It must be inevitable that every JET have a story like this, so maybe I should be grateful to get mine out of the way early on in my career (or perhaps just make way for more).
On Friday night I was to go meet some JETs in Murakami to go shopping and otherwise hang out. Murakami is not far away- 3 stops on the commuter train, so I purchased my 320 yen ticket and waited on the platform. At 5:35 there was only one train at the platform (that I could see), which seemed to be pointing in the right general direction, so I boarded and grabbed a seat.
As the train took off, I noticed that we were headed straight away from the sunset (Murakami is north of Arakawa), and started to get nervous. It's probably alright, I thought, the train will veer north soon and all will be well. After the first stop, however, it continued due East into the mountains of Honshu, so I decided to ask a passenger whether or not I was on the right train.
Me: Sumimasen, (mangled Japanese) Murakami ka?
Terrified Middle School Student: Hai, Murakami.
I don't know what she thought she heard me say (or indeed what I may have actually said), but at least for a time I thought I was on the right track.
By the time it became very clear that I was not, I had reached a remote mountain hamlet called Katakai, where I disembarked. Katakai had no convenience store worth speaking of, and consisted of a small number of houses and terraced rice patties strewn along the highway to Murakami. The waiting room of the Katakai station sported a bathroom, some posters, a fly the size of a human thumb, and some spiders that could have crushed the fly without a second thought. And mosquitoes. One of the posters also informed me that the next train would be arriving in about 2.5 hours...
I paced around, got some juice from the vending machine, and pretty much settled in. It would have been a bleak 2.5 hours, except that not long after I arrived the Katakai volunteer fire department showed up to have a barbecue under the station. Once I worked up the nerve to go talk to them, they were very friendly and loaded me up with roast corn, yakitori, and a cold Asahi. I told them my story (as well as I could), and they asked me the usual battery of questions (how long have you been here, where are you from, what do you do, do you have a girlfriend?). I also translated some of their English t-shirts for them.
Eventually the train pulled in, I bayed them farewell, and went back to Sakamachi (and to bed). Lessons learned: check the train schedule more carefully, and always bring bug spray everywhere (I was half-eaten alive). ...and learn better Japanese.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Silly jess...why did you not check the map in the train station before you hop on one of them.
You can also always look up and see train maps posted inside the train too !
Post a Comment