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    The question


    2012 - 01.08

    How can I return to Japan as an adult?

    Given the answers to that question, is it realistic that I might be prepared to return that way in three months when the new school year starts?

    Exceedingly unlikely.

    Which kind of bravery should I choose? Staying here until I am fully prepared is more practical, but would mean finding another job here that pays much more. In Japan, I’d automatically be making $40K. It is the transition between here and there that is the problem. Last time I did it with about $500 and it felt horrible and was pretty pathetic. That doesn’t count airfare. Do I really want to return to Japan on my knees? Coming home to Boston costed about $5000, all told. Moving back to Japan doesn’t have to cost that much, but wouldn’t it be nice if I was prepared for things to go wrong instead of hoping I got lucky? I do have free places to live with friends now, and I could make sure the contract gets me housing and pay right away…

    Look at me.

    It is SO HARD for me when I have a wish without the means to fulfill it. To admit that waiting is necessary for success. To do the slow work. To hold still.

    This is exactly what I must change in order to be successful in the long term.

    I can’t pretend that returning to something is the same as undoing a choice. I left Japan. I am here now. I can realize that it was a mistake, or accept that it was what I had to do at the time to learn what I needed to learn, or decide that coming to Boston was providence in disguise. It doesn’t really matter what meaning I make of it. I am here. I am not in Japan. I cannot undo. I cannot pretend that returning to Japan is not going to be a total pain in the ass that ‘wastes’ the money I just spent getting back to the US. I cannot pretend that I have already healed all of the issues that got me in trouble last year. I cannot pretend that I am even succeeding right now, given the state of my bank account.

    I am not in a position to do something as dramatic as returning to Japan in three months, and that is the truth.

    Shit.

    Okay. So March 2013 is the goal. That gives me time to prepare.

    1. Get a high paying job.
    2. Pay off credit card and as much of the reentry loan as possible.
    3. Save at least $5000.
    4. Learn Japanese, maybe take the JLPT level 5 or 4 next December.
    5. Keep making Japanese friends and getting involved in Japanese stuff in Boston so that my Japan resources are maxed.
    6. Finish getting into shape, start dating; maybe, if I’m lucky, fall in love with a Japanese bishounen or to return to Japan with.
    7. Figure out what it was that I missed about America when I was in Japan/ what I was so happy to get back when I returned here and consider.

    Caveat: March 2013 is the goal UNLESS I cannot find a higher paying job in Boston, in which case, going back to Japan may be the only way to get me out of debt. If that’s true, then maybe I should apply to jobs in Japan for this year and if I get a gig that sounds ideal I should go for it?

    *pulls hair*

    decompression vs paradigm shift


    2011 - 11.28

    I’m starting to think that I should stop waiting to feel like I did before living in Asia. I think it changed me fundamentally, and the way I look at too many things has expanded to expect to feel the same in this familiar place as I did before those experiences. So perhaps I’m not decompressing anymore after all!

    Japan decompression


    2011 - 11.23

    Returning to America has been so much harder than adjusting to Japan. I have been back for over three months now and I am still disoriented. While it is nice to be able to express myself accurately, the sound of English everywhere is strange on my ears. There is nothing to decode, no bravery involved in speaking, no constant learning every time I interact with the world. I miss this profoundly. All the little changes, the things I saw every day that I didn’t even think to record- now I wish I had pictures of the aisles in my local convenience store, the trains, the signs I looked at while waiting for them… And the people! There are so many blonds in Boston! While in Japan I had the magificant experience of feeling that all people were the same in essence and that the differences were really only trivial when you got right down to it. But back in my home country, I realize how many teeny details went into every gesture, fashion expression, tone of voice and glance of the Japanese and I miss them all. My romantic fascination with Japan is aching for the source of its inspiration. When I hear a group of people who might be speaking Japanese in Boston, I kind of trail after them just to fill my ears. But there are hardly any Japanese in Boston! Even at the restaurants, which are run mainly by Chinese and Koreans, so I can’t even practice ordering food, which is a constant disappointment. Up until a couple weeks ago, I was hearing Japanese in Korean, Chinese and sometimes even in Spanish being spoken around me! I try to speak Japanese to myself and my sister so I won’t lose it, and I talk to my Asian students about topics related to Japan, but its no where near enough.

    I will definitely return to live there again, but not alone. Hopefully when I have a family. If I meet a Japanese partner, that would be ideal, so that my children could know the culture of their heritage in a way they wouldn’t in America. And surprisingly, my Japanese language acquisition seems to have sped up since I left. I apparently know WAY more Japanese than I ever gave myself credit for- including sentence structures! Maybe the respite allowed my brain to synthesize and organize everything, but suddenly my fear around grammar and kanji have all but gone and I have decided to study seriously to take the JLPT exam before I return. If I could really speak Japanese when I went back, I could have so much that I denied myself before- friends, being able to find things, dating, working and playing with Japanese in Japanese… it would be amazing. I could learn some of the ancient art forms without feeling like such a poser. In fact, it would be the experience I was hoping for myself the first time but couldn’t make happen.

