As I recall it, a ticket vending machine first appeared in the early 80's at the nearest train station from my home in Japan where I grew up. There had been two ticket windows one of which was replaced with the machine. It was an exciting new gizmo especially for children that spewed out a train ticket by just pushing a button corresponded to the destination. The ticket gate was still operated by a clerk. The ticket examiner stood in an open booth with special clippers in his hand. Passengers would show the commuter pass to him, or have the ticket clipped by his clippers to get a hole or a nick on it. The examiner handled clippers skillfully, clipped tickets one after another so fast and rhythmically. When passengers broke off, he would turn clippers many times in his hand artfully as if he had been a juggler. Later on, the ticket booth was also replaced by the automatic ticket gate.
In those days, more and more vending machines had emerged here and there in Japan. They started with coffee and soft drinks, then cigarettes and beer. Soon pornographic magazines and condoms, hamburgers and noodle soup were all purchasable from the machine.
Nowadays, ordering at restaurants has been by a touch screen on the table, and check-out counters at the supermarket have been self-service registers. Either at a restaurant or a supermarket, I pay an incorrect total once in two or three visits when human servers and cashiers take care the payment and make a mistake. I know the odds because I look into the receipt very carefully right after the payment each and every time. Almost in every case I don't gain but overpay, which is a mystery, so that I claim at once. I understand I myself induce their mistakes by using every possible coupon and discount promotion in one payment that makes my total so complicated. When a machine handles service in place of a human, it's fast, convenient, clean and no mistakes. But on the other hand, no small talk or smiles are a little tasteless. Even so, machines may fit better for me since I often get annoyed with people too easily.
The day that machines take up most jobs of humans' might arrive sooner than expected. If it happened, the government would pay the people a basic income by taxing companies. Is it possible that people don't have to work? For the first time after the ancient times, humans would get liberated from money at long last. Everybody could live by doing what they want. I'm eagerly looking forward to seeing that day come. I'm strongly hoping. And I believe in a miracle as such.
Sunday, December 12, 2021
Liberation from Money hr649
The Turning Point hr648
I was nervously looking at a passing view of houses and factories from the window of the express train that ran between Kyoto and Osaka in Japan. On that day, I headed for Osaka to meet for the first time the person who had posted a recruitment ad for the band in a music magazine. I was tense not only because I wasn’t good at meeting people, but also because my demo tape to be exchanged at the meeting had sounded terrible. When I recorded it, I couldn’t manage to make it as I hoped it to be. In the end, I was so frustrated that I aborted recording in the middle of one of my songs. And I was carrying that tape as the finished product for the first meeting. I was easily able to imagine the dumbfounded expression of the person who would have listened to this tape.
It had been three months since I started college life that had turned out to be a waste of time and I began to look for a band. Although I had determined to pursue music as my lifelong career, my band searching hadn’t been going well. I had felt I was at a deadlock. If I had failed to form a band again with this meeting, futile days would have gone on. I couldn’t stand it any longer. The train arrived at Osaka and I came to the meeting place 10 minutes late.
The young man was standing where the railway track ended as Osaka was the terminus. When I passed him by on purpose, he called me to stop though he didn’t know my face. We greeted and entered the cafe. He introduced himself along with his music career so far. Although he was younger than I was and still a high school student, he had a wealth of experience in music under his belt. He had formed several bands with which he had won quite a few competitions and awards. I wondered why he hadn’t mentioned them in his recruitment ad on the magazine. He of course had written much more songs than I had. Compared to his experience, a few gigs and my own songs were nothing. Inevitably however, he asked about me and my turn to talk about myself came.
After I heard about his glorious career, I didn’t feel like telling him mine. I just gave him snippets of information such as I started to play the piano when I was four years old since I had applied to his ad as a keyboardist/singer. And instead of my experience, I ranted and raved about my passion. I didn’t have anything else for self-promotion but showing how committed I was to make a career as a musician. I did so also because I had my poor demo tape waiting to appear. As I remembered the last line of his ad was ‘A band member with passion wanted’, I thought my passion was the best defense as well as selling point. I even told him how hurriedly I had pedaled my bicycle when I went to get a double postcard to contact him prior to this meeting. After he listened to me half amusedly, he told me that his band would start with me as the keyboardist.
As it turned out, we exchanged demo tapes not to listen there but just to make sure later. All he needed to find out at the meeting was passion for music. Through his rich experience in forming a band, he had been sick of Japanese musicians’ common attitudes that they wanted to be professional only if they were lucky. They would play in a band until they got a steady job at the office and quit. No matter how skillful they were, they would decisively lack intention to become a professional musician whatever it took. I happened to have that kind of intention more than anybody and got to show him. I joined a band and the meeting was over. When we were about to leave the cafe, I said to him “Don’t bother about my coffee,” because it was still a common practice back then in Japan that a man should pay for a woman. He answered, “I wouldn’t do such a thing.” He was a rare progressive person for a Japanese of those days. Along with the cool cafe in the big city and the new band, I felt like I opened the door to the future at the meeting.
