I know on all of my other blogs, I tend to focus on food, but it does not feel right to do this on this day due to the experience we had. But to at least somewhat keep up with the bit, here are pictures of what I ate that day:
On this day, we paid a visit to Hiroshima and saw the Peace Memorial Dome as well as the Peace Memorial Museum. It was what I would consider a haunting experience. Seeing the dome, which seemed to be a beautiful piece of architecture in its prime, reduced to a skeleton of what it used to be surrounded by rubble is a scary image.
At the museum, the pain everyone suffered was immortalized with pictures and words, and it was nauseating to experience. How could someone morally do this to not just another innocent human being, but thousands of them? The thought itself is incredibly upsetting, but seeing it all before your very eyes brings it to a new level. Seeing all of the possessions the deceased had held dearly even during the bombing and the stories of people desperately trying to keep their loved ones alive was heart-wrenching. What may have been even more upsetting to me was the stories of those who submitted to their fates after fighting off disease caused by nuclear pollution for years.
The whole experience felt absolutely terrible, but I believe it was a necessary experience. We need to know history and why our ancestors were wrong to make sure we don’t make the same mistakes and lose our humanity as they did.
Next, we went to a Shinto shrine with hundreds of yellow lanterns.
Finally, a small group of us ran to and from the Hiroshima Pokémon Center before we hopped on the train back to Kyoto. That was the end of an incredibly emotionally draining day on this trip in Japan.
This day was the most hectic day of my entire life. We visited four distinct places: Kinkaku-ji Shrine, which is known for the golf leaf covering the building and the phoenix situated at the top; Arashiyama Bamboo Grove, which was a beautiful area filled to the brim with bamboo; Kiyomizu-dera Temple, which is a Buddhist temple on top of a hill, making the view breathtaking; and finally, Fushimi-Inari Temple, which is a Shinto shrine known for its thousands of red gates. Every single place we went to was so amazing, but going to all of those places in the span of 12 hours was brutal. Still, I greatly enjoyed that day and am thankful for being able to visit every place we went to that day. After our long day, we went to Kyoto Computer Gakuin to watch Mugin Train in their auditorium.
Now, in terms of food, I started out the day with a boxed breakfast provided by the hotel we were staying at. The box came with a croissant, and muffin, bread with raw fish and onions, pickled beets, an omelet, and some ham. Every piece of this boxed breakfast was delicious. The croissant was buttery and flaky, the muffin was sweet, and the tangy pickled beets paired nicely with the sweet ham.
For lunch, I got pork tonkatsu with rice and eggs. This really hit the spot after walking around so much. Because it was so protein heavy, this meal easily got me through the rest of the day until we watched Mugin Train at KCG.
After watching the movie, we went to Aeon Mall to grab late-night dinner from the food court. I ended up getting Korean fried chicken which was supper good. It was just the right amount of spicy and filling including the bed of rice it was placed on. It was also nice to help wake me up after watching a two-hour movie late into the night.
Today was our busiest day. Although I appreciate being able to see and experience so much in one day, I am glad all of our other days here are less jam-packed than this one so I can get some rest and relaxation in the near future.
So after our temple day, we had another early morning wake up. I got up at 7 and headed down for breakfast at 730am. I’m started to get used to the time zone which is cool but I kinda liked waking up that early. It was nice to have so much time to relax and see empty places. Also it’s gonna make readjusting to New Jersey so much harder.
Now that I’m done with my tangent, our first activity of the day was a Zazen mediation with a monk. Zazen is a mediation style that has the participant cross their legs, breathe through their nose, have a straight posture, and eyes half closed. We walked into the temple to be greeted by the head monk who would direct us. We took off our shoes and walked into the temple. He told us some history of the temple and zazen, gave is a demonstration, and we started. Two 15 minutes sessions were planned for us.
The first 15 minutes went fine for me, however I lost feeling in my left leg since we were sitting with each foot on our thighs. Also the monk was walking around with this wooden stick ( that I’m currently forgetting the name of) and if you wanted you could bow down and he would hit your shoulders with the stick to refocus you.
