The day was planned for my partner and me to go to the city that takes
us a 90-minute train ride from home. It was Friday the 13th with a full
moon. As a superstitious person, it gave me a slightly uneasy feeling. I
tried to shake it off and went out anyway. And here are spooky things
that happened on that day.
I had lunch at an all-you-can-eat
buffet restaurant. The buffet included Asian foods as their limited-time
specialty menu. Even for a Japanese, they were novel to me. I tried
them for the first time and quite enjoyed them. The lunch time was
coming to an end and the customers were leaving. The large restaurant
with many tables had gotten near empty. Then out of nowhere, tow young
men appeared with plates filled with food and sat at the table next to
ours. It was weird.
A new customer is usually ushered to a table
by a server at this restaurant. The server asks if there are any
additional orders beside the buffet, such as free refill soft drinks or
alcoholic beverages, and puts down a check and a wet towel – a pack of a
wet tissue is provided at almost all the restaurants in Japan – on the
table, then leaves. The wet tissue and the piece of paper for a check
are the mark telling the table is taken by customers while they are off
to get food at the buffet. The table next to us had no wet tissues or
check. The two men didn’t show up with a server but had already gotten
food. And they sat right next to us among all those empty tables in a
huge restaurant. I suspected that they sneaked in and tried to eat
without paying by using us as some sort of camouflage.
While my
suspicious eyes observed them eating merrily, one of them suddenly
started looking around, uttered “What? What?”, and left the table
hurriedly. I thought there he ran away. But he returned right away and
said to the other man, “My bag is gone.” They began to look for it
around and under other tables. When I was convinced that they finally
ran away, they returned with a server and told her that his bag was
missing. The server replied, “This table wasn’t your table. Yours was
over there.” She brought their wet towels and check along with his bag
from the far table. They were surprised, and said to each other, “This
table wasn’t ours? I thought we were ushered here!”
It was my
turn to be surprised. Didn’t they notice the wet towels? Weirder yet,
were my partner and I invisible? Weren’t we the distinguishable mark for
the table in the empty restaurant? They must have been tricked by some
magic of Friday the 13th’s full moon. That seemed the only explanation.
By the way, my partner himself had walked toward the wrong tables
several times there by the same magic, which he kept from me and
reluctantly confessed me later.
After we left the restaurant, I
shopped groceries at a supermarket. The supermarket had handed out QR
code mobile coupons that I had acquired. There was a machine to convert
the QR code into a paper coupon inside the store since the checkout
counter takes only physical coupons. The machine had a screen that
showed a step-by-step instruction. It looked so simple and easy that a
customer only needed to scan the code on a smartphone. With the
instruction telling ‘Scan Your Phone’ I scanned, but no coupon came out.
No matter how closely I put my phone to the screen, no response. I
tweaked the brightness, tried to place it horizontally or vertically,
uttering unconsciously “What? What?”. About ten unsuccessful sweaty
tries later, I noticed a red light was blinking under the machine. That
was where the phone should be placed. Instead, I was holding the phone
to the instruction screen.
Before going home, I dropped in a
cafe at the train station. The cafe had the sink for customers to wash
their hands next to the pick-up counter. I wiped my hands with paper
towels and threw them away into the trash bin. Although I pushed the
lid, it didn’t open. I thought something had jammed and I pushed several
times more, of course uttering “What? What?” again. It wouldn’t open. I
pushed really hard and almost sprained my fingers. And I saw a foot
pedal beneath the bin. I sweated all over again with my cheeks brushing
while the lid easily opened with the pedal.
I shouldn’t have underestimated Friday the 13th’s full moon. Its magic is dangerous…
Showing posts with label all-you-can-eat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all-you-can-eat. Show all posts
Friday, November 8, 2019
Thursday, July 7, 2016
Price of Greed hr572
According to my parents, I was such a sullen infant who always put a
long face. I had the habit of uttering “Butch!” as if to show
dissatisfaction, and I received ‘Butch’ as my first nickname from my
parents. When I started talking, I was a child who constantly grumbled.
