Of Crossings, Thresholds, and Transitions [Guest Post]

I’ll cover about a day-and-a-half with this post to tie up the rest of the time I spent in Kyoto before heading to Sydney. We covered a lot, including seeing the the incredible torii gates at Fushimi Inari as well as the Nishiki Market, both of which have been photographed by so many talented photographers and bloggers so I’ll spare the additional photos and more on a few observations that leapt to mind while I was there.

Of course, still took pictures – I’m a tourist, after all!

Don’t stop believing. In my first post, I reflected a lot about holding on to the principle of journey. At Fushimi Inari shrine, that principle seemed to come alive. With its estimated 10,000 Torii Gates (source: link), the shrine seems to invite you into a space that is in-between – inside a winding corridor but also outside and exposed to the elements, of this world but also of something else in warding off evil spirits, deeply spiritual yet also innately commercial with the names of people and business sponsors etched onto the back of each gate.

I found myself doing a lot of reflecting for myself while walking the path under the torii gates, of my own self being in-between, from where I came from and to wherever I will go. Each gate passed was a milestone (particularly in the heat, although the day we went was blessedly cloudy with a slight breeze), but also firmly pointing to the steps ahead to the next gate and all the subsequent ones to follow.

We talked about our lives and careers but also mused – with a small twist, the path around the shrine could easily become a nightmare. Imagine the repetition and the familiarity of passing gate after gate and if there was no end. The comfort of the familiar would take on a whole new light…

Waiting for the bus. In Chicago, I hate riding buses. I’ve had multiple times waiting to get home for the number 8 bus, getting ghosted by 40+ min, giving up and getting an Uber, only to have the bus saucily saunter up just as I’m getting in the car! 🤬

In Kyoto, that is not a problem because each station has a sign that forecasts when they will be arriving with these analog bus station signals for each bus. They flip up in real-time and – most importantly – are accurate.

Who needs GenAI/LLMs, when you have analog things like these that just work?

Finding new meaning in getting Lost in Translation. On my last half-day in Kyoto before heading to Australia, we went on a mission to find all the Kyoto sites that appeared briefly in Lost in Translation. TL;DR, we found the sites and I got super excited (yes, I am a bona fide nerd).

That’s right, the Black Widow toured Japan before joining the Avengers!

In Lost in Translation, Charlotte lightly jumps across stepping stones in a pond. The shot is beautifully framed, which was true to form when we got there. What I didn’t expect was how beautiful the surroundings are – the stepping stones are themselves located in a well-kept garden surrounding the Heian Shrine. To get there you walk on a small trail beside a small stream gently tinkling to the soundtrack of cicadas (on the level of cicada-pocalypse in the US), see serene lilies blooming quietly in a pond – then you get to the steps.

When you look at the center of each of the circular steps, you’ll notice a little “dimple” – apparently, it’s because they were cut from a pillar and reused.

One of my favorite moments for the whole trip was then as we were finishing the walk around the garden, there is a small bridge that crosses over the pond. Hanging in organized rows on both sides of the bridge are what basically seem like glass “wishing bells” (I don’t know what the real word is, will look that up later). As we hung out there to take a few pictures, swig some water in the shade, the breeze kicked up – and the whole bridge came alive with the sound of these bells clinking gently with the breeze.

When I closed my eyes, I could hear the wind and the bells around me – and, for that brief moment, I felt surrounded by playful laughter and joy. It’s not like anything I’ve felt before.

Core memory achieved!
Disclaimer: No GenAI, LLMs, and/or Chatbot interfaces were used to write or assist in this post. Just the squishy neural network of my own brain.
My brain needs more GPUs to stay competitive in this market!

Move over Tokyo – today’s about the Kyoto Drift! [Guest Post]

Day 2 in Japan trip was a whirlwind – all the obstacles from the previous day seemed to melt away and, today, we seemed to flow just-in-time.

Because there’s a lot I want to write about, I’m fighting my every instinct to turn everything into a bulleted list of short, succinct, and quantified statements

Early morning in Tokyo. Woke up a bit too early thank to jet lag but decided to roll with it. Breakfast and the Shinkansen train weren’t running yet so we walked to the Grave of the 47 Ronin/Sengaku-ji Temple nearby only to discover that it also wasn’t open either 😔. Still was a fascinating read about civic duty, particularly with the shenanigans going on with the upcoming US elections.

Breakfast highlight: ate “natto”, which is fermented soybean. Very stringy but also savory-delicious when combined with mustard and a bit of soy sauce. No slo-mo needed!

Writing this from the Shinkansen on the way to Tokyo. Yes, we actually made it! The ride is fast and strikingly quiet. Though the seats are full, all the riders are just listening to music, fiddling on their phones, sleeping, working, or – at most – talking very, very quietly. For those of you who know the CTA/Metra in Chicagoland, no need to crank up noise-canceling on your AirPods; the silence of the rider is only punctuated by PSA announcement and other ride information

My brother functioned as a noise-canceling mechanism and told me to shush several times when I tried to talk to him even though I was sitting right next to him! I’m sure the other riders were grateful for the premium brother noise-canceling service.