I was relieved to have found the band and have broken a deadlock finally when I headed home. I took the train back to Kyoto again, which was running toward the future this time. In the train, I listened to his demo tape on my Walkman. On the tape were three songs he wrote and sang with his own guitar playing. I was astounded. His songs, singing, playing were all excellent. Even the recording quality sounded as if it were of a professional musician. I couldn’t believe what I had just found. I was convinced I had hit the jackpot. With this talent, the band would become professional and be a big hit in no time. Success was assured. For the first time in my life, I felt hope enormous enough to tremble. All at once, everything I saw looked different. The same somber houses and factories that I had seen out of the train window the way there were beautiful now. The regular train was gorgeous and all the passengers seemed happy. Among those happy passengers, a shaft of sunlight beamed only on me and shone me. I saw my wretched life with too many failures ending at last. A successful life that I should have was about to start instead.
I listened to the tape repeatedly on my way home feeling literally over the moon. The thing I couldn’t see was that this was the entrance to my adult life filled with sufferings and miseries that I would have endured as a musician to this day.
Friday, October 15, 2021
No Other Choice hr647
I chose music as my lifelong carrier when I was a college student. The
first thing I got down to was to form a band. After I realized I
couldn’t find band members at nearby universities because students
played music just for fun, I expanded my search to the general public.
Until then, the whole world I had been familiar with was the small
hamlet where I was born and grew up and the schools I went to. I was
about to tread on to the unknown, new world.
It was early 80’s when
neither the Internet nor SNS had existed yet. The common way to find
band members back then was recruitment columns on dozens of pages in a
monthly music magazine. When you found someone appealing to you, you
would contact him or her by a double postcard to receive a reply. I
narrowed down to two postings for a candidate band. As I couldn’t figure
out which one was better, I asked my mother out of curiosity. She
glanced at each posting and without much attention picked one which
address indicated a good residential district. Neither she nor I ever
imagined that casual pick would have changed the course of life of mine,
my parents’ and of the one who posted the recruitment message. From
that point, inexplicable passion moved me in fast forward mode. I jumped
on my bike, rushed to the post office to get a double postcard on which
I scribbled enthusiastic self promotion on the spot, and mailed it.
A
few days later I received the reply card with the phone number on it.
We talked over the phone and set up the meeting in Osaka where he lived.
Osaka is the big city located next to Kyoto where I lived. It took me
about a 15-minute bike ride to the train station plus s 45-minute ride
on the express train, which was quite a travel for me who was a farmer’s
daughter in the small village of Kyoto. Adding to that going to the big
city alone was so nervous in itself, the one whom I was going to meet
was a boy. I had hardly talked to boys of my generation since I went to
girls’ school from junior high to college. That all felt like a start of
my adult life.
Before I set out for Osaka though, there was a
problem. I needed to make s demo tape of my songs for the meeting where
we were to exchange demos. When he talked over the phone about the
exchange of demo tapes, I said “Exchanging demos? Sure, it’s a matter of
course!,” which I found myself in a cold sweat to be honest. I had only
one song on a tape that I had made for an audition. All other songs of
mine were on paper as it was before the era of hard disc recording by a
computer. The gadgets for a demo I had were a radio cassette tape
recorder, the piano and the guitar. I didn’t have a microphone or a
mixer, which meant I had to record by singing to my own accompaniment in
front of the tape recorder. Although I had done that before and even
done a few gigs too, the demo I finished this time sounded so lame that I
thought he would turn me down as his band member at the meeting.
To
me, my demo tape sounded as if it made me a laughingstock since I had
confidently declared myself to become a professional musician over the
phone. He would either laugh at me or get angry for wasting his time
when he listened to it. Rather, I may have had excessive self-esteem to
think about becoming a musician with those poor songs in the first
place. It seemed more and more like the recurrence of my mistake in
which I failed the entrance examination of most universities after I had
declared to everyone around me that I would go to the most prestigious
university in Japan.
I felt hesitant to go to Osaka for the meeting.
On the other hand, my sudden loss of confidence showed how much I
committed this time. At that point of my life, joining a band was so
important. An audition or a gig as a high school student was nothing
compared to that. I didn’t have my purpose for living anywhere else. It
was the only way left for me to go on. I had no other choice but to be
heading for the meeting with my demo tape held in my hand.
Friday, September 17, 2021
Shiny Worn-out Shoes hr646
Heaps of old jackets, skirts, shirts and dresses that I no longer wear
are sitting in the back of my wardrobe. All of them are bargains and
out-of-date. Even though it’s said fashion recurs in a cycle, they are
too old and worn to be put on again. And yet, I can’t throw them away.
