ma ma ma My Shimoda!
This past week was a blur. It was pretty much a routine of going to work, watching commercials, eating sweet sweet sushi for lunch then going home and sleeping. Not to say that this is a bad routine but it got a little repetitive by the end of the week. There was one memorable moment during the week though.
That moment was playing Pachinko in Yokohama. Julie and I went into Yokohama on Tuesday night and went to a Pachinko parlor that I had passed every day on my way to work. I had been yearning to play pachinko for forever so I was excited to finally satiate my urge. Pachinko is a game that looks like an upright pinball machine. You launch small metal balls to the top and watch them go down through a series of pins hoping that it will land in one of the few small trays that would ultimately lead to you getting more pachinko balls. You pretty much do this until your ball supply runs out or you can cash in your balls for prizes. I put in the minimum 1,000 Yen ($10) and promptly lost it in under 5 minutes. I, apparently, have no skills at Pachinko and was defeated efficiently by the machine in less than 10 minutes. The atmosphere of the parlor though, is what made it really fun. The volume level on the machines are cranked up to a deafening level and there is a man on a loudspeaker constantly yelling at you in Japanese to play more pachinko. And also, it is customary to chain smoke while playing as it is thought to improve one's focus, or lead one to a quicker death so that the pachinko machines will get less of your money. I found that it created a thick oppressive fog that lent to the terror I started to feel as the man on the loudspeaker yelled at me from seemingly all directions. So I left "Silk Road" with ten dollars down the drain and an interesting experience under my belt. Now I know that if I'm ever feeling too good about myself and need to be brought back down to my proper place, I'll be sure to travel back to silk road where my money is waiting to be swallowed in an abyss of cigarettes, shreeking machines and yelling men.
This weekend was my favorite part of the week. I went out with the family to their beach house in Shimoda. Their house is really nice and cozy with two stories and is placed on the steepest hill I have ever seen. We had to get a fast start in the car to actually carry our momentum up the hill to their parking spot. The surrounding view was beautiful, though. The hills surrounding the house were covered in dense trees and it seemed like we were in an almost tropical setting. Shimoda itself, is a small village with a huge amount of beaches within a very close proximity. We got up around 8:00 on Saturday and hit the beach early, as the waves a perfect size for body boarding as well as surfing. I tried out the long board a couple of times but I just couldn't get myself to the right point of the wave to pop up. This lead to several falls, rolls and concerned looks from the other Japanese surfers around me. So needless to say, I stuck to the boogie board for the greater part of the day. It was also an incredibly hot and sunny day so I got fairly burnt. Everyone was fatigued from the long day on Saturday so we only stayed for about two hours on the beach on Sunday before heading home.
We started home, to Yokohama, at around 2:00 because Sunday is "Umi no Hi" or Day of the Sea. There were fireworks scheduled for around 7:30 and it is only supposed to take about 3 hours by car to get home. Needless to say everyone had the bright idea to get home for the fireworks so it took us about 7 and a half hours to drive all the way back. It wasn't all bad though. We managed to find a good spot on the highway where we could see the finale of the fireworks so we pulled over and watched. Overall it was a fun week and I'm sure I'll be heading back to Shimoda later in the summer. Keep those comments coming and thanks for reading my tome of a post.
6 Comments:
I'm sure your mother would not be very happy to know that you didn't put on enough sunblock....
Hey Brett! What wonderful news from you! I will pass this along to Joe so that you guys can "talk". We miss you on the Vineyard this summer!
xo, Kathleen Lauinger
Hey Brett. Sounds way to beautiful, take your camera with you fool, and show us some pictures of Japan. I feel the urge to live vicariously through you.
Wow Brett you officially deserve a "Holy Moly" in ever sense of the word! I mean dude you're in Japan - land of the rising sun and you still don't put on enough sun block!?!? I say good for you! Keep being the fiesty little American that you are! Though next I vote you take a TV and put it next to the magnetic Bullet Train tracks just to see what will happen... hee hee. Seriously dude it sounds like you're having a phenomenal time! I'm stoked for more adventure stories- and by the end of the summer I expect at least one involving a sumo wrestler(s) of some kind. WOOT!
-Meg
Brett! Forget about playing squash at the fitness club. Just blow $100 bucks a night at Pachinko and become a three pack a day smoker (including one extra pack/day of second hand smoke from the Pachinko parlor)! Now thats living!! Love, Dad
Thick, oppressive smoke not only enhances my vision, but also gives me the ability to emit a high-frequency shriek from my face. Maybe someday you will enjoy the same. And although they may sound the same, Pachinko is much more dangerous than its counterpart, The Price is Right's "Plinko".
From,
Whip Jorbison
PS Ride Mothra home and make it eat Simsbury Farms.
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