

Landing went pretty smooth, as did the passport control. The moment I saw my bag had made it here safe as well I thought I'd thank God so fucking much would I be a christian. Then, meeting our YFU representatives, we waited at some row of seats, and, guess what, saw a japanese vending machine for the very first time in our life. And I'm not talking about any vending machine here, but a real GIE-DOU-HAHN-BAY-KEY, famous for selling almost every thing consumers demand, ranging from warm lunches to worn high school panties.
Nevertheless Narita was a hell of an airport, talking about actual temperature. I'll never forget the moment I stepped out and got caught be an almost summer-like breeze of chilling Japanese air. By the way, the weather here in Tôkyô is absolutely AWESOME. Almost like summer in Germany (don't even wanna imagine a real summer here). So we got onto that tourist bus and went to the Orisen (国立オリンピック記念青少年総合センター - National Olympics Memorial Youth Center), moving through the real city of Tôkyô.




So many unforgettable views, all the buildings and skyscrapers.. well I'll upp some pics later. Although people asked me this a lot, I wasn't the least bit excited.. no, I don't mean excited in an eager way, but in a nervous. No idea why, everything around me seemed new, but not too unfamiliar. Can't really explain it.Orisen is a really big facility actually, didn't expect that.



There're a lot of opportunities to practice all kinds of sports, and of course they have their own &sleeping rooms and canteen. My and my Austrian room mate Thomas just ate supper there. Although my inner self denies it, I'm super jet-lagged. With almost 50kg of luggage. A bit tiredness, thirstiness and imagined earthquakes (actually a girl had them too). But only soft ones. Actually, I wonder how I could write so much without collapsing. They told us tomorrow's gonna be some kind of Kumon test to find out our Japanese skill level. Maybe I wrote too much after all, who's gonna read all that crap anyway? Gotta break off here, the tiredness is catching up... see ya later. PS.: I think I've found the same vending machine AkitaTom used on his Orientation, gonna upp some pics of that too.

1 comment:
You are really in Japan :D
That is so cool!
I'll be an avid reader of your blog from now on to get all the first-hand information I can.
The imaginary earthquakes are from the plane. Your body gets used to the movements the plane makes and reproduces them even after you are on firm land again. (enough wise-cracking from e now).
Katerina
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