Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Monday, June 20, 2011

conjecture

For the past week, I've been playing with this hypothetical idea of suicide at the center of my existence as the result of having sent myself a message from my past life into this life, not unlike Data did in the "Cause and Effect" episode of Star Trek TNG.

I keep looking at my life and wondering how did I end up here? Looking at the environment from whence I came, there are so many paths my life could've taken. It was one full of privilege and material opportunity. The answer is, of course: I brought myself here. I squandered the privilege and opportunities and ran the whole damn thing into the ground. All by myself! This is actually nothing new, but I'm looking at it from the angle of that final temporal loop in which the Enterprise finds itself after Data sent himself the message. Unlike the previous loops where all the strange occurrences and déjà vus were just a mystery, in the final loop they align in a way that they realize there's a message there.

Did I send myself a message that my subconscious is bearing out? Year-by-year, location-to-location, pursuit-to-pursuit, point A to point B to point C, I've lived my life in a way that would guarantee that I would be in my current position. And where suicide has always been an attracting, if not compelling, force in my life, I would of course create final conditions where suicide is logical and optimal, even while acting in a way that accords with living my life.

It was an experiment from the start, conditions controlled. Realizing the value of human life, I had to be responsible about affecting as few lives as possible. I've been constantly lowering my impact as much as possible, and now even my own memories won't be impacted. I've phased even my identity out. It's not important. It's not the point.

What might I have told myself at that moment of death when the Enterprise started shuddering and Captain Picard called to abandon ship, or in the final moment in the bardo of rebirth if I had learned to navigate it like lucid dreams, before all traces of what I was consciously aware of before in my past life dissolved because a sperm hit an egg and anything that could be said was me is created anew in the fresh and clean architecture of a new brain and body with just a splash of past karma vomited all over it? And perhaps a message.

A message that gave its first nudge in this life in an attraction to Japan of all places from a very young age. There may be other reasons for it. Such as when I was a kid, NHK would have a weekly broadcast on Saturday nights of Japanese programming out of New York. UHF Channel 47 if I remember correctly – oh, and not New York, but Linden, New Jersey, I remember it said so in station IDs between programs – and my parents never missed a Saturday night since they couldn't understand American broadcasting and there was no Chinese language broadcasts either back then, I shouldn't wonder.

Me and my brothers' interest was in the weekly episodes of anime; three series that I recall watching were Raideen, Ikkyu-san (a monk!), and the original Space Battleship Yamato, as well as the live-action, original Go Ranger!

The reason for the Japanese programming was the same reason for the success of my father's office (a private medical clinic) at the time: Japanese companies were doing well and sending corporate slaves over to New York and settling them and their families in New Jersey, and with so few Japanese speaking physicians, they flocked to my father's office. That also created a sphere of Japanese names in my childhood as me and my brothers were recruited to comb through the white pages and collect addresses with Japanese names to whom my parents would send advertising. I remember a lot of folding and licking stamps and sealing envelopes (forced child labor, lol!).

I'm not sure of the time frames involved. Obviously the airing of the anime can be pegged to the mid-to-late 70s, no surprise there. But another element was my grandparents' visits. I'm not sure what years they took place, or even if there were multiple visits, but in my memory, my mother's parents visited from Taiwan every summer. I would create lists of Japanese vocabulary, plying my grandmother for basic words in Japanese. Although I'm not sure how that worked since my grandparents sure didn't know English. I'm sure I was a resourceful little monkey.

The point being I was interested in Japanese, and had absolutely no interest in whatever language my parents were speaking to each other, which I wouldn't know until decades later wasn't even Chinese (Mandarin), but Taiwanese.

And the point of all this is that not many years later, there was something very comforting and familiar when I learned that in Japanese history, suicide was not only not condemned, but was even expected in certain situations (why the corporate head of the Daiichi Fukushima Nuclear Plant hasn't committed suicide yet is beyond me, and is probably indicative of some part of Japan's spirit dying).

Bah, this wasn't supposed to end up being a stroll down memory lane.

