Today's interesting word of Japanese is guuzen (GOO-zen), which means "coincidence." I don't know why, but there seems to be something about Japan that brings out the most unlikely coincidences, at least for me. On several occasions I've bumped into people I studied Japanese with at SDSU in Tokyo and Yokohama -- quite a feat, considering the fact that I live far from these places myself. The guy who lives next door to us decided to run for mayor of our city of 200,000 and won, so my next-door neighbor just happens to be the mayor. When racing manga/anime Initial D got popular in the U.S., I was surprised to learn that the mountain roads I'd been zooming up and down for years were the setting of the story. But the biggest guuzen of my life would have to be the fact that the city I just happened to come to live in was the home town of Mitsuru Adachi, the creator of Touch, the classic baseball manga that I used to learn Japanese from, and which formed much of my early perception of Japan and its language. What's more, the artist just happens to share a birthday with my wife, another incredible coincidence.

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3 comments:
Wow,so when you saw you former school mates,what are most of them doing(like what kind of employment)? I know they're not still JET's. oh,and if you live next door to the mayor,that must mean you live in a pretty good neighborhood.
One schoolmate was married and pregnant, one was working in a company and was very smug about it (we all hated business majors back at SDSU, since we perceived them as wanting to learn Japanese only so they could make money in "Japan Inc"), and one more was still studying something in grad school. The idea of "neighborhoods" works differently here, since land is so valuable and doesn't change hands very often. Hence you have old houses next to new ones, without the stratification that takes place in the U.S. Hmm, sounds like an update "neta" (neta being the top part of sushi, but also an idea for something).
Yeah,I figured as much,about the land differences,I just had to be sure. And,the differences between land value,lack of stratification and the concept of a "good neighborhood" would be a great update. Now I can say I gave Peter Payne of J-LIST an idea:)
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