Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Louvre Pyramid in Tokyo
Why Do People Tell Lies?
Japan's Prime Minister Abe said that his patience has come to the limitation on the abduction issue of North Korea. Right, he is tired of their lies.
The most frequent lies that I have encountered is about ages. Somebody told me he is 48 several months after he stated he was 51. Well, did he have a time machine that makes him younger as he age? Another person had said he had got divorced 1.5 years ago. The same person now says he has been single again since 1997.
My friend who used to lecture me about her perfect marriage suddenly gave me a call and said she has been preparing for a divorce. According to her, his husband has been violent. I was stunned as he looked so nice and even a bit sheepish.
From my standpoint and background -- journalism, whose most important mission I believe is to seek the truth -- all this is astounding. I don't even know what makes a difference between the two statements -- 51 and 48, for example.
For me, it is not even the matter of age; it is a lie that honestly backs me off.
Sunday, June 17, 2007
Perfect Combination

They're the most favorite artists in painting and writing. I just think they're so sophisticated.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Same Old Fantasy
That's all about my all-time favorite novel entitled "Aimez-vous Brahms ?" by Françoise Sagan.
I don't know why I've been so attracted to this story for such a long time -- the past 12 years to be exact. Well, I am a bit tired, that's for sure. That is exactly why I went to the Body Shop's reflexology salon already twice for the past week.
But I don't think I've ever been caught between the two opposite types, though the two characters sound very attractive to me for different reasons. Well, that may be why I am so into the novel.
Anyhow, reading the novel in original is my objective of learning French, at least for now. By doing that, I'd like to architect a perfect fantasy in my mind.......
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Simple Life
Over the weekend, I also looked around a few condominiums. But the more I did, the stronger I thought that I needed to study real estate. And to me, it seemed like a daunting task to find a nice condo that would not be damaged even when a big earthquake hit Tokyo. Plus, I learned that earthquake insurance covers only 10 million yen (about USD 83,000). So, what if a massive quake comes on the day I purchase a condo?
Well, I currently live in a small, but cozy, and best of all, safe apartment. Perhaps I should just read Sagan's novels here, and live in my fantasies.....
Sunday, May 27, 2007
So, What Is My Story?
Off the top of my head, it's related to a car. One childhood scene that flashes back sometimes is when we did a road trip to my grandmother's place in Nagano. As our car was so small that it was not comfortable for a long trip and I often felt sick. But I knew my parents would be in trouble every time we took a rest as that would multiply the travelling time in a crowded road. So, when I told them I was sick, I was really, really sick. I appreciate, even today, the fact that they never accused me of that even once.
But all this has made me determined to obtain a big car that nobody would question its comfortable quality. So, for me personally, it was a little success story that I took my mother by my BMW to Nagano earlier this month.
My uncle, however, cast somewhat a cold attitude. Of couse, he didn't openly criticize it, but I could sense he didn't like the car, or the fact that I drove it. Perhaps it was in part because his son, i.e., my cousin, works for Nissan. Overall, I felt he simply doesn't like yuppie things. From a conservative rural point of view, he might have thought that a black sedan is too much for a woman.
Anyway, I love my car, I obtained it with no debts from anyone, and I continue to love it. What's more, it made the road trip much easier for my aging mother. What the hell is wrong with that?
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Everyone Has A Story

Everyone has a story that motivates you to do something, good or bad. It can usually be buried under your unconsciousness. But once you discover it, you can act effectively toward your end. I thought that is the main message of the movie.
For an FBI Academy student Clarice Starling, it is a story when she ran away from her relative's house. She has lost her father who was a police commissioner from a duty, and as her mother had been also gone, Clarice was sent to her aunt's in a farm. There young lambs were screaming when they were being killed. She could not stand that and ran away by managing to take one lamb. But then a local official caught her and the lamb ended up being killed, too.
That made a deep impression underlying her motive to become an FBI agent -- to save those who were on the verge of being killed, just like keeping the lambs silent.
The irony is that the person who made Clarice notice that, Dr. Lector, the cannibal ex-psychiatrist, is still on the run, wanted by the FBI. He would probably have his own unique story that has led him to eat human meat.
Each acting has a taste. It is one of the rare, classy movies that you'll love!
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Famous Steps

