1.25.2011

90 minutes of American soil

Our agenda yesterday was to visit the US Embassy to apply for my permanent residency. Dressed up in a suit for the first time since the wedding, we first visited our lawyer’s office to pick up the documents. We bathroom-hop our ways to Akasaka, and arrive at the gate of the embassy at 14:15. There were about 20 people lined up for the entry, but with our appointment ticket, we are immediately at the top of the line. Going through the security much tighter than Narita Airport, we go inside and were given a number.

The first step of this application is to submit necessary documents, and answer a few questions regarding our marital status. The stress level kept rising when we were told us to sit and to arrange all documents in exact order listed on a piece of paper until the number is called. Shuffling through 40 pages of letter-sized paper, our number 047 was called.

So it was our turn. We are here to apply for, so called “green card”. As our lawyer did not elaborate on what the interview was going to be like and what kind of question will be asked, our only reference was the 1990 Peter Weir film. We know we have been married for 15 months, and hopefully forever. We just have to prove that to the government. So, we rented and watched it again, and then, we prepared a set of likely questions to be asked, 3 pages long, and we quizzed each other. That’s how prepared we wanted to be.

We go up to the booth 3, which reminds me of a bank teller ‘s counter. Shoving documents through the narrow slot, we answer a few non-threatening questions and were told to be seated and wait to be called again. Taking a deep breath and finally got my eye sight back. I looked around to find other couples, some searching for documents in their backpack, and others explaining the situation to the officer loudly with arm-throwing gestures, while their Japanese wife quietly standing next to this performance.  Seeing these reminded me how prepared we were; it definitely was worth spending a couple months reviewing documents with our lawyer.

We sat and waited for 45 years, hoping that our interviewer will not question us. No. 047 was called, and we are told that today’s interview will mostly directed to the petitioner. Sahe’s facial expression disappears and her voice becomes tone-less. She comfortably answers the first question, “when and where did you get married?”, but the interviewer questions her reply. He pointed out our document stated the year of marriage as 2010 instead of 2009. Here goes our few months of preparation down the drain. Luckily he was able to amend the date and the rest of the interview was fine, but of all things we could have written wrong, it was one date that we swore on. 

At the end of the interview, he congratulated us on passing the first part of the process, explained the next procedure, and we were back in Japan. A pint of Kilkenny and a shandygaff definitely helped us to wash down all worries, and never tasted better.

1.21.2011

Something old, something blue


This is probably a good time to introduce my partner for the journey to all.


Sturdy and trust-worthy, Deuter Aircontact 50+10 SL, purchased 10 years ago.


Apparently, Deuter the bag maker, located in southern town of Augsburg in Germany, started their business back in 1898 making tough, postal carrier bags. Other than sack-making, the town is known for the invention of an engine named after the French inventor/engineer; Rudolf Diesel(1858-1913?), and as the birthplace of Leopold Mozart(1719-1787), the father of the infamous composer.

We have no plan of visiting Germany in our journey at this time, but speaking of French man and a postal service, I am hoping to visit and see Palais idéal du facteur Cheval (Postman Cheval’s Ideal Palace), in a small town of southern France, Hauterives. A postal worker, Ferdinand Cheval (1836-1924), collected rocks on his postal routes everyday, to build an entire castle. This, only took him 33 years.

Sahe and I learned about Cheval in a total coincidence. We visited the museum of a French artist, Niki de Saint Phalle (1930 – 2002), in Nasu, Toichigi prefecture 2 years ago. One of the panels explaing her background mentioned about the palace, and how Niki was deeply moved/influenced by this man’s imagination and discipline. This also moved us. 


"From dreams to reality is a long way."
Ferdinand Cheval

1.16.2011

From Japan, walking/riding our way to America

Our new project for the year 2011, is to take apart what we have built, added, and refined in our past years here in a city on a small island, and start a new life there on the  other side of the Pacific, over the Rockies and Mississippi, again, in a city on a smal island. 

When leaving home with a bag of undefined confidence in hand to study abroad in the States 20 years ago, I remember having much less worries about anything, than I do now. However, that scare-free attitude gave a teenage me, on my first day at a boarding school, friends to hang out with, and a broken collar bone on my left shoulder. I am certainly more cautious, but am concerned that it would limit me from interacting with the extreme opportunities. It is time to resurrect the buried child within me; hopefully the kid inside me still is a kid.

It would be an exciting trip to take, spending a year to move from here to there, and see as many villages / cities / borders / shorelines / cultures / peaks / etc., in between.