On the second day of a trip to the western region of Japan, time was
running short for the train I was going to take while I was preparing to
go out at the hotel room. I walked to the closest train station
hurriedly and called my parents.
One of the purposes of this
trip was visiting my parents. When I do, I never tell them about my
visit beforehand. My life experience taught me that they will plan some
ways to attack me if I give them time. I let them know right before my
actual visit in order not to give them a chance to think of any plots.
The one who answered my call was my younger sister to whom I hadn’t
talked for more than a decade. Before the trip, I had received a phone
call from my mother who was crying and confessed that her life had been
hell since my sister began to live with them about a year ago. My
parents had kept it secret from me for a year because my sister didn’t
want me to know that she had returned to Japan from abroad and had lived
with them. Although I had known that from my mother’s phone call, I
pretended not to know when my sister answered my call as I also had
known her intention. I said, “You’re back in Japan,” and she admitted in
a very faint voice. And an unexpected new fact followed when I asked
her to put either of my parents on the phone. She told me that my
parents had no longer lived there because they ran away from home.
My mother had mentioned some kind of abuse by my sister on the
distraught phone call less than a month ago, but I never thought it was
serious enough to run away. My sister explained in a feeble voice that
they had felt excessively stressful to live with her. And she didn’t
know their whereabouts.
After I hung up the phone, I called my
father’s cell phone. He answered sounding absent-minded. I told him I
had come to see him and asked him if we could meet. He answered it was
inconvenient for him because he had somewhere to go with my mother and
there was no time to spare for me all day long. He apparently avoided me
and sounded he didn’t want to see me. When I asked him where they were
living now, he said in a vacant voice, “In an apartment near the condo
where I lived.” I had a previous engagement to meet with my high school
teacher before I was going to see my parents and the train to catch was
coming. Although I had tons of questions left, I ran out of time and
hung up the phone.
To meet my teacher, I needed to transfer the
train at Osaka terminal station. As there was 15-minute space to the
next train, I used the bathroom in the station. I was headed for the
platform where the next train would depart, walking through the enormous
station that has eleven platforms and seven different train lines. The
passages were entwined and crawling with passengers. It looked like as
much as O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. I was waiting for the
train on the platform I had made sure on the information board. When the
train came in though, I noticed a wrong destination was displayed on
the side of the train. I had checked the platform number by the
departure time. Unfortunately, Osaka Station is a gigantic station that
has numerous trains depart at the exactly same time. I had been waiting
for a train diligently at the wrong platform. I saw the right train
coming in a few platforms away. I panicked, rushed down the long flight
of stairs, ran down the long main passage, ran up the stairs and tried
to zap into the train. But on the platform I ended up, the right train
didn’t arrive. Instead, an unfamiliar, new special gorgeous train had
been parked and the full-dress station attendants were standing in line
in front of the train, giving it a salute. There were some camera crews
around them. It seemed some sort of ceremony was being held there, and I
appeared in the midst of it dashing out of the stairs. I couldn’t grasp
what was happening for a moment and was just looking around frantically
for my train. A young lady attendant approached me with a kind smile,
saying to me, “Why don’t you take one if you like.” and handed me a
small plastic flag on which an illustration of this special train was
printed. Then I realized I got on the wrong platform again because I
didn’t come here to see off this train with the flag. I ran down the
stairs yet again, and dashed up the stairs to the right platform this
time.
The platform was empty with no train and no passengers. My
train seemed to have long gone. I was standing alone in a daze, panting
for breath on the oddly quiet platform with a small flag holding in my
hand.
I was late for the arranged time and made my teacher wait,
but was able to see her again who is one of only few people that have
understood me and supported me for all the years after I graduated from
high school. A good time passes quickly. I was immensely encouraged by
her even in this short meeting and got on the train to go back to the
hotel instead of going to my parents’ home.
Because the plan to
meet my parents was cancelled in an unexpected way, I happened to have
time to go to the outlet mall that I had given up the other day because
of rain. I enjoyed hanging around there with my partner and had dinner
at the Hawaiian restaurant with a turkey sandwich and popcorn shrimps
that are rare items in Japanese restaurants and give me yearning for the
days when I lived in the U.S. In the end of a weird day filled with
totally unexpected twists, a wonderful time waited for me. My precise
plan for this trip turned to be completely different two days in a row…
Showing posts with label station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label station. Show all posts
Saturday, September 14, 2019
Saturday, February 25, 2017
The Beginning of A Winter Trip hr587
The mountainous region where I live is in the depth of winter and it
snows day after day. Now that the snow covering the ground has
accumulated over my own height, I was having a sense of claustrophobia.
That’s a cue for my annual three-day trip to the Tokyo metropolitan area
that doesn’t have much snow. I set about arranging this year’s trip
online. I successfully booked the room in a hotel of the Japanese luxury
chain at a greatly economical rate by making the best use of coupons
and their off-season promotion. The stay would come with preferential
treatment at no extra cost as part of the promotion. To get to the Tokyo
metropolitan area, I need to ride the bullet train that is expensive.
But I got a 35% discount for the ticket by reserving early in advance. I
was all set to get out of snow. Although it had snowed every day, it
rained on that particular day when I set off on a trip in the morning.
Rain is more troublesome than snow. I would take a local bus to the
bullet train station. The bus stop is near my apartment but it has
neither a cubicle nor a roof. When it snows, I can pat off the snow that
comes onto my clothes while I’m walking to the bus stop and waiting
there. But in the rain, my one hand is occupied with an umbrella as I
carry all the bags, which would cause awkward walking that inevitably
wets me. I would freeze while I’m waiting for the bus. I bore an
unexpected expense and called a cab. The dispatcher told me it would
take long to come to pick me up due to high demand. Since I had the
bullet train to catch, I gave in to my umbrella and walked toward the
bus stop in the rain. I felt miserable while I was waiting for the bus
with many bags around me drenching. Out of the bus window, I saw snow
plains beneath which were parks, rice paddies and sidewalks. The road
was plowed, but the snow was pushed off to a long, tall snow wall
alongside. The lengthy massive white wall was taller than the bus and it
looked almost like a snow-made tunnel. I started to feel claustrophobia
again. I cheered myself up by thinking I was soon in the snow-free
city. I made a wish for a nice trip upon the closest mountain that had
turned completely white. On the platform for the bullet train at the
station, I found many Chinese families and tourists. That suddenly
reminded me about the Lunar New Year during which Chinese people took
vacation and traveled. The hotel I was staying at might be crowded with
Chinese tourists as well. I couldn’t believe why I was so careless that
I’d forgotten about Chinese New Year. Among the gleeful Chinese
tourists, I stood waiting for the train with a long face. Rain and the
Lunar New Year seems more like a bad omen, and now I became unsure as to
whether or not this trip was the right move…
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…
Labels:
cab,
Childhood,
college,
farewell,
father,
grandparents,
homecoming,
house,
Japan,
Kyoto,
land,
mother,
musician,
neighborhood,
parents,
station,
temple,
Tokyo,
Tomorrowland,
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