
truth is, i hated living there.
it seemed to have a theme of failure associated around it
and i only attached sour memories mostly to these walls and doorframes.
as luck would have it, my half-British half-Japanese co-worker ended up being my savior in said situation.
He offered me the keys to a guesthouse apartment in Nakano-Shimbashi that he himself rented out due to a domestic dispute with his Japanese college-age missus.
However, she reconciled and he was back in her good graces within two days sans the apt. deposit.
So, he lent me his room free of charge since he no longer required it.
the milk of human kindness absolutely gushes through his veins.
of that i have no doubt....
*************
Life is absurd like that sometimes.
I worked quickly like a honeybee to round up everything i owned. Miscellaneous items, books, important letters, documents, worn-out clothing...
and tossed them into my battered, weather-beaten suitcase that i had bought in South Florida right before my flight to Munich.
Clearing out everything was like a time capsule of sorts.
Unsent postcards from Phuket, old passport fotos, rail tickets from Europe, smudged little pieces of paper with scrawled email addresses of the lovely French people that I had encountered on my first trip in Kyoto.
i was not just packing up belongings, but also memories....
my abrupt departure from Kamakura no longer haunts me
but rather my brutal and unforgiving uphill battle to stay in Japan from last May onwards taught me many valuable lessons.
being unemployed and having no place to live right before the festive Golden Week seemed daunting.
overwhelming at first.
almost impossible.
yet i soldiered on....
not willing to give up my dream of living in Tokyo just yet.
all those awful part-time jobs and hostile foreigners from spring to summer seem like a distant memory at the moment.
i barely recognize myself sometimes.
i had grown a cynical shell...become almost half the man i used to be.
yet.
i wanted to rise above it all.
getting evicted from my Oakhouse residence seemed to be just another catalyst for me to smash this Broken Year into more pieces.
getting in heated Japanese-language arguments with the irate housemanager only served this current situation was poignant albeit necessary for me to move on from the shitstorm of the previous months.
i have been evicted from many friendships in Tokyo as well.
I am starting to cut out the people and their lives from mine who serve no purpose other than to remind me of this horrible year.
There are others who i much rather invest and put my energy into.
and i crave their friendship as well as their intellect.
i recently got invited to a Thanksgiving feast in Ibaraki prefecture this Saturday.
a smile broke out on my face when i read that email.
i have not had an enjoyable holiday since that pivotal Thanksgiving in Bangkok....
*****************