Pachipro
Aug 10, 2005, 02:02
Are the Japanese really honorable and honest people as most people seem to think or are they just like everybody else? A lot of people seem to think they are. Some say it is because they are of one race and ethnicity. Some say itfs because of the group mentality thinking. Others say itfs because of the deep rooted culture based on codes of the samurai with bushido and the similar codes of the Yakuza. Others say itfs because of their morals and upbringing. And still, others say itfs because of the dense population and proximity to each other that one has to think about anotherfs feelings. I donft know the correct answer, but I do know one thing, and that is, in one experience of mine I was grateful that at least one person was honest and honorable.
Back when I was a student at Sophia University in about 1980 I also had a part-time job teaching English to businessmen and college students at a small school I worked at during the week and on Saturdays. We always were paid in cash on the 25th of the month. I had adopted the bad habit of carrying around one of those long rectangular wallets that I had received as a gift from a friend of mine. Maybe youfve seen them. They are thin, sometimes made out of leather or silk, and are long enough to hold Japanese bills without them being folded. A lot of businessmen carry one in the inside breast pocket of their suit jacket.
It was a fashion trend back then to have one prominently sticking out of your back pocket as it kind of made you look gcoolh and fashionable. (And we all know how important it is to be fashionable and gwith the timesh in Japan.) Why they were carried like that I donft know because they could easily be lifted from your back pocket and pickpockets are well known in Japan. However, I was told that that was rare.
Anyway, to look like I gbelongedh and cool, I started carrying one about two months prior. When I got paid this particular day, I put the twelve 10,000 notes in the wallet, stuffed it in my back pocket and started out for home. I got a seat on the train and slept most of the way home.
When I got to my train station I proceeded up the stairs with the crowd to the ticket taker. I reached around for my wallet to show my train pass and it was gone! It had everything in there, my train pass, my money, my bank card, important phone numbers, student ID, etc. Luckily it didnft have my gaijin card in there as back then it was a little booklet that wouldnft fit in any kind of wallet. I always kept it in the other back pocket. I panicked thinking how I was going to pay my rent and bills this month. I knew for sure right then and there that I would never see it again and it was gone forever. I thought for sure I was pick-pocketed while walking to the train or getting off. With Shinjuku station being so crowded I could understand how easily someone could have lifted it without my ever knowing it.
I explained my plight to the ticket taker and he pointed me to an office. I went in and explained my predicament to the station master. He asked me for a complete description of the wallet and its contents. He also asked for proof of who I was and luckily I had my gaijin card. I explained that I probably lost it after I got on the Odakyu line at Shinjuku as I had to show my train-pass for entry. He wrote everything down and made a few phone calls to the major express stops along the Odakyu line. From his conversations I knew he wasnft having any luck. After his last phone call to Shinjuku station he hung up the phone, looked at me apologetically, and said that I might have better luck checking back with him the morning.
Even though our conversation was conducted in Japanese, he never seemed surprised that I could speak Japanese, nor did he try to speak to me in English. He was professional throughout and treated me, I guess, as he would any Japanese person.
I went down the stairs of the train station and walked home in utter despair. I kept thinking how stupid I was to carry that thing in my pocket like that knowing that it couldfve been so easily lifted. I had no money on me whatsoever save for a couple of 100 yen and other coins and the banks were closed. I usually ate dinner out as it only cost 4 or 500 yen and I couldnft even eat that night. I did have some ramen, eggs and bread at home though so it wouldnft be a total loss.
When I got home, I was still so despondent that I wasnft even hungry. I just sat at my kotatsu and stared into space thinking about the 120,000 plus yen that I had just lost. I quickly did some calculating, got out my bank book, and figured that all was not that bad as I still had just enough money in the bank to pay my rent and bills and buy a new train pass. Then I thought about my student ID as I couldnft buy a student-discount train pass without one; and my bank card. I couldnft even go to an ATM. It would take a couple of days to get a new student ID and at least a week to get a new bank card.
After about an hour or so I thought that I was not going to let this screw up my life. Itfs gone and therefs nothing I can do about it. I chalked it up to a gstupid taxh that one pays going through lifefs experiences. Besides, there is still tomorrow. Even if I just got back the wallet with my student ID and train pass I would be happy as the train pass cost me about 7,500 yen for a three month pass and I just bought it the previous month!
I was now feeling a bit hungry and decided that I was going to go out to eat and get drunk. I wandered over to the little snack across the street from my apartment and asked the mama-san if I could pay her tomorrow and explained what had happened to me. Without so much as a second thought she told me not to worry about it and that I could pay tomorrow or whenever I could. I quickly ordered a beer and some food.