The second session was better since I did a regular criss cross Apple sauce pose for my legs but my shoulder did really hurt near the end so I volunteered to get whacked. It actually felt really good on my shoulders. After our meditation we all got some goodies from the temple and left.
Here’s Ritchie meditating. ( Photo creds to Todd)
After mediation we headed back towards the Kiyomizu temple area ( from the day before) and had a tea ceremony! We had to split up into 2 groups since we’re a large group so half did tea first other did some walking and then we switched. I was in the walking group first and we got to see some more temples and cool old architecture. We also saw a Pokémon sewer cover! It was a 40 minute walk. I didn’t expect to be outside that much so I ended up with a little red on my face but it’s ok.
After our walk we had the tea ceremony. It was a fantastic experience where the host showed us the proper way to prepare matcha tea and how to act in the tea room. She was so pretty in her kimono and spoke very good English. After her presentation we got the opportunity to have some tea sweets and make our own matcha tea. I haven’t had matcha tea before but it was really good!
After the tea ceremony we headed to Nishiki market around 12:30. It’s a very famous market with a lot of food vendors. I got some snoopy themed taiyaki and some steak on a stick. This is where we were let free to explore until about 6pm.
In my free time, Kat and I decided to go to the nearby Pokemon Center. It was about 5 minutes away by walking but we had to wait 50 minutes to get into the store. Once we got in I grabbed some cool items and some plushies and waited 45 minutes to check out. It was a cool center because it was Kyoto themed with a traditionally dressed Pikachu and the legendaries from Pokémon Silver and Gold which was based in Kyoto.
After our Pokémon adventure, Kat and I met up with Belle and Chloe to head over to our next required activity, bowling at round One. Round One is a super large entertainment complex filled with arcades, claw machines, gambling, bowling, etc. We bowled 3 games with some of the Japanese students. I was in a group with Belle, Chloe, and one of the KCG students who was from Sri Lanka! Her name was Maruni. I bowled pretty bad the first 2 games. I was starving and hangry. Once I got some fries I was doing really well. We finished bowling, said goodbye to the KCG students, and went downstairs to game.
There was some really cool rhythm game machines that I played on for way too long. They had the classic DDR but they also had games I’ve never seen in the states. It was so cool and I even found a game that reminded me of a game I play on my own computer, Osu! I was pretty good at that one. We played for about an hour and a half then headed home around 10:30pm. We walked back to the subway and went back to the hotel. I went to bed around 12:30 and passed out.
What a cool day of traditional and modern things! I had a blast and am now very very tired and a little sunburned but it’s ok. See ya next time blog!
Day 3 was an action packed day filled with sightseeing some of the most famous sites in Kyoto. After a quick boxed breakfast at 7, everyone was on the bus fully oriented with our guide by 8:30. Our first stop was Kinkakuji. I knew that it was going to be crowded, but it wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be and I got a few good pictures. The ticket was also an item to keep in your doorway to bring good fortune.
There were also places where you threw money into a small hole. If your coin made it into the hole, it would bring you good luck, which I did. Will I be extra lucky in my future?
Next, we went to the Tenryuji temple and bamboo forest. The forest was really pretty, but a little crowded.
The nearby river
Afterwards, we had lunch at a small karaage shop. I also got shaved ice for desert.
More strawberry than a strawberry
After lunch, we went to the Kiyomizudera temple and the historic area leading up to it. This was the iconic Kyoto that I had been looking for.
Last on the tour was my favorite place, Fushimi Inari shrine. I will definitely be coming here on my free day.
We quickly proceeded to an anime screening of Demon Slayer: Mugen Train.
We ended the day with dinner at the food court where I bought Indian food where the naan was not Japanese size.
Woke up at 7:30am(??) to eat breakfast in the hotel lounge (@ anteroom kyoto).
Simple but yummy! I love smoked salmon toast.
We met our lovely tour guide Yuuko-sensei and headed out on our long day of touring at around 9:15am.
Since we all visited the same places today, I’ll post just my favorites!
My nicer photos & videos are still on my SD card…in my camera.
