In Chris Jerichoās first book he told a story about being considered late for the departure time on a Japanese wrestling tour bus, despite š arriving at the time they told him - because, culturally speaking, on-time is fifteen minutes early. I remember reading that and thinking, āThat should come in handy one of these days.ā Išt took many days but it did.
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On my first tour in Jšapan, I made sure to be fully ready at least fifteen minutes before the time I was told we were going to leave. Every time, like clock work, my Japanese guide - translation babysitter/handler - who was responsible for making sure that I arrived safely and securely to wrestling event venues and bus meetups, would show up fifteen minutź§es earlier than the time he told me he would be there the previous night. Well, almost every time.
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***
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Shirtless On The Streets Of Tokyo
Part II
Enter Sandalman
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āMaybe šI misheard what time he wanted to meet.ā I thought, as I mindlessly scrolled through Facebook to cull my anxiety about my guide to the streets of Tokyo being late for my first long road trip of my first Japanese wrestling tour.
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When he did show up, his face clearly ź§said, āYou didnāt mishear me: Iām running late and not psyched ašbout it.ā I slipped on my flip flops and followed quickly behind as he waved me out the door.
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āI should have worn better shoes.āš I thought as I worked hard to keep pace with my companion.
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āI really should have worn better shoes.ā I added a few moments later, as he was now in full elderly person determined to stay in great shape power-walź¦k mode and my shoes and feet were humping their way to a litter of blister babies.
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It was after 10 pm Tokyo time, which meant the streetsš were damn near silent, well, other than the building echoed clip-clop-zebra-hooves-on-a-basketball-court noise of my flip flops tapping out to the abuse I was putting them through.
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My guide was studying his phone šintently, which I assume was him checking when the last subway train runs from the part of town we were in to the part of town that we needed to make it to.
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Like a grand version of patting your head and rubbing your belly, my guide, without slowing his steps a single kph, was typing š¹into his phone at double digit mphs. Before I could be impressed he looks at me witšh desperation in his eyes and sternly asks, (or maybe politely demands), āDash?ā(Maybe: !)
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I shrugged my shoulders to say, āOkay. F**k it, Iāll dash through the empty, late night streets of residential Tokyo, even though my feet are already cussing me out. At least it should make a funny little stš„ory I can tell later.ā As we run I sneak a glance at his phone and see that Google Translate told him the best way to get me to run was ādashā.
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With my flip flops making a noise that must have had confused-in-the-morning Japanese families dreaming about giant robots fighting or f***ing, ferociously depending on their age respective age demographics, we made it the mile or so tš²o the train station on time š¤”where Google told by my sighing-with-relief Japanese friend to tell me, āRelax.ā, Ā
I reply witšh a shrug meant to convey, āI am relaxed. Nothing like a brisk jog in the late spring night to make me feel at home.ā
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Meanwhišle, my feet wešre saying, āF*** both you f***inā f**ks.ā
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I glanced down at my gašshed up feet and torn flip flops, āYeah, definitely should have worn better shoes. Yeah, definitely going to make a funny little story.ā
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***
Despite the fact that he had the unenviable job of dragging around an English speaking wrestler with a babyās-first-words grasp of Japanese, who has a head tattoo that makes most people in public consciously avert ź¦”their gaze, my guide spoke about as much English as I do Japanese. So, most of our non-Google-assisted conversations went like this:
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āWe go?ā He asks in heavily accented English.
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āHai!ā Ā I answer in heavily accented Japanese.
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Mostly we communicated in body language. Someone stands up on the subway train, creating an open seat: he presents it to me with an low, upside down wave. I decline with a dismissive nod, right side up wave and a point to express, āNah, itās all yours, bro. I appreciate the offer but Iāll just feel anxious and insecure when older people get on the train and are standing and I want to offer them my seat, but donāt know if I will be able to communicate with them politely or how theyāll take it. So, Iād rather stand and haveš ŗ peace of mind than sit and have comfort of body.ā I donāt know if he got all that, but he gladly takes the empty seat every time.
