OPINION
Life in Other Places...#1
Published on December 15, 2009 By Big Fat Daddy In Misc

Imera came over yesterday to do some cleaning for MamaCharlie. She is a fanatic cleaner and wanted to do it as a kind of Christmas present for her good friend. So we were up late the night before, doing some cleaning so Imera wouldn't think we weren't cleaning at all. Before I went to bed that night, I sat up talking with MamaCharlie about a variety of things. One of the things was the idea of cleaning before the cleaner showed up. It reminded me of the period in my life when we had a maid.

The Chief came down on orders for Japan and ten days later he was there. We were left behind to do the pack-out, get the shots, the passports, wait on orders, board the plane and fly. That took about two months. The Chief met us at Tachikawa AFB and took us to our new house in Hayama. If you have seen the old movie, "Sayonara", you have seen Hayama. Much of the location shots were done in the Hayama-Zushi area. Living on the "economy" (military lingo for living among the natives, not in the little USA communities usually referred to as "housing")in Japan was a culture shock. The first Japanese person I personally met was a retired Geisha named Fuji who owned a beauty shop in Hayama and acted as a cultural liaison between newly arrived military families and the local neighbors. She tried to get families involved in the activities of life in Hayama and to ease them into the local expections. If you lived on the economy, you were classified as either a "Numba one" family, which meant you were assimilating and accomodating, or a "Numba ten" family, which meant you were not. Or worse, you were arrogant and had a "we-won-the-war" mentality.

One of the things that was hard to adjust to was the idea that we were suddenly a wealthy family...by comparison, anyway. And as such, certain considerations were expected of us, the most important of which was to hire a maid. This was necessary not only because a family of our status should have a maid, but also to support the economy of our neighborhood by putting a deserving lady to work. At first, Betty Lou resisted until Fuji-san explained that it would really disappoint the community and reflect poorly on our family if we didn't have a maid. So she relented and Fuji introduced us to a lady and a wage was agreed upon and a start date established. And we were called to service, cleaning the little house from top to bottom. Betty Lou didn't want the new maid to think we lived in a dirty house.

Early on the morning of her first day, Isa Tajima showed up to assume her duties as our maid. We had to be roused up early (it was summertime, no school!!) to make our beds, round up the dirties, and clean things up. We spent a few minutes saying our hellos and all that. Then Isa, who preferred to be called "Mama-san", looked around the house, noted where everything was located, looked under the beds where the dustbunnies had been evicted an hour before, saw the washing machine churning away with the latest dirty clothes, the clean dishes stacked in the drainer, and all the gleaming hardwood floors. She came back to the living room, where we waited patiently, and, with a quizzical look on her face, asked Betty Lou, "What you want me to do?"

For the next two years, Mama-san was much more than a maid. She was a life-guide, coach, interpreter, teacher and friend. She would go shopping with Betty Lou, chiding the merchants and jabbering a million miles an hour and getting the absolute lowest price on every purchase. If Betty Lou bought something on her own, bartering vigorously as Mama-san had taught her, Mama-san would tsk and shake her head and claim Betty Lou had spent too much. There were days when Betty Lou felt embarassed at how little she paid for some items, but Mama-san was fiercely protective and loyal and would allow no gouging.

We became involved with Isa's family. Her husband had been a professor in Tokyo before the war. When we met them, he was a gardener. They lived in a small house on the edge of Hayama with several children. I don't recall how many there were; I do remember one brother. And there was Amy. Isa's daughter Amy was beautiful and aspired to be in movies. She had an opportunity to audition for a role in a movie being shot locally, but needed a new dress, something that would make her look really foxy. Betty Lou gave her a red dress that did the trick and Amy got the part.

Other than some simple quirks, like refusing to put milk in the mashed potatoes, or some personality quirks, like muttering about things as she scurried about, association with Mama-san was equivalent to a college-level course on Japanese life and culture.

I look at our stay in Japan as one of the best times in our family. My dad, The Chief, was able to overcome his experiences and feelings about the Japanese, his deadly enemy of only thirteen years before, and embrace the opportunity to be in a new environment, a new lifestyle. Betty Lou overcame her reluctance to have a maid in service to her and gained a life-long friend. Little Sister, locally a favorite of almost rock star popularity, and I were exposed to a whole new world, a pretty danged cool one, too. We danced on the beach in summer festivals, shopped in markets and stores, travelled on trains and buses to amazing places (I have stood face to face with the Great Buddha in Kamakura and walked through the Ginza in Tokyo). And every step of the way we were tutored and trained by Isa and Fuji. They made our lives rich...richer than we ever believed they could be.

