Seoul - Day Three (Part I)

Posted on March 30th, 2007 in Customary Drivel, Media, Photos, Trips by Deas

If you're new here, please consider subscribing to my RSS feed. Thanks very much for visiting!

This post has 50 pictures. Yay! (Or boo, if you hate pictures. And me. Especially if you hate me. Why are you even reading this?) Right. So, I had to split this entry to keep the workload steady. The pictures are in this entry. The next one will *cross your fingers* contain some quick video clips. Nothing fancy. Anyway, let’s get to the pictures! (Please click the more link to see the photos and commentary. They’re just a bit much to stick on the front page.)

Kid Gloves?

Kids are in an interesting predicament in Japan. There is a low birthrate at present, in spite of the government’s New Angel Plan (PDF link to a JETRO special report from 2005, the first year of the population decline), which puts interesting pressure on the youth. Some people note that the “school refuser” culture is on the climb, leading to dropouts and truancy on a larger scale than was reported in earlier years. Some look at the situation as being a snowball effect, more and more compounded - Japan seems to be raising conspicuous consumers under the old ranks of conspicuous consumers from the golden years of the bubble economy. This leads to parasite children, “NEET” (Not in Employment, Education, or Training), and “FREETER” (from the English free or freelance and the German arbeiter) problems. If more people choose to continue to view children as an economic burden that threatens their purchasing power and standard of living, what will happen to Japanese society? I will address none of these questions. Ha ha. Sorry to psych you out. There is a flipside to the situation that I want to mumble about. There is obviously some guilt over not having children or losing them - those who have studied the modern instances of Jizo (Ksitigharba or Dizang, but the Japanese version) or the mizuko kuyo rituals since the latter half of the 20th century know what I mean. For the rest of you, I thought it would be fun to point out that Japan is following in Western footsteps as supermoms (and superdads) across the nation race to protect their children from all probable (and indeed, improbable) threats.

Playgrounds. Japanese playgrounds.

They have astonished me. I remember reading an opinion in an article for one of my classes in college which claimed that Japan was a child’s paradise. In some cases, that is true. The notion of a socially integrated upbringing, relying on teachers and other community members for disciplinary action and positive reinforcement creates plenty of individual wiggle room for kids. This means that you are more likely, in my humble and often inaccurate experience, to see a mom holding their screaming kid on the train, just letting the siren-like wails reverberate throughout the car. Every once in a while you’ll see a mom get fed up, pop their kid and reprimand them, but it’s not nearly as common as watching a mom cave to a temper tantrum on the street. Kids are babied a bit, in short.

Except on playgrounds. Until recently, that is.

I seriously wish that when I was growing up we could have played on some of the playgrounds that I have seen in Japan. (I found one guy who really was lucky enough. Jealous.) Sam and I gawked at the crazy stuff we saw while on our way to Yokohama’s Chinatown. I mean, look at this playground: awesome. Think back to being a kid - would that not have been the coolest hangout? YES. The answer is yes. Don’t lie to yourself. The Japanese have really darn cool playgrounds. The New York Times did a cool slideshow piece on some funky, more conceptually driven Japanese playgrounds. Admittedly, the really kitsch stuff fascinates me too, but my guess is that you are more likely to come across a cement and metal playground like the one I mentioned earlier from my day trip to Yokohama than you are one of a bunch of plastic animals. Ha ha. It seems that the world of playground design is headed to bright new (plastic-y, abstract) places. Keita Takahashi, the guy behind the popular Katamari Damacy game concept, has even said that it’s his dream to design playgrounds for kids. How cool would that be? He can feel free to design one for me…anytime.

Ah, you are wondering to yourselves, how can it be that these dangerous playgrounds show that children are becoming more prized? Because a horrible rash of safety complaints, mostly related to crime - not sanitation, which puzzles me - has broken out across Japan. The result is that some people are taking the extreme to the other end of the spectrum. Searching for Japan and playgrounds, I popped up mostly negative articles, commenting on the safety issues. Those are the very issues I wanted to share with you all in celebration for the lucky children who get to play on awesome playgrounds. But alas, now there is international sharing of safety checklists. Ugh. Why? There are people (even children) telling Japan that what they do during their recess time is dangerous. (If you read the comments from Mrs. Elzey’s class, you should know that I fully agree with Jay’s take on the situation, am confused by little Haley Littleton’s attempt to change the subject to sibling rivalry and infighting - a tricky tactic indeed for a young playground reformer, think David shouldn’t listen to his mom so much, don’t think that Kelsey understands how cool it is to “put each other in the air,” and feel for Ana and Brianna. They obviously want to give Japanese playgrounds a shot. Yeah, I know, random. Just thought I’d be thorough.) Turns out that I’m actually rather late to the table on this topic. Other bloggers have hit it before. What happened to Japan? Why did they suddenly put the airplane brakes on their super playgrounds? To the dismay of kids who like to jump in puddles, put weird junk in their mouths, and get scraped up once in a while, a new form of playground seems to be on the horizon: the unbelievably safe and clean playground. If I was a kid, I’d be upset. Well, more upset. I’m an adult and I’m upset for the kids who can’t do insane things anymore. Wussy parents have to go and ruin everything.

Sadly, it looks like Japan is going to start handling kids with kid gloves. It happens all the time in America, when some moron sues somebody for something ludicrous. The end result is jaw-dropping reduction in fun for everybody. Come on, Japan. Hold out. Preserve your cool playgrounds. Pretty please with cherries on top?

Exit question: What kind of playground would you rather play on?

This is a non-serious article written in haste for the previously mentioned Japan Blog Matsuri under the theme “Uniquely Japanese.”

