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  • 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.

  • talisman

    The house in which I grew up was about 100
    years old. Pieces of the wall plaster were falling
    off little by little and it was to be rebuilt when I
    was ten. During the days of moving out, my
    grandmother took out an old paper talisman
    from her ancient drawers. It had a mysterious
    picture on it. According to my grandmother,
    the talisman drew clothes if it was kept in
    drawers so that the drawers would be filled
    with clothes. She gave it to me and told me
    that I would never be short of clothes. I didn’t
    say out loud but thought it wouldn’t work
    because I knew how small her wardrobe was.
    When our new house was completed, I had my
    own room for the first time and kept the
    talisman in my wardrobe. As I thought, I was
    always short of clothes for years.
    Although the talisman didn’t work, I brought
    it with me when I left my hometown. Since
    then, the number of my clothes has been
    increasing and now, my closet is full of clothes.
    The talisman does work after all, but it has an
    awfully delayed effect. Another magic is, that
    almost all of my clothes cost around $10…

    Episode From An Old Tree in Kyoto /Hodemi Woods

    Audiobook : Japanese Dream by Hidemi Woods On Sale at online stores or apps. Apple, Audible, Google Play, Nook Audiobooks,  43 available distributors in total

  • lost over $1 million

    This incident happened one New Year’s at the
    end of the card game called ‘kabu’, in which
    my uncle acted as dealer for the yearly family
    casino at my grandparents’ house. He had lost
    quite a lot to my cousin, who was his son, as
    usual that night and my cousin had left the
    table as the morning dawned.
    My uncle, my mother and I were left at the
    table and the game was about to close. My
    mother asked for a few more deals because
    she had also lost a large sum and wanted to
    get it back. To recover her loss quickly, she bet
    by the $100. The game was played for high
    stakes every year, but I had never seen the
    stakes this high. She lost in succession and her
    loss swelled to $500 in a flash.
    “This is the last bet,” she claimed in
    desperation and put $500 on the table. She
    tried to offset her total loss on the last deal of
    the game. All at once the tension skyrocketed
    and strange silence filled the room. I held my
    breath and withdrew my usual small bet. The
    cards were dealt tensely and my mother and
    my uncle showed their hands of fate. Both
    hands were ridiculously bad but my mother’s
    was even worse. She lost $1000. Burying her
    head in her hands, she repeatedly uttered, “It
    can’t be! Can’t be true!” I saw tears in her
    widely opened bloodshot eyes. Then she
    repeated “Oh, my… Oh, my…” in a faint voice
    for ten times and staggered away. I clearly
    remember her state of stupor.
    A couple of days later back in our home, I
    enticed her into playing ‘kabu’ with me since I
    learned how poorly she played it and I knew I
    would win. I used to receive cash as a New
    Year’s gift from my relatives during New Year’s
    and it would amount to $1000. I dangled it in
    front of her and said that it would be her
    chance to get back her loss. She took it and we
    played for $1000. As I had thought, she lost
    another $1000 to me. She said she couldn’t
    pay, and I offered her the installment plan. I
    got $100 more to my monthly allowance of
    $30 for the next ten months. That was the
    richest year in my early teens.
    Many years later, she failed in real estate
    investment and lost most of our family fortune
    that had been inherited for generations. The
    amount she lost that time was well over $1
    million. And that was the money I was
    supposed to inherit…

    Episode From The Girl in Kyoto / Hidemi Woods

    Audiobook : Japanese Dream by Hidemi Woods On Sale at online stores or apps. Apple, Audible, Google Play, Nook Audiobooks,  43 available distributors in total