 

betty lou and fujibig fat daddy amy and isa

Betty Lou and Fuji                                     BFD, Amy, and Isa

 

 


Comments (Page 2)
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on Dec 18, 2009

No, cant say I have seen the Niman name.  But then one of the problems is the multitude of products to choose from!  So maybe I just have to check out a new store. 

My in-laws live in SoCal, in the valley.  There is a major beef company there (I had never heard of it until I visited there 8 years ago), Brawley Beef.  Dont know if their steaks taste better than the corn fed ones, but then they are fresher for me.

on Dec 18, 2009

The special thing about Niman is that they treat their animals decent. That video is on Pauls  farm in Iowa and I've been there quite often while I was there. It is great to see the pigs just run around, they can behave like pigs, literally.

Niman has also beef, veal and poultry farmers, but I don't know much about that. I think cattle is generally raised in quite a animal friendly way because you have the space to let them grow up on the pastures. But what I do know is that the pork from Niman Ranch Company will be the best you'll ever have - and you can have a good conscience while eating it too.

on Dec 18, 2009

Yea, while I am no vegan, and definitely not PETA, I do not like some of the meat processing practices I have seen (I have several friends who are Vegan, and while not die hard PETA - at least agree with the principal).

Strange thing is, I do love pork more than beef.  So I will research it and see if they are any sources nearby.  The beauty of the internet!  I dont even have a phone book any longer.  If I need something, I search on line for it.

Thanks for the referral.  You found my week spot - Bacon!!

on Dec 18, 2009

www.nimanranch.com

They have an online shop there and my mouth watered just looking at the pictures lol I don't really know how much higher the price is to what you would normally pay, but it is well worth it. Groceries and produce are alot more expensive in general in the US than in Germany.

I am quite happy to promote Niman, one because I know Paul and also because I believe that what they are doing is a good thing. One could make a political statement about the whole issue because it is a valid public interest to have good food. And there is a ton of money involved in the food industry which makes agricultural policy a very important issue in rural america - or at least that's what I asssume. It would be sort of interesting to see how the republican vs. democrat devide would be on this issue, because it touches also economic policy and environmental policy and ethics. I don't even know if it would be possible to supply the demand on meat with the traditional humane farming and without factory farming - and the question is wether the government should impose regulations regarding ethical and natural/humane treatment of animals on the market or not. I would support that, hands down.

Imagine the outcry if the government forced people to eat less meat (because that is how some would see it no doubt) should policy end up interfering with the supply and demand of meat in the economy. Next stop communism *snort* I can sort of imagine what some JU bloggers would write about that.

on Dec 18, 2009

U:  Your last paragraph describes what is happening to the US right now with the policies of our new administration.  It would be funny if it weren't so scary.

on Dec 18, 2009

I think I just have a different idea about what communism is. From my perspective, what is going on right now in the US is a far cry from communism. Germany is a social democray which has more elements of regulation than the US and I wouldn't really classify Germany as a communist country.

IMO Americans like to be dramatic and many are paranoid and wield emotions in politics like a weapon, scaring people into believing that Obama will rob americans of their freedom and destroy american values - at least that is what I got from some of the news and articles I read. Not everybody is like that, and I don't mean to stereotype republicans as such alone, the democrats do the same, just with other content which is just as ridiculous. How can you even make progress when everybody is so fixated on their respective concept of the "enemy" instead of finding solutions and working out compromises? All they seem interested in is to keep the "enemy" from winning any ground.

Btw, I'd like to ask you about the Colorado water rights. Do you know anything about that? I read on the news that a farmer was arrested because he drilled wells on his land for irrigation but had no right to the water - those belonged to someone else. Colorado is apparently the only state with laws like that, too. Technically, it is illegal to build cisterns on your land to collect rainwater because someone else has the right to that water.

on Dec 18, 2009

Btw, I'd like to ask you about the Colorado water rights. Do you know anything about that? I read on the news that a farmer was arrested because he drilled wells on his land for irrigation but had no right to the water - those belonged to someone else. Colorado is apparently the only state with laws like that, too. Technically, it is illegal to build cisterns on your land to collect rainwater because someone else has the right to that water.

