Hi friends, family, and bloggers! The last update I gave was a video of my sister's trip to Japan. I've since made a couple of other short clips of things that have gone on this summer. By no means are they definitive events (like the Fuji trip) but they have definitely colored my summer days in a shade that is distinctly of Japan and my time here at Universal Studios.
The first video is of the Chikko Candle night that we had back in June:
The second...well, you'll see.
As of late, I haven't been around the house a lot and thus haven't been on Skype or Facebook very much either. I am in desperate need of a good Skype session with the parents, my sister, and several friends. My evenings/everyone-who-lives-in-America's mornings have been filled with friends (new and old), dinners, outings, birthday parties, and work. My mornings have been me getting ready for work and work itself and my days...work :) The summer/holiday season at the park (or any performing gig for that matter) is usually filled with vacationers, and thus the work load of the performers increases to fit the demand of the increased population. Not only that, but my show is 1 of only 3 inside shows with just a handful of other indoor attractions as well, so a lot of people come to see my show - not because they are necessarily excited about the Sesame Street Happy Surprise show (though some are for sure!), but because it's one of the few places to really escape the heat and humidity of Japan's summer season.
I've also been doing the Universal Monsters Live show once a week which has been wonderful to do to change things up a bit every week. So now my show involvement is Sesame Street, Magical Starlight Parade, and the Monster's show. Halloween is just around the corner for us here and quite a few folks around here are rehearsing and gearing up for that as well - a parade and a couple of special shows/events that happen around the park. Once those open up and get going in the next month, I'm sure we'll start rehearsing for the Christmas season. That will happen probably around early to mid October I'm assuming and then sometime in November, we'll start Christmas at the park - and that will go through the first week of January...and then my contract will be coming to a close! Wow. When you think of it that way, time flies. It already feels like it has been going quickly - I can't believe that a) I'm nearly 7 months into my contract and b) that September is in 2 days which means that fall is just around the corner! I've found that my mind is already starting to race about what's going to happen after this...will I do another contract, will I get a job somewhere else (and where?!), and then all of the physical, mental, and emotional repercussions of the possibilities. I know my emotions are just going to go berserk at the end of this contract regardless of what happens. But don't worry, I don't think about it all the time and I'm not stressing or obsessing over it :) just a thought!
The last thing I'll leave you with is a picture of the beach that I went to last week. The beach is Wakasa-Wada Beach located on the Wakasa Bay near Takahasa Town in the Fukui Prefecture. It was about a 2.5 or 3 hour car ride north of Osaka and a wonderful escape for a day. It was nice to be at a beach and just be around nature and not see a so much concrete :)
Shimo and Ryo at dinner
Charity :)
Jared!
Bear in mind this was at the end of the day and so we were all tired and worn out from the beach. We didn't look our best, I'm sure!
Hopefully I'll talk to everyone soon via phone or Skype or something of that nature. Hope all is well in your part of the world! Much love
I decided to create this blog to see where my thoughts take me. Hopefully a summation of every day nuances to the big events of my life, work, and travels. A glimpse of my thoughts and my loves.
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Meredith Comes to Japan
Well, as promised, I finally finished the video of Meredith's visit to Japan. It can be viewed on Facebook for those of you who are a friend of mine, but for those who don't have Facebook or aren't a friend, I thought I'd share it here on the blog/Youtube. Perhaps some of you would like to visit me while I'm here, but just won't be able to make it happen. In that case, I hope you can live somewhat vicariously through this video :)
I love you all!!
I give you Meredith Comes to Japan
I love you all!!
I give you Meredith Comes to Japan
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Mt. Fuji!!!
Have you ever climbed a mountain before? I never had - not really, until this past work weekend. On August 9th-10th, I had the opportunity and the privilege of climbing Japan's highest (and probably most famous) peak, Mount Fuji. What an experience! I'll save some of the travel details and things for the picture captions and just talk about the actual experience itself, first.
