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<title>Meltdown Continued</title>
<description>This is an update to a long delayed blog( a long one!):Realty seemed more unreal to me then when I was in an unconscious state at the hospital from Feb. to March.Most people think that they're going crazy because they confuse hallucinations...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-08-08T18:03:13+09:00</dc:date>
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This is an update to a long delayed blog( a long one!):<br /><br />Realty seemed more unreal to me then when I was in an unconscious state at the hospital from Feb. to March.<br />Most people think that they're going crazy because they confuse hallucinations with realty. I soon realized the difference between the two when I saw El Greco's painting, "View of Toledo" on my hospital room's wall. I mentioned to the nurse that it was one of my favorite paintings. She replied that they didn't have El Greco's painting on the wall. I looked again and sue enough it wasn't there. I realized that it was a hallucination.<br /><br />I then had several more.<br /><br />I thought I was reading a newspaper, when I tried turn the page the newspaper vanished. The same thing happened when I thought I was reading a movie magazine. <br />Instead of getting freaked out about this, I realized that I could have fun with hallucinations. I mentioned to a nurse that I saw some escaped laboratory rats scurrying across the floor. She told me that the hospital didn't have any laboratory rats and she asked me why I thought they were laboratory rats. I told her it was because they were all wearing white coats and started laughing like a lunatic.<br />The nurse didn't realize I was making a joke. I felt that it was a sign that I wasn't going crazy because I could make a joke about hallucination. But the nurse was convinced that I was in fact a lunatic.<br /><br />"Hell is other people."<br /><br />This is a quote from the French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre( I think) the best describes the real lunatics who shared my hospital ward. They all had certain peculiarities. <br />One was a Japanese-American who seemed possessed with notions of utopian societies and talked endlessly about them. He seemed to be a guru of sorts who had quite a following. There seemed to be a constant stream of university age young people who visited his bedside to listen to his diatribes.<br /><br />One day when my dear Chizuko was paying me a visit I asked her what he was going on about. She replied that he kept on talking about money. <br />One time he invited a group of his followers to his hospital room, for discussion session. What caught my attention was an American girl saying that she went through hell growing up in the farming community of Yuba City, California.<br />I was of the opinion that listening to her snot-nosed b.s. was far more hellish.<br />I just wanted to read my book(the written word had ceased the "vanishing point" by then). <br /><br />Hell was, for me, being in a room in which all the other patients talked in their sleep-, for hours.  Keeping me awake. It was like being a room filled with "motor-mouthed somnambulists". <br />One particular loony would get out of bed and search the hospital room for something or someone, I don't know which. All I knew for sure was I couldn't sleep at night. I told the nurses and doctors that this, not an ammonia imbalance was making me crazy. The next day they moved me to another, quieter room.<br /><br />"Angels of Mercy".<br /><br />The up-side of my experience was the great nurses.<br />They were all cheerful and understanding.<br />One nurse whose main duty was drawing blood samples was always smiling.<br />When she drew the blood samples she never cause any pain or discomfort and never left a syringe mark.<br />My favorite nurse was Mika who seemed incapable of saying a sentence without saying "Thank you". She liked to talk to me about the books I was reading and about food. She was also a big movie buff. I tried to get her to say a sentence in English without saying "Thank you". I said "Mika, when a person says Thank you to you, your answer would be You Are Welcome." Mika said "So I say you're welcome when they say Thank You."<br />"That right"<br />"That' right? .......Thank you!"<br /><br />When one is hospitalized for a long time(5 weeks in my case) one notices certain quirks in nurses behavior or mannerisms. There was one nurse i saw everyday who introduced herself to me every time I saw her. I'll never forget that her name was "Marie". I always wondered if she had a deep fear of someone forgetting her name.<br /><br />Only one anxiety was sometimes in the back of my mind. The previous time I spend a long duration in a hospital was when I had to have my knee rebuilt in Portland, Oregon.It was during the 1972 Olympics when the Israeli Olympic team was taken hostage and killed by terrorists. This time while hospitalized in Tokyo, The World Baseball Classic was being televised. I would sometimes be reminded of the 1972 Olympic tragedy.<br />A lengthy stay in a hospital is a good way to think  about many things and to get a new perspective on one's life. I do miss those "Angels of Mercy" a lot.<br /><br />Thank You!<br /><br /><br /><br /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>In the memory of Jim Jedlicka/Martin's Melt Down</title>
<description>This blog is in the memory of Jim Jedlicka who passed away at the age of 83 of renal failure on March 13. At first, I thought that questionable taste to write this blog, as Jim Jedlicka was about to enter the "Big Sleep". Jim's wife, my sis...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-04-18T17:53:19+09:00</dc:date>
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This blog is in the memory of Jim Jedlicka who passed away at the age of 83 of renal failure on March 13. <br />At first, I thought that questionable taste to write this blog, as Jim Jedlicka was about to enter the "Big Sleep". Jim's wife, my sister Linda assured me that given Jim's sense of humor, he would aprove of my contribution.( to be continued....)<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730531_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730531_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730531_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />"Martin's Meltdown"<br />Thucydides the famouse Greek statesman, historian, and seaman wrote in the 4th century B.C. quoted a collision at sea can ruin your whole day. Some events foretell the impending arrival of more than an ordinary "bad hair day".<br />I knew I was in for one of these when I woke up in the hospital tied securely to my bed.<br />I thought I was in a scene from the movie"Bull Durham", a movie about baseball in which Susan Sarandon plyas the "High Priestess" of the church of baseball. And she ties Tim Robbins to the bed and keeps him up all night reading him poetry.