunma, about 100 km from Tokyo, so it's semi-rural. It may be that you're just too close to Texas to get people with real curiosity ^_^

3:11 AM

 
Blogger timo said...

I have found several helpful apps to put on my iPhone, to quiz me on kana/kanji, and a dictionary, too. so when I have a few moments, I can still be learning, too, away from the computer and the texts I have on nihongo.

4:11 AM

 
Blogger Eroneous Waylay said...

Hey~! I'm from Texas, and have a nigh-insatiable curiosity.

Granted, that DOES make me the exception rather than the norm..but I'm finding (at least in college, despite that fact that it's in a 3-bit rodeo/agriculture/prison town) that slowly, Texas is opening up.

Oklahoma is a different story altogether. I've learned to tolerate (to a point) narrow-mindedness and ignorance (the kind where people just refuse to discover anything new) but Oklahoma still blows me away in that respect.

5:29 AM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

I'd love to see some consenting movements in Texas, yes. If people are for the state's image of being cowboys and not embracing learning, it'd be nice if more people would stand up against that. Resist the "reddest of the red states" and be a little blue. You guys have amazing resources, and could really be a leader in a lot of ways, like California is.

9:54 AM

 

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