onsen – More Than Tokyo https://www.morethantokyo.com Exploring the Wonders of Rural Japan Wed, 01 Feb 2023 15:40:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.morethantokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png onsen – More Than Tokyo https://www.morethantokyo.com 32 32 6 Weird Japanese Cultural Quirks https://www.morethantokyo.com/6-weird-japanese-quirks/ https://www.morethantokyo.com/6-weird-japanese-quirks/#comments Mon, 23 May 2022 22:34:39 +0000 https://www.morethantokyo.com/?p=6080 More Than Tokyo

More Than Tokyo - Exploring the Wonders of Rural Japan

These things still puzzle me even after 36 years of living in Japan Even though I’ve lived in Japan for over half my life, there are certain idiosyncrasies of the culture that still leave me speechless. Weird Japanese Quirk #6 — Drinking behavior Someone can be embarrassingly out of control drunk and even vomiting in the …

The post 6 Weird Japanese Cultural Quirks first appeared on More Than Tokyo and is written by Diane Tincher.

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More Than Tokyo

More Than Tokyo - Exploring the Wonders of Rural Japan

These things still puzzle me even after 36 years of living in Japan

Even though I’ve lived in Japan for over half my life, there are certain idiosyncrasies of the culture that still leave me speechless.

Weird Japanese Quirk #6 — Drinking behavior

Whiskey bottles lined up on a bar. Drunkenness being normal is, to me, a weird Japanese cultural quirk.
Japanese whiskey. (Holdosi. Pixabay. No attribution required.)

Someone can be embarrassingly out of control drunk and even vomiting in the evening, and the next morning all is forgiven. “He was drunk” absolves such behavior.

Years ago when I became pregnant with my seventh child, I took that opportunity to quit a job teaching at a private high school. The teachers in the English department had a farewell party for me where the usually staid, conservative, dark-suit-clad men got inordinately drunk.

A bus had been hired to take us all home — driving after having just one sip of alcohol is considered a serious offense in Japan — and along the way, different teachers asked the driver to pull over so they could get out and be sick. 

Just another day at the office. No one was the least bit fazed.

Weird Japanese Quirk #5 — Clothing dictated by the calendar

Girls in school uniforms in Kyoto.
Girls in school uniforms, Kyoto. (Michelle_Raponi. Pixabay. No attribution required.)

What clothes one wears is traditionally dictated by the calendar, not the weather, and by interesting cultural norms regarding modesty. Let me give you some examples from where I live in southern Kyushu.

  • Short-sleeved shirts can only be worn between June 1 and September 1. You should see the looks I get when I wear short sleeves out of season. “Aren’t you cold?” asked concerned onlookers.
  • Students are not allowed to wear their summer uniforms before June 1, or winter uniforms before December 1. Some schools are stricter than others, and in these modern times, some even have hybrid uniforms students can wear between certain dates.
  • Some schools — not all — allow girls to wear stockings to cover their bare legs in the winter months. But never after March 31.
  • Young women can show as much leg as they want, but they must keep their shoulders and chest covered up.
  • Once a woman reaches age 35, she must not be seen wearing shorts. This is another convention I ignore.
Rows of dull-colored clothing hanging on racks at a store. Older women wearing only dull colors is a weird Japanese thing.
Neighborhood shop catering to middle-aged and elderly women. (©Diane Tincher)
  • Middle-aged and elderly women seem to have some sort of unwritten dress code that includes only dull colors. There are stores dedicated to providing this wardrobe.

Oh, and beaches in my subtropical city are only “open” from July 9 to August 31.

Weird Japanese Quirk #4 — Speaker cars used for political campaigning

Van equipped with large signs advertising a political candidate, speakers on the front and back, and people waving out the windows.
Political speaker car in Hokkaido. (Cropped from the original version found on Creative Commons.)

When election season comes around, each candidate uses a squad of cars equipped with loudspeakers and filled with uniform-clad, white-gloved volunteers. These vehicles roam the streets, blasting recordings of musical slogans and campaign promises. The volunteers wave and call to passers-by from the windows.

My youngest child always ran to the back of the house and hid in terror when any came near. The volume can be deafening.

If I had the right to vote in this county — which is only granted to citizens, not permanent residents like myself — I’m afraid I would make it a point NOT to vote for anyone who disturbs the peace in such an obnoxious manner.

I can’t help but wonder about the efficacy of such political campaigning. Some of the slogans are also quite hilarious, but that’s a topic for a different article.

Weird Japanese Quirk #3 — Mask-wearing

Path between enormous cedar trees in forest.
One does not need a mask when walking in this lovely forest. Mount Haguro. (©Diane tincher)

There was a culture of mask-wearing in Japan long before the pandemic. For years, people have been wearing masks to protect against catching the flu, to not spread their cold or fever, and to prevent breathing in pollen. Women sometimes wear a mask when they didn’t have time to apply makeup in the morning.

These days, though, I’m afraid this practice has been taken to the extreme, with people wearing masks working in their gardens, driving alone, and even walking in the countryside. 

I find it especially puzzling when people wear masks hiking in the mountains where they could be partaking of the health-giving fragrance of the forest.