<br />Unfortunately, Susan Sarandon had not tied me to my bed.<br />And my choice of poetry would have been "Charles Bukowski"certainly not "Lord Byron".<br /><br />It turns out that I had been lying in bed unconscious for 2 days  <br />and had been in a coma.<br />The last I remember was that I went to the toilet at my home bleeding like an ebola virus victim. I was experiencing severe leg muscle spasms. The next thing I knew I was looking into the eyes of a smiling nurse who seemed happy that I was conscious.<br />A short time later my wife and son came to my bedside, but I was not sure who anyone was.<br />For some reason, I thought I was in Mexico and I couldn't figure out why all the pretty senoritas were speaking to me in Japanese.<br /><br />It seems that the ammonia balance in my brain was way out of kilter.Ammonia helps stabilize your mental functions and if it is too out of balance you can go berserk. I wasn't accustomed <br />to this state of mind, having gone bersek before.<br /><br />I regained my bearings well enough to realize that something very unsual had befallen me.(to be continued....)<br /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>I'm Not Here...</title>
<description>Dear All of you who might be in the here &amp; now.Don't take it for granted that your government does. It'sa sorta "reverse paranoia" ("I have this feeling that I'malways following someone"...from the late, great GeorgeCarlin, my guru). Instea...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2009-01-31T20:42:21+09:00</dc:date>
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Dear All of you who might be in the here & now.<br />Don't take it for granted that your government does. It's<br />a sorta "reverse paranoia" ("I have this feeling that I'm<br />always following someone"...from the late, great George<br />Carlin, my guru). Instead, it's the realization that my<br />government (or agencies) has lost track of my being here<br />& now. I came to realize this state of affairs when I<br />applied for my Social Security Benefits. Using the <br />internet I found that they had no record of me. My<br />application was somewhere lost in cyberspace. I resorted<br />to an antiquated device, the telephone, to find out why<br />I no longer exist. Did I die and no one bothered to tell<br />me? Beatle Paul McCartney commmented on this in regards <br />to people perceiving a cryptic message from a Beatles'<br />tune to mean "Paul is dead". "I'd probably be the last<br />to know", he quipped. This sort of thing happens when<br />records are run backwards...which seems to be what the<br />U.S. Social Security Agency did to my records, not to<br />compare them to the Beatles' records.<br /><br />After moving to live & work in Japan I didn't need to<br />pay into Social Security. After 20 years this came<br />back to haunt me...or cause me inconvenience anyway.<br />It seems Social Security decided that I no longer<br />existed and assigned my SS# to someone else. To<br />paraphrase a favorite ditty of mine:<br />    Yesterday I met a man who wasn't there,<br />    He wasn't there again today,<br />    Everyday, he isn't there,<br />    Oh, how I wish he'd go away.<br />I've somehow become someone else! But, I won't go away.<br />As of now, the U.S. govt. & I have resolved this matter.<br />The embassy's staff were quite baffled by this at first<br />because they'd never encountered a case such a this <br />before. I wonder what the other person with my SS# is<br />going to do. <br /><br />To quote an embassy staff member:"I mean, I can see<br />your documents and that you are you...I'm sure you've<br />doubted the fact."<br /><br />I don't now doubt the fact that I am Me. I'll always<br />think of this whenever I hear someone say "I don't<br />know who I am...I need to find my identity and place<br />in this world!" Just ask your local embassy.<br /><br />Yurz, Martin<a name="more"></a>

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<title>[PR]注目のキーワード「ゲリラ豪雨」</title>
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<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E9%9B%A8&hid=35">雨</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E9%9B%B7&hid=35">雷</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%82%98&hid=35">傘</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%A4%8F&hid=35">夏</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%A4%96&hid=35">外</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%A4%A9%E6%B0%97&hid=35">天気</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E3%81%84%E3%81%84&hid=35">いい</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%B8%B0%E3%82%8A&hid=35">帰り</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E8%B1%AA%E9%9B%A8&hid=35">豪雨</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E9%9B%B2&hid=35">雲</a>
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<dc:date>2009-01-31T20:42:21+09:00</dc:date>
<dc:creator>ads by Seesaa</dc:creator>
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<title>Booker T. &amp; The MGs</title>
<description>On Friday night, Nov. 21st, Chizuko &amp; I went to see thelegendary Booker T. &amp; The MGs. I'd seen them live severaltimes before, both as solo acts and as back-up bands forsuch stellar acts as Sam &amp; Dave, and Otis Redding. I'venoticed that the ...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-11-23T11:03:48+09:00</dc:date>
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On Friday night, Nov. 21st, Chizuko & I went to see the<br />legendary Booker T. & The MGs. I'd seen them live several<br />times before, both as solo acts and as back-up bands for<br />such stellar acts as Sam & Dave, and Otis Redding. I've<br />noticed that the Booker T. guys on record and performing<br />live are two different experiences. It seems that the<br />record producers toned down the group's sound to appeal<br />more to a general listening public. Live, they kick butt!<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/CIMG1328_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="CIMG1328_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/CIMG1328_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Booker T. was his usual masterful, meticulous self...playing<br />dead-on, perfecrly executed keyboard melodies. Bassist Donald<br />"Duck" Dunn gives a whole new dimension to "bottom" and "funk"<br />to his Fender bass...and he does it so effortlessly. Steve<br />Cropper's guitar work should be studied by every young<br />"Jimmy Page wannabee." Cropper mixes lead guitar lines with<br />rythym licks and fills so seamlessly that it defies mere<br />technique. No bombastics or in-your-face hot licks, just<br />the ultimate in electric guitar playing sense of timing<br />and taste. <br /><br />What was of particular interest to me was that as a<br />result of Steve Cropper and Duck Dunn providing the<br />driving force to the Blues Brothers movies and live<br />shows, some people came to the Tokyo Blue Note thinking<br />that the Blues Brothers band's music would be played. One<br />guy even came wearing a Blues Brothers' get-up. What the<br />audience got was a healthy helping of Memphis Soul Stew.<br /><br />I first heard "Green Onions", the MGs first hit in 1962,<br />around the same time as the Chubby Checker "Twist" craze.<br />To me, there was no comparison. A bunch of white people<br />doing the Twist looked ludicrous, whereas I could feel,<br />even taste, Green Onions. The Twist still looks absurd,<br />even more so than in the 60's, Green Onions still sounds<br />real. Give me that Stax/Volt sound anytime.<br /><br />Yurz,  Martin<a name="more"></a>

