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The World According to Me
Saturday, 16 April 2005
The case is closed... I don't negotiate with love...
Now Playing: Rachel Stevens. She's bloody brilliant!!
Hello people...

Am back in Tokyo over a week now, and not a lot has happened. Well - that's not entirely true...

Have some new friends (as usual...) we now have Alex, a nice boy from Barcelona, via the US and Japan, and Kane, a New Zealander. And the dorm is also full of newbies, the majority of whom I have yet to meet. I'm not really in a mood to have the same conversation 15 times a night "Hi, I'm Conor, from Ireland, I study drama, Waseda University, about 6 months, my Japanese isn't amazing..."

So I've been out having fun instead. Well - I've been out, anyway.

The biggest news of all is that I bought an iPod shuffle. As a way of coping with my grief over the death of the pope.



This is me, out jogging with it yesterday. LOL

Rome was absolutely amazing. Cian, Roise and Hannah, thanks so much for such a fabulous time! We had posh dinners, saw beautiful art and architecture, were in St. Peter's with the rest of the gossip-vultures the night before the pope died, shopped for Ireland, met Andrew Moran for hilarious chats, ate our own weight in ice-cream and generally enjoyed La Dolce Vita on our Roman Holiday. Hurrah!

Since coming back to Tokyo I have been, on and off, in an incredibly foul mood, whose basis I cannot quite ascertain. It hovers between anger, gloom, misery, despair and blind rage, but I haven't quite been able to put my finger on it. Certainly I've been going through the wars emotionally, particularly with the arrival in Tokyo of a certain somebody's someone ELSE, but I think this whole thing is more of a growing pains kinda mood swing, of me doing the unthinkable and actually growing up a little and moving out of my romantic, romanticised imagination and realising that certain hopes and ideas that I have long clung to will never come to pass. And that that is probably going to be ok. Or something.

Anyway, gotta go - Jim is taking me, Ryan (the American who DJs our parties), and Caroline (the Malaysian who has apparently outed me to the entire dorm in my absence) out for dinner tonight at the Park Hyatt - home of "Lost in Translation". It's a buffet and all! We are celebrating the fact that Jim recently got his PhD AND a job in the civil service.

Talk to y'all soon...

Written by Conor at 4:10 PM KDT
Saturday, 12 March 2005
All is right with the world... :-)
Mood:  a-ok
Now Playing: A New Day Has Come - Celine Dion
Apologies for the delay in sending any kind of interesting news, but the truth is that there really hasn't been much happening here in Japan land.

However, we had a bizarre quake moments ago, which felt rather as if the whole earth had been smacked - one big jolt and then the quivers as it calmed down. And clearly it was the slap in the face I needed to let you all know how I am...

GOOD. Very very good.

Apart from continuing to update and expand the repertoire of scandalous stories that I shall only tell in person, I have been attempting to write a little, read a lot, and work on my Japanese. Alas MSN has a lot to answer for, and I have done little of any of the above. I have, however, virtually given myself carpal tunnel chatting online til all hours to all corners of the earth. One evening last week I had conversations going with Los Angeles, New York, Bangkok, Helsinki, Dublin, Yokohama and a room on the other side of my dorm, in English, Japanese and French. Talk about multi-tasking...

I appear to have become counsellor-general for Soshigaya International House. Something between the Hippocratic Oath and the vow of secrecy taken by priests hearing confession forbids me from relaying the kinds of things I've been hearing about here (don't worry, I'll tell all when I get home... haha...) but I've really had enough.

How do I manage to end up with so many complicated, neurotic women in my life? It's like I have a sign on my head that says "Talk to me! I WANT to hear about your problems!!"

Things came to a head last night. I had been planning for weeks to take all my friends to see Intermission, the fun Dublin movie, in Shibuya, as a pre-St-Patrick's-Day-look-how-funny-my-country-is expedition. Everyone cancelled at the last minute, and I was furious. Grrr!! So I met Paco (new best friend here) for coffee and trash-talk instead.

We have decided that my theme song shall henceforth no longer me "You've Got a Friend" *except for the lovely special people i still love and who GIVE and TAKE....* but for everyone else it's now Madonna's Human Nature. "I'm not your bitch, don't hang your shit on ME"...

Blah blah blah.