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Other times I point and say proper nouns with a š„vocal emphasis that Iām making a request:
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āLawson?ā I ask after a long night at wrestling venue, meaning āIām really f***ing hungry and could go for a grocery bag full of red bean, barley, and seaweed onigiri (rice āballsā that are actually in a triangular shape) and inarizushi (fried sweet tofu wrapped in vinegared rice) from the open-late convenience store that has iteź¦ms šlabeled in English!ā
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āOkay!ā He answers and waits patiently while āI load my hands full of post-match guilt-free carb-y goodness and sift through not quickly recognized coins and bills of money to try to match the electronically displayed set of the Western version of Hindu-Arabic numeral symbols that I learned pre-Kindergarten and am thankful are the common across much of the World; I ignore the alien speak coming from the face of the helpful strangers and stare at the might-as-well-be-magic window that turns 1ās and 0ās into 0ās through 9ās..
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Sometimes I wait to get back to my room while my sodium rich treats taunt meš° like a hauntiš„ng heartbeat in an another alliterative authorās art. Other times, I devour the Earth-grown goodies just moments after I have traded colorful-receipts-for-efforted-time (translation: money); before I even make the hey-someoneās-coming alert go ding-dooong. During the latter times, I have a memory arise. A memory from a cross-country trip I took with my wifeā¦
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***
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Maybe we were in Wyoming, maybe Oregon, or even Tennessee...that part I simply canāt remember, but hereās what I do rešmember: while waiting for my wife to take her obligatory, before-we-get-back-on-the-road, rest room visit,, at a Superchain Market, where I had just purchased some in-season strawberries, rinsed them in the fountain, and taken a bite of the sweet, vitamin C, rich, unguilty treat, a man I wasnāt aware existed the moment before created a moment that keeps lagging in my memory banks. He looks at me, enjoying the juicy, red berry goodness, smiles greatly, yet somewhat diabolically, and says words that continue to try to rob the juice out of my life; he says, āJust couldnāt wait till you got outside could ya?ā
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I paused with my hand in my easily recycled number 2 plastic container containing dopamine releasing Earth-gifts, like a child with their snot wiping hands caught rummaging through a cereal box trying to find a prize that makes 25 cent machine ātoysā look like handcrafted works of lifelong passion. I was caught so by surprise that I couldnāt formulate a proper response like, āWaitā¦ What the f*** is the bizarre programing in your circuitry babbling about, buddy? Is there special places that I am and am not supposed to crush things with my face and turn them into people; if so, I blow my own d*** in the general direction of your arbitrary borders between acceptable places to cš ram literal future-sh** down my happšy to have it gullit.ā
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Maybe if I had said that, or something similź¦ar, rather than just raising my eyebrows and nodding my head in a way that probably properly conveyed the subconscious thought of, āYouāre not doing anything so bad to me that I can justify this sensed-need to defend myself, but I still want to be unkind to you in ways that will make people go, āFor f***sakes that was a bit of an insane overreaction wasnāt it?āā, I wouldnāt have that voice like a stalking shadow figure in my only-for-me-World trying to ruin all my store-bought base-instinct gratification by saying, āJust couldnāt wait till you got outside could ya.ā
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Well, Mr. Just Couldnāt,, I donāt know if youāre still alive, out there somewhere in the Othersphere,, trying to psych out other snackers, but it seems that as long as my Innāersphere is creating new episodes,a piece of you may just live on even if you donāt.
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***
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āI wonder how many neurotic footprints Iāve left in mud of otherās upstairs ant farms.ā Myš¤” innervoice wonders, as I look at my Japanese handler and offer one of my many gain-friendly-grains morsels of mmmmm with body language as we leave a Lawson, on any given Tokyo-night.
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āNo.ā He says in English with a face full ā of āBut thank you, though.ā
FAQ:
Language Barrier
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(Thatās rigš¬ht, Iām doing a motherf***ing crossover, possibly building a complex non-fiction Universe or some such ambitious artsy sh**. Suck it, Marvel.)
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Is It Hard To Be In A Place Where You Donāt Understand or Speak The Local Language?
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Superficial, quick answer: Nah, I know enough tš °o be polite, usually tšhat - and knowing how to read body language - is all you need.
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Deeper answer: Sometimes it can be frustrating, but, a lot of the time, itās my favorite part about traveling to foreign landsą¦: not feeling the need to fill the beautiful silence and shared human experience withā words.
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Wait, for a guy who seems to have nerd-level love for words to the point you wax poetic over the simple, slamming drums of wrestlebeatsā¦ Wait! See! You did it, again, even as you were calling yourself out for it, you f***er! Isnāt communication beautiful?
