08 December 2011

"We aren't bad people. We don't need to leave." Tattoos and Japan

            Here’s some background on this subject for some readers:

I knew enough about Japan—the culture, history, and society—before I came here to know one thing: tattoos are taboo in Japan. 

Without going into too much detail, the Japanese translation of tattoo is irezumi.  This word has a few meanings/translation, but if you use the word in conversation with Japanese people the thing that comes to mind are the famous tattoos found primarily on members of the yakuza.  These images come in the iconic forms of koi fish, dragons, tigers, and, well, I don’t need to explain this to you all, you know what a Japanese tattoo looks like.

I knew from reading and conversation with people that have been to Japan that tattoos are not accepted in some places.  You don’t show them off in a tradition setting—a shrine or monastery—and you simply can’t go to a public bath if you have tattoos that you cannot hide.  When people in the states asked me about problems I think I could have in Japan, I always talked about my tattoos. 

So unpopular in the USA, my tattoos are often the target of graffiti.

Now for the story: my experience.

One of the first things I talked about when I came to Japan was my tattoos.  When I stepped off the plane at the Kansai airport and started looking for the person in charge of transporting me to the University I didn’t have to look long.  The fact is I was found and the first thing said to me in Japan was

Rikako: “Matthew?”
Me: “Yes? Hello?”  
Rikako: “It’s me, Rikako from Osaka Kyoiku University.”
Me: “Oh, it’s so good to finally meet you!”
Rikako: “Yes, I found you because of your tattoos.”

            Now, I’m not so pompous to have brought up my tattoos with one of the international faculty at the university.  Rikako knew about my tattoos because one of my friends from Kyoiku University had met me while staying at ECU and told everyone about them.  In fact, she still tells everyone we meet about them even though I keep them covered almost all the time in public: which, if you know me, you know it is no small feat.

            So, what kind of mistreatment or evil glares did I receive because of my tattoo’s in Japan?  None, I think.  In fact, when people realize I have tattoos, it is a fiasco.  Within minutes I will be forced to remove my shirt and show them to everyone around.  But it doesn’t stop there.  The Japanese, especially females, love to touch them.  I’m using the term Japanese here, but it really isn’t only the Japanese.  Many of the East Asians I meet, once again, mostly females, love to touch my tattoos.

God.  All this attention from females in japan is just awful.

            So, of course, I talk about my tattoos and answer questions.  Many people ask if they can be removed and if they hurt.  Tattoos are pretty rare here.  In the USA, tattoos are all fine and good, but most people don’t have them.  I’ve been in plenty of situations in the USA where I am the only person in a classroom with tattoos or the only person in a room with tattoos, but Japan is different.  At one festival I turned to a friend and inquired “how many people here do you think have tattoos?”

            “One.”

            And he was probably right.  It is just something you know: no one here has tattoos.

            But, not long after being in Japan I was invited to an Onsen: a Japanese hot spring.  I said that I’d love to go, but doubted that I’d be able to:

            Me: “I have tattoos, so I don’t think I can.”
            Friend: “Oh? It will not be a problem.”

            WHAT?  Clearly my friend was out of his mind, but I asked more and more people and not one person though I’d have a problem.  What I learned that was my tattoos are not “irezumi,” they are western tattoos.  “Everyone knows the difference in Japan,” they laughed.

So, I forgot about everything I knew and accepted this new view.  After all, Japan is a big place.  This is Osaka after all.

But, of course, the story doesn’t stop there.

In November, I told a friend that we needed to do something fun on the weekend.  No one came up with a plan, and the night before I said “let’s go get a bath tomorrow.”  The plan was set.

So, come Sunday the four of us, one Japanese, two Americans, and a Frenchman headed into the city for some good food and memories.  You have to understand: going to a public bath in Japan meant a lot to me because it is just the type of thing you can’t do in the USA.  If you are into sports, I guess you can chill with a bunch of naked guys in the locker room, but it’s not the same.  This is a real and important part of Japanese culture that has deep roots in Shinto.  You simply can’t know anything about Japan and not know about public bathing.

Our Japanese friend took us to a massive multi-story business named Spa World.  It was a brilliant time.  We entered, gave a machine what amounts to 12 bucks and entered.  On the first floor you remove your shoes and then proceed to the appropriate changing floor. There, we grabbed some towels, but really we’re talking about washcloths here.  The four of us stripped down and headed to the main bath.  We made it to the bath and where we grabbed some large water buckets at a water station to rinse ourselves off before we hopped in.  My Japanese friend, ever the clown, drenched himself on accident with some cold water and we had a great laugh.  We took the last few steps towards the bath when a clothed man cut us off, looked me in the eyes, and tried his best to say, in English, “Do you understand Japanese?”

At this point, I knew what was about to happen.  I didn’t answer him.  I just looked at my friend and shrugged.  Not long after, we had been escorted to the changing room, escorted to the reception desk, received a refund, and were outside of the building.