In
addition to a memory that each one of them holds, I feel guilty to
throw away what is still somehow usable by keeping its original form.
That sort of my own rule applies not only to clothes but to everything,
from food to a cardboard box. I just can’t waste anything. Recently, I
have often seen a notice on the table in a restaurant, which says ‘Clear
your plate for the earth.’ or ‘Remember again the old don’t-waste-food
spirit.’ As a person who is too cheap to leave food on a plate, I always
wonder since when Japanese people stopped clearing their plates and
forgot the don’t-waste spirit. I’ve practiced it all my life as a habit.
A bus person might mistake my finished plates and cups for clean ones
because not a bit or a drop remains there when I leave the table.
I
attribute it to my grandfather’s DNA. I lived with my grandparents when I
was a child and I used to go out with my grandfather. His black leather
shoes were totally worn-out. They were not as bad as Chaplin’s but a
tip of the shoe had a hole. No matter how often my grandmother asked if
he should get a new pair, he was adamant that he could still walk in his
shoes. For him, it didn’t matter how he looked in them but whether they
were usable or not. Since he kept putting on those shoes with a hole,
my grandmother had no choice but to polish them for him. As a result, a
weird item as shiny worn-out shoes came into existence. My grandfather
would take me to a department store in the city in those shoes and
strolled around grandly. Even as a small child, I was embarrassed by his
shoes and hated to go out with him.
It wasn’t about money. He had
enough money to buy new shoes. On the contrary, he was a rich man who
had quite a few properties. That meant his shiny worn-out shoes weren’t
necessity. Whether wearing them was his hobby or his principle is still a
mystery.
It’s more than a decade since my grandfather passed away. I
wonder how the world would be like if people around the world put on
worn-out shoes as a common practice. Goods wouldn’t be consumed so much,
the number of factories would be less, and more forests would remain.
There would be less CO2 emissions, climate change would be delayed, and
wildfire and a new virus would be sporadic. All it takes is us wearing
worn-out shoes. The problems are solved.
Regrettably, I don’t have
the courage to do so. I’m too self-conscious about how I look to others.
I don’t want to be looked down on by my looks. Even if my actions led
to the destruction of the world, I would like to stroll about a tinseled
city and show off by dieting and dressing myself in fashionable
clothing. Am I a senseless person? I wonder how my grandfather feels
looking at me from above.
Monday, August 23, 2021
Closure and Rebirth hr645
When I did online shopping the other day, I found out that my credit card had been cancelled.
It
was what I feared most in this world and had dreaded for my entire
adult life. Now, it has happened. The credit card was to use money that
my grandfather had left for me, which was the biggest resource of my
income. It was stopped by my parents.
Being entitled to inherit the
family’s money was the root cause why my mother had hated me since I was
born. My parents continued to harass and attack me after I left home in
order to make me give up the money. And they have finally succeeded to
do what they had wanted for such a long time. Closing the account.
On
that night, I couldn’t sleep until morning because of flaring anger. I
thought of leaving a note to my partner, jumping on the bullet train to
move 450 miles to my parents’ apartment, bursting into there with a
knife, stubbing and killing them, and then turning myself in to go to
the prison. That would settle my anger and I would no longer have to
worry about money for the rest of my life.
I had repressed that urge
so hard all night long and managed to make it to the breakfast table. My
partner suggested that I should call my parents to clear the situation.
I didn’t like the idea. There was no point of talking to them since I
had known their intention so well. Besides, if I had called them, my
anger would have erupted and I would have spewed out cursed words along
with fierce threats. And as my sister has been doing, I would have kept
yelling, “Go to hell! Die right now!”
I called them after all not to
curse them though, but to squeeze some money from them anyhow. I had
turned into a devil all the same. I was holding my phone with a hand
that was trembling with anger. My mother answered.
She sounded weak
and old as if a snake’s slough or a mere shadow had been talking. The
minute I heard that voice, my about-to-explode anger subsided for some
reason. Then oddly, I felt pity for her and even fond of her. I also
exchanged greetings and made small talk with my father. We didn’t bring
up even a single word about money. Instead, we talked rather friendly
and considerately as if a source of hatred ran out. And I hung up by
saying “Good-bye,” that was really meant this time.
We had had
hostile relations with each other and quarreled for decades. The only
connection between us had been my grandfather’s money. Now that it was
cut, our ties disappeared likewise. Only what my parents had done to me
remained. After all those years, they never loved me to the end. I had
longed to be loved by them, which was never realized. Our relationship
had been long ruined and now our problems that were the only things we
had shared were gone too. Everything was over and we have become
strangers.