BIG BIG BIG NEWS

Ninagawa, the reason I'm in Japan, is preparing a new version of Medea. Now everyone knows that his last production is the reason I study Greek, and theatre, and Japan, and everything. So this is all rather exciting. And I'm writing a posh letter to him to get him to get me involved, too... :)

I was up at an unspeakable hour this morning to go buy the tickets. Unlike other frantic ticket-buying experiences in my past (eg Trinity Ball, or indeed the National Theatre in London) this was a joy from beginning to end. It was all beautifully organised, and regulated. We were all given order forms, and posters, and pencils, and as we filled them in they were collected, and so when we arrived at the desk, we were presented with the seats available in our price range, and a variety of options etc. It was fantastic!

AND I have tickets!! In the middle, the second row!!! I may die of excitement before I see the show. But in case I don't, I bought myself an extra one for the very last performance, at the end of May.... :D

I will arrive in Dublin on March 23rd. I want to see everyone, so get in touch!!!

PS Look at this. Is Madonna turning into Bjork, or the other way around?!

Written by Conor at 12:45 PM JST
Updated: Saturday, 12 March 2005 12:46 PM JST
Tuesday, 22 February 2005
Paris when she tries to sizzle...
Mood:  don't ask
Now Playing: Culture Club - "I Just Wanna Be Loved"
Paris Hilton is the most loathsome person I have ever Googled. I only did because I couldn't believe sales figures for her book here in Tokyo, and was even more horrified than I thought I would be.

Of course it is easy for me to despise her, being heiress to some $300 million and famous for being blonde and dumb (and let's not forget - easy) but all the same I fear she represents what's wrong with the world.

Remember when Absolutely Fabulous started, and it was so funny because it was a horror vision of what MIGHT happen? And now it's not funny any more, because it happened after all...

Written by Conor at 9:26 AM JST
Friday, 4 February 2005
I love this...
Mood:  sharp
Now Playing: Car Wash - Xtina and Missy
I love this song so much...

And I love this little pic, too...



Written by Conor at 4:24 AM JST
Let's do the time warp again...
Now Playing: Little Nell - Do the Swim....
I am ashamed to admit it, but I only saw The Rocky Horror Picture Show for the first time last night. I was in pain from laughing so much. It's quite hilarious... Although I have to say that I made a pretty good go of trying to make a costume for the Players Rocky Horror Ball without seeing the film - and I now understand just how good Sylvia Gallagher's costume was!

So how are y'all?? Did ANYONE read the last blog? I realised far too late that I hadn't actually told anyone I'd posted it, so sorry about that.

Life goes on here in Tokyo - it's still amazing and still baffling (and still occasionally a pain in the ass) but all in all I can't complain. Jim, Cortney Caroline and I are going to Atami (about 2hrs from Tokyo) tomorrow to visit an Onsen (hot spring) and have a plum-blossom viewing party. Apparently it's the very beginning of spring, and the orchard we're booked in to visit has thousands upon thousands of trees all in bloom... Pretty!

My adventures in recent weeks included a visit to the big new year Sumo Tournament (it's SO much better on Eurosport, since they edit the extremely drawn-out Shinto ritual out of it) and an afternoon at Cirque du Soleil's Alegria in their big top, constructed in the gardens opposite Yoyogi park and the Meiji shrine we visited on Christmas day. Cirque was absolutely wonderful!

My Japanese languages have ceased for the (inordinately long) spring break, and, you'll be delighted to hear, I am coming home at the end of March!! So book your appointments/coffees/lunches/dinners NOW to avoid disappointment!

Just kidding - am dying to see you all. But get in touch anyway!!

Written by Conor at 1:26 AM JST
Sunday, 23 January 2005
Happy New Year! (Well - I'm early for Chinese NY, at least...)
Mood:  a-ok
Now Playing: There'll Be Some Changes Made
Hello hello,

Sorry it's been so insanely long since I blogged, but there it is.

I see my last update was December 16th, the day before my family arrived in Japan for Christmas. They came for a whole three weeks, which ended up being far far longer than I would have imagined. But I think I showed them a good time, and that's the main thing.

Soon after they arrived we went to visit a friend of theirs in Tsuchiura, which you probably won't have heard of, since it is a small town with hardly any redeeming features. None, actually. We faffed around doing precious little there for a few days, and then came back to Tokyo (THANK GOD) and got ready for Christmas.