“We don’t need to leave.  We aren’t bad people.”

These are the words my Japanese friend spoke to me while being instructed that we had to leave the spa.  This was a very interesting experience for me, but actually, it fit all of my expectations about Japanese culture.  It is interesting to think that only one month earlier, I knew all about this subject, but that I convinced myself that I was wrong, and my Japanese friends were right.

The night we were planning this trip, we were deciding where to go take a bath.  There are a few types of Japanese baths: sento, onsen, and giant spas like this one.  My friend mentioned that going to a traditional sento bath might allow me to experience Japanese culture best.  The ultimate irony here is of course that it wasn’t really me that learned anything through this experience, it was him.

            Now, we’re going to take some time to search of a small local sento that might let us bathe there.  I think it is possible, but my friend is perhaps a bit disillusioned.  I don’t think he at all expected this from his country: a country I think both he and I love.

After all, I agree with Wilson 100%.


            Note: In this post, I avoid referring to anyone by name.  I suppose this made me say things like “my Japanese friend” more often than I would like.  I don’t often think about him in this way: he is just my friend, but for purposes of reader comprehension and identity shielding, I decided to write this post in this manner.  In the future, I may just use fake names. 

            At any rate, this post is dedicated to my Japanese friend: you know who you are.  Let’s take a bath sometime alright?   HEY!  This time let’s make sure they won’t kick us out!   

06 November 2011

Prologue: The calm before the metaphorical storm before the real storm.

Did you hear?  I'm in Japan:


...but let me start somewhere.

I’ll not bore you with timestamps and action-packed/less details like some NBC broadcast, but I will say this: getting to Japan wasn’t easy.

At some point, I thought it may be simple.  I’m the type of person to over-think most situations and often expect the worse, but that type of thinking did not seem to have much of an impact while I was working on my student Visa to study here in Japan.  Now that I am here at Kyoiku University and living atop a brilliant mountain amongst a fascinating group of international students, the past events seem largely unimportant.  This is a falsehood.  In fact, the visa application process, and subsequent issues I (and at least one other student from East Carolina University) went through are relevant and noteworthy.

The problem I refer to deals with what can happen when we take responsibility out of our own hands for any length of time during a visa application process; namely when we mail our passports to an embassy or travel agency. In the case of another student, his passport was lost, only to be found a few days later in pretty bad shape (read: shredded).  The student only had one or two days left before his flight.  He risked it all and got on his plane bound for Russia, with a layover in London, England.  He made it to London, but that is as far as the airline was willing to risk taking him along.  He stayed there for a couple days and then returned to North Carolina with just enough time left to register for a few classes and save his semester.

My story is similar, but with some odd twists and turns.  In the end, my passport was located, but only after I experienced great deal of stress.  In this situation what should you do?  Report your passport stolen and quickly apply for a new one and then try to get a new visa as fast as you can?  Do you cross your fingers and hope it appears?  None of these choices would be unreasonable, but I would recommend one thing: try to prevent these types of situations completely.  If possible, apply for your visa in person.  If you have to go out of town (and you probably do) just make time for it.  You probably will incur some costs, but how much is it worth to have something go wrong?  Probably a lot…  If you can’t go in person, then I advise you to do two things.

1.      Use the safest shipping method you can.  It may cost triple, but you really can’t put a price on your passport. 
2.      If you can, send your passport in a small box rather than an envelope.  The small, flimsy envelopes can get stuck, destroyed, or lost in the parcel machines used by mail carriers

     In the end, I was lucky.  I received my passport, safe and sound, with both my Russian Visa and Japanese Visa intact. I stuck it out on the Outer Banks through Hurricane Irene and had a good last weekend with my friend and housemate Jim.  Some great thanks to Jim by the way who is kind enough to watch my things while I am gone for these months.  I don’t know what I would do without him.  After the storm, I made it to Moscow to spend some much deserved/needed quality time with Julia.  I returned to North Carolina for a few days and had a great time hanging out with my friends Will and Rachel who were kind enough to watch my car while I was in Russia and pick me up at the airport.  Will’s mixing skills are improving so fast that I can’t help but smile when he’s up there syncing tracks.  Lastly, a big thanks to Orrin who shelters me whenever I need, and took me from Greenville to the Raleigh so I could make it to Japan.  He is watching the Subaru while I’m here, so I better not anger him.

Cheers to anyone I left out.  Stay tuned for the next chapter.  I promise to include what you are really interested in: Japan …and fan service:




Haskett

31 January 2011

"Do I really want to keep this hand?"

Turn 1:



Turn 3:

Win

Sorry Josh.

30 January 2011

Ragdoll Red Panda are go!

Are you asking yourselves what types of blogs the greatest minds from Omsk and Kitty Hawk can produce?  Well then, look away...

Matthew Haskett