Weird Japanese Quirk #2 — Changing room etiquette

Illustration of cats in various rooms and in various states of dressed and undressed at a public bath.
Neko no Yu, Cats bath, by Utagawa Yoshifuji. (Public domain)

I’ve visited onsen hot springs, sento public baths, and most frequently, my local swimming club, and the contrast in what is acceptable puzzles my Western brain.

It’s fine to walk around stark naked in the women’s changing room at hot springs or public baths, but it is absolutely not acceptable at the swimming club. Women take great pains to never show any skin, covering up with hand-sewn, tent-like garments while they change.

I can only conclude that, like the Japanese language, context is everything.

Weird Japanese Quirk #1 — Anime hologram singers

People attend concerts to watch a hologram of an anime character sing in a synthesized, artificially produced voice. 

This is not a new phenomenon.

The singer in the video, Hatsune Miku, traces her roots as far back as 2007 when she was created by Crypton Future Media using Yamaha’s Vocaloid 2 singing-synthesis technology. This is open-source software, so anyone with a computer and internet can easily and freely collaborate on creating Vocaloid songs. And many people do.

Through the years, Hatsune Miku and other synthetic singers have evolved and grown from a subculture trend to become major players in mainstream Japanese pop music.

In 2020, an artist using Vocaloid singing-synthesis software, Yonezu Kenshi, secured the #1 spot on Billboard Japan with his album, Stray Sheep.

I’d love to hear quirky cultural customs that you have experienced. Please feel free to share them in the comments.

The post 6 Weird Japanese Cultural Quirks first appeared on More Than Tokyo and is written by Diane Tincher.

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10 Tips for a Delightful Japanese Onsen Experience https://www.morethantokyo.com/japanese-onsen-tips/ https://www.morethantokyo.com/japanese-onsen-tips/#respond Sun, 06 Feb 2022 16:19:38 +0000 https://www.morethantokyo.com/?p=4975 More Than Tokyo

More Than Tokyo - Exploring the Wonders of Rural Japan

The volcanic islands of Japan are a paradise of natural hot springs, called onsen. Almost all traditional inns have indoor baths, and some have beautiful outside hot spring baths where you can relax and enjoy the tranquility of nature.

The post 10 Tips for a Delightful Japanese Onsen Experience first appeared on More Than Tokyo and is written by Diane Tincher.

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More Than Tokyo

More Than Tokyo - Exploring the Wonders of Rural Japan

Outdoor Japanese onsen bath
hot springs on sakurajima, kagoshima (photo courtesy of rose)

The volcanic islands of Japan are a paradise of natural hot springs, called onsen. Almost all traditional inns have indoor baths, and some have beautiful outside hot spring baths where you can relax and enjoy the tranquility of nature.

Onsen symbol of steam rising from a pool. A lady in a yukata. A noren curtain with kanji writing showing the ladies' hot springs.
onsen SYMBOL. woman in Yukata with towels on her way to the bath. ladies’ onsen room entrance.

Let these tips be your guide when you visit a Japanese onsen:

  1. Make sure you have a bath towel, and a small towel to use for washing. These are either in your room, at the front desk of an onsen, or sometimes they are provided in the changing room. The receptionist or front desk clerk will let you know where to find them.
  2. In the changing room, remove all your clothes and place them in a basket or locker. Or you can change into your yukata robe in your room and then head to the bath, like the woman in the illustration above.
  3. Take only the small towel with you into the bath area.
  4. Rinse a stool, and sit down in front of the shower. Use soap and the small towel to scrub yourself thoroughly. Shampoo and rinse your hair. Then rinse off. Rinse the towel well, too. Be careful not to spray or splash people near you. If you have long hair, tie it up so that it will not touch the bathwater when you get in the tub. If you don’t want to wash your hair, there are usually disposable shower caps available in the changing room.
  5. Use the scooper that is near the bath to rinse yourself with the hot bath water, then get in. Do not let the small towel touch the bathwater. You can fold it and put it on your head, for easy storage and to help prevent dizziness. See the illustration below.
  6. Do not add cold water to the bath.
  7. When it’s time to get out, rinse the bathwater off, or not. Leaving the minerals from the water on your body is considered healthy.
  8. Use the small towel to get rid of as much water from your body as you can before stepping into the changing room in order to keep the floor from getting wet.
  9. Use the bath towel to dry off, put on your yukata (left side over right), and put your towels in the laundry basket, or else take them back to your room and hang them up. Be sure not to put damp towels on tatami mats.
  10. If you have tattoos, you are generally not allowed to enter onsen baths in Japan because of their historical link with criminality. If they are small enough, though, you can cover them with sports taping or tattoo covers.
A tattooed man with a line across showing they are not permitted. A noren curtain with kanji writing showing the men's hot springs. A man enjoying an outdoor bath.
GENERALLY, PEOPLE WITH TATTOOS ARE NOT ALLOWED IN JAPANESE ONSEN BATHS. entrance to the men’s onsen room. Man enjoying the outdoor onsen with his sMALL TOWEL FOLDED ON His HEAD. (All illustrations courtesy of irasutoya)

These may seem like a lot of rules, but following them will ensure a pleasant visit to an onsen, and make the proprietors happy for you to return.

The post 10 Tips for a Delightful Japanese Onsen Experience first appeared on More Than Tokyo and is written by Diane Tincher.

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