Amid the barely-happening shopping, we went to see the Kabuki, which was a triumph, all told. We got to see Bando Tamasaburo (the most famous onnagata working today - and the best) and the whole spectacle was just wonderful. Next time round, though, I hope to be a little closer than the VERY back row...

Christmas day itself was kinda surreal - we had been to mass (...) and ended up going to the beautiful Meiji Shrine (to the emperor that ushered Japan into the modern world) in Yoyogi before going to Shibuya for a look around and dinner. I was really nervous about finding somewhere to eat, since I KNEW that the one question that everyone would ask them when they went home was "what did you do on Christmas day?!" and I absolutely refused to allow them to go to McDonalds, considering how bad that would've made me look. Thankfully we found a nice Italian restaurant, and all was ok again.

Admittedly, they ate a lot of McDonalds when they were here, primarily because they often refused to even try Japanese food... :S

On St Stephens Day we headed for Kyoto on the Bullet Train. Kyoto was just marvellous, and I loved it there. We stayed in a traditional Japanese inn one night, complete with very posh Japanese food (bleurgh even for me) and saw as many of the temples, shrines and sights as we could cram in. Definitely somewhere not to be missed!!

New Year's Eve was spent in pachinko (slot) parlour, with the Hawaiian's brother and cousin, since Dad had a bad cold and stayed in bed. At 11.45 we headed for Starbucks, opting to start the year as we mean to go on.... Perhaps the most surreal New Year of my life!!

After their last few days visiting various other parts of Tokyo and the surrounding area, my tour group departed on the 7th, and while I was sad to see them go it was also a relief! But it was a good holiday, all in all.

Immediately after their departure, a variety of very "interesting" things happened, but I'm far too discreet and mysterious to reveal any details herewith. If you wanna know, you're just gonna have to email me - my name at gmail dot com (new fabulous address) to find out more!!

Apart from all the scandalous activity, I also saw a load of cool movies (from A Home at the End of the World to Raise the Red Lantern to In the Mood for Love and Zatoichi, again....) and I have begun, belatedly, watching Desperate Housewives, which is hilarious.

I'm hopefully going to be partially involved in a Noh Opera version of the Scottish play (very exciting, but can't reveal anything about it yet) and yesterday I was completely blown away by the awesome wonderful fabulous "Alegria" by Cirque du Soleil. Talk about full circle - I first heard the cd for this show nearly 10 years ago in a drama class with Marina Donnelly - little did I dream that I'd ever see the show, and certainly not in Tokyo!

Alas, things will be changing here soon - my Japanese classes end temporarily in a week's time (until the beginning of APRIL) and several of my friends will be going home to their respective countries. As a result, we are having lots of "must do this before leaving Japan" experiences - everything from visiting Tokyo's amazing futuristic landscape built on islands and shit to bowling to eating in extremely cool Japanese-style bars... That said, there are a variety of new interesting people who will doubtless feature in future episodes, including a half-Brazilian flamenco dancer obsessed with Riverdance, a Japanese boy called Kenji who worships Mariah and X-tina, a hysterically acerbic French scientist called Franck, his boyfriend Yoshi, and many more besides :-)

But this Chinese New Year brings in the Year of the Rooster - a special year for all of us born in 1981 as it's a new beginning of a new cycle of 12 years, and who knows what they're going to bring. (Blah Blah Blah I sound like a Hallmark card...)

Happy Birthday to Theodora, Hannah, Emily, Roise and Aidan - hope you all got lovely presents!!

Please please email me and tell me your news!!

Written by Conor at 2:33 AM JST
Friday, 17 December 2004
Surprised by Cinnamon
Mood:  accident prone
Now Playing: Kosheen - Hide U
Well this one`s been a long time coming, and sorry for that, but I suppose it`s a good thing that I`ve been so busy!!

I think it`s a good few weeks since I let you know what I`ve been doing. I finally got my phone line sorted out, and indeed I have had broadband connected to my room, so I am officially techno-fabulous. Hurrah! Now all I need is people to email/chat to me! (Hint hint...)

I`ve been hanging around a lot with Cortney (the Hawaiian with the dirty mouth) and indeed she is responsible for getting me through the various sign-up processes and other frightening events (like buying an electronic dictionary) that should not be attempted alone.

