Saturday, April 26, 2014

The Sakura Festival (Daniel)

Springtime in Japan is marked by the annual Sakura Festival, a celebration of the blossoming of the cherry trees. The Sakura Festival is grounded in centuries of developing historical significance and yet, the only ritual is sitting under the cherry blossom trees and stuffing yourself with food and drink. This is called a hanami party. As with many things in Japan, its simplicity is its brilliance.
            Cherry trees are only in bloom for several weeks of the year. Sarah and I, not wanting to miss the opportunity, decided to have ourselves a hanami.
            On a warm Spring morning we began our preparation. Sarah packed wine, sunscreen, card games, and a blanket to sit on. I packed water and beer. As we left the apartment, I suddenly remembered that one of my Japanese students had told me that sake was a necessity of the Sakura Festival. We made a detour to our local liquor store.
             Our next stop was Osaka Castle where Sarah and I paid 300 yen to enter their cherry blossom park. 

           Through the gates we found a bustling park the size of two football fields. At the center of the park was a large rectangular lawn and the cherry blossom trees were planted in a thick border on all sides.
           This area was clearly quite a popular Sakura spot and many people were beginning to prepare for their hanami parties. Parents unpacked pastries and sweets for their children. Parents unpacked sake for themselves. Children ran played across the field, ignoring the requests of their parents. And here and there was a lone Japanese intern, standing watch under the cherry blossom tree his company had sent him to stake out at six in the morning. Among all these, one oddly familiar eyesore stood out. The blue tarp:
            Blue tarps are an omnipresent reality in my family, both cherished and cursed. They are prized for their many applications. They can be used for rain protection, storage, slip and slides, and car covers. But in my family, a blue tarp's most apparent and common purpose is to cover unsightly things.
            To be fair, the blue tarp is only the most visible symptom of a problematic genetic disorder. This disorder can be defined as an inability to recognize when personal possessions have lost all value, usefulness, or have become otherwise unnecessary clutter. This disorder occurs on my paternal side and most strongly afflicts the Y chromosome. In advanced stages the males of my family lose entire rooms to old crap and have no recourse other than to cover it all with blue tarps.
            Perhaps you are thinking to yourself that this is not a condition, but a voluntary indecision. You may be right, but I want you to imagine it from my family's perspective for a minute:
              
Imagine that you are a fan of electronics. But now I want you to also imagine that you are clinging to the belief that electronics never become obsolete. Imagine the implications of this. You can't just throw out that cassette player or that VCR-to-Camcorder cable. What if every Radioshack, Fry's, and Best Buy in the tri-county region suddenly go under? What if cassette players suddenly become retro-vogue?
That pack of AA batteries that has been sitting in your garage since you remodeled? Sure they were made by an off-label company no longer in business, and sure one of them is almost certainly oozing, but that blue tarp in your TV  room, with its light and heat blocking protection, could give those batteries another ten years.
Sure others may laugh at you now, but you can be satisfied knowing that the greatest minds of modern times are simply laying the groundwork for a future where scientists have perfected the process of restoring expired AA batteries. Someday, when the world's electricity has run dry, your friends and neighbors will cry in anguish during their iPod's final moments of life. But you'll simply smile at the treasures beneath your tarp and shake your head in vindication, tuning them out with  your 1979 Sony Walkman.
Cryogenic Sheet and Interior Decoration in one?
                So given my affliction, you can imagine my surprise when I saw blue tarps simply being used as a barrier between the lawn and the pants of hanami-goers.
                Perhaps instinctively, I made the decision to seat Sarah and I next to the largest blue tarp in the entire park. It was seating an entire company's hanami with forty or so revelers. I assumed they had just come from work as the men were all dressed in suits and the women in conservative blouses and calf-length skirts. While their attire was all business, their attitude was all party.

        Different company men took turns standing up and delivering drunkenly disjointed toasts and cajoling their coworkers into various cheers and chants. At one point one of the men stood up and begin to swipe at a violin. I must emphasize the word "swipe", because "play" would be imply that he had experience, skill, or purpose.
          As Sarah and I got out our wine and sake, we realized that we'd forgotten to bring plastic cups. However, our adjacent company appeared to have an excess of party paraphernalia.
          I used my translating app to find the word for "cup" in Japanese. Kappu.
                Next, I nervously edged towards the company party, unsure of which individual to approach. As I got closer, a woman on the edge of the blue tarp looked up at me. I lost my nerve and kept walking, hoping they'd think I was just passing by. I unknowingly walked right into the set-up for a photo of seven or so salarymen with their arms round each other, smiling.
                The salaryman taking the photograph raised his head from the camera's viewfinder as if to confirm there was a foreigner walking through the frame. All of the subjects swiveled their heads in curiosity to find me. Instead of being mildly irritated or politely waiting for me to finish crossing through their photo, they laughed and smiled warmly.
                I offered to take the photo for them by miming snapping a photo and then gesturing to myself. This was met with nods and more laughter. The photographer handed me the camera and joined with the seven or so other salarymen.
                "Alright," I said, "one....two....thr-"
                "Cheese!" cried out the salarymen. They were very amused by their appropriation of our Western custom.
                I handed the camera to its owner, before I could even say "kappu?", he threw an open palmed hand in the air and used his other hand to point at it.
                A different salaryman called out, "HIGH FIVE!", which was partly instructions to not leave my new friend hanging, and partly an unbridled exclamation of the man's enthusiasm for the idea of high-fiving a Westerner. After high-fiving the owner of the camera, this man was next in line. And a line did form.
     Soon, others were petitioning me for high-fives. Many of the other salarymen from the company party began to take notice of our side show and began to crowd around. Soon there were two dozen salarymen upon me.             