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<title>Gotta Have My Bicycle</title>
<description>The Rock band Queen never appealed to me. I considered themoverblown and everything that Punk Rock was railing about interms of popular music. That being said, I have to give theblokes some credit...I think Brian May is a brilliant axe-mano...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-11-14T22:01:28+09:00</dc:date>
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The Rock band Queen never appealed to me. I considered them<br />overblown and everything that Punk Rock was railing about in<br />terms of popular music. That being said, I have to give the<br />blokes some credit...I think Brian May is a brilliant axe-man<br />on the guitar, and I think Queen's tunes "Crazy Little Thing<br />Love" & their bicycle ditty were great. I especially liked<br />the bicycle song.<br /><br />Living in San Francisco near the top of a hill (most places<br />in SF are either uphill or downhill from someplace else),<br />riding a bicycle in my neighborhood could be considered to<br />be a suicide attempt. I didn't have a bike for years, though<br />I seemed permanently attached to one when I was a kid. Then<br />came motorbikes and scooters (how I loved my Vespa!) which<br />almost got me killed.<br /><br />For several years after coming to work & live in Japan I <br />was without a bicycle, or any other means of getting<br />about other than mass transit or taxis. When we moved to<br />a neighborhood near the urban mass of Tokyo, I bought a<br />bike. I felt free as a bird until the local cops kept<br />stopping me to check whether my bike had been reported<br />stolen. They still do from time to time. <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/mw02.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="mw02.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/mw02.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />My first bike was a 3-speed shopping bike (called a<br />"charinko" in Japanese...which could mean either the<br />sound of its bell or the sound of jingling coins...<br />I've heard different opinions). The bike had<br />"Fortissimo" emblazed on its frame. I thought that<br />was funny because the term could be translated to<br />mean "noisy" or "loud" in Italian. To the Japanese,<br />it sounded foreign and sporty. My bike was neither<br />foreign nor sporty but I rode the daylights out of it<br />for years. It finally just flat wore out.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/mw03.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="mw03.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/mw03.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />I then upgraded my bikes to snazzy mountain bikes,<br />the expensive ones kept getting stolen in spite of my<br />locks. So I got a cheapo Spalding and it has lasted<br />years...in spite of assaults upon it and my person.<br /><br />In Japan there are traffic mirrors at many intersections.<br />These give a bike-rider a false sense of security as<br />other riders (often in a hurry to get to the train<br />station) may ignore them and come zooming through the<br />intersection, often causing collisions with others.<br />This has happened to me several times. I sometimes feel<br />that I need "body armor" before going out riding.<br /><br />There has been a lot of discussion as to bike safety<br />in Japan. What many civic planners don't seem to be<br />able to realize is that streets in urban areas are<br />incredibly congested. It's a policy now that bike<br />riders no longer cycle on sidewalks to avoid hitting<br />pedestrians. Where is a cyclist supposed to go? Bike<br />lanes have been proposed, but putting them on narrow<br />streets with auto traffic speeding by is an invitation<br />to roadside mayhem. I could go on and on about this,<br />but I won't for now. I'll just avoid busy streets and<br />enjoy the bikepaths along the river near my house...<br />but don't get me started talking about crazed joggers<br />and wierdo dog walkers!<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/mw01.jpg" width="180" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="mw01.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/mw01.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Yurz,   Martin<a name="more"></a>

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<title>[PR]注目のキーワード「裁判員裁判」</title>
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<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E8%A3%81%E5%88%A4%E5%93%A1&hid=35">裁判員</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%88%A4%E6%B1%BA&hid=35">判決</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E8%A3%81%E5%88%A4&hid=35">裁判</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E8%A3%81%E5%88%A4%E5%93%A1%E5%88%B6%E5%BA%A6&hid=35">裁判員制度</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%AF%A9%E7%90%86&hid=35">審理</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E4%BA%8B%E4%BB%B6&hid=35">事件</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%85%A8%E5%9B%BD%E5%88%9D&hid=35">全国初</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E5%88%9D&hid=35">初</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E6%87%B2%E5%BD%B915%E5%B9%B4&hid=35">懲役15年</a>&nbsp;|&nbsp;<a href="http://match.seesaa.jp/ot_listing.pl?aid=608868&sid=martins-table&tid=seesaa_hotspot&k=%E6%9D%B1%E4%BA%AC%E5%9C%B0%E8%A3%81&hid=35">東京地裁</a>
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<dc:date>2008-11-14T22:01:28+09:00</dc:date>
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<title>Baseball Blues</title>
<description>At a  recent visit to my doctor about a particular symptomof stress and anxiety, the doc suggested that I take sometests (you know how docs like to read test results). Upon reading the test results, he concluded that there was nobig problem...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-10-30T21:40:18+09:00</dc:date>