We found a fantastic Chinese restaurant in Shinjuku, where I had the best sweet&sour pork I`ve ever had, complete with sweet potato and lotus root. Afterwards we went for coffee, and were unpleasantly surprised at the amount of cinnamon that was dusted over our cake(s). This was worsened by the cinnamon dusted over our hot chocolate. Although we were horrified by this overkill, it did open our eyes to the unselfconscious abuse made of this spice all over the city. It`s as if Starbucks sent a memo ("Christmas + Winter = CINNAMON") and now the whole place is riddled with it.

Christmas is certainly on its way here. There are different "Christmas Illumination" festivals everywhere, although Jesus has yet to make an appearance anywhere. Were I more naive I might suggest that he`ll only make it into the decorations on December 25th. I doubt it though - I made a joke in class the other day that Christmas celebrated the birth of Santa Claus, and a Chinese girl in my class said "Isn`t it?" I kid you not...

Wednesday was pretty unpleasant for me - well, until 9am anyway. I was nearly run over by a crazy driver (landed on my ass in front of the station) and no sooner had I calmed down and gotten my starbucks, when a bird decided that it had to GO at the exact moment that I and my expensive latte were directly in its line of fire. That bird was SICK. During the day, however, various Greeks reassured me that this is a sign of great luck and that financial renumeration will be here soon. Sure it will - my scholarship is paid on Monday!!

Far funnier was the incident last week on the train. Japanese old ladies are particularly obnoxious when on the move. It`s as if they`ve given up the obsequious good manners that they used to have, and they`ve all read "When I am an old woman I shall wear purple" and they have some kind of entitlement thing going on. I was in the train as usual, when this pushy lady stood directly under my arm. (I was holding the rail.) She had about 14 bags, and wasn`t in control of any of them, and she jostled and jolted like it was going out of fashion. THe most striking thing about her was her hair - striped black and white, kinda like Mary J Blige. I only found out that it wasn`t real as I was leaving the train. I accidentally (and gently) hit her head as I moved away, slightly dislodging her wig... I didn`t have the heart (or the guts) to say anything...!!!

I finally saw Fuji the other day, when Ruben (the Spanish architect) and I went to Shinjuku to buy his family`s Christmas presents. He bought his siblings iPods. (Aidan, take note...) Afterwards we went to the Shinjuku city hall to climb the tower there. From the 48th floor, the view is amazing. We went at sunset, just as the sky was going through a spectacular colour change, and there it was, floating mysteriously over the clouds on the horizon. I now fully understand how and why this mountain means so much to and has inspired so many Japanese people. And why you have to see it to believe it! Ruben and I stayed for a good while, watching the lights of the city flicker on. It`s brilliant!!

Anyway, I`d better go - we`re doing Secret Santa in class (not that the Chinese students will have gotten the point...)

Talk to you soon!

Written by Conor at 8:55 AM JST
Updated: Sunday, 23 January 2005 2:34 AM JST
Saturday, 11 December 2004
Hell hath no fury...
Mood:  incredulous
Now Playing: MY Medea Soundtrack...
So it seems that, as well as there being a new Conor Hanratty in Trinity (the horror!), the new young queen of the drama department is directing Medea next term.

A rational approach to this admittedly slight crisis would be to accept that a) I am no longer in the same continent or timezone, or indeed a student of Trinity, and b) I did not write the play.

But still...

It seems that we really are moving on, to bigger and brighter things. It`s almost exactly two years since The Bacchae. I now live in Tokyo. The lady who played my Medea is now a married lady living in Los Angeles... For some reason I have the opening words from Days of our Lives in my head...

Which brings me back to what I actually wanted to mention - thanks to technology I have been able to see a good few episodes of "Joey", which in spots extremely funny - none moreso than the sporadic appearances of the AWESOME and MAGNIFICENTly trashy Jennifer Coolidge as his agent.

Gotta go - have nice theatre-loving teacher this morning, and must wow her with tales of the enormously popular film star/thetre director I met last week and will be meeting again soon. (Shall blog about it soon and wow you too...)

And by the way, without wanting to sound like Mrs. Jason herself, I wish PC all the very best with the show, and hope he has as much fun with it as we did.

Coming in the next episode, "Surprised by Cinnamon" - the Setagaya Public Theatre incident, Cortney`s birthday, and preparations for the arrival of Team Hanratty in Tokyo...


