I'm down to the last couple of days in Japan, before heading back to philadelphia. I am staying with a friend in the Shimo-Kitazawa neighborhood. It is a kicky little place, lots of dogs being walked and little shops on every corner. It is smoldering here this morning, I'm about to head out for another day of Tokyo street life. It is so fun to be back here, when I got here after Toyama I was so excited- I remembered so much from the first week here. I'm on a quest for some art books, other than that, just taking it slowly enjoying it.
Yesterday I was looking for last minute things, and books, and found an interesting street in Naka Meguro. There is a little stream lined with trees in the middle of it, and some great bookstores and american vintage stores. I have been trying to find some japanese designed bags, and every I see something I like, it is american vintage or swedish. I can say that the buyers are great here. I love the selections, but I'm not paying tokyo prices for things that i can get at home.
I'm entering the pre flight time zone confusion. Tomorrow I will give my phone back to Charlie and then I will feel even more displaced, but looking forward to all of it. The last minute walks, shopping, packing, giving things away, the general spacyness that flying induces, and the arrival back into everything that is familiar. I will be able to read and understand signs again. I will not live out of a back pack for a little while. I am already plotting my return.
I will continue to post about Japan and my work, through the next couple of months. Time and memories are non linear, folding and layering into my life. I was really surprised when I first got here, at the memories that kept coming up from all phases of my life. My childhood, friends, people I've lost, and my friends whose lives are full of sadness and grace. It has been so interesting, maybe because I had the space and time for it to emerge.
This time has been like dipping into a pool of silence, cast in on myself in ways that I haven't been in a very long time. In a letter, a friend was talking about how traveling is like studio time, you are always confronted by the unknown, uncertainty and your own habits, strengths and weaknesses. I just felt like I wanted to pay attention to every moment with relaxed alertness. Partly because of the language barrier, and partly because the people that I met were so rare, beautiful, generous and fascinating. Because we spent much of our time in silence, the exchange was charged. I wanted to pay attention, to be ready for anything. I am so grateful for this time. It has given me so much.
"...most people are much more unusual, complicated, playful and creative then they have the time to express. play is the thing that we put on hold because we get distracted by other things... play is sort of a reminder of what it was like to be a kid... we never lose that in the end... I think its always there. I mean you carry your past inside of you, it's clear, so why should it disappear?"
Oliver Herring