We climbed the Yoshida trail from the Kawaguchiko 5th station which is about 2300meters about sea level. There are 10 stations in total from the beginning of the climb, but as the last 5 are probably the most difficult and taxing, that's where most people start. There was no sheer rock climbing like you would practice at a rock wall gym or something, but it definitely wasn't an easy hike either. The 5th to the 6th station was super easy - definitely uphill, but not difficult at all. The 6th to the 7th was a bit more winding, but still, not too difficult. The 7th to the 8th was probably the longest, but it was broken up with a bunch of sub stations along the way. You would switch back and forth for maybe 200-600 meters between substations, and ascend anywhere from 20meters to 100 meters, but let me tell you, it was slow moving. You don't realize what a lack of oxygen does to your body until you experience physical activity at an altitude that high. If you start walking on anything other than flat, your heart starts racing to help deliver the limited oxygen that's available to your whole body, you're sweating and you are literally picking your foot and moving it so deliberately - maybe only half a normal stride - in front of you and sometimes not even that far. I was thankful for the chains and ropes that sort of map out the route for you, because it makes pulling yourself up that much easier. Also, there is a walking stick that they sell at the bottom and you can get it branded at all of the stations and substations. That stick and the shoes that I wore (thank you JB!) were what made getting up to the top of the mountain possible. It was an exercise different to anything that I've experienced because walking and climbing like that is not the most strenuous thing that I've ever done - I think the proper word for it is tedious.
So the thing to do is to start your climb in the early evening and either shell out the big bucks to stay at one of the stations for a sleep or start it a little later and hike through the night and just try and time your arrival to the top around sunrise. We opted for the latter. We left just before 9pm from the bottom and by 2 or 2:15am, we had made it to the top - 3776 meters above sea level. Unfortunately, that meant waiting around for another 2.5 hrs for the sunrise. Daijoubu. By 3am, some of the summit shops had opened and by 3:30 I was warmed by the heat of about 150 others in a hut and enjoying some hot ramen. By about 4:00am or so, I went up to a spot on the side of the crater and sat to watch the sunrise over the next hour or so. Right as the sun was coming over the horizon, you could hear everyone gasp or utter a cry of awe. Then at the official sunrise time a man by the Torii gate led everyone in a sort of celebration of the sun rising by basically getting everyone to shout Bansai ("hooray") 3 times as they lift their hands over their heads. It was quite an experience!
During the climb, you don't have a lot of time to ponder things - I was concentrating most on putting one foot in from of the other or chanting things in my head. Repetition. Something to keep you moving forward. Near the top, maybe between the 8th and 9th stations, we broke a couple of times to rest and change out of some sweat soaked clothing and into some dry (and thus warmer) clothes. For a while, Max and I just sat there on the side of the mountain and looked at the stars. You can see a ton of stars in the countryside anywhere I suppose, but to be that high up - it was just crystal clear. We even saw a few shooting stars. Believe it or not and as silly as it may sound, at that point, even though I'm physically half a world away, I felt closer to my family and friends than I have the whole time since being here. Mom, Dad, Meredith, Brittany, Kara, Nathan, Whitney, Brad, Marissa, James, and many more people - extended family and friends - were with me the whole time (too many to name!!!).
Watching the sunrise was also SO rewarding. I'm sure anyone can get up and see a sunrise and appreciate it, but when you take the time to climb a mountain and you are exhausted from the exertion and you are higher than anything (natural or man-made) for hundreds if not thousands of miles it makes watching and savoring that sunrise that much more intense. That much more awe inspiring. That much more special.
So for a time I felt on top of the world. It was an experience that was amazing, exhausting, beautiful, cold, tedious, wonderful, and completely unforgettable. It has left me feeling inspired, invigorated, and once again, completely in awe of the beauty that this world holds within it. A lot of people that I've talked to have said they were glad they climbed Mt. Fuji, but never want to do it again. I would do it again in a heartbeat. I doubt I'll ever become an avid mountaineer, but I won't say never. I'd love to climb some other mountains of stature in the near future, somewhere. Kilimanjaro sounds nice and not completely out of reach. One day maybe :)
If any of you have the opportunity to climb a large mountain and are physically able, whether to watch a sunrise or just to stand on top of a mountain and say "I did it!," I would highly suggest you do it. It is an experience that is rewarding in just about every sense of the word. Enjoy the pictures below. Some of the night pictures were lightened a bit, but every other picture is completely unedited.