Written by Conor at 9:01 AM JST
Wednesday, 24 November 2004
More...
Mood:  celebratory
Now Playing: Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered...
Hello again,

Sorry I haven't been writing in a while - have been very very busy here, with Japanese language tests every day for the past week (next week it's the same, but there is a National Holiday on Tuesday). I'm not sure what I wrote last time, so I'll cover everything in this one!

A significant proportion of the past fortnight has been spent obsessing about my results from Royal Holloway. I knew that they were due around about now, and then Alex emailed me to say that they were back. So I emailed David wondering if he could send me my details here. He replied, saying that of course he would, but didn't actually SAY anything. ARGH!! Then Lynda suggested I email the MA Coordinator and try to wheedle it out of her. I thought this hadn't worked, because she replied saying that the marks had been sent out, and had I not received them? I sent one back saying NOOO, and at last she replied yesterday saying that, yes, I had gotten a distinction, as far as she remembered, but she couldn't really remember the mark. Maybe I'll know something by the time we have our graduation ceremony in July of next year. But at this rate, I can't count on it...

(Actually, since I wrote this yesterday, my mum called to say I got it... Woo hoo!!)

Two weeks ago I went to the Tokyo American Club to see Tokyo International Players' production of A Doll's House, mainly to scope out what kind of group they were, and to meet the director of their January production of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, to offer my services as sound designer. The Tokyo American Club is like a large hotel and conference centre with the hotel removed - all of the extra facilities are there (sports, suits, restaurants...) without the hotel-ish bit. And it gives the impression of being for RICH people. The weirdest thing about it is that I don't think I heard a single word of Japanese while I was there. It's a real haven for ex-pats to sink into and avoid the grim reality of actually being in another country. Maybe that's too harsh, but it was very strange!

I met Jamie the director, and I'm going to do the sound, but he asked me during our chat whether I would like to submit a play to direct for the company. I could do anything I wanted, but there was enormous responsibility attached. And the production would be next October at the very earliest. And I had six days to submit my brief, as interviews were being held the following Saturday. I hummed and hawed for a few days, but eventually didn't submit anything - too big a commitment to make before I've fully found my feet and gotten a foothold in the drama department etc... Doll's House was interesting - they set it in contemporary Tokyo, thereby making Nora very topical and interesting, but it made Torvald into a monster!

I guess it's time to properly "introduce" the various people in my class, and my teachers - give you some idea of what my day-to-day is like! My class is made up of Chinese, Korean and European students. I have virtually no idea what any of them studies, since I missed all the introduction-style stuff because I arrived three weeks late. Anyway - here goes...

If you visited our class, the first person you'd notice would be the Korean guy, simply because he's so bloody loud. He's about forty, has a wife and children in Seoul, and is very good at Japanese (although his pronunciation is creative, at best...) But he just will not shut up. He repeats everything the teacher says, gives an answer to every question asked of anyone else, and often even repeats the answer. I really disliked him for a good while, but he's actually ok - the more we can talk in Japanese, the less irritable/irritating I think we're both becoming!

Then there are the Chinese students: there's Denny, long-haired guy who studies media design. He's very funny, an incredible artist, and comes to class about twice a week. He drinks cider in class. (But it turns out that "cider" here is just fizzy apple juice... and only 1% alcohol...!!) Then there's Den Den, about whom I know nothing. Except that rather than asking the teachers when she doesn't understand something, she either asks her compatriots or just doesn't ask anything. There's Yo, who's very cool and very smart. There's Lee (or maybe Ree) from Mongolia, who's a bit older. I don't understand a word he says - in English, Japanese or anything in between. There's Tei, the top of the class, who annoys me primarily because he's a nightmare vision of what I fear I might have been like in school. There's Chin, who has a permanent cold and is always late, but is really sweet and trys REALLY hard. And there's Ryu, the coolest, who is very funny and has an electronic dictionary (so we all like her). They're all quite nice, but have the bad habit of chattering in Chinese throughout class, and the worse habit of getting away with it. Particularly because the Europeans do not...