After a while my good friend Suzuki-san walked in with his ever present dog, Jiro, on his back. Mama-san explained to him what had happened. He immediately said that he was paying my tab that night and I was not worry. As I ate and we talked, I thought about what a great country this is and what good friends I had made. Here a foreigner loses his months pay and his Japanese friends step in to help him out. Mr. Suzuki even offered me 10,000 yen to tide me over, but I refused as I told him I would be going to the bank in the morning.
We drank and sang a few songs and then I went home. As I lay in the futon waiting for sleep to befall me, I still couldnft stop thinking about the lost wallet.
I awoke the next morning, started up the kerosene heater, put my futon away, made some coffee and watched a little TV. After about an hour I got out my bank book and my hanko (official seal with my name on it), put them in my bag, turned off the heater, and ventured on up to the train station and the station masters office in the hopes that someone may have found my wallet and turned it in. But I still highly doubted it.
The station master was a different person, but he had all my information. When I told him who I was he said, ghai, hai,h and went on to explain that my wallet had indeed been found and I could pick it up at Hon-Atsugi station, a short distance away, as that was where it was turned in. I breathed a sigh of relief and asked him if there was any money in it. He said he didnft know. I was just so glad that at least I might get back the train pass, my student ID card, and my bank card. I wasnft so much worried about the train pass and my bank card as, unless it was a young person who pick-pocketed me, they wouldnft be able to use my train pass as it had gSTUDENTh stamped in bold kanji on it. Also, they couldnft use my bank card either as they didnft know my PIN number.
As I had enough money to buy a ticket to Hon-Atsugi, I didnft bother wasting any time going to the bank as, if my money was indeed stolen, I would go to the bank at Hon-Atsugi station. I purchased a ticket and a can of hot coffee from one of the vending machines and sat on the bench waiting for my train to arrive. It was a sunny day. A brisk March wind was blowing and I was warmed by the coffee. It was one of those days when the sun was bright, the air was crisp with just a hint of spring, the sky was picture perfect blue, and you were just glad to be alive. I just hoped I would feel the same after getting my wallet back.
After about five minutes I heard the familiar female voice announcing that the train was arriving and to stay behind the yellow line. I boarded the first car as I usually did and stood behind the engineer as I always enjoyed the view from this perspective.
Five stops later I was at Hon-Atsugi and found my way to the station masters office. I told him who I was and produced my gaijin card as proof. He asked me to identify the contents in detail and I did. He then went around a partition and after a few agonizingly long minutes came back. He had my wallet and a piece of paper in his hand. I was relieved as all hell. He laid my wallet on the counter and explained that the piece of paper he was giving me had the name, address, and phone number of the person who had found my wallet and turned it in. He said that I should call them and thank them. I said that I would. He asked if he should write the information in romaji and I told him that he neednft bother as I could read Japanese. He then asked me to check the contents of the wallet. As I opened it I was dumbfounded that every single item in my wallet was still there right down to the money! Nothing was missing, not even a 500 yen note! It was all there! This time I put my wallet in my bag and vowed that I would use a normal wallet from now on. No more trying to look cool.
As I left the station masters office I bowed and thanked him and headed for my train back home. I couldnft help but be awestruck that my wallet was turned in and that nothing was missing. If this happened in the States, Ifm sure Ifd never see it again. The odds there were against me especially with all that money in it. But some kind person may just as well have turned it in there also.
As I rode the train home I just couldnft get over it. I had heard that the Japanese were an honest people, but this was just unbelievable. I looked at the paper and the name on it written in Japanese. It was a womanfs name and she lived in Atsugi city. After I got to my own station I went immediately to a phone booth and dialed the number. A lady answered and it was she. I immediately guessed she was probably in her 40fs or so and told her who I was. I thanked her for finding my wallet and turning it in. She seemed more worried than I was as it had everything of mine in it. She said that she noticed it on the seat of the train after I had gotten off. As the doors were already closed, she decided to turn it in at her station after finding no phone number for me in the wallet. She said that she worried about it all night as she knew I would be bothered by my loss. Leave it to the Japanese to be more concerned about the other person! She complimented me on my Japanese and I thanked her profusely and finally said good bye. Come to think of it, Ifm sure I was also bowing my head while thanking her on the phone.
After hanging up the phone I immediately went to a nearby post office where I purchased an envelope. I asked for a sheet of paper from the postal person and wrote a thank you note in Japanese to this kind lady. After I signed my name, I reached into my bag for my wallet, opened it and removed a 10,000 yen note. I placed the note in the envelope and sealed it up; wrote down her address in Japanese and turned it in to the postal person. I had learned somewhere that it is a custom in Japan to pay a reward to the person finding, and turning in, a lost item. I fulfilled this custom.
