No Touching Season

August 23rd, 2007 Posted in Daily Living, Rant | No Comments »

I have mentioned before, but in case I haven’t made it quite clear, it is REALLY HOT here. In fact, last week Thursday a city in Gifu set the record for highest temperature ever recorded in Japan. EVER! Since the 1800’s. It is amazing hot. Hot like I have never felt before. I’m sure that you are getting the idea. The record temerature was 40.6 degrees celsius, for those of you that work in fahrenheit, it was 105.6 degrees. I know it sounds like it could be just a regular old hot day, but when you combine those temperatures with 90-95% humidity, the result is incredible. And, when the heat doesn’t break, for weeks at a time, it can be a bit mind blowing.

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If you don’t have something good to say

August 15th, 2007 Posted in Daily Living, Rant | 2 Comments »

don’t say anything at all.

I know this familiar mantra, and I was about to follow it, but then I reminded myself that this is my blog, after all, and I can write about whatever I want, whenever I want. And besides, the bad days and the unhappy tales are just as relevant as the comical and happy stories we’ve been able to spin thus far.

Today I was having one of those down-in-the-dumps, culture-shock, I-hate-Japan-with-a-passion, sort of days. Not to worry, these days come fairly infrequently, and the feelings tend to pass quite quickly. Most of the time it is a teary moment or two, and then I quickly move on. But today, today was different.

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Hummer – Japanese Style

August 12th, 2007 Posted in Just for Fun, Rant | No Comments »

Hummer Bicycle

Finally, a Hummer I can get behind.

It Is HOT!!

August 4th, 2007 Posted in Rant | 1 Comment »

Heat Rash

Before I came here I was told, on many occasions, that it was hot. Really hot in Japan. I consulted numerous weather forecasts to try and figure this out for myself. When I looked at the forecast for Tokyo and Japan, I never really saw the temperatures climb above about 80 degrees farenheit. So, in my head, I never really believed that it was that hot. I mean, I’ve seen 80 degrees and, yes, it’s hot but it is definitely tolerable.

Well, now that I’ve been here for just a few days. Let me tell you, It Is HOT! Not just like, hey, it’s hot out. Hot like, I’m soaked, everywhere. I am sweating from places that I didn’t even know could sweat. I spend about five minutes outside of my air conditioned wonderland and every piece of me is wet.

And, as you can see from the picture, not only have I sweat out of every orifice, I have also developed this fantastic case of heat rash. Lovely.

Welcome to Japan!

Further Explanation

July 17th, 2007 Posted in Rant | No Comments »

After receiving some comments to my previous post about SiCKO on the blog and via email, I thought I would do a quick follow-up post.

Josh, no you are not being a pesk, and yes, you make a good point. I agree that the majority of the film was dedicated to exposing how fubar our political situation is, but the other half of the film I think was quite interesting. I think, in our country, it is largely perceived that nationalized health care is an impossibility. For some reason we are made to believe that the countries with nationalized health care are somehow different or special. More than that, we are made to believe that the citizens of those countries are unsatisfied with the level of care they receive, that the facilities are subpar and that the employees (doctors, nurses, and other staff members) are not compensated adequately for what they do.

In the film, the most striking thing that MM did (in my opinion) was to expose these fallacies. Nationalized health care does work in other countries, and the only thing that is different about those places is that they have decided that there is a universal human right to have ones health and well being cared for, and that that privilege shouldn’t be extended solely to the rich, powerful, and educated (as is the case in the U.S.).

MM’s movie made it abundantly clear that a system based on profit, as is the case here, is fundamentally unjust. If healthcare organizations are centered around turning a profit, they can’t possibly CARE for the people that pay them.

I’m not going to deny that nationalized health care seems like an unlikely or impossible solution, after all, it would be quite difficult to implement here. But for this problem to get better we need a rethinking not just of the way we approach healthcare, but more importantly, about the way we think about people. I think our healthcare crisis is simply a symptom, albeit a frightening one, to a larger problem. This problem of inequity, this gap between rich and poor, educated and uneducated, exists not only in healthcare but other areas of our society as well. Until we decide that all our fellow humans deserve the same level of care, dignity and respect, we will still have problems like this to discuss.

First Packed Bag

June 10th, 2007 Posted in Pre-Departure, Rant | 2 Comments »

In a short 12 days we will be leaving Chicago. Wait a second, let that sink in.

Ok, now we can continue. 12 more days means that packing has officially commenced. But more than packing up our stuff to store, as we’ve been doing for the past few weeks, today we packed the first bag of stuff that will be going with us to Japan. And here it is:

The Mighty Green Duffle

Wow. What a lame photo. Look at my duffle bag. It is filled with my crap. Anyways. . .

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