"Don't you know the scene where Rocky ran the steps? It's here!!"
Since my friend was so passionate about the site, I was feeling a bit bad as I actually had never seen the Rocky movie series.
Last night, I finally finished seeing all the six episodes. I thought Rocky IIII sent the most compelling message, and probably the last one, Rocky Balboa, was the most educational. I especially liked his following lines to his son:
The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It is a very mean and nasty place and it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't how hard you hit; it's about how hard you can get hit, and keep moving forward. How much you can take, and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done. Now, if you know what you're worth, then go out and get what you're worth.
Well, I think I can appreciate the sight much better if I have a chance to go visit there again......
Thursday, May 17, 2007
The 60s Is a Boom
That age was before cell phone, PC, the Internet, even message telephones.
Somehow, people seem to be enjoying going back to that simple time.
Sunday, May 13, 2007
Tiny But Macho...??
It was a moment when a strong stream of water came from the hose pipe, which I targeted to the car body. Somehow I thought this action is quite macho, which I was excited to do. Looking around, only men were doing this. Not sure why, but the sheer fact that I came upon the idea of washing my car in a Sunday afternoon as a relaxing pastimewas quite macho, at least in Japan.
What's more, my car is a black sedan. A man who had started car washing before me saw me curiously. His car was a Toyota Lexis, if I remember correctly.
Anyhow, my car now gets sparkling! I wish the weather continues to be beautiful at least for the next few days......
Friday, May 11, 2007
La Science des Rêves
Well, sounds familiar. Sometimes life goes on as you like, other times, doesn't. That's why you fantasize. My best fantasy is a democratic version of the world that Françoise Sagan depicts, you know.
In an attempt to best fantasize her world, I started to study French really hard....The material is NHK's radio French program. It runs from 7:25 to 7:45 am. My best plan is to preview the text at the previous night, listen to the program while driving to my workplace, review it by CD-ROM, and then see and check the text when I'm waiting while the security checks my car before entering the office building...actually, this works quite well.
Monday, May 07, 2007
Mission Completed
The highways between Nagano and Tokyo were so crowded, but we killed time by chatting and listening to classical music CDs. Speaking of music, my uncle, mom and myself all love Western classical music, which are influenced by my grandfather....no wonder I adore Brahms like crazy.
Monday, April 30, 2007
Golden Week
The Statue of Liberty in the picture was originally founded to commemorate the French year in Japan in 1998. Two years later, it came back to France. But because it was so popular, a replica was created in France and returned to Odaiba, a seafront area in Tokyo, in 2000.
It is now the best season in Tokyo -- nice and crisp, not hot, not cold either. In fact, this kind of nice weather is fleeting, as we're expecting the rainy season soon followed by a harsh summer.
In this gorgeous weather, my friend and I went see a movie in Odaiba. The movie was excellent...I'll write about it soon.
Yeah, it's Golden Week!!
Friday, April 20, 2007
Serge Gainsbourg - La Javanaise
Yes, it's April...as this song tells...and you know what, I'm set to learn French really seriously. When I finished reading La Laisse, I reconfirmed how uniquely excellent Françoise Sagan really is. So, my goal is to read her books in original.
So, I tune into NHK's radio French lesson at 7:25 am each morning. The theme music of the program is this song. Tonight I bought flash cards...gosh, this fondly reminds me of when I first started to learn English.......
Monday, April 16, 2007
Talent Is Everything....Almost, Perhaps
"After all, talent is everything, I think. If you have talent in a certain field, things will go well because the talent will make making effort make sense. But if you have no talent in other field, even if you make tremendous effort, things won't go well because you don't have the talent that makes making effort make sense."
The simplest example may be diet. Some people need to exercise, try really hard to refrain from eating a lot, and yet they stay fat. But I have never been overweight in my life. Rather, most of my life I've been categorized as thin. And yet I have never been on diet. It's just that I haven't liked sweets and fatty food since I was a little child.
Career would apply, too. Just recently, without any asking, I was offered an extremely honorable mission. I was frankly surprised. From any point of view, that means a top-level success in my chosen field. It's true that I have always put my career on the first priority in my life, and I have made tremendous effort. But that's not everything. I think I am talented in this particular field.
By contrast, there is a certain field in which I have also made tremendous effort, but have had little fruit, if not zero. I come to feel that I am not talented in this particular area....
So, my conclusion is that talent is everything.....well, almost, perhaps.
Monday, April 09, 2007
Car Wash
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
A Famous Grocery Store
The Narita Higashi, Suginami store of Summit, a middle-sized grocery store chain in the Kanto area, started to "sell" plastic shopping bags. They charge 5 yen (like 5 cents) for one bag in front of the cash desk. As a result, 89% of customers, including myself, are now carrying their own shopping bag.
If you google this grocery store, you'll swamped by so many stories on this!