We climbed the Yoshida trail from the Kawaguchiko 5th station which is about 2300meters about sea level. There are 10 stations in total from the beginning of the climb, but as the last 5 are probably the most difficult and taxing, that's where most people start. There was no sheer rock climbing like you would practice at a rock wall gym or something, but it definitely wasn't an easy hike either. The 5th to the 6th station was super easy - definitely uphill, but not difficult at all. The 6th to the 7th was a bit more winding, but still, not too difficult. The 7th to the 8th was probably the longest, but it was broken up with a bunch of sub stations along the way. You would switch back and forth for maybe 200-600 meters between substations, and ascend anywhere from 20meters to 100 meters, but let me tell you, it was slow moving. You don't realize what a lack of oxygen does to your body until you experience physical activity at an altitude that high. If you start walking on anything other than flat, your heart starts racing to help deliver the limited oxygen that's available to your whole body, you're sweating and you are literally picking your foot and moving it so deliberately - maybe only half a normal stride - in front of you and sometimes not even that far. I was thankful for the chains and ropes that sort of map out the route for you, because it makes pulling yourself up that much easier. Also, there is a walking stick that they sell at the bottom and you can get it branded at all of the stations and substations. That stick and the shoes that I wore (thank you JB!) were what made getting up to the top of the mountain possible. It was an exercise different to anything that I've experienced because walking and climbing like that is not the most strenuous thing that I've ever done - I think the proper word for it is tedious.
So the thing to do is to start your climb in the early evening and either shell out the big bucks to stay at one of the stations for a sleep or start it a little later and hike through the night and just try and time your arrival to the top around sunrise. We opted for the latter. We left just before 9pm from the bottom and by 2 or 2:15am, we had made it to the top - 3776 meters above sea level. Unfortunately, that meant waiting around for another 2.5 hrs for the sunrise. Daijoubu. By 3am, some of the summit shops had opened and by 3:30 I was warmed by the heat of about 150 others in a hut and enjoying some hot ramen. By about 4:00am or so, I went up to a spot on the side of the crater and sat to watch the sunrise over the next hour or so. Right as the sun was coming over the horizon, you could hear everyone gasp or utter a cry of awe. Then at the official sunrise time a man by the Torii gate led everyone in a sort of celebration of the sun rising by basically getting everyone to shout Bansai ("hooray") 3 times as they lift their hands over their heads. It was quite an experience!
During the climb, you don't have a lot of time to ponder things - I was concentrating most on putting one foot in from of the other or chanting things in my head. Repetition. Something to keep you moving forward. Near the top, maybe between the 8th and 9th stations, we broke a couple of times to rest and change out of some sweat soaked clothing and into some dry (and thus warmer) clothes. For a while, Max and I just sat there on the side of the mountain and looked at the stars. You can see a ton of stars in the countryside anywhere I suppose, but to be that high up - it was just crystal clear. We even saw a few shooting stars. Believe it or not and as silly as it may sound, at that point, even though I'm physically half a world away, I felt closer to my family and friends than I have the whole time since being here. Mom, Dad, Meredith, Brittany, Kara, Nathan, Whitney, Brad, Marissa, James, and many more people - extended family and friends - were with me the whole time (too many to name!!!).
Watching the sunrise was also SO rewarding. I'm sure anyone can get up and see a sunrise and appreciate it, but when you take the time to climb a mountain and you are exhausted from the exertion and you are higher than anything (natural or man-made) for hundreds if not thousands of miles it makes watching and savoring that sunrise that much more intense. That much more awe inspiring. That much more special.
So for a time I felt on top of the world. It was an experience that was amazing, exhausting, beautiful, cold, tedious, wonderful, and completely unforgettable. It has left me feeling inspired, invigorated, and once again, completely in awe of the beauty that this world holds within it. A lot of people that I've talked to have said they were glad they climbed Mt. Fuji, but never want to do it again. I would do it again in a heartbeat. I doubt I'll ever become an avid mountaineer, but I won't say never. I'd love to climb some other mountains of stature in the near future, somewhere. Kilimanjaro sounds nice and not completely out of reach. One day maybe :)
If any of you have the opportunity to climb a large mountain and are physically able, whether to watch a sunrise or just to stand on top of a mountain and say "I did it!," I would highly suggest you do it. It is an experience that is rewarding in just about every sense of the word. Enjoy the pictures below. Some of the night pictures were lightened a bit, but every other picture is completely unedited.
My Japan flag on my walking stick. I took the bells off so I didn't have to hear them jingle the whole way up. As much as I wanted to write the names of every person, family member and friend, that has touched my life in some way - I simply didn't have the time or space. Know that you were there with me, though! The Japanese at the top is my name (or what the Japanese call me anyway): Pato-chan
So the hike itself was a little over 6km and we ascended a total of 1,476 meters (give or take a few) to the 3776meter high summit.
Torii gate at the very summit - The highest point on my side of the mountain (I'm pretty sure the western side of the crater is a little higher though).
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