Wednesday, 8 July 2015

12367

12367 messages 
12367 messages sent between the two of us back and forth in conversation while I thought we were building a relationship all the while not knowing that you were just patient 

I had no idea someone could be so patient 

12367 messages over a year of empty lies about how you loved me and appreciated me 

12367 time I listened

I listened one too much 
 
See, I'm patient too but honey I must let you know you take the cake. You're better than me at this patience thing 

12367 lies 
12367 times 
12367 messages to your breaking point
Heck I heard black men were strong  but honey I guess I wasn't convinced 

12367 tries 

Now I know that 12367 is the threshold of your disguise 

12366 times I questioned it but you being so patient I started believing

12366 times I doubted you and you waited till the last moment

Of 1 more added why 

12366 safe 

But I guess on the last one I die

Congratulations. 



Tuesday, 14 April 2015

Conversations with my uterus

Uterus: hey Kho 
Me: Hey
Uterus: what's poppin? 
Me: nothing really, planning to keep it that way
Uterus: haha feisty aren't we? 
Me: shrug 
Uterus: how you feeling? 
Me: I'm alright 
Uterus: are you sure? 
Me: yeah I'm feeling good actually, surprisingly energetic 
Uterus: WELL YOU SHOULDN'T BE OK YOU FUCKING BITCH, YOURE ON YOUR PERIOD! 
Me: fuck
Uterus: SUFFER AND DIE BITCH!!!  

The End. 

Saturday, 4 April 2015

The Gift of Goodbye

I resist  change as much as the next person,holding tightly to my routine and daily comforts. I hold on to people that I like, more so before than I do now. Its natural. Before I came to Japan I had a discussion with a friend where she told me that I cared too much about people even when they didn't deserve it and that I should learn what she calls "the gift of goodbye" and just lose people and stop caring about them. Little did I know that Japan would teach me just this.

The way things change in Japanese schools so swiftly and habitually each year still startles me. There's no challenge to it, no petition, just swift adaptation from the people. Staff members change, old people leave and new people come in. New rules, new subjects, new classes, new faces, new sakura. Every songle year without fail. The only constant you are sure of is that there will be change. I only came here because I new how easily adaptable I am and I doubt they would have sent me here if they thought I wasn't.

I still remember clearly that one question in the interview that caught me off guard: "How will you ensure that Japan does not change you?"
I was flabbergasted.
Isn't that the whole reason I'm going? To be changed? My romanticization of Japan had me thinking that I was to come here to learn discipline and a whole lot of other good things this culture had to offer me. I was right.But I was also wrong.
I had answered, at age 23:" I have a strong sense of self. I know who I am now and I don't think that will change."
Easy to say when who you are has never been really challenged under a completely different context. Back home,I could prove my mettle within specific social boundaries, the known and the familiar. How much weight does this sense of self really hold when its challenged by situations I have never encountered or anticipated before?

The first thing that I learnt about myself in my first year here is that I am Zulu. I am South African, yes. I am a cultural hybrid in terms of my influences and opinions, true. But no matter how anglicized or Americanized I had thought I was, encountering it first hand on a day-to-day basis, I became more sure than ever that my culture is Zulu and I hold it proudly. Despite any hate this pride might get from other South African groups, my culture is expansive and detailed and complex and beautiful as is the language and I learnt the true meaning of this by being exposed to other cultures and lifestyles.It is by no means supreme or infallible, as I believe no culture is, but it is what I choose as much as I am born to it.

Talk about regaining a new perspective on my sense of self. The first phase was letting go of ideas that I thought were about me being international-minded and falsely assuming that at some level we all saw the world the same way. The second came with intercultural exchange where I realized, not without injury, just how important my job was,

As a JET, one expects to always have positive intercultural exchanges in this ever-welcoming country with nice accommodating people who hire you to teach them about you and your country. This cannot be further from the truth. For the most part, the most significant incidences of teaching or demonstrating to this country how the world works outside of Japan or in my own country, has been personal and painful. This was  not by choice but by chance which left me finding out just how resilient and strong I am,mentally. I could not have done it without the weight of my own history and upbringing backing me up.