Be it as it may, the concept of suicide was then always there. Always. There was never a point in my life where I thought I never would or could commit suicide. I would even go so far as to say that even during relationships it didn't go away, and I likely had more of a sense that suicide was still more realistic than being with this person for the rest of my life and living happily ever after. Although I'm sure I was expert at blocking it out.

Committing suicide, or not committing suicide alternately, became my signposts in my life, marking directions to not go, or otherwise to generally half-heartedly strive towards. If the vine I was swinging on wasn't the one to let go of, it was always there several vines down. I even made it into my own inside joke to torment me that I never would.

There are any number of bad reasons to commit suicide. I've long discounted any reason as being a bad reason to commit suicide. But if I don't have a reason to do it, why this lifelong impulse? What might I have said to myself? That perhaps in the pursuit of enlightenment, one must first be prepared and willing to give up one's own life, characterized by all our attachments and aversions, voluntarily, no matter what the circumstance? It's counter-intuitive to life. To reach enlightenment in any lifetime, some future lifetime, one must have experienced the willingness to give up one's own life. That idea solidifies as more difficult than it sounds as I type it since accompanying the thought is "selflessly".

In the metaphorical tales of the Buddha's description of his past lives are ridiculous stories of self-sacrifice, such as coming across a dying tiger mother with her cubs, but she's too exhausted to kill him to feed herself, much less her cubs. Guess who comes to the rescue and does it all himself (whispered hint: it's not Jesus).

And even contemplating the extinction of this particular existence, try as I might, alive, I'm just not that selfless.
WordsCharactersReading time

Sunday, March 06, 2005

 

One thing I really loved about Japan was how it's so densely populated and how the train system is so extensive and goes right amidst huge apartment complexes filled with people's lives. It's like no other country I know of. 

You get on a train in Japan, and you go right by apartment buildings, face to face with them, many buildings, all different, close together, far apart, some modest, some huge. Buildings sub-divided into boxes, grids, all of them lives that I know nothing about, but imagine. 

Who comes home to that box? What do they do when they get there? Do they watch TV, do they cook, do they do laundry, do they crack open a beer? Do they have a family, are they happy? What is their job, what is their passion, who are they in love with, who are they fucking, are they lonely? 

Lonely in this Borg-like mesh of lives. The person in this box over here might have so much in common with the person in that box over there, but they'd never know it. So many people, so many lives, I love that country. 

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

Nagasaki JR Station:

I was wondering if the time stamp for this photo was right, but fortunately there's a clock in the shot verifying that it is. It's not necessarily so when moving around internationally or across time zones. I have noticed wrong time stamps that must have been automatically adjusted depending on where my laptop is. No idea how that works.
Kyoto, Japan
Wow, one should always try logging on with a wireless ethernet wherever one goes. On my last morning in my room in a hostel, I got onto a connection, much to my surprise.

I'm leaving Kyoto today, taking the Shinkansen for Nagasaki and do some exploring there just because I've never been there. I'll be there for the same amount of time as Kyoto, and then I'll head back up to Tokyo for the weekend.

I flew into Tokyo last Thursday to visit Madoka, and the next day, I spent the entire day with her at an Immigration Detention Center, aiding a Karen refugee from Burma in getting a provisional release. Freedom. Restricted, provisional freedom, but freedom nonetheless. Being a refugee in an Immigration Detention Center is akin to being in prison.

I won't go into the horrible truth about Burma, or the horrible conditions refugees endure, even once they've made it to another country like Japan, but let's just say this is what I can expect whenever I visit Madoka. I know her work is priority for her over just about anything else, so I just go with the flow and stay out of her way.

She's getting better about work consuming her life, and on Sunday she made time to go with me to Kamakura to visit some temples, but when I left on Monday to come to Kyoto, I'm sure she had to face up to a pile of work.

One full day in Kyoto was hardly enough, but I've been here before in 1992 and 1995, and maybe in 1983 but don't remember. I visited Hiroshima in 1992 with Shiho, so now I figure I'll make a pilgrimage to the only other place on earth that was victim of an intentional nuclear attack.
Ginkakuji, Kyoto, Japan from keauxgeigh.

Ginkakuji, the Silver Pavillion, Kyoto, Japan. I like taking pictures of people getting their tourist pictures taken. I'm weird like that.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Shinkansen - Japan from keauxgeigh.