As I left the post office and headed home I was more than happy that I was living in a country where some people do think about, and feel for others, including foreigners. The golden rule, so far as I knew, applied to Japan.
Back when I was a student at Sophia University in about 1980 I also had a part-time job teaching English to businessmen and college students at a small school I worked at during the week and on Saturdays. We always were paid in cash on the 25th of the month. I had adopted the bad habit of carrying around one of those long rectangular wallets that I had received as a gift from a friend of mine. Maybe youfve seen them. They are thin, sometimes made out of leather or silk, and are long enough to hold Japanese bills without them being folded. A lot of businessmen carry one in the inside breast pocket of their suit jacket.
It was a fashion trend back then to have one prominently sticking out of your back pocket as it kind of made you look gcoolh and fashionable. (And we all know how important it is to be fashionable and gwith the timesh in Japan.) Why they were carried like that I donft know because they could easily be lifted from your back pocket and pickpockets are well known in Japan. However, I was told that that was rare.
Anyway, to look like I gbelongedh and cool, I started carrying one about two months prior. When I got paid this particular day, I put the twelve 10,000 notes in the wallet, stuffed it in my back pocket and started out for home. I got a seat on the train and slept most of the way home.
When I got to my train station I proceeded up the stairs with the crowd to the ticket taker. I reached around for my wallet to show my train pass and it was gone! It had everything in there, my train pass, my money, my bank card, important phone numbers, student ID, etc. Luckily it didnft have my gaijin card in there as back then it was a little booklet that wouldnft fit in any kind of wallet. I always kept it in the other back pocket. I panicked thinking how I was going to pay my rent and bills this month. I knew for sure right then and there that I would never see it again and it was gone forever. I thought for sure I was pick-pocketed while walking to the train or getting off. With Shinjuku station being so crowded I could understand how easily someone could have lifted it without my ever knowing it.
I explained my plight to the ticket taker and he pointed me to an office. I went in and explained my predicament to the station master. He asked me for a complete description of the wallet and its contents. He also asked for proof of who I was and luckily I had my gaijin card. I explained that I probably lost it after I got on the Odakyu line at Shinjuku as I had to show my train-pass for entry. He wrote everything down and made a few phone calls to the major express stops along the Odakyu line. From his conversations I knew he wasnft having any luck. After his last phone call to Shinjuku station he hung up the phone, looked at me apologetically, and said that I might have better luck checking back with him the morning.
Even though our conversation was conducted in Japanese, he never seemed surprised that I could speak Japanese, nor did he try to speak to me in English. He was professional throughout and treated me, I guess, as he would any Japanese person.
I went down the stairs of the train station and walked home in utter despair. I kept thinking how stupid I was to carry that thing in my pocket like that knowing that it couldfve been so easily lifted. I had no money on me whatsoever save for a couple of 100 yen and other coins and the banks were closed. I usually ate dinner out as it only cost 4 or 500 yen and I couldnft even eat that night. I did have some ramen, eggs and bread at home though so it wouldnft be a total loss.
When I got home, I was still so despondent that I wasnft even hungry. I just sat at my kotatsu and stared into space thinking about the 120,000 plus yen that I had just lost. I quickly did some calculating, got out my bank book, and figured that all was not that bad as I still had just enough money in the bank to pay my rent and bills and buy a new train pass. Then I thought about my student ID as I couldnft buy a student-discount train pass without one; and my bank card. I couldnft even go to an ATM. It would take a couple of days to get a new student ID and at least a week to get a new bank card.
After about an hour or so I thought that I was not going to let this screw up my life. Itfs gone and therefs nothing I can do about it. I chalked it up to a gstupid taxh that one pays going through lifefs experiences. Besides, there is still tomorrow. Even if I just got back the wallet with my student ID and train pass I would be happy as the train pass cost me about 7,500 yen for a three month pass and I just bought it the previous month!
I was now feeling a bit hungry and decided that I was going to go out to eat and get drunk. I wandered over to the little snack across the street from my apartment and asked the mama-san if I could pay her tomorrow and explained what had happened to me. Without so much as a second thought she told me not to worry about it and that I could pay tomorrow or whenever I could. I quickly ordered a beer and some food.
After a while my good friend Suzuki-san walked in with his ever present dog, Jiro, on his back. Mama-san explained to him what had happened. He immediately said that he was paying my tab that night and I was not worry. As I ate and we talked, I thought about what a great country this is and what good friends I had made. Here a foreigner loses his months pay and his Japanese friends step in to help him out. Mr. Suzuki even offered me 10,000 yen to tide me over, but I refused as I told him I would be going to the bank in the morning.