Actually anyone can sell their mineral rights without selling the land (it is done often in the Oil states).  I suspect he bought some land, but the previous owner had signed away the water rights (or the government took it for some reason - emminent domain).

I am not sure if selling mineral rights is unique to the US or not (I suspect not), but it is often common in rural areas where someone wants to mine or drill for something without having to unload the land later.

on Dec 19, 2009

Believe it or not, Colorado is a very water-poor state.  There are strict regulations about what you can and cannot do with run-off, rain water, and gray-water.  Collection of rain water supposedly interferes with natural run-off and collection.  It is one of the biggest political hot potatoes in the state right now, development vs resources, who gets what water, etc.  A dear friend of ours will soon lose her property to a water retention project here in El Paso County...so that land that has already started being cleared for building will not deprive the area of water.  She lives in a beautiful house that her son built for her.  She will never be paid what the place it worth to her.  But all those Californians and Texans that are steaming in here by the thousands will have shower water.

on Dec 19, 2009

Thanks for explaining. It makes sense to have strict rules if there is really so little water. I'm sorry for your friend, too. Losing a family home must be hard, especially for a reason like this.

If water is such a rare commodity - why do you allow cities like Las Vegas? I mean, it's in the middle of the desert, so to speak. It seems like such a waste of resources and energy to maintain it there. And where does all the water come from that they use? I remember reading that some areas in Cali have dire problems because all the water is aquired for big cities like LA. which also couldn't survive otherwise.

What do the respective political parties say about that political hot potatoe in Colorado? What do you think? Sorry, I am just curious because I find this is really interesting so tell me if Im bugging you too much

on Dec 19, 2009

And how do you pay for water? because here, every household has a meter and you pay for every drop and also for wastewater disposal for every drop you use. In fact, the wastewater fee is alot more than you pay for the water itself. If I remember correctly, you just paid a flatrate of sorts in Iowa every month and could use as much water as you wanted, and people were not very concerned with wasting water.

on Dec 21, 2009

Have a merry christmas! I wish you lots of fun and a good time with  your families - and that the weather won't be too bad to make travel difficult.

God bless

Ruth

on Dec 21, 2009

Utilities are a local thing for the most part.  Each community has their own way of charging for them.  We pay a rate based on usage and the city charges a fee for run off...but we don't live in the city.  Our community is almost entirely fed from wells.  

The big city water usage is an issue almost everywhere.  Las Vegas gets most of its water from canals, I think.  Some of the fountains there lose more water in evaporation than most households use in a month.  But dollars speak louder than need and politicians honor the almighty dollar.  

I personally think there is more than enough water to go around, it is not very well managed.  We recently went through a five year period that was locally called a "drought".  During that drought my basement flooded twice and more than a dozen times we watched water that was ankle deep running down our street.  Where did it go?  Into Fountain Creek and on down the road to the reservoir in Pueblo.  Water storage and usage depends on how the snowcap melts and how well it is preserved.  In a year when we don't get enough snow, the powers that be put restrictions on water usage...while their sprinklers go off in the park, even when it rains.  It is a complicated problem.  If you don't grow, your economy stagnates.  If you do grow, you gotta provide water and gas and electric and all that.

Frohliche Weihnachten, my friend.  Hope you have a fun time.

on Dec 22, 2009

Utilities are a local thing for the most part.

BFD is correct.  In most places, your water is either well (in which case you just have to make sure the well does not run dry) or metered.  I was very surprised to learn that is not always the case, and indeed one of the places where water is charged on a flat fee basis (it is just a montly fee regardless of usage) is in the Desert of california!  I believe a similar case exists in Phoenix AZ since it is a crime to let your lawn die there! (That is the desert as well).

Froeliche Weihnachten as well!

on Dec 22, 2009

[

one of the places where water is charged on a flat fee basis (it is just a montly fee regardless of usage) is in the Desert of california! I believe a similar case exists in Phoenix AZ since it is a crime to let your lawn die there! (That is the desert as well).
That doesn't make sense - why do you have to have a lawn in the desert in the first place? Or golf courses..

Thanks for the information

 

on Dec 22, 2009

That doesn't make sense -

Welcome to American law.

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