I felt lonely because I would never see them again. On the
other hand, I was released from unquenchable anger that had dwelt in me
for an eternity. Then I couldn’t sleep that night again from anxiety
about how to pay living expenses from now on.
Next day my partner and
I went to Coco’s for which we had mobile coupons. The coupons had been
received for free desserts on our birthdays that were long passed. As
they had remained unused, we ordered a free dessert for each of us
there.
A big plate was placed before each of us, on which were a
small piece of chocolate cake, small macaroons and ice cream. It was a
small portion for the huge plate so that the most part of the plate was
empty as if the blank space had been a main purpose of it. On the blank
space, there was a message written by big letters of stenciled chocolate
powder, which said, ‘HAPPY BIRTHDAY’. The server said in a loud voice
that could be heard throughout the restaurant, “Congratulations! Happy
Birthday!” and left our table. My partner and I stared fixedly at the
letters on the big plate and then at each other.
I had surely thought
my life was finished, but I could be reborn into a new life in a way.
That thought gave me a little relief. And a sense of freedom as well.
Saturday, July 17, 2021
The Insufficient Child
I was a nine-year-old child living in Kyoto when I was hospitalized for nephritis. In my room for six
patients of the children’s ward, a girl named Ayumi also suffered from
nephritis and was next to my bed. She was so little, probably three or
four years old, that her mother was allowed to stay in the ward on the
makeshift couch beside her bed.
Ayumi’s mother studiously read thick
medical books everyday to study kidney disease for Ayumi’s recovery
while looking after Ayumi. She would ask millions of questions to an
intern nurse and learned from her by taking detailed notes. For Ayumi’s
medication, she went to get wafer papers and would divide a dose of
powdered medicine into a couple of small wrapped doses three times a day
so that Ayumi took it easily.
Next to her bed, I was struggling to
swallow powdered medicine though I was nine, and often coughed up and
blew powder all over my bed. My mother was hardly around. She visited me
barely a few minutes before the visiting time was over and left
immediately. She blamed her dash visit for her busy work as a farmer,
but I doubted she cared. Looking at what Ayumi’s mother was doing for
her, I was stunned by the difference between her mother and mine. Mine
had never been attentive like hers even when I was a small child as far
as I remembered.
The worst part of my hospitalized days was
loneliness and hospital meals. As a nephritis patient, I was banned from
taking in salt. My meals are salt-free and with minimum seasoning. I
felt like eating sponge three times a day. The volume wasn’t enough
either for me who was chubby. Because I persistently complained about
the meals to my mother during the short visit, she brought me potato
chips. Since potato chips were deemed as the biggest taboo for
nephritis, she told me to hide under the bed and move the contents from
its flashy package into a plastic bag. She continued to bring other
salty snacks and I made a bag of my best mix under my bed. I was
strolling about the hallway, carrying the plastic bag of snacks in one
hand, munching in my mouth. In case I passed someone, I stopped munching
and hid the bag behind my back. But one afternoon, Ayumi’s mother
caught me. She asked me to show her the plastic bag. As I did, she said
somewhat sadly, “It contains everything you can’t have.” I ignored her
caution and kept snacking on what my mother brought. My mother enticed
me to hide under my bed and let me eat a can of corned beef with a big
topping of mayonnaise there. As a result, I stayed chubby in the
hospital despite the controlled healthy meals.
One day, a younger
girl who had been annoying all the time next to my bed on the opposite
side of Ayumi enraged me. I was bashing her with a coloring book while
yelling the biggest taboo word in the hospital this time, “Die! Die!
Die!”, with full force. Impatient at my unprincipled behavior, Ayumi’s
mother raised her voice toward me, “That’s enough, Hidemi! Clean up your
act, already!” I thought she was a carping critic because I hadn’t
realized evilness of my mother yet back then and had been such a nasty
child who had totally accepted my mother’s bad influence.
Ayumi’s
father came to visit her on his day off. I was taking powdered medicine
on my bed that I had gotten used to swallowing without problems by then.
He said to me smiling, “You have gotten the knack of it and no longer
choked. Good for you!” I wondered how he had known that as I had rarely
seen him here.
A family of caring. Not that I was familiar with.
Sunday, June 20, 2021
Nothing But Leaves My Carrot Gives hr643
When I was nine years old, I suffered from a kidney disease called
nephritis. I skipped school and stayed in bed at home for a week as I
felt sick and had a fever every day. It had gotten so worse that I
vomited blood one night and passed out. My mother found it next morning
and called in a neighbor who worked as a nurse. She urged my mother to
take me to the local clinic which doctor in turn urged her to get me
examined at the hospital. As a result, I was hospitalized for nephritis.
