Friday, October 15, 2010

Ramblin' On

As I sit in the hallway outside my room to write this, there is a guy practicing riding a unicycle down the hallway. He has failed quite a few times already, and now he has asked me to take him to the hospital if he hurts himself. Needless to say, I respectfully waited 5 minutes and then walked outside to sit in the picnic area in between my dorm and its twin.


I guess I will go ahead and warn you that this really has no purpose, so if you don't appreciate/like my rambling you can probably stop reading now and save yourself valuable minutes of your life.


Oh, I want to apologize for the snorkeling videos, those were the first ones I have ever done and underwater videography is definitely a skill that I lack. So keep a trash can close by if you actually watch them. I would practice more, but I don't know how much snorkeling is left. It is starting to "cool down" here, which means its low 80s. I'm not complaining, after the snow fest the east coast suffered last year, this is a nice adjustment, one I can live with for sure. Not going to lie though, Christmas in the 60s is going to be odd.


Word on the street is if I can find a guy named Mr. Miagi I can see a mongoose fight a habu snake. I think that would definitely be a sight to see. It's up north somewhere near Nago.


This island is really small. Basically it's like a drive from Stokes to Raleigh to go from Nago to Naha. The biggest difference is the speed limit is 80 kph (about 50 mph) versus I-40s at 65mph. That is one thing that cracks me up about this island. All the movies would make the average westerner believe that all Japanese drive supped up cars and drift around all the time. Now don't get me wrong, there are drifters, but that’s the 5% of the hoodlums that cause 95% of the problems...at least from what I see.


They have yellow plate cars here. That means the have a yellow license plate. What this means is they have an "economy sized engine" aka slow. But hey, they have a better carbon footprint than I do.


A really cool thing they have here are karaoke booths. You go in with you and your friends and you sit in like a "U" shape around a low table and you have unlimited karaoke (and drinks and food if you choose) for the amount of time you choose to pay for. It is a real treat, because you don't a) have to worry about making a complete fool in front of anyone besides your friends and b) the slit-your-wrist songs are unanimously vetoed. Cool idea...might try it back in the states sometime...if all my other career choices don't work out of course.


Steinbrecher-Hoffmann says hi.


Last night a whole bunch of us from the Marine Detachment Fort Meade got together and headed out the gate for a little reunion and to hang out with one of my buddies, LCpl Rogers, who is down from Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni for pre-deployment training. It was great to get to see everyone and hang out. Everything was good until we tried to come back on base. The base commander had issued a 100% search of all honchos (cabs) at the gate. They had drug drugs and random urine analysis. So instead of our honcho ride being around 800 yen it turned out to be 1520 yen. With the yen rate being 79 yen to 1 dollar, that was the difference in about 10 bucks. That really griped by batooter. Nevertheless, I participated in the search and went to Chili's Too. Those bacon ranch quesadillas are the best. I ate about half of it and gave the other half to the honcho driver that took me to the dorms. He was grateful and I think he was actually going to eat it. Which is somewhat awesome if I do say so myself.


After I got back I went bowling with a couple friends. I bowled a 167. That never happens. If they had a lottery here I would have bought a ticket...because it was my lucky night.


The thing I love most about Okinawa is the low crime rate. It's awesome. You never really feel in danger here. People are honest and kind. It's rather amazing. It's like walking through main street in Walnut Cove at night. The only difference is millions of people live on this island. For America to be like this we would have to get rid of "big business." Don't get me wrong, I am not saying competition and the drive to succeed should leave, that is what has shaped us into the country we are, but where did we lose sight of "the melting pot?"


I am reading a pretty awesome book series. It's by Steig Larsson. It started with The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, then The Girl Who Played with Fire and finally the third book The Girl who Kicked the Hornets Nest. I highly recommend these books if you are looking for an engaging fiction read. The books are lengthy, but there is never a dull moment.


The food here is very different than the food in the states. Take McDonalds for instance, I never eat McDonalds in the states. The cooks take zero pride in their product...it is so different here. I order a big mac and it actually looks like the picture. It also looks like the employees actually wash their uniforms each night.


People here are so accommodating. Me an English speaking westerner can go pretty much anywhere and have a somewhat effective conversation. I pity the people that visit or immigrate into America. Most people don't even know Spanish. The mentality is "if you’re in my country, know my language." That is ignorance and lack of initiative my the government and school systems.


I have always wanted to be part of something bigger than myself, but that is hard being an American. Everything is self-driven with the purpose of personal gain. No matter what you do. For me, I see this never changing which is upsetting. Probably the most selfless people in America are teachers that teach because of their passion. As well as volunteer firefighters. Thank you for what you do.


Well, I guess that is enough rambling from me. I will leave you with this quote from my dad, "if guns kill people, then pencils misspell words."

1 comment:

  1. I enjoyed reading the ramblings. It was sitting on the deck shooting the breeze. The snorkling pictures are great!

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