There comes a point when living as an expat in Japan (and I am told by my counselor that anywhere in the wold actually) where you need to choose whether you embrace certain aspects of the culture that will probably never change, or you reject them. Now the cost in Japan for rejecting anything Japanese, is to be outcasted. This has led to many a foreigner turning their backs on this country and running as fast as they can in any direction BUT that of the land of the rising sun. With good reason too. It can get dire, followed by endless publications of racial slurs and defamation on social media and the likes. They call it culture-shock and this phase is the one some people don't return from, especially having lived here for a while and thinking you had it down. While I cannot excuse the behavior of some of these people, I can't quite condemn their experience either. Its cringeworthy, some of the things you hear.

And being outcasted may not be such a bad thing in other countries, some of us lived our whole lives as outcasts before we came here. But in Japan you can't help but look around and notice the abnormally  high suicide rate and everybody's crippling obsession with being perfect in every way to their society and wonder why there cant even be that one random teenager that doesn't give a fuck and throws everybody deuces because he's not taking this bullshit. Even that teenager, that one you had hope in, comes to a point where they will fall back in line and somebody out there knows his breaking point.Fear is an amazing phenomenon.

So initially I looked at my pocket and my unmet financial goals and I resisted leaving. I applied for jobs, ever so reluctantly and to be honest now that I look back, everything in me was dying to leave. In the end my mind was made up that too much was calling me home and I remembered that gift of goodbye my friend had once told me about.  My relationship with Japan had become an abusive one. Each day felt like somebody was out to screw me over. I'd proven my point in Japan. I had achieved 80% of my goals there. What was I holding on to? It was just fear of change and the unknown that kept me fighting. I was spent, done, exhausted culturally and emotionally, and mentally. The day I made my decision I felt relief. A month later I threw my deuces in the air and I was happily gone.

Sayounara Nippon. No love lost. Mata ne?

Monday, 16 March 2015

Coffee and Cigarettes

2015. I have a new found addiction to coffee. 

I've gone from no coffee to dessert coffee with plenty cream and syrup or sugar and milk, various Starbucks concoctions to sugarless coffee with milk. And this morning I finally had a cup of hot sugarless black coffee and I enjoyed it.

The aftertaste? Tastes like the taste I used to get after kissing my boyfriend after he's had his cigarettes. Bitter, tasty, foul but pleasant. I like it. 

I've had a cup of coffee every morning for the past two weeks just to keep awake/ get energy at the office and it's worked like a charm. Is this what growing up feels like? The sudden change, surrendering into habit?

Friday night last week I finally understood the phenomenon of coffee and cigarettes. My whole life I've been reading in fascination about these "sophisticated" city women enjoying coffee and cigarettes as a guilty pleasure of their not-so-ideal, successful lives. I've wondered what it meant, what it felt like. I've tried it with my caramel- infused lattes and giggled at my pretentiousness. My role-play, my aspiration. But never did I fully understand. 

Until last Friday night. Suddenly going out didn't seem so appealing. Not that night no. Other things were at bay. Other problems, thoughts, preoccupations. And the only temporary solution for my raging emotions, the only comfort suitable was coffee and cigarettes. Strong black coffee and tobacco- infused, bitter smoke filling up my lungs and relaxing my nerves with each exhale. Bitterness in my mouth so palatable, so comforting, so sweet to my soul.

I understood those women. I have become one. And for the life of me I quit smoking once before because I know it's a bad habit but right now I don't even care. I'll probably quit again when the time is right, I'll probably even quit the coffee but for now, it's all I have and it tastes and feels  good. 

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Funeral Flowers

I hate flowers 
I hate flower arrangement and flower decorations in buildings and ceremonies and places 
It always reminds me of death. That's what it looks like to me, those flower decorations at funerals. 

