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Ah life, life is just full of so many difficult choices isn't it?
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For example earlier this week I was walking through town in search of happiness,
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when I stumbled across a closed shop with a rather unusual and eye-catching name.
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It was the sort of shop sign that you have to stop and look up at in disbelief,
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because it's not every day that you see a closed shop called
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"Sperm"
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And staring up at that shop sign, I thought to myself I wonder which people actively choose to
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purchase their clothes from from Sperm? Perhaps it's people captivated by the shops promising tagline.
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"I never thought freedom was cheap"
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But quite honestly I don't think I'll ever find out what makes Sperm so appealing.
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But one of the biggest choices you have to make when moving to Japan is deciding where to live.
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In the countryside or in the city.
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Of course there's no one answer to where the best place to live in Japan is,
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but I've been fortunate in the last five years to live in both the countryside and in the city.
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And today I thought I would talk about my experiences and weigh up for the "crows" and cons...
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The "crows" and cons?
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The pros and cons of living in both rural Yamagata prefecture and in the city of Sendai.
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I'm going to look at six different aspects of everyday life,
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such as quality of life and work opportunities etc.
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And give each of them a point until we have a definitive winner.
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But before we even get to the "crows" and cons, why did I end up living in the two places that I did..?
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so when you're applying for an English teaching job in Japan,
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you can write down your two or three preferred locations where you want to potentially end up.
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Back when I filled out my application form in the UK all those years ago,
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I didn't know a whole lot about Japan but what I did know was Kobe beef.
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And so when filling out my form my first choice was to be placed in the city of Kobe.
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And for my second answer I wrote down Hyogo Prefecture the prefecture
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that Kobe is in, with the hope that even if I didn't end up in the city of Kobe,
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at the very least I'd be about 30 minutes away from the city.
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30 minutes away from the mountain of beef that I deserved.
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However presumably when my application was reviewed a few months later by some
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people in a room, they looked at my application and said he wants to live in
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Kobe does he? I know let's send him to a rice field about a thousand kilometers
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away from Kobe. And thus they ended up placing me about as far away from Kobe City as possible.
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And I didn't set foot in the city until about two years later.
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Fortunately though I did have the last laugh. As it turned out the rice field was
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located in a stunning corner of North Japan surrounded by volcano and the Sea of Japan
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and it was quite honestly the most beautiful place that I'd ever seen.
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And that's how I ended up in Yamagata prefecture.
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After three amazing years living in the countryside in Yamagata.
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My time is the English teacher came to an end.
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And as much as I loved it there I wanted to try living in the city,
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somewhere where there was more opportunities and in a place that was
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much better connected to civilization. I'd also forgotten what it was like to experience things
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like shops and Starbucks so I was interested in
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experiencing those things again. But there were three potential cities I had in mind
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Tokyo, Osaka and Sendai.
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I quickly decided that even though Osaka was my favorite city, it was too far away from
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North Japan where a lot my friends were and where I wanted to make videos about going forward
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and I also ruled out Tokyo because as much as I love this city,
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the idea of living amongst a never-ending sea of people and concrete, seemed a bit depressing to me.
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And for me Sendai was just right it had the countryside of Tohoku on its doorstep.
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And Tokyo and Osaka about 90 minutes away by bullet train and by airplane.
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And also there was a large train station in Sendai,
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surrounded by no less than four branches of Starbucks, so I was completely spoiled for choice.
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And that's how I ended up living in Sendai.
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One of the most overused marketing phrases you hear in Japan is the phrase
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"The real Japan" It seems to be a phrase used to describe the idealistic
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romanticized image that most people have of Japan. But it does get bloody annoying hearing it every day.
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All this food is the real Japan! This temple is the real Japan.
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This wood is the real Japan.
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However for three amazing years I did find myself immersed in the real Japan out in the countryside.
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Living in the countryside you pretty much feel like you've got the whole of Japan to yourself.
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For example in Tokyo, you go to a temple and it's difficult to feel something,
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in the presence of a thousand smartphone camera shutters going off.
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Out in the countryside you have stunning temples on tap.
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Temples with the kind of atmosphere that allow you to feel something profound and moving that is difficult to do in the city.
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And whilstin the city you can find yourself amongst a hypnotic futuristic urban landscape,
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particularly at night for the scenery and for the atmosphere,
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for the real Japan.
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The point absolutely goes to the countryside. There's a sense of adventure out there in the country that
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I've never really found in the city at least not to that to the same extent.
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Where I used to live I rarely traveled around Japan because I would have to use
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half a month's salary and three days holiday just to get out of the region.
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In Sendai you can wake up in the morning and be in Tokyo or Taipei by lunchtime,
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thanks to the bullet train and the local airports. So access definitely goes to Sendai.
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One of the sad things about the countryside is foreigners go out there
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they teach English they live and work there for three or four years
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and integrate into the local communities and fall in love with it.
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And then after teaching there's just no work opportunities and they kind of forced to leave,
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taking their skills and knowledge with them.
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And it's bad for them and it's bad for the local community as well.
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And whilst the influx of tourism has led to a lot of new rural jobs being created,
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unless you're willing to teach English until the end of time, realistically you have to head to the city.
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So that one goes to the city.
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I mentioned the word "integration" a minute ago with regards
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to people integrating into the local community and it's definitely a factor worth evaluating.
