Sunday, June 1, 2008

Sayonara

When you get used to parking attendants bowing to you (90 degrees) and polite men guiding you to safety at road blocks (with a bow) ....

When you routinely start seeing trash in your mind as 'burnable, 'non burnable' and 'recyclable'....

When you expect the world to be spotless and always run on time...

...its time to pack up and get real.



Japan's hushed orderliness spoils you into believing that the world has actually become a better place to live in. When you get out of it, the rest of the world seems like a cacophony of sounds and brash people who havent been taught any manners. Dangerous, when you know that someday you will be yanked out of this temporary Utopia and dumped into the real world.



After two lovely years in a place that gave me more than I expected, its time to move on and...well get real. And how. We get back to India next week and meet Life head on. Nothing couched there, nothing indirect and politeness is an inconvenient waste of time.


Capturing Tokyo, I said in my first post, was like trying to catch a thousand different sensations in a bottle. In my two years maybe I did hold and understand some.Others I just soaked in without bothering to decipher.

I cant imagine anyone walking away unscathed from Japan. It is bound to change you , even if imperceptibly so. I know it has changed me. Taught me patience, given me clarity and helped me understand that speed is not the fastest way to get to your goal always- patience and perfection might get you there more soundly. It has tempered my spirit and taught me to respect even the tiniest details.

Maybe when my mind is being 'bheja fried' (battered) in India, I can escape to my 'inner Japan' to repair and restore in its noiseless calm. Maybe I'll carry that always with me - my own portable Inner Peace and maybe that can only be a Japanese thing!

Sayonara beautiful Japan.


10 comments:

ServesYouRight said...

(Will de-lurk for a second) This is such a wonderful post and I have so enjoyed reading your thoughts. Many thanks for sharing! Good wishes,
Smita

Preethy said...

Thnaks for dropping by Smita! I have enjoyed Tokyo just as much.

You have a very inviting blog. You will definitely find me fumbling my way to there for recipes!
cheers

Anonymous said...

A moving yet awesome post! I hope masala sushi will continue....

Anonymous said...

*standing ovation* and *big hug*. Welcome back home girl !

Anonymous said...

We'll miss you girl and I will especially miss reading your posts. Sayonara my friend!

Anonymous said...

To 2 great years in Japan and some wonderful posts on masalasushi!

...time to move on...a new city, a new journey.

so far you wrote abt beautiful jaapan
now switch to mera bharat mahaan

having served masalasushi
let a new masaladosa chapter bring us more khushi

Preethy said...

Harish,Akku,Asha....thanks guys! Tokyo really was a dream...and getting more and more like one as days pass...

Asha...enjoy Tokyo!

See u all in Namma Bengaluru!

Unknown said...

I agree with "Akshata's " comment. We want another blog now- a masala dosa one or a bheja fry one-you can call it whatever you like, but we definitely need you to keep writing.

Anonymous said...

Sayonara to Japan ... seems just yst that I started reading Masala Sushi...

Hope to keep reading yr blog on Bengaluru, Bharat.

All the best.

Shashi

flaashgordon said...

hey, Perfectly worded, this one was ! I know how u feel having come back to Bangalore after a 2 year stint in Tokyo, I could relate to most of the stuff u wrote. Have just got back to the "Real World" from the days of "Irasshai Masse", "Sumimasen" and "Moeru/ Moenai gomi" ..Part of me wants to go back but then things such as the work culture are making me prefer Bangalore.But you never know. Came here via link sent by Shinie Antony. Btw , I'd written a couple of Tokyo posts in my blog as well, do check out

http://flaashgordon.blogspot.com/2007/07/losto-in-translationo-from-kathakali-to.html

http://flaashgordon.blogspot.com/2007/02/lost-o-in-translation-o-am-onsite-in.html