Showing posts with label land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label land. Show all posts
Saturday, August 6, 2016
The Crane hr574
The hotel I checked in on my trip to Kyoto gave me a discount coupon for
the buffet breakfast and I had it next morning at the restaurant. The
buffet had Japanese expensive dishes in addition to the familiar Western
breakfast dishes, which made up the most luxurious buffet breakfast I’d
ever had. As there were many foreign guests around, it produced an
international atmosphere. One of the walls of the restaurant was the
glass window from the ceiling to the floor. Beyond it was a small
Japanese garden that had a pond with many red-and-white-colored koi
fish. When I was eating delicious breakfast and thinking I hadn’t known
that Kyoto had a fabulous place like this, something out of the window
caught my eyes. A tall, sleek, beautiful crane came flying from
somewhere and landed in the garden. Its height was about half of mine
and its color was mainly white mixed with silver and black. It stood
just five feet away from me separated by the window, watching the koi
fish in the pond with its cool eyes. I was close enough to see each of
its feathers clearly. I had never been this near to a crane before. It
didn’t try to fly away but stood still majestically. There’s a myth in
Japan that a crane lives one thousand years. Since it is regarded as the
embodiment of celebration, kimonos for a wedding or the New Year have
crane patterns. The crane standing in the garden also looked as if it
had lived for a long time and the restaurant was somehow filled with a
sense of awe in the air. Because this trip was the first one after my
family sold and left its land that had been inherited from my ancestors
over for one thousand years from generation to generation, I felt the
spirit of the land finally got freedom, took the shape of the crane and
flew away. And it came here to say goodbye to me. I was convinced that
parting with the land was the right thing to do. It set each of my
family free after all. The crane kept staring at the koi fish a long
while and suddenly crouched as if it decided to pounce. I was thrilled
to see if it would eat expensive colored koi fish that often cost
thousands of dollars, but it returned to its previous calm position and
stood straight. It repeated those moves several times and then flew away
without attacking the koi fish. Goodbye, gorgeous crane. Goodbye, my
ancestors’ land and its spirit. I was going to visit my parents on that
day. Visiting them usually ends horribly and I had been quite worried
about it this time too. But seeing the crane was auspicious and made me
feel that the visit would go well. After the mystic breakfast, I was
headed for a strange town where the condominium that my parents had
moved in located…
Saturday, July 23, 2016
The New Kyoto hr573
When I spent 40 minutes aboard the bullet train bound for Kyoto from
Tokyo, an alarming notion popped into my head. “Did I miss Mt. Fuji?”
It’s around this time that Mt. Fuji comes into view closely in the
bullet train window. Somehow Mt. Fuji is a special mountain for Japanese
people. It’s said that seeing the first sunrise of the year from the
top of Mt. Fuji brings a happy new year. Many of them want to climb it
once during their lifetime. They regard it as something holy and good
luck. I myself try to see it every time I take a bullet train to Kyoto,
and pray to it for a good trip. It was cloudy and rain looked imminent
on that day of my latest trip to Kyoto. Whether the train already passed
Mt. Fuji or it wasn’t visible because of thick clouds was uncertain.
The outcome of the trip depended on Mt. Fuji. I felt that this trip
might end terribly if I couldn’t see it, and I looked for it
frantically. “There it is!” Above the dark clouds, its top section poked
out clearly. “I see it! A nice trip is assured!” I was relieved and in
high spirits. While I jinx it when I don’t see it, however, I’ve had
horrible trips even when I saw a clear Mt. Fuji. Although I duly
understand an outcome of a trip doesn’t have to do with whether I see it
or not, there’s a reason why I’m nervous enough to pray to the
mountain. A trip to Kyoto means homecoming and meeting my parents. Three
out of every four visits, they give me a hard time. They insult me,
deny me and complain everything about me. I sometimes feel my life is in
danger when I’m with them because of their relentless attacks. Not to
be strangled by them while I’m sleeping, I avoid spending the night at
my parents’ home and stay at a hotel instead. I would rather not visit
and see them, but I know it would make things worse. I couldn’t imagine
how this particular trip would go especially as it was my first visit
since my parents sold their house. They could no longer afford to keep
their large house and its land inherited by our ancestors. Their
financial crunch made them sell it where my family had lived for over
1000 years. They moved out to a small, old condominium outside Kyoto.