As
it was when I lived in a small village of Kyoto, Japan, no one in my
family knew what nephritis was. My mother rummaged out a supplement of a
homemaking magazine that featured medical issues. It had charts of
disease that showed a result according to symptoms by following the
arrows to correspond applicable symptoms. I chose the arrows of my
symptoms and ended up the result of ‘death’. No matter how many times
and how many different patterns I tried, the bottom of the chart
concluded with a word ‘death’. “Does it mean I’ll die of this disease in
any case?” My mother and I asked the same question to each other and
closed the booklet.
My hospitalized days in a shared room of six
patients at the children’s ward began. As a nephritis patient, I didn’t
have freedom of flushing the toilet. Urine had to be kept in a glass jar
each time to be examined. Its amount and color told a condition of a
patient. Other patients’ jars were put on the shelves along with mine.
Compared to others’, mine was less and darker. I was afraid if my
condition was so bad. Because I didn’t want to admit it and didn’t want
doctors and nurses to find it either, I tried to cheat. Into a one-time
jar, I urinated twice so that at least my amount seemed normal. It had
escalated gradually and I urinated the whole day into one jar.
Ironically, the abnormally large amount of urine drew an alarming
attention of a nurse who thought my illness had taken an inexplicable
turn for the worse. It worked directly opposite to what I had intended
and I confessed my cheating helter-skelter.
My six-patient room
wasn’t usually lonesome as we were kids and some of their parents were
allowed to stay with them on the couches next to their beds. But some
got permission to go home for the night provisionally, some got well and
left the hospital, some got worse and moved to a single room, all of
which coincided at the same time and the room was almost empty one
night. A girl whose bed was on the opposite side of mine and I were only
patients in the room. After the lights-out time, she asked in the
darkness if I was still awake. As I answered yes, she started telling me
a story that she made. I thought she felt lonely and couldn’t sleep
because the room was too quiet that night with just two of us. Her story
was about two rabbits. They seeded, watered and grew carrots at each
section in the field. The night before the harvest, one of the two
rabbits sneaked in the field and pulled out all the carrots from the
other rabbit’s section. He ate them all and put leaves back on each hole
to cover it. Next morning, two rabbits came up to the field and started
to harvest their carrots on their each section. The other rabbit, who
knew nothing about the night before, was excited to reap his carrots
since he had been looking forward to this day for long. But every time
he pulled out his carrot, there was nothing beyond the leaves. He was
puzzled and sang, “Nothing but leaves my carrot gives!” While his friend
rabbit was pulling out a ripe carrot one after another next to his
section, he pulled out only leaves out of a hole repeatedly and sang
each time, “Nothing but leaves my carrot gives!” I dozed off and woke up
by the girl’s voice of “Hidemi, are you listening?” a few times during
the story. Unfortunately, my patience didn’t last until the end. I had
been completely asleep at that part of the story and didn’t get the
ending. With hindsight, her story may not be her original but something
she read or heard since it ‘s too good for a story that a small child
makes. Either way, I still remember the story for some reason. When my
song didn’t sell at all although I had spent many years to complete it, I
heard “Nothing but leaves my carrot gives!” from somewhere.
One day,
we had a new comer in the six-patient room. Although she was a junior
high school student and wasn’t supposed to be in the children’s ward,
she was sent here because the women’s ward was full. She was unhappy to
be confined with kids and complained to her mother and the nurses. She
looked a grown-up to me and I liked her instantly. I went to her bed to
talk to her and tried to console her. I had been stuck to her bedside
every day since. She often told me not to make her laugh because her
wound from an appendix operation hurt. She laughed at my talks anyway.
When she left the hospital, she gave me a gift. It was a small porcelain
doll who was wearing a white bouffant skirt beneath which was a bell.
On the skirt, there was a printed inscription saying, “I wish for your
happiness.” I had put her on the shelves in my room long after I left
the hospital, until I grew up and left home.
I think those hospital
days have influenced me immensely. I had been constantly aware of death
in those days. I got well after all but I had never felt death so close
to me in my life. As it’s said that people don’t live life unless they
understand death, that experience has driven me to think things based on
the idea that I eventually die, and therefore to do what I want for my
life. Even if my carrot gives nothing but leaves.
Friday, May 14, 2021
The Dream Super Express hr642
I was born and grew up in a small village of Kyoto, Japan. My family
made a living by farming, which contributed to my even more
old-fashioned childhood than usual that was nothing like a current
ordinary life.
Food on the table was almost self-sufficient that came
form our fields or the front yard and the chicken coops of the house.
We had only one tiny refrigerator without a freezer that was more than
enough as beer or watermelons were chilled by pumping well water. The
bathtub was round and made of wood. Its floor was a round iron plate on
which a round wooden board was put in to sit. Beneath the iron plate was
a small furnace that my grandmother put wood, straw or used paper in
the fire to heat water in the bathtub. Our toilet was a wooden bucket
placed in the garage. My grandfather would carry it on a wooden pole to
our fields as manure. Not only the way of living was old-fashioned, but
also the way of thinking was. All the family members obeyed submissively
my grandfather who was a patriarch of my family. Women were deemed to
be inferior to men and treated unfairly. Families were giving and
receiving them through marriage as if they were commodities.
