Most of Sunday was spent on yet another find-the-temple adventure. I'd wanted to see the Yasurai Matsuri at Imamiya Jinja: it's a rather unique festival during which people dress up as red and black-haired demons and dance. Sarah, I-House's only Aussie, came with, but we got off to a bit of a late start. We did manage to successfully utilize public transportation, thanks to some kind passersby and Sarah's superior Japanese, but when we arrived in the afternoon they were already cleaning up.
Imamiya Jinja is surprisingly pretty, considering its location: surrounded by residential areas and almost across the street from a fenced-in school field. But then, most of the woods (or whatever the immediate natural area might be) surrounding shrines and temples have been preserved and well-maintained. I was a bit disappointed that I missed the dance, but it was a nice visit all the same. I got my first shrine stamp in my nokyo-cho. (That makes nine stamps: Touji, Kotoin, Kinkakuji, Fudodo, Ryoanji, Shokudo, Enryakuji, Chorakuji, and now, Imamiya Jinja.)
Ema, as well as omamori andofuda, are also very creative ways the shrines make money. There are lots of opportunities to develop new designs and new kinds of charms now. Some of the omamori require no translation at all: many of those for safety while traveling have the outline of a plane embroidered on them.
These little slips of paper are called omikuji--peoples' fortunes are written on them
One evening when I was waiting in Vivre, an older gentleman with a cane and fedora came up to me and talked to me a little in English for a couple of minutes. He asked me how I was doing, where I was from, if I lived here, when I came to Japan, where I studied, if I liked Japan...I answered him in Japanese mostly, which made me happy. Then he smiled and told me to enjoy my time here and went his way. He seemed pleased--and he should have been. His English was still very good. It's very adorable when a random Japanese person sees a foreigner and decides to try out their English, or what-have-you. Sometimes they're very excited and shy or embarrassed at the same time, like they're pulling a dare or something. I remember another instance of this, when one of the club members who was handing out flyers on campus ran after me a little, handed me one, and said "Music Writing Club!" really excitedly. I was in a hurry, but it made me smile. He probably ran back to his friends and was like "I talked to that foreigner!"
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