Thinking about the situation they were now in, I couldn’t imagine their
state of mind other than being nasty. The bullet train slid into Kyoto
Station after two and a half hours. I stepped out on the platform for
the first time as a complete tourist who didn’t have a house or a family
there. To my surprise, Kyoto looked different. I couldn’t tell what and
how, but it was decisively different from Kyoto I had known. It used to
look grim and gloomy as if it was possessed by an evil spirit. But now
it was filled with clean fresh air and looked bright. I would see all
but mean people, but they also turned into nice people with smiles. I
checked in a hotel and looked out the window. Rows of old gray houses
were there. I used to think Kyoto was an ugly city with those somber
houses, but I found myself looking at even them as a tasteful view. I’d
never thought having the house I grew up in torn down and parting with
my ancestor’s land would change the city itself altogether. Or maybe, it
was me that changed…
Saturday, December 5, 2015
Hidemi’s Rambling No.557
At the end of my last homecoming day, I got into the cab heading for the
train station, saying goodbye to my mother who was merrily talking
about which condominium she would move in, to my father who was weirdly
cheery, and to the house and its land one last time. When I dropped out
college and left home for Tokyo to be a musician a long time ago, I
thought I would never come back to this house again. I have made
unplanned visits since then, but I assumed it would be the last visit
each time. I was accustomed to a farewell feeling toward the house in a
way and I departed with no particular emotions this time either. The cab
was running through my familiar neighborhood where I spent my entire
childhood. It was still shabby as it used to be. The cab drove through
old houses of my childhood friends where I used to play with them, and
under the overhead train bridge where I ran into perverts so many times.
From the window, I saw the elementary school I went to, and the
sidewalk my first song came to me while I was walking on. The bookstore
where my father bought me my first English dictionary and also where he
spotted his missing cousin. A place where a milk factory used to be that
I waved to its plastic cows beside the gate every time I passed by in
my father’s car. The old temple where my late grandparents used to take
me and let me feed doves. Then something struck me and I suddenly
realized. It wasn’t just the house I was losing. I was losing my
hometown and departing from my childhood. I would never be in this
neighborhood again because it was going to be an unrelated, foreign
place from now on. Although I had always hated my neighborhood, that
thought brought a lump to my throat and soon I found myself crying. I
was stunned at this unexpected feeling. If I hadn’t been inside a cab, I
would have wailed. The cab came near Kyoto Station that was my
destination. My late grandfather often took me to this area around the
station that used to be undeveloped, decayed and in the miserable
condition. But now, after years of intense redevelopment, it has become
an urban area with numerous modern buildings of hotels, fashionable
shops and huge shopping malls. It was a completely new different place
and I found no trace of what I was familiar with the area. The cab
stopped at the signal close to the station and there stood a new movie
complex by the street. I casually wondered if it showed ‘Tomorrowland’.
Then I felt I was actually stepping into it. Things and places I had
been with were all disappearing and a place I had never seen before
appeared in front of me. I saw a change more clearly than ever. I was
leaving everything old behind and going into a new world. The world I’m
walking in is unknown, but therefore there are full of possibilities…
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Saturday, November 21, 2015
Hidemi’s Rambling No.556
As the house where I grew up was being sold, I came home in Kyoto for
the last time fearfully. My parents had been constantly sullen from
anxiety about money and their future since I left home. Now that they
gave up their house and our ancestor’s last land, I had wondered how
gloomy they were. On the contrary, I was surprised that they were
utterly in a good mood. They seemed at ease as if a great weight had
been lifted from their shoulders. I hadn’t seen them like this for a
long time. The main purpose of my visit was sorting out my stuff. To get
some keepsakes and mementos of my childhood, I entered my room for the
first time in decades. It had become my younger sister’s room, who now
lived abroad. Some of my old stuff was kept in the mud-walled warehouse
that had stood next to the house for several hundred years. This ancient
two-story warehouse that my ancestors used generation after generation
is also going to be torn down along with the house. The last time I got
in there was probably with my late grandfather when I was a child. So
this was the first time I got in as a grown-up, and also the last. I
found my first stuffed animal downstairs there and was about to get out
with it when my father told me to go upstairs with him. I climbed the
steep wooden ladder to the second floor that was more like an attic. It
had a small skylight on the plaster wall and tons of dust all around. On
the wooden shelves along the wall were an antique balance and bronze
weights that used to belong exclusively to a landowner during the
Japanese feudal times. There were also numerous coated plates, bowls and
trays with legs that my ancestors used for banquets. On the entire
floor were Japanese traditional huge oblong treasure chests called
‘Nagamochi’ that size was about two coffins. They had sit there keeping
my ancestors’ valuables all through the times of wars and my family’s
decline. My father once saw many swords inside one of them and wanted to
show them to me. I was keyed up about unveiling what my ancestors had
inherited for so many generations. We opened dust-covered chests one by
one, but every chest contained the same thing – futon. So many old musty
futons appeared from chest after chest. They must have been expensive
in the old days and my ancestors stored them for the house guests.
