We went to sleep around 1:30. I woke up a few times through the night, but it was pretty comfortable.
I got up around 8:15 and showered. Looking out the window in our room, I could see many people walking by with umbrellas. I really like the clear ones.
We checked out around 10:30 after everyone had showered. We wandered outside looking for breakfast. A lot of people seemed to look at me first, probably because my hair’s not dark brown or black. We eventually decided on heading under Fukushima Station. Most places were closed still, but at an intersection, we found a breakfast joint. Outside were the famous fake displays of food.
It’s really amazing how realistic they look—it’s only the texture that looks a little off sometimes. After about 10 minutes of staring at the food outside, we finally went in. The whole place was run by one older Japanese man, and there were quite a few people for such a small place. I got the ‘ham-egg-toast’, or in katakana, the ‘alphabet’ for foreign words, ハムエッグチイズ [ha-mu-e-ggu-chi-i-zu]. Double letters means you sort of hold that syllable. It turned out to be a kind of sandwich.
Afterward, we wandered around, eventually resting in a big hotel/department store lobby. After maybe 20 minutes, we went to nearby Osaka station and bought 160 yen tickets to Shin-Osaka station. The train was very smooth. We crossed a bridge over water to get there, which I hadn’t expected.. We arrived, hung around a bit, and then bought drinks from a vending machine (jidouhanbaiki or じどうはんばいき).
All photos can be found at: http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=266917&id=736370424&l=37441abaf1
It's interesting how foreigners with different hair colors get more or less attention -- but definitely true. You'll stand out more than Matt will. My blonde friend in Japan got sick of the stares after 6 months, dyed her hair black, and said it completely changed people's reaction to her. Hopefully you don't mind the attention though, it can be fun too :)
ReplyDeleteI'm really enjoying you & Matt's blogs so far (I intend to live vicariously through you guys' Japan experience >_<) so keep up the good work!