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One of my main concerns about moving out to the countryside originally
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was that I would feel lonely and isolated and I wouldn't be doing anything.
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But actually after 18 months of living there I'd got involved with the local community in a big way.
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I was volunteering at two international centers, I was doing speech contests
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and spending a lot of time with the local people which is basically just Natsuki getting drunk at a bar.
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And I felt like I was really a part of something in Yamagata.
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And when I left the area I got a really nice big awesome spectacular send-off from a lot of friends.
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And a really nice cake as well.
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But in the time I've lived in Sendai the last 18 months now I still feel like I haven't really integrated here,
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in a way that, I in the way that I had back there.
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And whilst I know plenty of people here, I still feel like I'm like I'm missing something.
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I found that in the countryside people often stare at you in a state of surprise
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that you're there in the first place as a foreigner.
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Whereas in the city people stare at you with a sense suspicion.
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Now that might be because I pretty much exclusively wear black t-shirts and I never smile
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when I'm walking down the street.
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But I found just the locals seem to be friendlier out in the countryside.
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I mean I remember one time a nice old man came up to me on the street
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and just gave me a box of cherries.
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Which is a really nice gesture. A bit bit weird in hindsight,
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but very generous of him and the cherries were bloody good as well.
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In the countryside I would speak to like strangers every day,
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Whereas here in 18 months I've lived here,
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I've probably spoken to three strangers just in the street or in coffee shops or whatever.
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So, so when it comes to integration,
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I really do feel like the countryside wins that round.
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The good thing about living in Yamagata was there was always something nearby to do
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when it came to the great outdoors. You could go skiing in winter you go to the beach in summer.
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And there was always Onsen around as well.
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But actually for everyday leisure activities the city wins this round.
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Just on account of the sheer varieties and bars that you find in the city.
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For example I had a friend come visit a few months ago a youtuber who I won't name, even though his name is
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Joey and he's "The Animeman"
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We started the evening by going to a darts bar where Joey unfortunately one of darts,
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which I'm still bitter about. Then there was a BB gun shooting range bar as well.
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Then we went to a 1950s themed restaurant and ate there for three orfour hours.
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And then we went to a Israeli shisha bar as well for another two or three hours.
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So we had this kind of this really diverse evening at three or four completely different bars and restaurants.
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And you just can't do that in the countryside.
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If you want a good night out the city wins this round, absolutely hands down.
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Finally quality of life overall.
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Life in the city is definitely more expensive, for what I pay for this relatively tiny apartment begrudgingly every month,
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I could probably get a house in Yamagata for the same price.
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But beyond that life in the countryside actually brought out the best of me.
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I used to run about three or four evenings a week in the countryside.
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Just because I wanted an excuse to get out and be amongst the incredible scenery.
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I used to run in the shadow of a 2,200 meter volcano.
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And that never got boring in all the three years that I did it.
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And because there were less bars and shops and restaurants.
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I found I spent less money and wasted less time just going out drinking and eating .
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Instead I'd go to the park and read a book, or be inside studying, or go off cycling.
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It pains me to use the cliche, but I did find myself out there.
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Not in some twenty, shitty, superficial way
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like praying in a temple for three hours, and coming out a changed man.
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But gradually over the many months many years that I lived there.
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I got a sense of what was important in life.
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And how I wanted to live it as well.
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And so for all those reasons, the countryside Yamagata wins that round for quality of life.
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Seeing as it came to three all, which makes it pretty boring and inconclusive I'll throw in my final opinion and say,
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In conclusion I definitely do miss living in the countryside.
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I feel like I was a part of something there it was a general sense of adventure
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and a feeling of contentment though I had everyday,
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though I just feel like I've lost since moving to the city as much as I love it here in Sendai.
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I realize it does come down to personal preference and most people in their 20s,
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would probably want to live in a city where they could get drunk and go clubbing every night.
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But if I lived in the countryside again I don't think there's anything that I would really miss
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about living in the city apart from just accessibility.
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And yet despite all that I don't regret moving to the city.
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I feel like it's always important to move forward and change location every few years.
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And as much as I love living there I would have felt a bit Restless if I'd stayed on.
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Whilst I know I'll look back fondly at both my life in the countryside and in the city,
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it's in the countryside that will feel like the home that I left behind whereas the city just
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feels like somewhere that I lived for a while.
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But those are just my thoughts and opinions, how about yours?
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If you're somebody who lives in Japan or has lived in Japan please write your experiences below, share them with us.
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I always find it's interesting to hear everyone's opinions.
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People living in Japan always have such wildly different experiences.
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So yeah please go ahead and let us know below.
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But for now though guys as always many thanks for watching.
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I'm off to go and discover some more awkwardly named clove shops,
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which I can slide into the narratives of future videos.
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Basically how I spent all my time just walking around the streets looking for weirdly named shops.
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Although this one, the one in this video is going to be bloody hard to top.
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Seriously sperm, WTF
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I recently had a small cameo on a TV show on NHK world called,
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"Saver Japan" and in the episode that I featured in we explored the cuisine in the rural town of Tsuruoka,
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and a nearby Haguro temple such as the kind of vegan cuisine eaten by Buddhist monks.
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If you're interested in watching it you can find a link to the episode on NHK world online,
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and I've put a link to it, in the description box below.