      Then more cameras were out and photos were being snapped rapidly. We posed, we threw our arms around each other, and of course, we high-fived. With every new picture one of the photographers would shout "CHEESE!" and all the salarymen would shout "CHEESE!". Every new photo brought further high-fives and increased our fervor.
          After several minutes of posing as their token foreigner (gaijin as the Japanese call us), I felt I'd earned my kappu. I made a drinking gesture to the crowd around to signal for a cup. Several men simultaneously snapped into action and began giving instructions to other men. Within seconds they had brought me several beers from their cooler. But no cup. I was, of course, polite and graciously accepted their hospitable gift.

                At some point Sarah noticed me drinking beer and high-fiving legions of Japanese salarymen. She decided to document the encounter with her camera. She was quickly noticed by some of the other salarymen and was quickly ushered over to join me. They brought her several beers, as well.
                I felt a bit sheepish, drinking their beer, being a one-dimensional novelty for this company party. Yet they were plenty friendly and the laughs came often and easily.
                One woman did approach me to ask me questions about where I was from and such. But her English was lacking and the conversation couldn't advance past that barrier. No one else spoke much English and I realized that the novelty of our interaction was subsiding. Mingling was futile. There were nods and chuckles and few more high-fives before Sarah and I returned to our blanket to enjoy the rest of our hanami.
                And in the end, we got some party cups and roughly a six-pack in assorted Japanese beers. Later, one of the salarymen even brought some food over to us.
                So we sat there, Sarah drinking her wine and me drinking my Sake and their beer, and both of us eating their food. As the sun hung low we watched the company party slowly stumble to their feet and pack up. Sarah and I watched as a group of ten or so of the salarymen tried to fold a their giant blue tarp. It was large enough that under normal conditions it would have taken at least four men to fold. However, due to the intoxication of the folders and the rest of the company party's increasing interest in their ordeal, there ended up being twenty or so salarymen crowding around, shouting out advice, and occasionally grabbing a piece of tarp, making the situation worse.
                Sarah recorded their trial and, at one point, asked, "how many Japanese salarymen does it take to fold a tarp?". I am still not sure of the answer, but I imagine it is roughly the same as the number of drunken football players it takes to fold a paper crane.
                Slowly, the salarymen began to reacall how to alternate hotdog and hamburger folds. Finally stumbling off for good.
                As night settled, a different crowd made their way into the park: young couples.
Pictured Above:
The combination of beer,
sake, meat, and
excessive sun
                To enhance the romantic atmosphere, the park's staff brought out large lights that alternated through different colors. The white cherry blossoms were transformed into a fluid prism, burning from orange to red in one minute and stained in deep indigo the next.
              Beneath, the young couples shared open-mouthed kisses. This was quite a shock to my expectations. The Japanese consider most public displays of affections to be taboo, even ones as harmless as a platonic peck or a man putting his arms around a woman.
                I was doing my best under the vibrant lights to appear tender and smoldering to Sarah. Unfortunately the long day's combination of borrowed beers, sake, skewers of meat, and excessive sun were beginning to ruminate in my stomach. The chaos of the lighting situation was not helping.
               I made an earnest trot to the park's bathroom, only to find no toilets in the Western variety. Unfortunately, traditional Japanese toilets are really just a porcelain oval dug into the ground. 
                I stared into the Japanese toilet with foreboding, sensing I had a problem. As I began to spew the contents of my day, I realized that my problem was a simple matter of physics: a falling liquid, unless undeterred by any solid barrier, will continue to fan out into a wider and wider spray radius. That is to say, standing and puking into a hole in the ground is like shooting the stream of a firehouse through a keyhole.
It's no Catcher of the Rye
               I thought I was playing the whole bathroom situation cool, but apparently a foreigner with a leg up in the sink, washing the legs of his pants is very unsettling to the Japanese. Midst alarmed looks, I grabbed Sarah and informed her that it was time to leave Osaka Castle park.
                At the edge of the park we happened across a small crowd that was gathering to see a performing Capuchin monkey and its trainer. I stopped to watch. (I've long been interested in having a Capuchin helper monkey. I'm not sure if Capuchin monkeys can be trained to make a Ruben sandwich, but I am confident that given several weeks, I could at least train it to grab a beer and throw a six-pack in the fridge).
                I quickly began to feel bad for the monkey. The poor guy was dressed in humiliating, little monkey clothes and was bound by the leash his trainer held. People clapped and cheered as the monkey did handstands and waved. Then the trainer put out a mini, monkey stool and the monkey took a bow before sitting down. His trainer gave him a cracker and prompted the rest of the crowd to clap.

                Something in my heart went out to that Capuchin monkey. I wondered if he enjoyed his routine or if he was exhausted by endlessly performing his silly little act in his silly little clothes. I wondered if he was able to understood why people crowded around him or if he was just confused by the attention.
                I told Sarah that I had lost my interest and wanted to go. We picked up our bags and as we walked towards front of the stage and past the edge of the crowd the monkey began to stare at me. His eyes followed me for some time.

                Thinking back now, I wonder if that monkey took interest in me because he sensed some mutual understanding between the two of us. Perhaps, he saw that I, too, was different from those around me and that, I too, had been an entertaining novelty, at least for a minute or two. Or, I wonder if maybe he showed interest in me because he smelled the puke all over the front of my pants. 

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