Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage. Show all posts
Saturday, November 18, 2017
A Long Journey hr600
I have been estranged from my friends for a long time. There are only
three people with whom I keep in touch by a Christmas card once a year.
They are my kindergarten teacher and two high school teachers. I feel a
lifelong obligation to those three for each reason. I came across one of
the two high school teachers when I was a senior. She had just
graduated from a university and started teaching at my school as a new
teacher. She taught Japanese classics and I was one of her first
students. The Japanese classics class consisted of a mere dozen students
who selected the subject to prepare for the entrance examination of a
university or a college. As the class was unusually small and the new
teacher was young and friendly, it soon became like a big family. It was
as if we had a weekly family gathering that happened to have a specific
topic of Japanese classics, rather than a school class. In my dismal
and miserable high school life, the class was a chink of light. It was
the only place at school where I could breathe and came to life. I took
the initiative in having fun. Mostly my target was the new teacher. I
pulled various pranks on her at every class, such as all students hid in
the cupboards and she walked in the empty classroom, perplexed. On a
perfect sunny day, I suggested having the class outside and she taught
us in the schoolyard like a picnic. I tried what hadn’t been done at my
school before and she just cracked up every time. It seemed I was really
good at making her laugh. The whole class eventually laughed all the
time, and the old strict teacher who had her class next room often came
in to tell us to shut up. She sometimes called my teacher out to the
hallway and reprimanded her. Nevertheless, my teacher never hushed us,
and continued laughing at my jokes and having fun together. She helped
me with those bright hours in my dark last year of high school and I’m
thankful for that forever. She quit and moved to the other school when I
graduated. We have exchanged New Year cards or Christmas cards ever
since. While I write simple season’s greetings on them, she somehow
knows and writes what I want to hear most. For instance, toward the end
of the year in which I’d had a hard time and felt discouraged, her
Christmas card said ‘Hang in there! Things are turning better!’ and made
me wonder how she could ever know. We somewhat have a lot in common
with the way of living, too. In those years, most Japanese women got
married and quit working when they did. While I work and stay single,
she also continued teaching at school and didn’t change her last name to
her husband’s when she got married as the Japanese tradition goes.
Without seeing her in decades, I’ve felt strange bond with her. Last
year, my parents moved and their new address startled me. By pure
coincidence, it’s weirdly close to the teacher’s. I mentioned about it
on the Christmas card to her and then things developed quickly. During
my latest trip for a visit to my parents’, we had a chance to meet each
other for the first time since I was a teenager. The hotel I stayed in
on the trip was located in Osaka because I flew in this time instead of
using a train. From Osaka to the station we would meet though, it was a
two-hour train ride with several transfers. It would be a long trip but
we would bridge a decades’ gap in two hours. I thought of the gap, and
suddenly came to myself. Shouldn’t a reunion with one’s former teacher
be an opportunity to show some achievement for gratitude? I had
forgotten about it because the process to this meeting had strangely
gone smoothly as if it had been happening automatically out of my will. I
had tried and worked hard all those years, but achieved nothing, no
money, no fame. I recalled I had said to her that I would become a
musician when I last spoke to her. During the course of life, I did. But
that’s it. I haven’t gotten anything to show to her. I wondered if our
reunion might be an embarrassment where a teacher would see her
student’s unfruitful result of many years…
Saturday, August 20, 2016
A Demon’s New Home hr575
I visited my parents for the first time since their financial difficulty
made them sell their house and move into an old condominium. It
situated only two train stations away from Kyoto but in the different
prefecture, which meant they were kicked out of their hometown too. The
moment I met them there, I noticed a big change. Both of them had turned
into different persons. They used to be grumpy, gloomy and nagging all
the time. But now, they were cheerful and lively. It was as if demons
living inside my parents had departed and they regained consciousness. I
felt like I saw my good old parents whom I’d known when I was little
for the first time in decades. Even their faces had been changed
somehow. My father was raving about his days of exploring his new town
with childlike excitement. As he had been raised and lived as a
successor of the family that had continued for generations on the same
land, he had never imagined moving to a different place let alone
actually moved out of the house. He moved to a new place for the first
time in his life and realized how comfortable it could be. Because our
house had stood in an old uncivilized area of Kyoto, everything here
seemed modern and incredibly convenient to him. He rapturously talked
about his new daily life of shopping at a discount store and eating at
McDonald’s. He even mentioned that he intended to start new hobbies such
as drawing or English conversation. I had never seen him so positive.