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Well, yeah, Othervoice Inside Me That Sounds Like Someone Outside Me, communication is very beautiful and I do love words, but tį¦heir both really f***ing difficult to master without the benefit of a backspace button.
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So, what youāre saying is, āI like to go places where Iām not expected to speak because Iām a pu**y about speaking.ā
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Um, no.,Well, yeah, kinda.
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Donāt be a d**k. This is the in-depth part of the Socratic Dialogue, explain yourself.
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Well, I recently read a book that I love, with a line that I loź¦ŗve: āIntroverts like people-watching. Extroverts like people watching.ā (Everyoneās a Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too: A Book by Jonny Sunź¦).
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I happen to enjoy both people-watching and people watchingā¦ Like a lot of peoplš«e who are drawn to the performing arts, and in the words of Robin Williams, āIām a cāase specific extrovert.ā
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Okay, we get it youāre a quiet weirdo who also still looks for approval from without by performing look-at-me tricks for all the mommies out there, what does that have to do with your attack on spoken human-interaction and heralding of the virtues of boring-ass silence?
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Well, as a quiet weirdo, Iāve had a little time to think about thšat. Why do I prefer short-worded or silent šinteraction?
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Yeah, thatās what Iām asking.
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Because saying the wrong thing has strź¦ŗong consequences.
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I remember when I was in Middle School and an older kid told me, āHey, I like youšr shoes!ā And that made me feeš³l pretty damn good for a moment.
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Youāre arguing against yourself...Iām mean even more so than this.
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Then, he asked me where I got them. šI quickly answered, without the slightest reservation, āWalmart.ā
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He quickly answered my answer, without the slightest reservation, āHahahahahahaha! You shoš³p for clothes at...Walmart?!ā Ā
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That felt pretty damn bad for a lot longer than a momentš±. The following Christmas,I begged my parents for Nikeās and saved up my money to buy my baby brother some Filaās: you know, to set him on the right path - awš¶ay from embarrassment - early.
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It took me many years to let go ofąµ© obsessively having to have name brand shoes and judging those that didnāt.
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So, ass**les, say mean sh**, does that mean the rest of us should shut the f**k up and lead by example?
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The problem is that he wasnāt an ass**le, well, I mean he kinda was, but he was my friend and responded so fast that thereās no possible way that he had time to consciouāsly decide to say something that he knew would make me as insecure as flip flops on a ādashā through the streets of Tokyo. He was just having a conversation that he probably forgot. A lot of the time, it seems that many peopleās most-silly-to-everyone-but-serious-to-them psycho-emotional hang-ups that keep them from squishing the juice out of life comes from other people just having a conversation.that they probably forgot.
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I have to walk around with the sh** that I knew was f***ed when I said it lurking around in the remember-when-you-weāre-a-d**k-donāt-be-a-d**k-anymore neighborhood of my memory, add in the sh** that Iāve said and never thought twice about that may be echoing in other peopleās caves-of-insecurity, and itās really nice to spend a vacation where I just know how to smile and say,things like āThanks, so much.ā and āNice to meet you.ā and not be expected to say more. When you only have nice words you canāt helpź¦¬ but say something nice or nothing at all.
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Iāve had my heart broken over words, broken hearts over words, Iāve spent a lifetime watching people hurt each other with arguments, fist-fights, and wars over words...when, from an outside perspective, theyāre in total agreement over the meaning that lies behind the words. Iāve also had my broken heart mended with carefullšy chosen words, mended broken hearts with carefully chosen words, and been able to defuse conflict with carefully chosen words.
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So, yeah, I love words and love sharing my carefully chosen words with people and thatās precisely why itās nice for me to take a break from my spoken vocabulary every once in a while and watch how it enriches my interactions with people by meeting them at a place thatās more natural substantial than words and watching words that I would normally say without thinking come into my mind but get put away in the donāt-know-how-to-say-that-here-drawer andź§ informs me on how to choose my words more carefully when I do so that I use the right words at my disposal to communicate wisely.
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Word.
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Word.
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But doesnāt having very few face to facše conversatš³ions for a month make you a little crazy.
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Of courseź¦: thatās why I make videos where I'm shirtless on the streets of Tokyo, as weāll talk about next time on Shirtless On The Streets Of Tokyo.