Everything in the warehouse told how prosperous our family used to be
and how low we have gotten now. It was funny though, that what our
family had inherited and preserved to pass on to the next generation for
years were mostly futons. I had quarreled with my parents over
succeeding the family all these years and had been on bad terms with
them for that because I had refused. Many ancestors of mine gave in to
unwanted marriages or sacrificed their lives to succeed the family. We
all suffered from the family succession and everything was for futon! I
wanted to tell my ancestors that futons of good quality were widely
available at incredibly low prices in the discount stores nowadays.
Succeeding the family turned out to be preserving what became worthless
today. That was ridiculous enough for me to make my anger pass into
laughter. At the very back of the warehouse was one chest that hasn’t
been opened for who knows how many years. It was practically impossible
to open it as other big chests were stacked up over it. Nobody had an
idea what was inside. I strongly hoped that wasn’t futon although it was
quite likely…
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Friday, November 6, 2015
Hidemi’s Rambling No.555
On the answering machine, there was a message from my father that said
he needed to be called back immediately. I was chilled to the bone. I
have never received a single phone call from him that’s not disturbing.
When he calls me, he does it to vent his spleen about his daily life and
about my career as a musician. What comes out from the receiver is his
lengthy verbal abuse. Nevertheless, I mostly return his call because
things get worse if I don’t. This time was no exception and I called him
back fearfully with trembling hands. Instead of a spurt of anger, he
told me to come home as soon as possible and stay for a few days. I
asked him what happened and he didn’t answer that. As his request
sounded urgent, I repeatedly asked for the reason. He just dodged and
kept saying that he wanted me to come home right away. I hung up and
felt alarmed. Something must have happened. Since he had never given me
good news, that something was most certainly a bad thing. My parents’
home is located in Kyoto that is 500 miles away from where I live. It
takes me over five hours to get there by bullet train. I don’t have so
much free time to take that long trip without the reason. Besides, such
an unusual request requires extra caution. I called my mother’s cell
phone and asked her what was all about. She told me that they had
decided to sell their house and move out. They were looking for a
condominium to buy and moving in as soon as the house was sold. The
house could be sold next month at the fastest, and they wanted me to
sort out my stuff and spend time together under this house’s roof for
the last time. The house was built when I was nine years old at the
place where our old house was torn down because it was too old to live
in. That old house was built about 100 years ago. My ancestors lived at
exactly the same spot generation after generation for over 1000 years
since my family used to be a landlord of the area. We are here for
around 65 generations. My father succeeded the family from my
grandfather, and I would have been the next successor if I hadn’t left
home to be a musician. Because my father failed the family business and
didn’t have the next successor for help, he had sold pieces of our
ancestor’s land one by one. Now his money has finally dried up and he
can’t afford to keep the last land where the house stands. When my
grandfather passed away nine years ago, he complained to me again about
financial help I wouldn’t lend. I promptly suggested he should sell the
house and its land. He got furious at my suggestion. He shouted, “How
could you say something like that? Do you really think it’s possible?
All ancestors of ours lived here! I live to continue our lineage right
here for my entire life! Selling the house means ending our family
lineage! It’s impossible!!” He bawled me out like a crazy man while
banging the floor repeatedly with a DVD that I had brought for him as a
Father’s Day gift. But nine years later, the time inevitably came.
Considering his mad fury about selling the house back then, it was easy
for me to imagine that he planned to set fire on the house during the
night I would stay and kill my mother and me along with himself. That
seemed the true reason why he wanted me to come back. Those
murder-suicide cases sometimes happen in Japan, especially among
families with long history. But the first thing that I felt at the news
was not fear but relief. As I had known my father wouldn’t sell the
house, I had thought that I would end up reaping the harvest of his
mistakes as his daughter even though I didn’t succeed the family. I
would have to liquidate everything in the house to pay his debts and
sell the house and the land by myself after I would argue with all my
relatives in the family’s branches who would most certainly oppose
strongly. That picture of my dismal future had been long hanging low in
my mind. But now, completely out of the blue, my father was taking up
everything and I was discharged! I took an enormous load off but didn’t
forget to be cautious. As there was still a possibility to be killed by
my father, I decided to make my last homecoming a day trip in order to
avoid spending the night there…
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