It seemed he enjoyed his first freedom. My mother also talked about how
much she liked the view from the balcony and how convenient to live in a
compact apartment instead of a large house she used to live in. Only,
she added every time lamentably, “But I had never imagined myself ending
up my life in a small apartment.” I know too well how far the reality
diverged from her plan. As a young girl, she planned to live a rich life
whatever it took. So she got married with my father whom she didn’t
love, and endured living with and taking care of my grandparents, all
for money. In return, she believed she would live luxuriously in a
mansion until she died. When I was a child, I often heard her say, “How
stupid women who marry for love are! They live in a small apartment. But
look where I live!” As it turned out, though, she found herself living
in an apartment, being old without either love or money. “I should reap
what I have sown,” she murmured with a cynical smile. My new changed
parents didn’t attack me, which they used to do every time. Not a single
complaint came out of their mouths. When I was leaving, my mother
looked as if she would miss me. My father walked with me to the train
station to see me off. In addition, he slipped me some money and told me
to eat something good with it. All those things couldn’t be explained
unless demons stopped possessing them. I got on the bullet train from
Kyoto toward home and uttered “I’d like to come to Kyoto again.” That
was what I’d never said before in my life. But I should have been
careful about a wish. My wish to travel to Kyoto came true too quickly.
The very next day I returned to my apartment, my partner’s brother
called him to let him know his father passed away. Since his father also
lived in Kyoto, I traveled back to Kyoto with my partner for the
funeral only two days later. And then, three weeks later, I went down to
Kyoto yet again with my partner to place the ashes of his father in the
grave. I decided never to say ‘I’d like to go to Kyoto’ ever again.
After his father’s death, my partner’s brother suddenly changed from a
tender and modest man to a completely different person. He came up with a
scheme to have a small inheritance all to himself, instead of dividing
it with my partner as his father had told to. A demon which left my
parents chose him as its new home and moved in…
Friday, May 20, 2016
Reward hr569
My parents didn’t get married for love. Their marriage was part of a
deal to inherit the family’s fortune and they took it for money. Another
part of the deal was to carry on the family and they had me as a
successor. It had gone according to their plan until I decided to do
what I wanted for my life and left home. Since then, they attempted
every evil way to pull me back in the family. They tried all possible
means to make me give up my carrier as a musician. They said I had no
talent, I was a failure, and how bad I was as a human being, over and
over at every opportunity. They conned me once big time. Out of the blue
they offered money to set up my own record label, and after I rented an
office and hired the staff, they suddenly withdrew their money, crushed
my label and bankrupted me. I defied any kind of attack, threat,
temptation and begging from them because I was determined to be a
musician. When they realized I wouldn’t succeed the family, they told me
not to even visit them because they didn’t want to see me any more. On
their repeated requests not to come see them in their house, I
understood they didn’t need their child who wasn’t a successor. From
that experience, I have a doubt about a concept of unconditional love. I
spent about 10 years to complete my last song. The new song I’ve been
currently working on hasn’t been completed yet after four years. It was
not because I was loitering over my work on purpose. Making music is the
only thing I do seriously without compromise. I don’t want to let time
interfere with my music. It’s completed when I’m satisfactorily
convinced it’s finished. And I dream of my future in which my song will
be such a big hit that it will make me a celebrity and take me to
Monaco. The other day, I noticed an unfavorable fact. While I dedicate
my life for my songs that I spend all my effort, time and passion on, I
unconsciously expect reward from them. Although I already have so much
fun and feel indescribable happiness during work, I believe that my
songs should bring me money and fame someday. That sounds awfully like
my parents’ attitude toward me. They raised me while they expected
reward when I grew up. Do I also nurture my songs for reward when they