Seoul - Day Two

Posted on March 29th, 2007 in Customary Drivel, Media, Photos, Trips by Deas

Holy crap! He’s already posting day two! (I know, I know. Please, I can’t type over the applause. Sheesh, folks. Calm down. There’s not even a video component in this entry. Well, sorry. It was a crappy video day. Right, ok, on with the entry. Ending self-referential soliloquy now.) The photos are immediately below, but the writing is tucked in the rest of the entry, so click the more link for the text. (Some running commentary is in the captions too.)

Abbreviations

Posted on March 28th, 2007 in Customary Drivel by Deas
Possibly related posts: |No related posts|

This is a quick note more than it is a real posting. I have been reading comments on other sites, and I have come across some unfortunate abbreviations. It seems like there is still a discussion going on about whether or not “Jap,” the 3 letter abbreviation for Japan or Japanese, is a bad word. I personally feel that it is a rather charged term, loaded with anti-Japanese sentiment stemming primarily from World War II. Therefore, if you really must abbreviate Japan (which I think is rather daft, considering that there are a mere 2 letters left, like abbreviating March or April, but that’s another story), please do not use that term on my site. I would much prefer that you alleviate the crushing need by using the abbreviation JPN if you absolutely must shorten things. I don’t care where you stand on the other term’s usage, its cultural roots, its slur status, or anything else. It’s just my personal preference, and shouldn’t interfere with any discussions on this site. I ask that you respect it. Thanks folks.

(By the way, I really doubt anybody posting on my site currently would actually attempt to be offensive. I’ve never had this come up before. Just thought that I’d lay it out there while it was on my mind. Cheers.) :-)

Seoul - Day One

Posted on March 28th, 2007 in Customary Drivel, Media, Photos, Trips by Deas

This one is short, which is merciful for both you and me. My ragtag crew of crazy Ehimenians (Wendy and Melissa) met me in Matsuyama on Tuesday afternoon. Wendy and I rendezvoused at the JR Station in Matsuyama, while Melissa chose to catch up with us at the airport. (She took a taxi, which baffled us, since it’s way more expensive than the bus we took…but hey, she lives the high life when on trips, I guess.) After checking in, and discovering that Japan has much stricter guidelines than I had previously remembered, we checked our baggage and sauntered up to the international departures deck. There we went through the typical security gauntlet, with my belt getting me in trouble. I made the best of this, and after removing said belt, made a “ta-da!” style stage entrance, as though I were bursting onto a football field from behind a paper logo, which got the security guards to giggle. By the way, in retrospect, it is REALLY stupid to do anything like that - I’m lucky I had giggly guards. That’s all I can say about that.

We took off without a hitch, and a remarkably short flight, bad meal, and bumpy landing later, we were taxiing to meet one of the international gates at South Korea’s Incheon International Airport. We got inside, did the reverse customs stuff, picked up our bags, got our passports stamped, and exchanged cash. Later, in the hostel, I realized how ridiculous this amount of cash looked to my eyes. Have no fear, I documented this with some cash-money shots, a la pathetic gangsta. After checking in, being told that we must provide our own toilet paper, and subsequently being given a roll of toilet paper each (true, I swear), we checked our rooms out. Turned out that rather than the 3-person shared room with attached bathroom that we had expected, we somehow wound up with 3 individual rooms with their own attached bathrooms each. Awesomeness, though unexpected. Changed our hangout times and whatnot. Anyway, after this, we left our bags in the hostel, and struck out on our own, for the first time. We exploded onto the streets of Seoul, in all our illiterate excitement, and went hunting for food. To our dismay, it turns out that just about everything is closed after 10 pm. After buying a load of groceries, imagining that we’d cook our own food (HA!), we were caught by a kindly old lady who was hawking for a 24 cafeteria shop. And so, being hungry, we all partook of my favorite - bibimbap (which I continue to pronounce as though it’s Japanese - bibinba, no p). After this, we scurried our tired little butts back to the hostel and conked out. Sweet.

That’s all for now, folks. But I assure you that there is much, much more to come. If you get bored, go visit Jon’s blog and read his arrival experience. It’s more adventurous than ours was, and he told us the story when we met up the next day at Dongnimmun.

Japan Blog Matsuri

So, I am one of the guys who has just started a blog, is desperate for an audience of any kind, and wants more than anything to connect to other people who are in the same field. I am in the midst of building my blogroll up, trying to make meaningful comments on other sites (HA - I’m failing, too), and trying to get my site on its feet. If you are like me, you might want to participate in the Japan Blog Matsuri. It’s a Blog Carnival based setup created by Seron (aka Ken Y-N) over at one of my new favorite sites What Japan Thinks. The basic idea is simple: one blog “hosts” the carnival, everybody who wants to participate submits an article (or two, or three) to the host. The host chooses a theme for everyone to write about, and on the day of the matsuri, posts an aggregation of all the submissions (if they are deemed shareworthy, anyway - along common sense lines, family friendly, etc.).

This time around, the matsuri is being hosted by Rising Sun of Nihon. The theme chosen by the host is “Uniquely Japanese.” I urge all of you who are interested to put something together - write an article or pick a recent one you’ve written, and submit it. If more people participate, then the matsuri will grow.

-Quick Reference-
Theme: “Uniquely Japanese” (link to host’s matsuri page)
Host: Rising Sun of Nihon (link to host’s main page)
Deadline: March 31st, midnight JST (don’t miss this date)
Date of matsuri: April 10th (date for reposting of all submissions)
Submit stories via this link, the widget located here, or by emailing the host (bill at panasianbiz dot com).

Get writing! And linking!