But the
changes of the world can’t be stopped. In the year I was born, a bullet
train started running between two major cities in Japan, Tokyo and
Osaka. It was dubbed ‘a dream super express’ because of a high speed.
The city of Kyoto where I lived was close to Osaka and on the line of
the bullet train. A new special railroad and its platforms were built
above the existing ones. The railway near my home accordingly had the
new overhead railroad above it. When I was an elementary school student,
I crossed the local train railroad and the big, tall, splendid bullet
train railroad by an underpass beneath the tracks on my way to school on
foot every day. In the middle of the passage, when a local train or a
freight train passed above my head, I would cringe at an enormously
thunderous noise. But the bullet train sounded like a whistling wind,
almost soothing.
The number of children had been increasing as the economy was
picking up. The elementary school I went to burst with students and a
new school was built when I was in the fifth grade. I was sent to the
new one that stood right next to the railroad. Out of the windows, the
bullet train was running. From a brand new school building, I had never
get bored to see the bullet train zipping past at incredibly high speed
through the countryside where time went by so slowly. Thanks to the
bullet train, my new school had the air conditioner since the building
had soundproofing windows that can’t be opened because of train noises.
My former four years in the old school with wooden buildings and coal
stoves were felt like ancient.
I loved the bullet train so much. To
me, it seemed alive with a soul like Thomas the Tank Engine as its
headlights looked like eyes and its coupler cover looked like a nose.
Since I had difficulty in getting along with others back then, I felt
more attached and closer to the bullet train than other human beings.
Every time I saw it passing by, I sensed it glanced at me and was
running toward the future, carrying hope and dreams. Years later, I left
home of an old village and moved to Tokyo by bullet train to become a
musician.
Sometimes there is a day when we feel that this world has
come to an impasse and been headed just for destruction. But if we adapt
ourselves to new ways of living or thinking, we may be able to see more
of something bright and exciting. In 2027, Japan is going to have a new
railway on which magnetic levitation bullet trains called Linear Bullet
Trains run at the highest speed of 320 miles per hour. I wonder how
their faces look like. I can’t wait to see them.
Friday, April 16, 2021
Early 80s – The Beginning of My Music Career hr641
I started to think about becoming a singer-songwriter in the beginning
of 1980’s when I still lived in my hometown of Japan where I was born
and grew up. By the end of the first month as a college student, I had
lost interest in a college life since I didn’t care about getting a
degree or being hired by a renowned company after graduation. A college
had turned into an unnecessary place for me because of music. Only I
tried to follow the footsteps of a Japanese band that I had admired
most. Before they became professional, they started their careers by
forming bands at universities and colleges where they were enrolled. I
tried to do the same. As I had easily known, I found nobody in my
college all of which students were women and most of which students
attended as preparations for homemaking and marrying a doctor. I
searched other universities for band members, for which I used my
otherwise wasteful college life.
At that time, PCs or smartphones
were yet to come. Even CDs didn’t exist. To listen to music, you needed
to buy a record, put it on a turn table of a stereo carefully and
gingerly not to scar the record surface, put down a record needle softly
onto the start groove, and wait for music to begin while watching the
record turning fast. The moment music started, the space shifted in a
flash from where you had been. That was the essence I used to feel with a
record. The sound of an analog record is different from the digitalized
CD’s one. I feel the former round and deep that vibrates and seeps into
the heart. Both Western and Japanese rock music I had listened to back
then conveyed something to inspire like a struggle for life or for
freedom. I’ve seen quite a few people whose life was actually changed by
music.
A record has been given way to a CD, and then to download and
streaming. On the making side, recording on a tape by physical
instruments has turned more and more into entering data on a computer by
software. The sound has become mechanical with copying and pasting.
Having an impact is valued more than being dramatic. I hadn’t the
slightest idea this kind of music scene would arrive in the future when I
lived the beginning of 80’s. I simply had believed that music could
change the world and save someone by healing a sore heart just as it did
to me. While the music scene did change, my belief remains unchanged.
I’ve been striving to make music by taking advantage of the digital side
into inspiring songs.
Back in the eighties, I was trying to form a
band to have my songs heard as soon as I started a college. I came
across a bulletin board of a band circle at one university that was
recruiting new members. I went to the meeting where many freshmen
gathered. The circle leaders were matching a new member to an existent
band according to which part the new comer played and which part the
band needed. Because I intended to join a professional-aiming,
high-grade band, I pitched earnestly my skills of writing songs,
singing, playing the keyboard and the guitar, and most especially, my
passion for music. The person who interviewed me said outright that
there was no available band for me to join. While I was preparing to
leave, I noticed that other freshmen got assigned to a band one after
another. They all said they had no skills or had never played an
instrument, except that they all were cute and had a flirty smile.