    Am I sorry I left? Yes and no. I think I needed to return home for a reality check. I was shocked to find Boston so clean and pleasant, with so many facilities and areas I had never frequented and a river that was the cleanest one I had seen anywhere in Asia or Europe. I appreciate Boston a lot more and would settle here if California did not exist. I need to get home and feel that sunshine on my skin again, hug my trees, jump through my waves, eat my fresh fruit. So that is my next destination after I get my financial feet under me again, which is well on its way, I’m glad to report.  Coming back also reminded me of the artificiality that is distinctly American and that I will only encounter in greater strength in California, but I feel like I have the perspective and integrity to withstand the pressure to conform to it now after holding to myself in a culture who had no idea what to do with me.  On the other side, as soon as I got here, with no money and facing so much hardship after my stupid panicked-dissociated decisions about ending my job in Japan, I wanted nothing more than to go back in time and undo it all- staying in my cozy apartment, having the daily life I had built, and this time really appreciating what I had there. The good news is that all it takes is saving up airfare to do it again, so I can put my regret to rest with that assurance, even as I know that I will not move to Japan until I have gotten rid of my pending financial obligations and have saved enough money to not have the poor life in that country.

    Thank goodness 32 isn’t actually that old. Babies, and therefore, love-of-my-life  and financial/career security need to happen in the next few years; but there’s no reason I can’t move back to Japan when my child is half-grown and I am 50. It’s not like my adventursome spirit is going to decrease! I will never get my 20s back, but that long painful process was required so that I can be free for the rest of my life, so every day is precious. Now I am learning how to give myself the means to do what I really want, not just throw myself forward without support in the desperate hope that I will get some crumbs of my dreams. Now that I know how much awesome is out there, I am going to establish security so that I can explore it all! Yay, attachment resolution! ;)

    Revelations of love and loneliness during the last few months in Japan


    2011 - 11.06

    I totally fail at updating. This is partially because I’m back in Boston, which is relatively familiar to all of you (at least compared to Asia), living the day-to-day work life that I assume you wouldn’t find terribly interesting- but more honestly, it is probably because my ponderings have been intensely personal since March or so. I am fairly open about my process on my blog, but the kinds of realizations I’ve had recently are still too tender to put out in the universe yet in more than a general fashion. They are almost all connected with love, a topic which part of me tried to keep me from processing until I knew I was completely safe. Apparently it took about two and a half years for me to find that part of myself. (more…)

    Back on the grid- ish.


    2011 - 09.03

    So much updating to do… the trip to France and Britain, deciding to put off music school and stay in Boston- some major exposition is needed. But for now:

    Hey all! Upon returning to Boston I disappeared again… crazily interviewing and then starting my new job on Aug 16th as a full time ESL teacher at Kaplan at Northeastern Univ. I have been bouncing between Katherine and Jon’s houses (thank you guys, you saved me!) but only had internet access sporadically and I still don’t have a cell phone, tho I should be getting one tomorrow I hope. I’ll send out the number as soon as I know it. Today I signed a lease on a little apartment w/ housemates in Allston, actually a block away from where Katherine is moving into this week, too! I caught the flu on Friday so I was staggering around with a fever today trying to get the stuff together for my landlord, but now its done so I can rest and then move in starting on Tuesday (which will take 2 car loads!). Anyway, that’s the brief update! As soon as I have a phone it will be easier to get together with all you guys- I miss you!

    Birthday in… London?


    2011 - 08.04

    Where was I?

    This is actually posted on January 8, 2012 when I realized there was a month when I didn’t update at all. That’s because this was the month from hell. I ran out of money in Europe, to my infinite shame, barely got home and then was completely dependent on the charity of my friends for a month… and while I was able to find a job in only a few days, it is, even now, barely covering my expenses. I had to take out a $4000 personal loan to survive. And I was numb from reentry culture shock. My friends were all disgusted with me and I am still earning their trust back, and the relationship with my siblings was incredibly strained. I had to give up on music school (for now) because the financial aid proved impossible given my credit history. I spent two weeks in Nice, Paris and London and it might as well have been in a video game for all the impression it made on me. I was so afraid of starving that I was only able to allow the smallest amount of pleasure in.

    But the learning was rich, some of the richest I have done. Turning 32, I realized how much I was trying to literally have a second adolescence, as if I could actually go back to the moment when I sent the break up letter to Richard and step forward into the new era before me with the wisdom I had gained in the 13 years since. As if I could be 19 years old again and not go through all the pain of giving up on love and my future. “If I could do it all again, I would throw myself toward my dreams, even if I didn’t believe in myself yet, because now I know what I can do so I know I will make it.” So I threw myself to China, then to Japan, then to Music School via Europe and now here I’ve landed on my ass in Boston expecting my friends to pick up the pieces as if they were the parents I should have had to support me when I was 19. There was a lot of success, much more than there was failure, for sure. But it all felt like running, falling, shoving, flailing, forcing, hiding, pretending. Not all, that’s not fair to the moments I was awake. But I didn’t realize until I came home to Boston how much my trip had been a teenage rebellion against the limited existence of my post-Richard life. That’s fine. Everyone needs a rebellious stage. But now it is time for me to be an adult.

    The question is, how can I create the adult life worth living? A life that holds up to my ambitious expectations, overflowing with my reasons to live? And what is that subtle difference between this life and the rebellious one?

    I have some of the answers already. It would include money; enough money that the days of anxious paycheck waiting are behind me, that my debts are decreasing steadily like the weight I burned off my body. I wouldn’t be lonely; friends and loves and family would surround me. And I would feel like I was walking, not running; dancing, not dodging; touching, not flailing; confident, not afraid. Like I said, the life I have in mind is an ambitious one.

    But as I sit here today, 4 months after the date of this entry, contemplating moving back to Japan, I have to remember how it felt when I first came home, and I MUST make sure I am not running again.

    How can I return to Japan as an adult?