We drank and sang a few songs and then I went home. As I lay in the futon waiting for sleep to befall me, I still couldnft stop thinking about the lost wallet.
I awoke the next morning, started up the kerosene heater, put my futon away, made some coffee and watched a little TV. After about an hour I got out my bank book and my hanko (official seal with my name on it), put them in my bag, turned off the heater, and ventured on up to the train station and the station masters office in the hopes that someone may have found my wallet and turned it in. But I still highly doubted it.
The station master was a different person, but he had all my information. When I told him who I was he said, ghai, hai,h and went on to explain that my wallet had indeed been found and I could pick it up at Hon-Atsugi station, a short distance away, as that was where it was turned in. I breathed a sigh of relief and asked him if there was any money in it. He said he didnft know. I was just so glad that at least I might get back the train pass, my student ID card, and my bank card. I wasnft so much worried about the train pass and my bank card as, unless it was a young person who pick-pocketed me, they wouldnft be able to use my train pass as it had gSTUDENTh stamped in bold kanji on it. Also, they couldnft use my bank card either as they didnft know my PIN number.
As I had enough money to buy a ticket to Hon-Atsugi, I didnft bother wasting any time going to the bank as, if my money was indeed stolen, I would go to the bank at Hon-Atsugi station. I purchased a ticket and a can of hot coffee from one of the vending machines and sat on the bench waiting for my train to arrive. It was a sunny day. A brisk March wind was blowing and I was warmed by the coffee. It was one of those days when the sun was bright, the air was crisp with just a hint of spring, the sky was picture perfect blue, and you were just glad to be alive. I just hoped I would feel the same after getting my wallet back.
After about five minutes I heard the familiar female voice announcing that the train was arriving and to stay behind the yellow line. I boarded the first car as I usually did and stood behind the engineer as I always enjoyed the view from this perspective.
Five stops later I was at Hon-Atsugi and found my way to the station masters office. I told him who I was and produced my gaijin card as proof. He asked me to identify the contents in detail and I did. He then went around a partition and after a few agonizingly long minutes came back. He had my wallet and a piece of paper in his hand. I was relieved as all hell. He laid my wallet on the counter and explained that the piece of paper he was giving me had the name, address, and phone number of the person who had found my wallet and turned it in. He said that I should call them and thank them. I said that I would. He asked if he should write the information in romaji and I told him that he neednft bother as I could read Japanese. He then asked me to check the contents of the wallet. As I opened it I was dumbfounded that every single item in my wallet was still there right down to the money! Nothing was missing, not even a 500 yen note! It was all there! This time I put my wallet in my bag and vowed that I would use a normal wallet from now on. No more trying to look cool.
As I left the station masters office I bowed and thanked him and headed for my train back home. I couldnft help but be awestruck that my wallet was turned in and that nothing was missing. If this happened in the States, Ifm sure Ifd never see it again. The odds there were against me especially with all that money in it. But some kind person may just as well have turned it in there also.
As I rode the train home I just couldnft get over it. I had heard that the Japanese were an honest people, but this was just unbelievable. I looked at the paper and the name on it written in Japanese. It was a womanfs name and she lived in Atsugi city. After I got to my own station I went immediately to a phone booth and dialed the number. A lady answered and it was she. I immediately guessed she was probably in her 40fs or so and told her who I was. I thanked her for finding my wallet and turning it in. She seemed more worried than I was as it had everything of mine in it. She said that she noticed it on the seat of the train after I had gotten off. As the doors were already closed, she decided to turn it in at her station after finding no phone number for me in the wallet. She said that she worried about it all night as she knew I would be bothered by my loss. Leave it to the Japanese to be more concerned about the other person! She complimented me on my Japanese and I thanked her profusely and finally said good bye. Come to think of it, Ifm sure I was also bowing my head while thanking her on the phone.
After hanging up the phone I immediately went to a nearby post office where I purchased an envelope. I asked for a sheet of paper from the postal person and wrote a thank you note in Japanese to this kind lady. After I signed my name, I reached into my bag for my wallet, opened it and removed a 10,000 yen note. I placed the note in the envelope and sealed it up; wrote down her address in Japanese and turned it in to the postal person. I had learned somewhere that it is a custom in Japan to pay a reward to the person finding, and turning in, a lost item. I fulfilled this custom.
As I left the post office and headed home I was more than happy that I was living in a country where some people do think about, and feel for others, including foreigners. The golden rule, so far as I knew, applied to Japan.