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Forums - General - Anyone ever traveled to/lived in Japan, China, or South Korea

Slimebeast said:
Rubang, interesting story, "bought really expensive gifts", "masturbation hotel" lol.

So u went on the trip all alone? How old were u at the time?

Yeah I was all alone and I was 24.

tastyshovelware said:
@Rubang

Do you speak any Japanese or did you get by with english? If so, was it tough or did enough people have at least a basic understanding of the language?

I'd taken 4 semesters of Japanese at a community college, and then I hadn't spoken a word of Japanese in 2 years.  I practiced for a couple weeks before my trip with some podcasts and my old tetbooks, but it didn't help.  My Japanese was really bad when I got there, but it got better real fast.  By the end of my trip I was completely fluent in the areas of asking for directions and ordering food.

In the big cities the train stations will spell out the names of the train stops, but when you get to the more rural areas they'll only be in kanji.  Luckily I got a map in Tokyo that had the names of the stops in English next to the kanji, so that helped me navigate the outskirts of Tokyo.  You can get around downtown Tokyo and other major cities with just English.  The major downtown train stations have tourist information centers, and somebody will speak English there.  They can provide you with a map and help you find a hotel, but they usually have a deal with an expensive nearby hotel.

One day I was just staring at a map with a confused look on my face, and a woman walking her baby in a stroller asked if I was lost.  I told her the address of the hostel I wanted to scope out, and she said she didn't know where that was, but walked me down the street to a police officer with a map who helped me find it.  (These police huts are everywhere and can be really helpful, but they usually don't speak a lick of English, so you have to be able to know what to ask them in Japanese.)  Then she walked me to the train station and taught me how to buy a ticket with the right amount of money on it, and told me which train to get on and how many stops to count before I got off.  This was my 2nd day there when I was really clueless. I'd slept about 3 hours and was carrying everything on my back and ready to collapse staring at that map.  She might have saved my whole trip just then.

There were some small areas where I could barely communicate with people, but as long as I could find a hotel, hostel, ryokan, or internet cafe, I was fine.  The language barrier was one of the most fun parts of my trip.  I got to the point where I stopped using tourist information centers and just wandered the streets until I found a place to sleep.

And I highly recommend the web site WikiTravel.  It's written by tourists as they travel to places.  It details transit, food, hotels, prices for everything, and fun stuff to do.  You can also look up where you live and see what visiting tourists have written about it, and maybe help them out if they're dead wrong about something.



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Every man should make such an epic travel at least once in their lifetime.

Personally I'm afraid I would get crushed by the language problems if I went on such a trip.



I went to Tokyo when I was 16 by myself. Now THAT was an adventure.

It is a really great place to visit, and I myself am going there to teach when I graduate in about a year or so. I have been planning to do this since I was 16 and I'm 25 now. However, teaching required me to complete college which I wasn't planning on originally. Plus my parents prefer the trickle down method of raising.
Kick you out at 18 and live life happily while the realities of adulthood trickle down.

Anyways, I'm finally prepared to go and I have made a few connections. Here are some things to consider.

Try to pick up the language. Buy a book before you go anywhere, a beginners textbook should be fine.
Tokyo is super expensive, keep in mind that nearby countries are very very cheap and worth a week long trip.
Scout out youth hostels. Mine was someone's home. An american lady and her japanese husband rented out rooms to travelers but there was a 10pm curfew. Fortunately the prices are about 30$ a night so you can do that for a week to save money. Plus they will often include actual japanese meals, so that is pretty cool.

You will probably be set up with an apartment. Just try to enjoy yourself and really get immersed in the culture. It's amazing.



If you are planning to go to Japan, JET program is pretty good.
Also, if you want a contact in Korean, I know a guy who runs a program there.



If you want to teach english in Japan... read this guys blog:

http://www.gaijinsmash.net/archives.phtml

I suggest you start with the first one - "My kids are perverted".

http://www.gaijinsmash.net/archives/introduction_-.phtml



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