From Europe, then - yours truly, from Ireland. Ruben, the architect from Barcelona. He's fantastic - rather like me in terms of crazy and clashing interests, and has already had an amazing life, working in Switzerland with one of the world's best architects. He's here to finish qualifying as an architect, and has decided, for his big project, to propose a new design for Shinjuku station. He's a brave man! There's Antoine, from Belgium, who is very dry and very funny. There's Laurent from Luxembourg, who is also funny and very sound, and Guillaume from Paris who is quite shy but extremely funny when the mood takes him. He's also an architect. Funniest of the lot is Karim, who is French Moroccan. He and I have a conversation exchange every Friday with Antoine's Okinawan girlfriend, Naho. Trouble is, we speak a little in English, and sometimes a little less in Japanese, and then slip back into French. My French is all coming back, by necessity rather than design, but it's nice to speak in French. Then I speak Greek to the Greeks, and Spanish to the Spaniards, attempt every so often to do a little Irish, and then try to grapple with Japanese. It's all a big blur...

Our teachers are great - the weird thing is that we have a different one every day. Monday is Otsuka-sensei, who is nice but timid, and always ends up covered in chalk. Tuesday is Senda-sensei in the morning, who loves theatre and is really friendly, and writes the most beautiful kanji. In the afternoon is Chung-sensei, who is from Korea and is hilarious. She's really perky and younger than the other teachers, and is very very well dressed. When we were learning how to link sentences (we're that basic) she came out with examples like "I am rich AND beautiful" or "I like to drive fast cars AND go shopping". I am being taught by a Korean Karen Walker!! We have her on Tuesday and Wednesdays for language activities like games and reading exercises. On Wednesday mornings we have Honda-sensei, who at first glance is quite scary. She's very into computers, and has all manner of gadgets in her classroom. She teaches us to write kanji with powerpoint animations to show stroke order, and has a camera on her desk linked up to her projector, so she never writes on the board... As well as the multimedia gadgetry and her striking dress sense (Hello Kitty crossed with the Matrix and Claire's accessories...) she is probably our best teacher. She listens to us, and ANSWERS questions, and is well aware that she is teaching a group of adults. On Thursday morning (by which time of the week we're all wrecked at 9am) we have Kawaguchi-sensei. He's also the boss and the coordinator of our course. He's the one who taught my first class wherein I learned to read the McDonalds menu.... He gets up at 5am every day, makes his kids' lunches (bento) and no doubt skips to work singing. He would make the Energizer bunny look like an underachiever. He's bewildering, but I find myself understanding more after his class, so I guess something is going in! Thursday afternoon is Arai-sensei, who is lovely but gets really really bogged down when we ask her grammatical questions, and confuses herself (and us) like crazy. And finally, on Fridays, we have Hirosaki-sensei, who has a permanent cold but is very nice.

After every test, we have a rather strange ritual. A class member is elected as MC, and then introduces the test's champion(s). These are then prevailed upon to come and accept their trophy (sometimes a cup, sometimes an Oscar, sometimes a medal...) and make a speech. It goes along the lines of "Good morning. I am the champion of yesterday's test. Thank you very much. Please everyone, work harder. I myself will also work harder. Thank you very much." Of course, Tei (insufferable Chinese lick) has done it so many times that he has started trying to improvise, never a good idea in a language you don't actually speak, trying to say things like "Come on, guys, I don't want to say this every day" or "Do a bit of work, it's easy". He's not so popular... The only time I was the champion so far was in a Kanji test. I was very proud. My speech was " Good morning. I am not Tei-san. I shall be brief. Thank you very much. Let's work together. Thank you very much". Ha ha ha...

You'll notice that one says "Thank you very much" a lot here. It's probably the most commonly used word in the language - second only, perhaps, to "Irasshaimasen", which is called, screeched, wailed, whispered, or shouted at everyone who enters any kind of establishment. I half expected to have it called at me when I went into the library! It means "welcome" and can be used in all manner of ways - the most creative so far was a little old woman in a stationary shop who cleared a whole aisle of teenage girls by sweetly saying it as she elbowed her way along holding a pair of scissors... It's also said in a variety of accents. Obviously i can't write that down - you'll hear it when you visit!