Again, my passionate, serious attitude backfired there too, as if it
foretold my subsequent music career. I learned that bands at Japanese
universities and colleges in 80’s were for those who just wanted to
enjoy a campus life not for those who sought a music career.
I was
excluded from campus musicians and couldn’t use my college life for
member hunting. As a college has become useless to me more than ever, I
was sent outside the campus to look for a member in the real world.
Friday, March 19, 2021
What Wild Animals Try to Tell Us hr640
When the snow still lay six feet deep, my partner suddenly spotted something and pointed it with a surprise out of the dining room window in our apartment during lunch. In the direction of his pointing, I saw a Japanese serow on the snow-covered ground under a tree in the grove about 30 feet away from the building.
I had never seen a Japanese serow in the residential area. Or should I
rather say, I had never seen it for real altogether. It had a face like
a goat and its body looked rather like a calf than a serow, covered
with light brown and gray fur. I wondered why just looking at a wild
animal was somehow awe-inspiring. I took my binoculars and observed it
closely.
The Japanese serow was standing on its hind legs and holding
on to the trunk with its forelegs. It seemed to eat the tree bark or
something on the trunk. Every time a car pulled into the parking lot
stretched out between the grove and the apartment building, it hid
behind the tree and peeked out the lot. After people were gone, it
resumed eating.
In the beginning of this winter, my partner bumped
into a boar for the first time on the foot of a mountain beside the
street he was walking on. The boar was staring at him at a distance of
60 feet. Its size was about a calf and with black fur and a pig-like
face. He was afraid and turned back. It was the right choice since I had
heard about quite a few incidents that a boar rushed into and injured
people or bit them in Japan this year, which hadn’t happened so often
before. Considering that much more bears than before appeared in my town
last autumn, wild animals have come down to the residential area around
this year far more than they used to.
It’s said that has to do with
climate change. Wild animals aren’t the only ones that have been sent
out of the depths of mountains. Judging from the present situation,
unknown viruses that are new to human beings and stay where they’re
supposed to be may continue to come out as well.
Twilight drew near
and the spots in the parking lot of my apartment building were being
filled up as commuters’ cars came back one after another spewing out
exhaust fumes. The Japanese serow started walking back slowly. It stared
over here for a while one last time as if it was trying to tell
something, and plodded back on the snow, up into the mountain.
Friday, February 19, 2021
Regret and Decision hr639
If I could go back in time by a time machine, I would most certainly
choose one summer day in my senior year of high school and redo that
day.
In the summer of my senior year, I had been in the final stage
of study for the entrance exam to the leading university in Japan. My
love for music was the biggest obstacle for study and I tended to lapse
into listening to rock and pop records on the stereo easily. Since I
spent too much time in music instead of study, I determined to stop
listening music until the entrance exam was over. I pulled the plug of
my stereo off the outlet, paste it on the wall of my room along with a
handmade poster that said ‘Patience!’ in capital letters. I tried to
devote everything for a life at the best university in Japan.
I was
an avid fan of a Japanese band called Tulip. Most albums and tapes I had
were theirs. I frequently went to their concert that would give me a
heavenly time. I had had to stop going there as well in that summer. So
ironically, or almost fatefully I should say, Tulip was having the
1000th concert that coincided that particular summer of that particular
year, of all summers and years in the calendar. It was a milestone big
enough for them and their fans to be held at an amusement park that was
reserved specifically for the event for the whole day. The amusement
park was operated as ‘Tulip Land’ for the day, where paper cups and
plates donned Tulip Land’s special logos and designs that were available
on that day only, commemorative goods were sold, games and events
connected with Tulip were held during the daytime, and the 1000th
special open-air concert was held in the evening. As you can imagine, it
was a dream event in which fans would drool all over. For me, it would
be the day with Woodstock, Comic-Con and Disneyland combined all
together at one place. It would be actually a dream. There was no way to
miss it.
Back then in Japan, it was an era of so-called ‘Entrance
Exam War’. Students with four-hour sleep pass, and with five-hour fail,
that was a general rule for the war. Not individual ability but a name
of the school one was graduated from decided later income and social
rank in Japan. It still does. I think a social structure like that has
brought this long economic decline to today’s Japan. In a whirlpool of
the relentless era, I was an immature, foolish high school senior who
was willingly sucked into the war to get a name of the university. In
the depth of it, I had looked for any possible way to spare time for the
dream event. It would be held in Tokyo that was over 300 miles away
from Kyoto where I lived. It couldn’t be a matter of a couple of hours
but a two-day trip. It would be crazy to waste two days in the middle of
fierce competition like ‘Entrance Exam War’. I reached a heartbroken
decision. I chose to study in my room instead of going to Tulip Land.