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At a  recent visit to my doctor about a particular symptom<br />of stress and anxiety, the doc suggested that I take some<br />tests (you know how docs like to read test results). Upon <br />reading the test results, he concluded that there was no<br />big problem with me other than the physical carnage that I<br />call a biological body. Perhaps some psycological help<br />would do me well. So I consulted a "shrink" on this problem.<br />To my distress, the shrink was a Yankees fan. I'm of the<br />opinion that rooting for the Yankees was like rooting for<br />Microsoft. The "mind scrambler" referred me back to my<br />original doc. He suspected that the problem was genetic<br />in origin.<br /><br />More tests followed. Sure enough, I've got a rogue "Baseball<br />Gene" from my mother's side of the family, and a tad from<br />my father's in laws. I have several uncles, as well as my<br />grandfather, in my mother's family, who were baseball players.<br />And some were pretty good, too. My uncle Earl played 18 years<br />in the minor leagues. My father said that Earl was the most<br />left-handed person he ever knew. "He even walks left-handed"<br />said Dad. Earl was a great "glove-man" who was so skilled<br />that he could play every position. "I've had enough 'cups<br />of coffee' with the Cardinals (St. Louis Cardinals) to fill<br />a coffee urn." said uncle Earl. He did teach me how to hit<br />left-handed and have a sharp eye for the strike zone. To<br />this day I have no patience for batters who swing at pitches<br />out of the strike zone...they almost always strike out.<br /><br />The World Series is over and the Phillies "took home the<br />cake". There's a lot of confusion about the term "World<br />Series" in that many countries play baseball and don't<br />participate in the series. There is now a World Professional<br />Baseball contest that is supposed to settle that gripe. it's<br />contrived and doesn't really settle anything but "bragging<br />rights" between the participating countries.<br /><br />As I understand the history, the original World Series was<br />an idea cooked up by the Chicago World newspaper...and the<br />original term for the competition for baseball supremacy<br />between the established National League and the upstart<br />American League, was the "World's Series."<br /><br />In any case, the baseball season is played and done, and<br />I'm in a "blue funk". From my childhood days there was a<br />baseball game on the radio and/or TV every day, all<br />summer long. The season concluded just before Halloween.<br />It was a part of daily life as I was growing up. I think<br />the Ken Burns video tape series on baseball is the best<br />depiction of the history and reach of the sport played on<br />Elysian fields. He became so obsessed with the production<br />of the video that it ruined his marriage. Not even his<br />production of the American "War Between The States" could<br />do that.<br /><br />I'm in sort of a vacuum, emotionally and sentimentally,<br />about what to do if there isn't a baseball game on. What<br />am I supposed to read about when I pick up a newspaper?<br />Politics? The economy? Weird things that people do to<br />each other? Where's  my box-score on all this. Baseball<br />reduces life to its basic enjoyment of "Throw the ball,<br />hit the ball, catch the ball...and then decide what to<br />do with it."<br /><br />If life could be so simple...not to say that baseball<br />doesn't have its own myriad complexities.<br /><br />Yurz, Martin   <br /><br /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>Fine Winged Friends</title>
<description>Ornithology is not my strong suit, although I like livingthings that can fly. The abilility to fly through the airlike a bird is the image that often inspires our dreams.In Japan, the Karasu (Jungle Crow the size of a raven) isviewed with c...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-10-24T19:47:16+09:00</dc:date>
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Ornithology is not my strong suit, although I like living<br />things that can fly. The abilility to fly through the air<br />like a bird is the image that often inspires our dreams.<br />In Japan, the Karasu (Jungle Crow the size of a raven) is<br />viewed with contempt. My Grandmother could teach crows to<br />talk, and took in a family of crows (they're very territorial)<br />to protect her corn...as her friendly crows would drive off<br />their rival crows. It must have been her Native American <br />genes that gave her such awareness. <br /><br />At the park near my home here in Japan, I like to sit on a<br />park bench near the cedar trees at dusk. Before it gets too<br />dark and the skies turn the color of lavender, small birds<br />(I don't know if they're swallows or sparrows) fly about<br />in tight swoops to catch flying insects for their supper.<br />When the skies become darker, little bats take over the<br />airborne insect harvesting duties. The bats are much <br />better flying acrobats than the birds. I marvel at their<br />aerial ballet. I don't expect to see a version of "Bat<br />Lake" anytime soon, however...unless it's by Tim Burton.<br /><br />In Japan, newspaper holidays are observed one Monday<br />every month. No daily newspapers are delivered on that<br />day, although one can still buy sports papers and tabloid<br />rags at convenience stores. This past Monday I went for<br />my usual twilight walk in the park and noticed that there<br />were no bats swooping through the air in pursuit of the<br />flying bugs. Is there a "bat holiday" in Japan? I wonder.<br /><br />Another subject concerning the bats is: where do they live?<br />I often see sparrows' nests in the eaves of nearby apart-<br />ment buildings...even at the train stations. But even as<br />I bicycle around my neighborhood, I've never seen a bat's<br />lair. We don't have caves or bellfries around here, so where<br />do they hang upside down and sleep all day? Secretive and <br />elusive creatures, these bats.<br /><br />Yurz, Martin<a name="more"></a>

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<title>Jindai Park</title>
<description>I love my neighborhood. It's convenient, close to the harriedmobs of downtown Tokyo, but a 20 minute train-ride puts meto an entire other reality. There are still farms here wherefor \100 I can buy a big bag of eggplants, onions, okra andne...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-10-03T08:13:38+09:00</dc:date>
