Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Silver Week! (the Weekend)

September 19-23 was Silver Week here in japan. Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday were national holidays, so there was a 5 day break from work and school. I was told that this is the first time it has ever happened because of the way they determine when the holidays will be (I think the first is fixed, the second one floats around, and the third is the equinox, so since the equinox fell only two days after the first holiday they stuck the floating one in the middle).

However silver week came to be, it was a lot of fun. On Saturday I ran in the morning with my friend Kelli, then went to Osaka to see Deep Sea 3D at the I-Max, which is narrated by Jhonny Depp. We also rode the "biggest giant farris wheel in the world" because another of my friends won two free tickets at the I-Max. We split the costs so each of us got a discount.

I also bought a stuffed ghibli creature at the suntory museum (which was still having the Ghibli exhibit). I showed it to my Okasan (host mother) when I got home and she laughed at me and said some thing like, "you sure like toys, don't you." Thanks Okasan. I kind of deserved it, though, because I had been buying other toys and had gone to the Osaka pokemon center and the kiddyland store with my friends.

on Sunday I went to church. My Okasan told me she knew of one near the Hirakata train station, so she took me. The service was in Japanese, of course, but it was different from any service I had been to before. Much to my chagrin, I found out this weekend when I got lost on my way there, that the church is Catholic. That explains why I had no idea what they were doing. As I wandered the neighborhood this past Sunday, I found another church (presumably not Catholic) which I will try to find again this Sunday.

My Okasan, although she is Buddhist, was curious and wanted to attend the service with me. We arrived late for the first service, so we went to an old ryokan (Japanese inn) that had been turned into a museum, which was nearby. All I really understood was that people from Hirakata sold food from boats to the people who were traveling the Yodo river between Osaka and Kyoto, since Hirakata is the halfway point. They would say something like "Kurawanka!" which apparently means "why don't you eat." People in those days sometimes called Hirakata Kurawanka because of all the vendors.

After church I think we did something else, but I can't remember what it was. I'll have to look at my pictures (which are comming soon!) to see.

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