Sunday, January 22, 2012

Japanese style New Years Day

Wow! Things got very crazy at work and I've been sick lately so I'm very sorry that there's been such a lull in the updates. I'll finish writing about my family's visit...eventually... So anyway, my family was here to help my celebrate New Years Day Japanese style. Traditionally, the Japanese celebrate New Years Day and don't emphasize New Years Eve like we do in the States. Most people will go to a temple to celebrate the day by praying, getting a fortune, and eating some good food!
We started the day by going to church in Roppongi. Then, since the we hadn't seen it yet, we headed off to the Tokyo Tower. I had never been to the top before so I was very excited to see what Tokyo looked like from the observatory. Unfortunately, it was not the clearest day so while we could see the awesome layout, we couldn't see all the way to Yokohama or even Mt. Fuji. Still, we all looked out enjoying the view of Tokyo. The view that got my interest was that of Zojo-ji temple. It's a temple right next to the Tower. From above, you could really see the magnitude of the amount of people there. It was incredible.
Why hello there Tokyo Tower

The family with the Tokyo Tower mascot. I have no idea what it's supposed to be...

Look at all of the people!
After our stop to the tower, we quickly headed over to one of the most famous temples in Japan: Senso-ji. I knew it would be crowded but I was not prepared for the crowd that we encountered. Now, I have been to Senso-ji many times before. Never had I ever seen a line. But that's what we encountered when we first got there (well that and the Sky Tree in the skyline).
Hello Sky Tree! I can't wait until you open in March!

Hello line of unexpected people in front of us.

Hello people behind us in line...
We waited in line for about an hour and a half. It wasn't too bad. We munched on snacks and shopped. The main road up to the temple even after you pass through the first gate is lined with tourist stores so we took advantage of that while waiting.

The main temple gate

I also spent my time trying to ninja pictures of girls in kimonos...
Once actually inside the temple, we said a New Years Day prayer. Basically, there is a grand and beautiful statue that you admire. In front of the statue, there what looks like a wooden table with slits in it. You take coin money and toss it in as an offering. Everyone tossed a coin in. True story: my coin actually ricocheted off the back of a temple employ...pretty sure that's some kind of bad luck...so I tried it again successfully with a  100 yen coin. That should balance everything out...right? After the long wait in line, we were all starving! Since it was New Years Day, the temple grounds were packed with street vendors selling all kinds of traditional Japanese food. I made my family try a little bit of all my favorite things! We started with takoyaki (fried octopus balls) and BBQ pork. Then we all split off and got different things: okonomiyaki (a savory pancake), yakisoba (fried noodles), chocolate bananas, and candied fruit. They all really enjoyed the food! Which was awesome because these are some of my favorite Japanese foods.
Enjoying some yakisoba!
After dinner, we got a New Years fortune! I have gotten my fortune before at Senso-ji so I knew that there were English translations of all of the fortunes. You pay 100 yen (about $1.15) and then you shake a metal cylinder full of sticks with Japanese numbers. There's a little hole in the bottom that one of the sticks slides through. Next to the shaker is a small wall of drawers that all have numbers labeled on them. You match the number on your stick to a drawer and there's your fortune! Jenny, Tommy, and I all got good or normal fortunes. Chris got the best fortune. But, my poor mother, she got the worst fortune. When you get a bad fortune, you need to tie it and leave it at the temple to make your luck change.
Poor mom!

Chris is super pumped about his awesome fortune!
After that, we just walked around Asakusa enjoying the scenery and shopping. We had a great time experiencing a Japanese New Year!

No comments:

Post a Comment