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I love my neighborhood. It's convenient, close to the harried<br />mobs of downtown Tokyo, but a 20 minute train-ride puts me<br />to an entire other reality. There are still farms here where<br />for \100 I can buy a big bag of eggplants, onions, okra and<br />new potatoes. It takes a short bike ride to do so. Thoughts<br />of moving from here cause me sweaty-hand-wringing.<br /><br />One block from our house is the Jindai Danshi (a Danshi<br />being somewhat of a low-rent apartment building) and another<br />block away is the Nogawa River (a glorified creek). I take a<br />walk or two through the area every day.<br /><br />I especially like the park at Jindai Danshi. There are big<br />cedar trees, lots of benches (where I like to sit and read<br />my newspaper or book) and the "Sand Pit", as I refer to it.<br />The Sand Pit is a concrete "bowl" (sort of) with sand at its<br />bottom. Kids run circles around the concrete or slide down<br />its slopes. Mothers, sometimes fathers, take their kids to<br />enjoy the Pit. Sliding down the slopes is very popular.<br />Some kids flatten cardboard boxes from the near-by Super-<br />market to give them more speed as they slide down the sides.<br />Some mothers freak out that their children will get their<br />clothes dirty, some just take the attitude of "Let the kids<br />play, getting dirty is part of being a kid."<br /><br />My favorite episode as I sat in the park was watching a<br />mother play "hide & seek" with her young son. He covered<br />his eyes while his mother hid behind a cedar tree. Then,<br />when she said go, he was supposed to find here. The mother<br />hid behind the tree for a long time, not knowing that her<br />son had joined the other kids at the Sand Pit.<br /><br />"Would you like to take a walk in the park,<br />Stroll hand-in-hand before it gets dark?<br />You know a girl like you isn't so easy to find,<br />I'd like to make you all mine,<br />To keep me company, don't you see<br />That's the way it should be."<br />-lyrics by 60's~70's band Sopwith Camel.<br /><br />Or the counterpoint: Tom Lehrer's<br />Let's Go Poison Pigeons In The Park."<br /><br />My Stephen King-channeling-self imagined<br />the Sand Pit in the park as being part of a<br />gigantic trap-door spider's plan to devour<br />young humans. But I've often failed at presenting<br />myself as normal.<br /><br />Martin<a name="more"></a>

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<title>Back in Tokyo</title>
<description>So here we are back in Tokyo after our West Coast U.S. trip.San Francisco was (still is, according to some) a capital ofstand-up comedy, which in Japan involves seemingly endlessuses of one comedian slapping another comedian on the headwith...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-09-19T15:28:52+09:00</dc:date>
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So here we are back in Tokyo after our West Coast U.S. trip.<br />San Francisco was (still is, according to some) a capital of<br />stand-up comedy, which in Japan involves seemingly endless<br />uses of one comedian slapping another comedian on the head<br />with a folded paper fan...slapstick fan humor, anyone.<br />I encountered double-reverse culture shock in a way. I felt<br />it difficult to relate to both the land of my birth and the<br />land where I've lived for the past 20 years. In spite of<br />my familiarity with both lands I could sort of relate to the<br />novel "Stranger In A Strange Land." But that's my problem.<br /><br />What I could relate to was my neighborhood and its flower-<br />basket qualities. It seems everytime I turn around or turn<br />the corner while riding my trusty (getting rusty) bicycle, I<br />see flowers blooming. Every tree or shrub seems to take<br />turns presenting lovely displays of blossoms. <br />Now it's the "Crape-Myrtle" or "Sarusuberi" trees at festooning our locale with pink and white blossoms.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/CIMG1209_resize1.jpg" width="180" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="CIMG1209_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/CIMG1209_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/CIMG1210_resize1.jpg" width="180" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="CIMG1210_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/CIMG1210_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />It's reassuring to know that no matter how alienated one may feel, blossoms tend to ease the angst. I don't remember who<br />first said it but I recall, "Is this the first blossoming <br />of love, or are we just blooming idiots?" I suspect Ogden<br />Nash or Noel Coward...but I'll take being a "blooming<br />idiot" anytime. Idiocy in such matters becomes me...and<br />eases transitions if properly applied. Now don't get me<br />started about Van Gough and his manic sunflowers.<br /><br />Yurz, Martin<br /><br /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>North By Northwest</title>
<description>We completed our West Coast US tour by taking an Amtrak train from Portland, Oregon to Seattle and then on to Whidbey Island on Puget Sound. The train trip was pleasant but getting lunch nearly required elbow pads and a crowbar to negotiate...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-09-11T17:32:43+09:00</dc:date>
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We completed our West Coast US tour by taking an Amtrak train <br />from Portland, Oregon to Seattle and then on to Whidbey Island on Puget Sound. The train trip was pleasant but getting lunch nearly required elbow pads and a crowbar to negotiate the line snaking its way to the luncheon counter...and we were one of <br />the first in line! I made do with a kosher hot dog.<br /><br />The train ride along Puget Sound made it all worthwhile. We could catch a quick view of Mt. Ranier as we passed through Tacoma. We finally arrived in Seattle. We passed Safeco Field where the Seattle Mariners allegedly play baseball. Live broadcasts of Mariners games are highlighted by the sounds of passing trains and their pitchers dishing up three-run home runs. We'd arrived safe and (Puget) sound in Seattle.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730470_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730470_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730470_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />We were met by my Sis Linda and took a ferry boat to her and<br />hubby Jim's home on Whidbey Island. When we got there we were <br />dazzled by Sis's latest quilting projects. It seems that the<br />womenfolk in my family have a highly refined gene that deals<br />with such work as crochet and quilting skills. Given a needle<br />I think any one of them could perform heart surgery and knock<br />out a quilt for the patient's hospital bed at the same time.<br />Sis is exhibit "A" to this notion. Her work defies description.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730465_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730465_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730465_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730467_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730467_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730467_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />The next day we were back on the ferry to Seattle to take in<br />its new library and a trip to Pike Market, one of my favorite<br />places on earth. Seattle's library is like no other library I<br />have ever seen. I almost expected Spiderman to come swinging<br />through the rafters at any moment. Pike Market is its usually<br />quirky self with seafood, vegetables and flowers galore. I<br />was able to buy some fresh Halibut (extremely hard to find<br />in Japan) and a mixture of wild chantrelle, morel and cepes<br />mushrooms...supper will be served and I'm gonna cook it, by<br />golly. Halibut poached in a wild mushroom consomme!