Shinkansen, probably between Tokyo and Kyoto. The average top speed is about 170 mph. I love traveling by Shinkansen and have several other MPEG clips. You speed along the Japanese landscape and wonder about the history that happened here. Who traveled on this land before, what happened here? How different is life here now from before? What marked the changes? It gives an appreciation for land and its history.

Monday, February 28, 2005

Kamakura Train from keauxgeigh on Vimeo.


On the train returning to Tokyo from Kamakura.

Daibutsu, Kamakura, Japan from keauxgeigh.

Benzaiten Shrine, Kamakura, Japan from keauxgeigh.

Sunday, February 27, 2005

Second of two clips:

Cat chasing camera strap, pt. 2 from keauxgeigh.

Wednesday, November 27, 2002


November 27, 2002; 3:00 P.M. - The sweetness that is Madoka.


November 27, 2002; 2:27 P.M. - Madoka profile.


November 27, 2002; 2:22 P.M. - Out on a walk with Madoka.

Friday, November 22, 2002


November 22, 2002 - 10:26 P.M. - Narita Airport, Tokyo, Japan. Waiting for the train to meet up with Madoka. I'm a little confused about the time stamps, but I think this is right.

Wednesday, November 06, 2002

Urgh!
I'm not going to Japan tomorrow. Might be able to reschedule. My passport expired in May and I didn't notice since I haven't traveled overseas in four years and I've never had my passport expire before. Got too comfortable about it.

Ooh, maybe it's the curse of Josephine. There is no curse of Josephine, I'm making it up as I go along, but coincidentally, we broke up four years ago on November 11! Josephine was wicked jealous of Madoka from the moment she heard about her, without ever having met her. More on that drama later, I'm surfing the web as I write this trying to find what I'm going to do . . .

So this says a lot about me. I'm careless and cavalier. I miss big important details. I'm certainly not practical. And perhaps worst of all, I take big nasty surprises like this in stride and roll with the punches.

No freaking out. Some people like freaking out. If there was someone more entrenched in my life, they might be yelling, "How could you let this happen, you stupid idiot?!", and I would hang my head in shame. Perhaps that's one reason why I don't have anyone entrenched in my life now. Who needs that?

Me, when my eyes bulged looking at my passport expiration date, I may have thought "shit", but any more than that wouldn't have made any sense to me. I just, by nature, can't beat myself up for things I've done. I already put myself through enough for things I have no idea about and no control over.

So expired passport is fact, a material fact, I screwed up and have to deal with this in the present, what do I do now? I can't say no biggie, because this is a biggie, but first thing is e-mail Madoka and let her know, and currently I'm seeing what needs to be done to renew my passport rightways so I can still visit her in the next few weeks anyway.

Tuesday, November 05, 2002

I'm leaving for Japan on Thursday to visit Madoka. I arrive on Friday. I return on Tuesday. That's like 10 hour flights for three full days there, hardly enough time to adjust for jetlag (I love fucking with my biorhythms).

Crap. I need find my passport. I'm not worried, though. I'm good about storing shit like that, so even if I can't say exactly where it is now, I should be able to locate it rightways. I need to print out Madoka's directions from the airport to her train station. She offered to meet me at the airport, but she'd have to leave work early, and I want to make sure I can do this myself. And get over this neurosis about the Japanese language, which I have all but forgotten.

I never got a handle on the language despite my parents speaking it to us in our infant years (they're not even Japanese, wtf?), tutoring growing up, 2 or 3 years of college classes, 4 months in Osaka after college, lots of self-study with cassettes and CD-ROM, and 3 Japanese speaking girlfriends. All to no avail. A clear sign I should just give up.

Why going solo from the Narita Airport to Tokyo fills me with fear, I don't know. I had absolutely . . . little problem going to Geneva solo to give an intervention at the U.N. (a Master's thesis thing) and I can't speak a sentence of French.

So seriously now, wtf, I'm going, I'm thrilled at seeing Madoka this year, I'm gonna find my way around, I'll try to dig up phrases from the cobwebs and use them, and make an ass out of myself as much as possible!!!