A question I get asked a lot is “Why did you come to Japan?”
or “Why do you like Japan?” It is not an
easy question for me answer, so I always have to be vague about it. I suppose it all started when I was in Elementary
school in the early 1980s. Ninja stuff
was all the rage, and honestly I could not tell the difference between China and
the rest of Asia. There was a movie that
came out, that now I look back on as being so incredibly stupid, but back then
I thought it was awesome. It was a
series called “Revenge of the ninja.”
The video I posted just makes me laugh... what the hell is that they are doing with their hands!?
But what really clamped it for me was when my parents came upon a
Japanese art shop that was closing down.
Everything was on clearance so they decided to decorate the living room
in an oriental theme. That included a
large screen that went on the wall showing a pastural scene in the sumi-e style. Being a kid that loved to draw, that was what
really started me off.
As I grew up as a somewhat artsy kid with a big imagination,
I quickly fell into playing Dungeons and Dragons and other RPG games. Suddenly, a new expansion came out to D&D
that I immediately had to get. D&D
Oriental adventures. Reading this is
where I really started to get a glimpse of Japan through its mythology. D&D has always been based on the
mythologies of many different cultures, and it was my first separation of Japan
from say China or Korea, what really focused me on Japan eventually was the
advent of Teenage mutant ninja turtles… Not the Saturday morning cartoon
version, but the older black and white, very violent comics, through that comic
I was introduced to Usagi Yojimbo, which is an anthromorphic comic roughly
based on Miyamoto Musashi and retelling Japanese myth and legend. Most of that comic is very accurate to
Japanese history despite its cartoony nature, and the story telling is so good,
I am still quite the fan of that comic.
Like all things though, I grew apart from it (until I picked it back up
in my early 30s), and my interest in Japan went in torpor again until
college. Here is where I first started
seriously studying Japanese history and took some basic Japanese language
courses.
Scene from Usagi Yojimbo |
After I graduated college, the fascination with Japan
subsided a little, until a new card game and RPG came out using Japanese
mythology as a center piece entitled Legend of the five rings which allowed me
to use the little information I had picked up throughout my life. It was more than most people knew about
Japan, but it was still extremely basic information. My interest in Japan was still at the
potential energy stage, and did not really become kinetic until the release of
a historical video game; Shogun total
war. That let the genie out of the
bottle… The total war series is now a
huge success in the historical video game world. Its attention to historical detail is
amazing, and it is through playing the game and devouring the readme files that
got me permanently hooked. I still had
no intention on moving to Japan… maybe visit, but not move.
The first Shogun video game |
It wasn’t until I had just graduated college
and finished with my army obligation, that found a job working for a big
English company called NOVA. I hated my
job in the US so much at the time, that it looked very appealing. So why?
Did I come to Japan? I hated my
job and all the reasons before. It was
an impulsive move based on intuition and what my heart said rather than good
sense. But in the end it was the right
move. Now I am in Japan as a permanent
resident.
So now I still read Japanese history as a hobby, and the total
war series has put out a highly addictive revamp of the original Shogun total
war, but including expansions for not only Sengoku jidai (戦国時代 Sengoku
jidai) encompassing the 15th and 16th century, but
for the Gempei war (源平合戦 Genpei kassen, Genpei gassen) (1180–1185, and the Boshin
war (戊辰戦争
).
Rise of the Samurai or the Gempei war
Shogun total war 2 or Sengoku jidai.
Fall of the Samurai or the Boshin war
And that is how I
became interested in Japan in a nutshell.
It’s a bit glossed over, but those are the key points I believe in how
Japan came into my life. Through
history, mythology and imagination.