<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730482_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730482_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730482_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730488_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730488_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730488_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730495_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730495_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730495_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730501_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730501_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730501_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730508_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730508_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730508_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />On the way to a farmer's market on Whidbey, we passed a<br />gathering of Model A Ford enthusiasts. I had to take a pic<br />of Chizuko next to a roadster that I would die for. If I<br />had the cash I would've bought it for her, but she'd have<br />trouble with the old fashioned gearshift. But with a silk<br />scarf and wide-brimmed hat, she'd turn a lot of heads in<br />Tokyo! Maybe even stop traffic!<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730556_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730556_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730556_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Whidbey Island has been berry, berry good to me...in fact<br />to anyone who's been to a farmer's market there. It's a<br />fresh berry wonderland. Boysenberries, Loganberries, Blue-<br />berries, Raspberries and more! Sis bought a whole box of<br />them. We had fresh berry pie for dessert after I cooked<br />the halibut.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730544_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730544_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730544_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730568_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730568_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730568_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730570_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730570_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730570_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730609_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730609_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730609_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Finally, we had to wish Linda & Jim farewell before <br />returning (retuning?) to Japan.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730612_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730612_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730612_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>Northern Exposure</title>
<description>On our previous leg of our journey to the US (not to be confusedwith "last leg") we experienced a nostalgic return with family &amp;a side trip down memory lane to Mendocino. Much has been writtento disparage the quality of American cars. Our r...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-09-04T17:23:10+09:00</dc:date>
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On our previous leg of our journey to the US (not to be confused<br />with "last leg") we experienced a nostalgic return with family &<br />a side trip down memory lane to Mendocino. Much has been written<br />to disparage the quality of American cars. Our rented Pontiac V-6<br />was a very good car...although its dashboard display/message<br />display kept nagging me with messages such as "due for scheduled<br />oil change" and "auto light system off". I thought the rental<br />car service should have seen to whether the engine oil needed to<br />be changed...not me. I wasn't about to pay the expense of having<br />the oil change, I was only responsible for making sure the car <br />had enough oil.<img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730379_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730379_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730379_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Mt. Shasta was amazing. It seemed to come out of nowhere.<br /><br />We finally arrived in Ashland, Oregon...home of the revered<br />Shakespeare Festival. Regrettably, we didn't attend a<br />performance there. It was the height of the theatre/festival<br />season and we were spent from our drive from the California<br />coast. I slept like a baby. Our friends from Bezerkley <br />shared a house with us and we had our usual fruit-laden<br />breakfast before continuing on to Portland, a city dear to<br />my heart. We resumed driving up "I-5" at breakneck speed...<br />even school buses passed us as we did our best to observe<br />the speed limit. Americans shouldn't complain about fuel<br />prices and economy as long as they continue to drive like<br />maniacs. Driving with restraint, my V-6 Pontiac got 30 MPG.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730384_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730384_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730384_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730383_resize1.jpg" width="180" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730383_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730383_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Our drive to Portland was uneventful...I like to avoid events<br />when driving at highway speeds. Approaching Portland, Oregon<br />is an interesting experience. One drives along a highway<br />lined with evergreen trees, thinking "There's supposed to be a<br />city here somewhere." Then there it is when you least expect it.<br />It's easy to wonder why someone would put a city here. It should<br />be a park. It's interesting to know that the name of the city<br />was decided with the toss of a coin. One of the city's fathers<br />was from Boston...another was from Portland, Maine. They<br />decided to flip a coin to determine what to name the new<br />settlement. Portland won the toss. Thus, it bears the name<br />today. I suppose that New York could have just as easily<br />become New Amsterdam (which was its original name).