November 7 Harajuku
Dull flea market and the Meiji Shrine
Sunday morning, so I ventured over to the
Togo shrine, near Harajuku. I'd enjoyed my
previous visit to a Japanese flea market,
in 1992 when I rode the
Seibu subway line way out to Arai Yakushi.
This one didn't impress me - just a bunch of
picked over Asian junk, much more crowded,
the air full of too many foreign voices
(English, American and British; and
French). The few things which appealed
were priced at double or triple what I
thought reasonable; the one thing of
interest was a big box of small,
identical temari balls, which I
scoffed at (due to their corner-cutting
construction) but I should've snagged one
anyway since they were only ¥100.
Instead I walked off the shrine grounds
and back into urbane Harajuku where I
had a breakfast pastry at one of the
many French places, a meal I eventually
augmented at the classy-looking (but
ho-hum tasting) mechanical sushi place
pictured on the ten
general observations page.
Then another Ukiyo-e museum, the Ota Kinen
Bijutsukan, to see their display of wood
block prints. An irritating, rude foreigner
was in whispery, giggly discussion with
his native date; they had to examine
everything and the visit was made even
more uncomfortable/memorable by the
slippers. The Ota Kinen was one of
the very few public places I visited
which mandated the shoes-off Japanese
indoor tradition: at the entrance
one placed their footwear in little lockers,
and donned a pair of one-size-fits-all
(natives) slippers - those available were
unusually small with thick soles whose
edges really dug in - ouch! Suffer
For Art! The reason they were required
was, to inspect one wall of pictures closely
one had to step onto a low shelf of
tatami matting. The furnishings
everywhere else were thoroughly Western,
however; so I thought the shoe deal was
uncalled for (and the prints displayed
at this time, a small subset of the
holdings, weren't really noteworthy).
On the other hand, the Meiji Shrine
was fun - it's in the center of a patch
of parkland much liked by that
emperor, and I'd been before but
returned since I was on the lookout
for another "traffic safety" sticker,
and they had a good one.
An added attraction was the little
girls dressed in kimono - I couldn't
help but notice these little family
groups when I visited big shrines; their
numbers were increasing as the calendar
approached "Shichi Go San" day,
November 15. Not exactly a
holiday (it means Seven Five Three)
but it marks a time when
girls of age 3 and 7 and boys of age 3
and 5 are celebrated. So their parents
dress 'em up in traditional garb and
take 'em to the local shrine to pay
their ancestors respect. I tried to
get some photos but all my attempts
were thwarted, and the looks their
parents shot my way were off-putting
so I tucked away my camera.
Outside, near the station, I finally
observed the take noko zoku or
"bamboo shoot tribe," but it was dusk
and too dark for pictures. These are
groups of young people who dress
up alike and dance there, at Yoyogi Park
on Sundays. My first trip, this was
something I wanted to see, but it
was a festival day or something and I
thought the "bamboo shoot" business
had become archaic - that day the park
was overrun and there was a rock band
(powered by a portable generator) every
few meters, all playing at once. Their
sounds combined to form a roar like
jet engines - but here today I saw a
bit of what usually happens, kids huddled
around boom boxes dressed in flamboyant,
home-made costumes. Maybe they'd been
dancing earlier, but the day was winding
down - the theme of the group I observed
closest was some kind of Goth thing.
On to Ningyo-cho to check in at my
last hotel, the Sumisho. It was pleasant
enough but when I went back out the
neighborhood was strange, oddly
deserted - big apartment buildings
devoid of signs of life, even lighted
windows. Guess they just roll up the
streets early on Sunday nights there;
the next evening everything was open
and all seemed normal and lively again.
One of the few open establishments was a
pachinko parlor with exceptionally harsh
and annoying signage - traveling marquee
lights but with strobing xenon bulbs rather
than the usual incandescents.
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