Wednesday, May 8, 2013

I am Sick, Call the Doctor Very Quick!: Going to the Hospital in Japan

In the midst of the night revelry during the Hamamatsu Festival, I rushed a friend to the hospital. This is my first time to accompany a friend to a Japanese hospital. It's my first time (and hopefully my last)  in Japan. The experience was both funny and scary.

Just before I entered my apartment gate, my friend sent me a message telling me she's thinking of calling an ambulance. She has been having back pains the whole day. She can walk and sit but she cannot bend without feeling any pain. She had a hard time getting up from the bed. (The doctor later said that she has lumbargo or severe lower back pains.) 

I was honestly not in the mood to help anyone at that time (it was so late already and I was just so tired from partying) but I realized how difficult it must be for anyone to be sick alone and in a different country. Also, she was considering to call an ambulance so I thought it must be serious. 

So after a few minutes, I walked in her apartment. She called the ambulance. What should have been a less-than-five-minute call was longer because she couldn't speak Japanese. Thankfully, the person on the other side tried his best to understand her. All the while, we were looking funnily at each other. She was scared but she also doesn't know what to say. I didn't know either. I was just a comforting presence there.

Within 10 minutes after the call, the ambulance was there. The funny part was when the paramedic was trying to act out. First, the paramedic asked if my friend bumped her head. Because he cannot speak English, he pointed to his head and bump it on the wall. We simultaneously said "No! No!" while crossing our arms in an X fashion.


Japanese ambulance on the rescue!
photo credit: http://www.fire-engine-photos.com/picture/number2270.asp

Then, the paramedic acted again as if he slipped on the floor. We said "No!" again quelling our giggles. He looked funny and it felt like we were watching a pantomime. 

He acted one more time which we didn't understand. So, it was turn to explain that my friend cannot bend. I acted as I was in pain while I bend. My friend laughed along with the other two paramedics. 

After a few minutes, we gave up and called a friend who knows how to speak in Japanese. I don't know why we thought of her only at the last minute. She could have spared us from those moments. On the other hand, I was also thankful that I experienced it (without me being the sick person) because it made me realize the gravity of being sick in a foreign country.

(More on health-related articles in Japan, here.) 

After our Japanese-speaking friend talked to the paramedic, my friend-in-pain was placed in the ambulance.The paramedic who was with us kept on browsing an English book translator so he can check other symptoms. If I were alone, I would feel more depressed. I am already sick then I also have to find ways to explain my sickness. I wouldn't be surprised if I'll just break down and cry. More so, what if my friend's case was really an emergency like a serious injury and serious accident. It would be more difficult to explain. 

Inside an Ambulance
photo credit: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ambulance-interior.jpg

I guess the best way to avoid this complication is to keep in check of one's health and safety. This is especially true in a foreign country. In a way, we were glad we're in Japan where people seemed to take their jobs seriously. We were grateful to the three paramedics who did their best to help us, act out and brought us to the hospital. 

PS: Just in case you can't avoid getting sick the ambulance hotline in Japan is 119.  

Monday, May 6, 2013

Happiness in Hamamatsu; The Hamamatsu Festival

The past three days have been crazily busy. It was the Golden Week last week- a week-long holiday in Japan. In Hamamatsu, it was not just a simple holiday. From Friday to Sunday, Hamamatsu has been cloaked with the spirit of revelry because of the Hamamatsu Festival.

The Hamamatsu Festival is a 3-day celebration of... Hamamatsu! In the morning, the festivities were at Nakatajima Sand Dunes. Hundreds of kites battled on the park grounds of Nakatajima from 10 am to 3 pm. While watching the kites, people also tasted the various food, roamed around the grounds and just simply took part of the constant shouting. 

kids marching with their big kite 

side show at Zaza City 

"experiencing" the lamp of these two festival participants

cheering on for the babies! Risho! Risho!
one of the floats during the festival nights
At 3 pm, the people moved their celebration to the station. For several hours, they paraded the streets around Hamamatsu Station with their floats and lamps on hand. 

(More on Hamamatsu here)




For three days, I kept on hearing the same thumping festival sound from morning to night. It wasn't annoying though cause I can also hear how happy the people were. For these usually quiet Japanese, it was a great change to see them so loose and carefree, even just for three days. Their enthusiasm and energy were infectious that one couldn't  help but also rejoice with them. 

(More Celebrations in Japan, here.)

A Disney Parade capped off the three day celebration.(Sadly with so many people, I wasn't able to take pictures of Mickey Mouse and the Disney gang.) Being in the midst of these people was so much fun. It made me feel I belong and that I can celebrate with them even if I am a foreigner. Looking forward to more festivals!




Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Naki Sumo: Baby Crying Contest in Japan

I just like to share this interesting contest in Japan.


Reference: http://www.express.co.uk/news/weird/395636/Strange-crying-baby-contest-held-in-Japan

Strange crying baby contest held in Japan

IT is a sound that fills most parents with dread, but at the annual Naki Sumo – crying baby contest – in Japan, wailing and screeching is encourged.

Wailing-and-crying-as-loudly-as-possible-is-encouraged-at-the-event





The bizarre event, held for over 400 years, is based on the concept that a long cry is good for the health of babies.

Eager mothers bring the children to the event where Sumo wrestlers and high priests coax babies into a state of distress.

No physical pain is inflicted on the babies; the sumo wrestlers instead growl and scowl in order to get a wail.
A crying baby is carried by Sumo wrestler
The baby to cry loudest and longest wins the contest
Sumo wrestlers coax babies to cry at the annual Naki Sumo (crying baby contest) in Japan
If both babies cry, whichever wails loudest wins.

If neither of the babies cry – or even worse, laugh – the wrestlers don creepy-looking masks to encourage tears.

The event, which marks the high point of spring, is held each year at the Sensoji Temple in Tokyo.
If the babies do not initially cry the sumo wrestlers don masks
The competition is intended to generate good health for the babies
Participating Japanese parents believe the Sumo-induced cries are beneficial.

As the babies are held high, so that their cries are closer to heaven and their mothers pray for their good health.

The 400-year old ritual is also believed to ward off evil spirits.
The annual Naki Sumo event is believed to ward off evil spirits
Wailing-and-crying-as-loudly-as-possible-is-encouraged-at-the-event


Aren't these babies so cute even when they cry? :)


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