<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730381_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730381_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730381_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />I love Portland...always have. It's the most civilized city I<br />have ever lived or worked in. It's also full of odd characters,<br />unusual places and style. Sorta like San Francisco without the<br />pretensions. Oh...and its got lots of bridges and a decommissioned submarine on the waterfront. The Adams family<br />were our gracious hosts while we were there. No, not THE Adams<br />family, of course, but David and Kim Adams, longtime Portland<br />residents. They were kind enough to show us around the city<br />I love so well and help me to keep myself from going into a<br />state of "road rage" at the Avis car rental place when I tried<br />to return the Pontiac. Portland is not by any stretch of the<br />imagine a "car friendly" city. It does everything possible, it<br />seems, to discourage car traffic in its downtown district. A<br />sometimes baffling maze of one-way streets criss-cross city<br />centre. Lotsa buses, though. A beautiful park is located in<br />the midst of the city and there seem to be rose gardens all<br />over the place. Gorgeous Washington Park with a view of Mt.<br />Hood (on a clear day...the "American Mt. Fuji") is a stone's<br />throw from downtown Portland. I loved living there. Only<br />Mendocino and a re-built knee could draw me away.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730413_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730413_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730413_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730415_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730415_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730415_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Portland is the home of Jakes Famous Crawfish Restaurant. I<br />will write more about Jakes in my bi-lingual section of this<br />website...the story involves moose heads and oil paintings<br />with bullet holes in them, wild crayfish running amok in the<br />vegetable cooler, naked sous-chefs in potato sinks...that sort<br />of thing. We went to Jakes with the intent of eating catfish<br />and "crawdads", which are seldom found in Japan. And eat them<br />we did...almost a full bucket of "mudbugs" (we saved some for<br />Dave Adams). Eating crayfish is a learned skill, almost an art.<br />Separating the tails from the heads is one thing...sucking the<br />tomalley from the heads determines who is a true crayfish<br />afficianado (sp?). It's not a pretty sight except for true<br />crayfish lovers. <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730397_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730397_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730397_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730398_resize1.jpg" width="240" height="320" border="0" align="" alt="84730398_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730398_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730407_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730407_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730407_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730402_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730402_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730402_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />The next day we took the Portland ~ Seattle Amtrak train.<br />Portland's Union train station is one of the jewels of the<br />entire Amtrak train system. It even houses a good restaurant!<br />The classic brick station is located near the junction of the<br />Columbia and Wilamette rivers and is like stepping into another<br />era. Towering ceilings soar above the lobby, marble floors<br />beneath, a tasteful giftshop, carefully tended wooden benches,<br />I felt like I was going to greet my grandmother, not depart for<br />Seattle. The ride to Seattle was bucolic and peaceful. We could<br />see majestic Mt. Ranier near Tacoma and skirt the shores of<br />Puget Sound on the way. Seattle and my Sis awaited us.   <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730428_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730428_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730428_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>More To Come</title>
<description>Modesto: We were surprised that it wasn't as hot as wethought it would be...all the way to Hanford. We had achance to visit with my nephews (my brother's daughter, Diana, and his son, William). Diana has two sons, Lelandand Wesley. Diana is...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-24T20:50:34+09:00</dc:date>
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Modesto: We were surprised that it wasn't as hot as we<br />thought it would be...all the way to Hanford. We had a<br />chance to visit with my nephews (my brother's daughter, <br />Diana, and his son, William). Diana has two sons, Leland<br />and Wesley. Diana is a "tree hugger"(according to my<br />brother's take) who works for the California Department Of<br />Land Management and William isn't so sure whether he should further his education or open a swimming pool cleaning <br />business. He's very bright, so time will tell.... <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730186_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730186_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730186_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />They weren't able to drive with us to visit with<br />Aunt Ruth, my last remaining uncle or aunt. She's still just<br />as lively and dynamic as I remember her being. She once snuck <br />me out to a circus, unbeknownst to my worried parents.<br />  <br />My brother & Roni, his new wife, Chizuko & drove to Hanford, suffering a blown out tire on the way to the family's "Ice <br />Cream Mecca". The Superior Creamery is Hanford's "Claim To<br />Fame." At least it is in our family.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730225_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730225_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730225_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Superior Creamery is a classic 50's creamery that serves<br />mediocre sandwhiches (at best) yet makes home-made ice cream <br />and sundaes (and humongous ice cream splits!) to die for.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730216_resize1.jpg" width="240" height="320" border="0" align="" alt="84730216_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730216_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730220_resize1.jpg" width="240" height="320" border="0" align="" alt="84730220_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730220_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />We gorged on ice cream delights the size of one's head! The <br />last photo is one of my Californi brothers and cousins.<br />Chizuko was a real trooper and showed great patience on<br />this, or 30th anniversary. The photos with my Aunt Ruth<br />are priceless. I just wish I didn't have my butt up my<br />rear so much of the time.   <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730223_resize1.jpg" width="240" height="320" border="0" align="" alt="84730223_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730223_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>Central Valley Roots</title>