are completed? If so, I will end up exploding my anger if my songs don’t
reward me with money and fame. Am I the same as my parents after all or
can I give unconditional love to my songs? I get enough reward in the
process of completing songs. My reward is done when songs are done. From
then on, all I should care is to make my songs happy, which means to
support them all my life by doing whatever I possibly can to make them
be heard by a lot of people. Can I love my songs that way and be
satisfied with my life until the day I die? I must try. Because even if I
don’t have any money or fame at all, I think I’ve already received
reward called life with freedom and happiness…
Saturday, May 7, 2016
The Decision hr568
We all face decisions every day, big or small. It may be as trifling as
what to eat for lunch, but sometimes it is as important as what decides a
course of our life. And the big one often comes abruptly like a
surprise attack when we least expect it, unguarded. I faced the first
crucial decision unexpectedly on my 20th birthday. In Japan, 20 years of
age is regarded as the coming-of-age and there is a custom to celebrate
it. When I was 20 years old, I lived in a big house with my family. My
parents had a hefty fortune inherited by my ancestors as it was before
they failed in their undertaking and lost every thing. For them, my
coming-of-age was such a big event that they had bought an expensive
sash of kimono for me months in advance for a municipal ceremony held in
the first month of the year. Since I defied the custom and didn’t
attend the ceremony for which the sash was wasted, my parents determined
that my 20th birthday should be memorable at least and planned a party.
I wasn’t told about the party because they wanted to surprise me. On my
birthday, I was hanging around and having fun with my friend until
night, not knowing that my parents and my sister waited for me with 20
red roses and expensive steaks cooked and delivered from a restaurant.
As crazy as it sounds, my curfew was 9 p.m. back then. I had too much
fun and broke it that particular day. I came home half an hour late
bracing for a rebuke from my parents. What awaited me was beyond rebuke
actually. I usually came in from the back door that was left unlocked,
but it was locked that night. I went around to the front gate that was
locked too. I thought my father had locked them by mistake and pushed an
intercom button. My mother answered and I asked her to open the door.
She said in a tearful voice, “I can’t. It’s no mistake. Your father shut
you out of the house.” She started crying and continued, “We were
preparing a party and waiting for you from this afternoon. We waited and
waited until your father got furious. He said that he didn’t want you
to come home because you never appreciated this important day and your
family. I can’t open the door. Your father doesn’t want you in this
house any more.” I was astounded at the deep trouble I suddenly got
into. I could have apologized repeatedly and begged her to let me in.
Instead, I was wondering if that was what I really wanted. I didn’t have
anything but now it was a chance to leave the house. Totally out of the
blue, the moment for a decision for life came up. If I lived in this
house forever as a family’s successor like I had been told to, I would
inherit family’s fortune. But if I threw it away, I could do whatever I
want for my own life. In a matter of seconds, I decided. I chose freedom
over money. I said, “That’s fine. I’m leaving.” I felt oddly refreshed
and upbeat. My chained life came to an abrupt end through the intercom.
My mother panicked and shouted, “What do you mean that’s fine? Wait!
Don’t go! I’m coming to open the door! Stay there!” I saw her rushing
out of the house and dashing toward the gate. She grabbed me in. On the
dining table, there were two empty plates that were my father’s and my
sister’s and two untouched steak plates that were my mother’s and mine.
In the center was a big vase with 20 roses. I ate steak with my mother
who was weeping through on my completely ruined 20th birthday. Shortly
afterwards, I eventually left home and became a musician. My mother, my
grandmother and my aunts were married unwillingly for money. My father
and my grandfather gave up what they wanted to do in order to succeed
the family. They all looked unhappy and I didn’t want to live like them.
But I also didn’t know freedom didn’t come cheap and my decision would
lead to trials and hardships that I had to endure as a consequence…
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