![Tokyo School boy](http://www.asamnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/Tokyo-School-Boy.jpg)
Text & Photos by Tony Lee
Travels with Tony
I have been in Japan for nine days. I find that I can learn a lot about a country from observing the children. Japanese kids are well-cared for, healthy and extremely well behaved. A normal school day starts around 8 o’clock but often times the kids don’t go home until 6 or 7 o’clock. When I wandered my neighborhood one evening just before 8 PM, I came across a private tutoring service that was still open. I peaked in and saw 10 kids ranging from elementary to high school doing their homework. There was no tutoring going on as the only adult present sat idly by at her corner desk. Two of the youngest kids, ages 9 or10, were obviously working on math, judging by their use of an abacus. That’s right! No calculator but an abacus.
Japanese society reflects this kind of regimentation, but with good results in many areas. There is virtually no crime in Japan. Gun ownership is not permitted. Young kids walk to and from school by themselves. Middle and high school students take buses and trains on your own. Unaccompanied Women head home at midnight without fear. And I went everywhere with impunity.
In planning my trip to Japan, I spoke to Margaret Peterson, the assistant principal at my school. She lived in Japan for six years and speaks the language fluently. She gave valuable information to me and John Fong, a fellow counselor who surprised his wife with a Thanksgiving trip to Japan for her birthday. We met up in Tokyo. twice but missed connecting in Kyoto.
I was leery of Japan as an expensive destination. This fear seem to be well founded when Margaret told us about the time in Japan when she had an insatiable craving for a burrito. For one she had to take a train from her home to Tokyo ($80). Then there was the cost of the food. When it was all said and done, her Mexican meal cost around $200. In San Francisco it would have been less than $10. But I found that by avoiding expensive sushi and Kobe beef dinners,I could get by with a daily food cost of $30. A neighborhood the hole-in-the-wall tavern or izakayas offer noodle, rice and combination plates for less than $10. And typically they offer counter seating only with 4 to 10 stools. But the food is delicious and make an excellent snack or a filling dinner. It’s just not the place to take someone on a date.
For accommodations I stayed at Airbnb apartments in Tokyo and Kyoto. In both cases I got a self-contained apartment instead of the typical spare room
And as Douglas MacArthur and Arnold Schwarzenegger said, “Ngoy woy fahn Loy.” At least that’s what they would have said if they spoke my Toishan dialect. I’ll be back. Maybe I could even retire to Kyoto part of the year. I could supplement my pension by teaching English or maybe math, which was my best subject. But I would start lessons by getting rid of the darn abacus.
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