The tldr is that we visited & saw lots of shrines & important religious/cultural landmarks today (Kinkakuji -> Arashiyama Bamboo forest -> Fushimi Inari)! These are all places I’ve seen lots of shows & series referencing, as well as just seeing gorgeous photos of them online in general; it was incredible to see them for myself now, and our guide did an amazing job giving us succinct descriptions of each locations’ history & significance.
This bridge wasn’t mentioned as part of our tour, but I noticed the name on a sign while we were walking through Arashiyama and asked our guide, Miss Yuuko, about it. I had recognized the name surprisingly from a Kuraki Mai song before ever actually seeing photos of the bridge, and she and I sang a bit of her songs together while we walked around?! I have never been so glad of my knowledge of J-musicians until today.
After our tour ended, we were taken to KCG’s campus and straight to the theater room to watch Mugen train together and to meet with more important faculty!
This is my 5th time watching this film, and I swear it hurts me more each time. It took all my energy to not audibly sob like how I normally do at home, and I think this drained me more than after all the walking from earlier today (I miss u every day rengoku).
Maybe a little weird of me but I took the chance during one of the less engaging scenes of Mugen Train to make a quick trip to the restroom outside, and it was really nice!! While the stalls were small, it was clean and I really liked how the restroom was designed?! The view out the big window inside was lovely.
After the movie (and trying to hide my waterfall of snot & visible tears), we all headed to yet another food court within the station nearby for dinner.
I got udon. Again!
Kakeudon again, this time with ebi tempura and a singular inari, to celebrate our trip to fushimi inari taisha today.
I’ve finished typing this post exactly at midnight, and we’re set to wake up in about 7 hours for another early day tomorrow!
Combining 2 days into one since I KO’d the past few days
05/21/2023
Today we were scheduled to meet up with everyone at Shinagawa Prince Hotel. As our group arrived a few days ahead of schedule, we had to travel from our prior accommodation in Oshiage to Shinagawa. We left at around 10:00am.
Cam and I absolutely passed away today. We went from Oshiage -> Shinagawa, then saw the discord ping notifying us that Shinagawa was not the right place after we had already spent a good amount of time hauling our luggage from the station to Shinagawa Prince Hotel (we had to climb multiple slopes while getting lost around that hotel).
We were told to go to Grand Prince Hotel Takanawa, so while looking for the main entrance of Shinagawa Prince Hotel, we switched directions and had to climb up many more slopes to the Takanawa Hotel. We checked our luggage in early and thought all was well enough to go grab food before the check-in at 2pm. It was around noon at this point.
Cam and I met up with Skylar to go to our first family restaurant at Royal Host! I ordered omurice & garlic toast.
We also took a quick trip to Akiba to check out the Hololive x Kanda Matsuri collab since it was its last day!
On our way home, we saw once again another change in plans, in that Shinagawa WAS the right place after all. We had to make the walk of shame to the luggage desk and let them know that we wouldn’t be checking in at that location after all, but luckily there was a free shuttle to all the surrounding Prince Hotels so we didn’t have to carry our luggage through the heat back to Shinagawa.
After that very eventful travel journey, we met up in the hotel lobby at 6pm to get our rail pass vouchers exchanged for the real thing and we all went to the food court in the nearby station for dinner before retiring for the night.
Kakeudon for dinner!
05/22/2023
We woke up early today to grab breakfast before taking our trip to Kyoto! We were scheduled to stay in Shinagawa Prince Hotel for one night before heading to Kyoto, and I have to say, that hotel was severely underwhelming for how much extra facilities they had to offer. Shinagawa boasts an aquarium, bowling alleys, etc etc, but the room had pillows that were too soft and didn’t offer nice support, and the comforter!!!! was so!!!! uncomfortable!!! scratchy and thin….
Anyway, we got a small squad to get breakfast together consisting of Jess, Megan, and Belle, with Skyler and Liam joining us a bit later. We went to The City Bakery at around 8am. *takes note if I ever visit again in the future*
I picked up a croque monsieur, some thick bread slices & maple bacon french toast. I saved much of the bread for takeout, and then also ordered an eggs benedict set for dining in. Yummy!