Last Saturday Jim and I visited Hakone to see the autumn colours. Hakone is famous for its hot springs and its views of Mount Fuji. There's a really cheap all-in day ticket from our local station, which we took. Our day went like this - train, train, smaller train, huge queue, tiny train up a mountain, moderate queue, cable-car, stop in the smelliest place on earth. It was a sulphur mine, complete with hot spring baths. There were signs everywhere saying that if you were in any way delicate not to stick around as it was dangerous. All I got was a bit queasy. As if the sulphur smell wasn't enough, the local delicacy is eggs boiled in the sulphuric mud. The shells go black, and they are sometimes sold for outrageous prices. I have never seen so many people eating hard-boiled eggs, or indeed so many eggshells. I really didn't like it! Jim and I found a restaurant and ordered lunch, having been reassured that the curry noodles had no meat (he's a veggie). No such luck - it was a beef curry!! So I ate that and he had my lunch after I removed the pork... In the giftshop next to the restaurant, we saw yet another example of canny Japanese commercialism. There was a huge stack of Hello Kitty local dolls - in which Kitty appears dressed in a black egg!! (No, I didn't buy one...)

Somewhat fortified, we joined the queue for the next cablecar, due to lead us to the good view of Fuji and down to the lake for the boat trip. We queued for 95 minutes. The cablecar ride was great, but there was so much cloud that we saw nothing. I still haven't seen that mountain. I am starting to believe that it's an illusion cooked up by the Japanese tourist board, to fleece anyone gullible enough to believe in it! The boat trip was great fun - an immaculate replica of some kind of 17th century pirate ship. The lake is extremely beautiful, and we got a hilarious running commentary through the ship's speakers to boot. After the boat, it was the bus back to the train station, where we waited and waited and finally got the direct train back home. Lots of travelling, but really relaxing to be outside Tokyo for a little bit!!

That evening was the big party for our residence's International Festival - it was a BRILLIANT night, which was still going when Sundays festival activities began... It was a good way particularly of getting to know yet more of my neighbours. On Sunday, I taught Irish to various studious and interested Japanese people, and then Maurice appeared and gave an impromptu (but very clear and accurate!) history of Ireland. We had delicious lemon tea from Malaysia, various delicacies from latin America, and poutine, the Canadian guys' national delicacy - chips with cheese and gravy. Cortney and I rechristened them Ghetto Fries. And ate far too many of them...

Cortney is so much fun - she's from Hawaii and we have a very similar sense of humour. (Lethal combination, I know...) She took me to Yodobashi camera during the week (where all dreams of Japanese digital advancement come true) and is going to help me set up my phone line and internet on Monday. Yesterday we went to Roppongi (which seems to be the foreigner capital of Tokyo) and bought her Thanksgiving Turkey. Her Argentinian friend Ivana came too. Imagine trying to cart a 30lb frozen turkey across Tokyo with a loud Argentinian of Italian descent and a louder Hawaiian Japanese-American. We had a lot of fun, ending up splitting our sides laughing in our (nearly) local Starbucks. It seems that the Malaysian's boyfriend dumped her last night (we still haven't worked out quite what happened, but she blubs so much that it's certainly not good news) so we stayed up very late making her feel better and watching movies. Today we're throwing a surprise party for Hugo the Venezuelan, and I had better go now as we have to buy the cake. And I am seriously considering getting a haircut. I look ridiculous.

Congratulations to the class of 2004 - hope you had brilliant graduation days and nights, one and all!!

Written by Conor at 8:47 AM JST
Thursday, 18 November 2004
Congratulations!
Mood:  celebratory
Now Playing: Kylie`s AMAZING new song...
Congratulations to all of the people from Royal Holloway (my fellow inmates!) who have finally received their results. To anyone reading this - well done! Where the hell is my mark?! How are you?! MAIL ME!!

I have decided that I really did have a great year there, and I miss all the cool people I met there very much.

Of course there are some of you who don`t get congratulations and whom I don`t miss at ALL, but printing such names would be beneath me...

To celebrate not getting my results (which seems to be an ongoing state than a one-off...) I bought myself Pink Martini`s new album "Hold On Little Tomato". If you have never heard of them, go find them! They`re a sort of collective of very cool people and groovy music-makers (I guess like a jazzy version of the Wu Tang Clan, painted by Jack Vettriano) who sang the song on the car advert "Je ne veux pas reveiller..." It`s the title track to their first album, Sympathique.

Go get it!!

We had a funny discussion at lunch yesterday. What ever happened to Guy Ritchie`s career?!!


Written by Conor at 9:01 AM JST

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