I've never been given flowers by a boy or anyone except my school to welcome me and even then it felt weird. It feels like a bad omen. 

Flowers die quickly after they are plucked and people know this but they still pick them because they're beautiful. 

A Japanese friend tried to explain it to me once. The Japanese really appreciate flowers. She offered me a flower that was  from a stage display that was taken down. I told her I didn't like flowers and she was shocked. When I told her why, she explained to me that we need to appreciate beauty while it's still there even though we know it will fade and wither away. Unfortunate to the situation she had just recently lost her father and this conversation made her a little emotional which made me feel sick with guilt so I apologized. She asked me to please not feel sorry for her or feel obliged to talk about it now because she'd had that plenty from people. I appreciated the honesty and then went on to observe the flowers more carefully. They were indeed beautiful. I still couldn't help but feel sorry that they were slowly dying in my hand. 

She must've sensed this because then she called her husband and asked him to explain to me why people pick flowers. He said that either way they would end up dying one day and that they were made for us to appreciate so we use them and then we let go of them when they die but feel hopeful when we know the spring will come again and new flowers will bloom. 

In the end I agreed and took the flowers. 

I still hate picked flowers. They remind me of funerals. The only flowers I can appreciate are those that continue to live in pot plants or on the earth. This January, my friend and I went to see fields upon fields of bloomed cosmos and we frolicked in them and even picked the ones that had been trampled and looked like they would die anyway. We both didn't want to pick the healthy ones. After appreciating the dying cosmos I threw mine away with somewhat a heavy heart yet feeling grateful that I could appreciate them before they died.  

I don't understand why we can't love things and appreciate them from a distance if that means preserving their life. I don't understand a love that is so possessive to the point that the threat of death makes ownership worthwhile. How can you love something to death just because you won't let it go? Love shouldn't be possessive or stifling or  deadly. 

Yes all loving things will certainly die one day and yes their beauty should be appreciated. Yes life is short and a glimpse into this madness of a puzzle but the short time we have should be thriving not suffocating. Should be nurtured not abused for what we can give. 

Do flower arrangers even bother to make specific stage designs for weddings or funerals? I've seen the same design in both occasions with just different colors and got sick to my stomach at the underlying symbol I saw from it all. It's all just temporary. Passing. Wind. 

I don't want picked flowers at my wedding. I want pots with blooming life on them. When my time of rest comes, then you can pick me flowers and then plant a tree on top of me. 

Another year, another birthday

How many birthdays will come with you secretly saying to yourself that I am not happy with the life that I have.
Each year counting the countless ways you have toiled and tried to make it better but all you have is failure and sacrifices and plans being jeopardized by those you care about most. Some days you smile anyway because  now smiling is a choice and happiness is an attitude and no longer a state of being or a condition set from satisfaction. You realize that satisfaction maybe is your choice but we don't all get what we choose. And all that stuff about happiness being a displacement, a result of the pursuit of God  or something else... You're starting to believe that now. Because every once in a birthday you look back and think the year wasn't so bad, or it could've been worse. That on the moments when you threw caution to the wind and said to yourself what the heck, whatever happens will happen and I'll survive it or die and either way that's fine, those are the days you started loving, pain and all. And in embracing pain and change and turmoil and loss, there was nothing left but joy to feel after everything that was meant to kill you didn't. Because you got broken over and over and over and over again so many times you no longer keep count because now it's become an expectation. You got betrayed and you're fully experienced with loss. You lost your mind even, a couple of times. Went looking for yourself just so you could grasp reality again when even that proved to be fickle. You remained. You stayed. The you that you're not even sure of anymore whether it's pieces of a soul or a broken heart or a mesh of ideologies or dreams or just a lie.  Its the you that is your flesh that survived it all. Perhaps to be reprogrammed again. Perhaps. Perhaps not. However you were there and you remembered just as you realized that you were all you needed in the world.