I had had gloomy days for a few months until the day of the event
came. My dismal feeling culminated on the day. For the entire day, all I
thought of was what was going on in Tulip Land. I glanced at the clock
every hour and imagined what game was held by now. Is it a trivia quiz
about Tulip? Or a lottery game for Tulip goods? Are fans sipping soda
out of a paper cup that has ‘Tulip Land’ printed on the side? Has the
concert started? By which song is it kicked off? Which song are they
playing now? Are the fireworks showing? Is it done? Is it over now? I
couldn’t focus on anything all day long. I spent the whole day in my
room without studying at all.
At the end of the day, I realized I
could have been there. I just might as well have gone to Tulip Land as
wasted the whole day. I intensely regretted it and literally gnashed my
teeth. I blamed myself for my stupidity. The size of regret appalled me
so that I sincerely hoped never to feel this way.
I hopefully
expected time would heal the regret. On the contrary, it had tortured me
at length for months. The regret hadn’t been eased but deepened. It
continued to ask me what I was doing, and the question had evolved
gradually into why I was studying for the entrance exam, what going to
the best university meant, whether it would bring happiness, and
eventually, it began to ask me what I lived for. As I had grappled with
those questions, I studied less and less. By the time of the entrance
exam, I had lost interest in the university. Instead, I got a grip on
what I really wanted to do.
I failed the exam not only to the leading
university but to all the other famed ones I had chosen as a safety
measure. Only one college of my worst-case scenario accepted me but I
didn’t feel like going there. I decided to do what I want however
society works or whatever people say because I simply didn’t want to
experience that kind of regret again. All what I went through in that
six-month period after one regret of Tulip Land set the course to take. I
chose to live as a singer-songwriter.
Decades have passed, and yet
Tulip’s 1000th concert pops up in my mind every time I think about
regret. Tulip Land had never been held again. Since the band broke up
and the guitarist passed away, it never will. I passed up the once in a
lifetime event for sure. Time neither solved the problem nor eased the
pain. I still agonize over how foolish I was not to go. In me, a word
‘regret’ stands for Tulip Land.
Friday, January 15, 2021
The Beginning of My Life hr638
After I was graduated from a Catholic high school in Kyoto, Japan, I
went overseas for the first time in my life as a family trip around
Europe during spring break right before starting college. The culture
shock I experienced there seemed to alter my brain. It took control of
me and began to inflict cracks everywhere on common practice of the
small hamlet of Kyoto that I was born and grew up in.
One of the
things I realized in Europe was that so many different people lived by
so many different ways of their own. It had been always that way and not
worth mentioning, but that kind of notion blurred in my home town where
everybody knew everybody who lived in the same way. As a firstborn, I
was destined to succeed my family that had lasted over 1000 years, which
meant I should live with my family in the same house, on the same
location, for my entire life until I die. Although that had been fixed
according to the hamlet’s long-standing common practice, what I saw and
felt in Europe told me that shouldn’t be the only way to live.
Another
thing Europe showed me was better understanding of my parents. Through
numerous happenings during the trip, I learned their true self. They
weren’t wise, weren’t respectable and didn’t even love each other. It
became questionable whether I should follow the fixed life that was
demanded by my parents now that I found they didn’t deserve trust.
The first day of college came in only a couple of days after I returned from Europe. It was an orientation day on which we had a physical checkup. I didn’t understand why it was necessary in the first place. For a few-minute-long checkup, all the freshmen had to stand in line waiting for their turns. We waited for three to four hours doing nothing, just standing. I couldn’t leave the line for lunch. A friend from the same high school as I had been in spotted me and went to get a cookie. While I was munching it standing in an everlasting long line, I felt dreadful for my college life that had just started. I had been fed up with my school days that were inefficient, wasteful, full of totalitarian practice. I thought I finally got out of it but it turned out to be started all over again. Everybody did the same ineffective thing at the same time here in college too.
The college had a
compulsory two year’s curriculum claimed ‘general education’ and one of
the subjects was physical education. About 30 students of the same class
gathered at the ground wearing the college gym uniform. We played catch
in pairs in one class, and danced odd moves to music all together in
another. To me, it wasn’t college at all. I was sent back to
kindergarten.
I asked myself what I was doing day after day. The
world was infinitely vast yet life was too short. There was no time for
doing what I was told to like others did. Time had to be spent on what I
wanted to do even though others didn’t do. Three months later, I
stopped attending all the classes other than an English conversation
class. I knew I would neither graduate college nor get a degree as a
result, but I didn’t care. There, I chose what to do by myself, and my
own life has begun.