Daytime in Kyoto. We’re here! First up: took an amazing bike ride through Kyoto and did a partial perimeter of Kyoto’s downtown, hitting some of the most important landmarks like the Kinkakju Temple shrine, Nishi Honganji, and a few of the Geisha districts.

We rode in single file to hide our numbers.

The bike tour was awesome and the city seems to be pretty friendly to cycling. Our tour guide was incredible; she guided us unerringly through the streets, answered innumerable questions from the group (and for those of you who know me, you know I always have questions), while being continuously chill.

Lunch was conveyor/rotary sushi and the prices alone were worth of a *chef’s kiss*. Compared to similar rotary sushi restaurants in Chicago, we were talking 2-4X cheaper AND the food quality was just so much better.

Kyoto in the evening. After the bike ride, we immediately sprang into a walking tour. As part of it, we experienced heading into two Izakaya establishments, which are very cozy bars that sometimes have food. For sense of scale, by “cozy” I mean that in the first one we went to, it looked like it could seat maybe 8 people max! It meant that the setting was also really intimate – while our tour group was there, a native visitors from Kyoto showed up and the chef called out “Ah, come in! it’s been a long time since you’ve been here.” The relationship matters.

In terms of food, move over Wagyu beef – for me, it was all about the wasabi. Not the green-colored horseradish we often get in the US; real wasabi that has a different texture and hits different. While everything was tasty, I found myself eating the wasabi alone and actively avoiding mixing it with soy sauce like I normally do with the “wasabi” in the US!

In hindsight, this could have been two posts – oh well, there’s more stuff in my head that I’ll save for later posts. Till the next post!

Disclaimer: Forgot to add this in my first article - none of this content was aided or written with GenAI tools. Just good ol’ human hands-on-keyboard!

On the nature of journeys before destinations [Guest Post]

Ever since I watched Lost in Translation, I’ve wanted to visit Japan. Yes, Bill Murray and pre-Marvel Cinematic Universe Scarlett Johansson probably hyped up what I would actually get to experience if I got there, but my mind was enamored – the culture, the sites & sights, and the food and Suntory whiskey (which I did learn to enjoy later on).

Can you blame me for associating relaxing times with Suntory time?

Most of all, I yearned for the opportunity to be lost in all aspects of the word – elsewhere in a place foreign to me with no claim to who I am or should be and vice versa. There was just never time to make the trip though with a million different reasons to say no and choose otherwise for where to go.

Close to 20 years later, I finally got to yes and – I’m here, in Japan! But it’s been a harrowing trip with a lot of different factors that made it very uncertain for if I’d make it, thus the motto that my brother traveling with me and I adopted and the title for this post: don’t lose sight of your destination, but enjoy the journey.

So, a shortlist of obstacles that I enjoyed in my journey to get to Japan:

The CrowdStrike outage was impacting different matters at ORD even when I get to the airport – I wasn’t sure if I’d get a last minute cancellation while I was at the airport. 😰

Thankfully, the flight took off right on time!

~14 hours later, we arrived in Japan! We headed over to take the Shinkansen (“bullet train”) to head to Kyoto, only to learn that there had been a maintenance vehicle crash on the Tokaido line we were taking, resulting in ALL trains for the day being cancelled (link). 😮‍💨 Alright, deep breath.

After considering all our options, including heading back to the airport to take a flight to Kyoto or even driving ~6 hours, we decided to book a hotel nearby the station and try the Shinkansen the next morning. Reciting “journey before destination, we decided to experience one tourist attraction in Tokyo that hadn’t been on our original itinerary planning: the Tokyo Skytower. Fast forwarding for a second to finalize about the theme of obstacles, on our way back to the hotel, we then got hit by a pretty major thunderstorm!

Finally, we re-directed our plans to a hotel close-by, tried to hit up an attraction that wasn’t high on our itinerary for the Tokyo Tower only to be hit by a thunderstorm as we were heading home! ⛈️

We’d known and thought we were prepared about summer in Japan being very hot and humid; we were not prepared.

But the strawberry vanilla soft serve ice cream we had the Tokyo Skytower was exactly what we needed – and didn’t even know existed in the world (or at least I’ve never seen that flavor at McDonald’s in the US!).🍦

In any case, there it is – my first post on the legendary sabbatiblog! ✅ The first is always the hardest so glad I got this going – I’ve got lots I want to to cover since this first post was written across multiple places – combination of Tokyo, on the Shinkansen to Tokyo we eventually were able to board while wrestling (unsuccessfully) with jet lag, and in Kyoto. You could say…I have a backlog! Till next time.