Afterwards, we went back to the hotel to get ready to check out and travel to Kyoto. A bit before 2pm, we all met up once again in the hotel lobby to set out for the station. It was my first time riding the shinkansen, and it was painfully uneventful due to how cramped we all were. I had planned on getting some work done, but our group was packed into the space and I ended up taking many mini naps while sneaking peeks at the scenery outside and praying for my phone battery to make it through the day.
Once we arrived, we were greeted by KCG faculty and they were very hospitable and kind! Our luggage was loaded onto a bus while we were treated to an amazing 10 course(?) meal at a restaurant called Ganko(?).
My phone battery KO’d after the third course but it was all very tasty! (Minus the faux savory tofu dessert…)
After our adventures to the Aqua Park, I met up with everyone else as we prepared our trip to Kyoto. We went to Shinagawa Station and used our newly-acquired JRPasses to hop onto my first-ever bullet train!
The ride was about two-and-a-half to three hours, but it went by fast. As we approached Kyoto, the scenery changed from metropolitan to gorgeous countryside. It was absolutely stunning, not to mention noticing how fast we were really going on the train.
We got to Kyoto and met with our sponsors at KCG, who were super hospitable and kind. They took us to an amazing restaurant where we had a 10-course, authentic, Japanese cuisine experience. It was truly some of the best food I’ve ever had. After the dinner, we made our way to the Anteroom Hotel, which has the quaintest and cutest rooms I’ve ever seen and it’s own, dedicated shower room.
A picture of Brody during our morning stroll to 7/11 in Kyoto
On the last day of our Hostel stay, Belle and I had a biiigggg day planned. That plan being the Pokémon Cafe!!
Belle and I moved out of our hostel and dropped our luggage at the luggage holding area. From there we headed for the train station in Asakusa. We once again ran into the festival from my last post but we tried to avoid the traffic as much as possible. We went to like really small shop on Orange St that had all these old DS games for like ¥300! It was so cool. However the weather was hot, so we headed for the station to go to Nihombashi. We boarded the train without issue and got off at our stop. We arrived a bit early so we walked around Nihombashi.
Nihombashi seems to be a very business centered town so we really just saw buildings. Once 10am came around, we went to the the Pokémon Center! I spent a lot of money but it was so worth it. I got some goodies like pins, a nice shoulder bag, and a sticker! We also met up with Fabian and Pavel!
After waiting for a while in the line to check out, we went to the Pokémon Cafe! And let me tell you it was quite the experience. We ordered order food from the iPad and got it pretty fast. I ordered a soufflé pancake and a chocolate milk au lait for my first order and hot chocolate and the chocolate parfait for dessert.
We also got a dance from Pikachu!!! At the end we got some merch and headed back for Asakusa to pick up our luggage. After getting our luggage back in Sumida, we met up with Jess, Fabian, and Pavel to travel to Shinagawa for our first class meetup! Everything went pretty smoothly other than the train being busy. We arrived in Shinagawa and checked into our rooms.
After putting my stuff away it was already time to meet for class. Jas and I headed downstairs to meet everyone. As a class, we headed to the station to exchange our JR rail passes. It took a while and everyone was starving so at around 7pm we went to dinner at the hotel’s food court.
I have a side tangent though. This hotel was so extra. There were 11 IMAX theaters, 2 FLOORS of bowling, an aquarium, 7/11, multiple restaurants, many parlors, and golf simulations. It was insane. Side tangent over.
For dinner I got just a slab of pork and that was good for me. After dinner I went to 7/11 and got some ice cream and dango once more. I also saw that they had avocado Doritos and melon KitKats. I didn’t know those existed but they sure did!
After 7/11 , I went back up to my room, took a shower, and went the bed.
Next morning I got up at around 5am and decided to do laundry. The laundry was fine but the dryer was not the best. I had to use a hairdryer today my jean shorts.
After 11am checkout, Belle, Cam, Jess, Skylar, Liam, Chloe, and I went to the aquarium! It was really cool and they had capybaras! I love capybaras! They also had really cute otters that out on a little show for us. We were there for a little while then headed back to the hotel for class to meet.