My mother’s impression was that I complained about anything whenever I
opened my mouth. Indeed, when I recall my childhood memories, they are
abundant in all kinds of complaints I made. My mother would ask me why I
couldn’t have even the slightest feeling of gratitude. She told me how
fortunate I was to be born into wealth since she always boasted our
family’s fortune. I was never convinced because if we had been that
wealthy, we would have lived a better life in which I didn’t need to
complain so much. Mostly I complained about meals, but I did about other
things as well. Among them was about clothes. I was ten years old when I
began to get fat. I’m short now, but I was quite tall for a
ten-year-old girl back then. My mother stopped shopping children’s
apparel for me and put her used clothes on me instead because I was big.
I went to school every day with her clothes on that were mainly brown
and mean boys called me a cockroach. I insisted to my mother that
colorful clothes for adults existed and pestered her to get them, which
was rejected. I frequently criticized my parents’ way of working, too.
They always tried to curry favor with my grandparents who lived in the
same house and were so stingy. My family used to farm and my parents
worked so hard on the fields from dawn to night. And they told me we
were wealthy. It was obvious they worked crazily not to earn money but
to impress my grandparents. I repeatedly explained to my parents that
what they were doing was completely pointless and demanded to come home
early, which was rejected too. I regularly appealed for a raise of my
monthly allowance. I was so persistent in this particular request
because it was scanty despite my mother’s claim of our wealth. I never
stopped after I was rejected for a million times. By the time I was a
teenager, when I started casually “Mom,” my mother would cut me right
away saying, “About money, isn’t it? No!” She told me that she would
have a nervous breakdown if she heard more of my ‘Mom’. Thus, I spent my
childhood as an extremely unsatisfied child. I think I’m greedy by
nature. But I believe that greed can make people progress. Resignation
is considered as virtue in Japan and greed is loathed excessively. In my
opinion, we need greed to make changes for better. There was a line in a
US TV show, “Happiness is to be content with what you have.” I think
wanting more can be happier with efforts and hope. I often feel sick and
have a stomachache after having too much at an all-you-can-eat buffet.
As the communal spa is free in my apartment, I take it too long every
day, which sometimes puts me in bad shape and lays me up. But it’s more
fun and livelier than doing things acceptably. Besides, I can’t stop it
because this is who I am. Being greedy is one thing, but getting what I
want is a different matter. While I find more and more things I want,
they are usually out of my reach. I have to face disappointment all the
time that I can’t possibly possess what I want. Even so, my greed is too
strong to accept reality…
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Saturday, April 25, 2015
Hidemi’s Rambling No.541
I came across a very nice restaurant that served an incredibly
money-saving all-you-can-eat lunch buffet on weekdays, and I have been
frequently there lately. The restaurant is inside a thrifty hotel but
its interior and food is gorgeous since the hotel is also used as a
wedding ceremony hall. The lunch buffet has mainly Japanese dishes that
other buffet restaurants usually don’t serve because they are costly and
time-consuming to prepare. In addition to common buffet items like
curry, fried chicken and pasta, it has a wide variety of expensive
dishes such as seafood, tempura, chirashi sushi and beef stew. They are
laid out on the beautifully decorated buffet table in a luxurious
atmosphere. Amazingly, the price is only $11, including soft drinks and
desserts. It’s so unreal and I feel I must be in a dream or something
every time I eat there. Maybe because of the surreal price, a line of
customers is often formed in front of the entrance before the restaurant
opens. It happened once that I couldn’t get in when the table got full
in the middle of the line. About 70 percent of the customers are
seniors, which is peculiar for an all-you-can-eat buffet restaurant and I
guess is due to Japanese food. As seniors are getting healthier, or
they have too much time to spare, or human greed never decays, or for
whatever reason, they devour and enjoy lunch immensely. Come to think of
it, Japanese society has been aging rapidly and shopping malls and
cafes are filled with seniors. Japan has a crazy pension system that
seniors receive what young people pay. The demographic change of more
seniors and less youth causes a serious shortage of the pension and the
government makes up for it by a debt. Japan is tumbling down a steep
slope by keeping such an unsustainable system. Thinking this country
might be eaten up by senior citizens soon, I match them with my appetite
at the buffet and eat gasping for air even after I’m full. I stay on
until the lunch time ends and the place closes, and by the time I’m
leaving, I end up running toward the bathroom. I have an upset stomach
almost every time because I eat far too much there. The super-saving
buffet may work against me after all, but I will feel like going back
there by the next day…
Labels:
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