We went to the rail station and went on the Sinkansen line. We waited then got on the train to Kyoto. Goodbye Tokyo! see you in a week!
The train ride was fine, it was cool to see other little towns outside of Tokyo. The ride was long but we had Zelda! After getting off the train we were greeted by KCG staff directing us to our bus for our luggage. We all packed our luggage into the bus and headed to dinner!
Dinner was at this fancy traditional Japanese restaurant where we had a 10 COURSE MEAL. It was so cool and such an experience. Pictures will be added below. I’m a very picky eater but I tried as much as I can to have a bite of everything. My favorite dish It was an amazing experience but I was so exhausted after the long day of travel and Aquarium and now so much food in my tummy so we headed to our new home for a week.
The new hotel is nice. The room is like a studio but with 2 beds. Jas and I watched some tv then went to sleep.
Okay! See you tomorrow blog!
Here are photos of Pokémon Cafe, Aquarium, Our hotel is Shinagawa, breakfast before the Shinkansen, our ride to Kyoto, the big dinner, and our new hotel.
For the first time, I was able to sleep in until 8! Previously, I had been waking up at 5 or earlier. We made our way to a bakery where I ate french toast and other bake goods. I also had a delicious smoothie and tried yuzu juice.
After, we checked out of our hotel and split up into groups. I was a part of a large group that went to the aquarium that was attached to the mall connected to our hotel. We were immediately welcomed by a swing boat type ride which we of course had to try.
While many of the earlier exhibits were more sparse and appeared to create a flashy vibe opposed to showcasing the animals, there were some interesting animals there.
This fish looks like he is eating sand.
Some of the later exhibits featured larger animals.
However, the most impressive exhibit by far was the penguin one (no biases here). I’ve never seen a penguin exhibit featuring different species of penguins in one exhibit space. They had King, Gentoo, African, and the rare Northern Rockhopper penguin native to only a few remote islands in the middle of the Atlantic. Truly a treat to see!
There was also an otter show where the otter did various tricks such as sorting garbage, speaking, and eating a shrimp larger than its head. However, we had to leave before seeing the penguin show in order to get to Kyoto…
I had to buy a bag from my favorite anime of all time, Pingu. A true masterpiece.
After riding the Shinkansen and playing more Hearthstone, we were greeted by KCG staff in Kyoto. They kindly guided us to a restaurant where we were treated to a traditional 10 course meal (+desert). This was a very new experience for many and not all of the food was everyone’s favorites, however, this was an amazing experience to experience the foods of a different culture. Personally, this compared to the Chinese banquet dinners that my extended family puts together for Chinese New Years so I was willing to try most foods. Familiar foods of Tempura, Sashimi and Sushi were also served following ice cream for desert. We also had the opportunity of making sushi under the direction of the head chef where I went first and had a great amount of difficulty putting on my glove (and ripped it). All things considered, I think I did a decent job.
We made our way to our hotel afterwards and am about to retire for the night as of the writing of this. Stay tuned, the Kyoto action has only just begun!
Before meeting with the rest of the group, I went to the aquarium with Professor Jacobs and the sign language interpreters. Afterwards, I went to the building where Kojima productions is located. This was one of my top destinations, since their game Death Stranding is one of two games that makes me want to go into the game industry. Obviously I couldn’t go in but I was able to take a photo with the statue out front.
The next day I tried karaoke for the first time ever, which was on my bucket list since I love singing. It was so cool getting a private room and having drinks brought to us. I’ve always loved the idea of karaoke, but was nervous about trying it in public, usually around drunk people that I don’t know; so having a private room with someone I’m more familiar with was ideal.
Then we all took the bullet train to Kyoto where we met with employees from KCG for dinner. Unfortunately for me, I knew eating was going to be an issue because the Japanese diet consists of a lot of fish – something I am physically unable to eat; but I still had a good time getting to talk to my classmates, being in the environment, and trying new things. In the end, I just told everyone I was vegetarian.