<description>California' Central Valley (the Sacramento &amp; San Joaquin valley is not a place for the weak of heart in the summer months. Daytime temperatures of 38 ~ 45 degrees centegrade are not at all out of the ordinary. Our July visit to the burgs of...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-22T16:45:36+09:00</dc:date>
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California' Central Valley (the Sacramento & San Joaquin valley is not a place for the weak of heart in the summer months. Daytime temperatures of 38 ~ 45 degrees centegrade are not at all out of the ordinary. Our July visit to the burgs of Modesto, Fresno and Hanford promised blistering heat and low humidity. <br />I was actuallylooking forward to our journey because the weather conditionswould provide some relief for my aching knees and feet. It wasalso a chance to visit some family members whom I hadn't seen in years. <br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730199_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730199_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730199_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />Aunt Ruth, my mother's sister is, at 84 years of age, my last<br />surviving aunt or uncle. It could be my last chance to see her<br />alive. I didn't want to miss the opportunity. My brother and<br />some of my cousins and their kids decided to all pay Aunt Ruth a visit in Hanford.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730213_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730213_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730213_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br />First top was at my brother and his new wife's (Roni) house in<br />Modesto. My nephew David (my sister's son) his wife, Thuy (born<br />in Vietnam), their kids and my brother's son & daughter and her<br />two sons, stopped by to visit. There were way too many neices,<br />nephews & kids to name them all, so I'll just name some. <br /><br />The first photo is with Chizuko, Destiny (my nephew David's<br />daughter) and me. Destiny's school class had a "Flat Stanley"<br />project which proved to be a lot of fun. "Stanley" is a flat<br />cut-out character that the students were to send to friends<br />or relatives who would take photos of him in different places<br />& the student would then tell a story of Stanley in the<br />different locations. Destiny sent Stanley to us in Japan<br />where we took photos of him at a temple, a park, in a<br />vending machine,etc., and mailed him back to Destiny. <br />He was a big hit with the American kids.<br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730183_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730183_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730183_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730185_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730185_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730185_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />to be continued......<a name="more"></a>

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<title>Mendocino Part # 2</title>
<description>One of the most important aspects of going to Mendocino isgetting there..."the drive" from Cloverdale on Highway #128and back. It's a twisting, narrow road for the most part. Myrental Pontiac compact car had race-car quick steering, sonegot...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-12T14:12:38+09:00</dc:date>
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One of the most important aspects of going to Mendocino is<br />getting there..."the drive" from Cloverdale on Highway #128<br />and back. It's a twisting, narrow road for the most part. My<br />rental Pontiac compact car had race-car quick steering, so<br />negotiating the mountain roads wasn't a problem. Anticipating<br />other drivers' cars moves was of concern.<br /><br />Once we got through the windy mountain roads, we entered<br />secluded Anderson Valley...once so secluded that the area<br />developed its own language, "Boontling", spoken around the<br />main town of Boonville. It's a mixture of the original<br />settler's Welsh and colloquial jargon. For example, tele-<br />phones are called "Bucky Walters", in honor of the first<br />person to have a telephone in Boonville.<br /><br />We had to stop at Gowan's Oak Tree in Philo, a fruit <br />and vegetable stand like no other. Just the selection of<br />apples was dazzling and yet down to earth. See pics,<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730256_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730256_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730256_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730259_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730259_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730259_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730258_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730258_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730258_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />After a drive through the redwood forest to the coast, we<br />stopped at the Heritage House, where I experienced many<br />encounters with movie and TV stars as it was the location<br />of many movies. I have an especially interesting story<br />to tell about my encounter with Susan Hayward regarding<br />room service. More, later.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730276_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730276_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730276_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Two miles north on the coast was my restaurant, The Prince<br />Or Whales, which is now an excellent California/French<br />restaurant. Much of the design is the same, only they<br />somehow managed to re-do the kitchen design to make it<br />more workable. I hadn't the money to do that when I was<br />working on a limited budget. Kudos to the new owners!!<br /><br />Another couple of miles north on a serpetine-like road,<br />we came upon the breathtaking vista of the town of<br />Mendocino. Keen attention to the driver's wheel is<br />needed here to avoid veering off the road or into the<br />path of an oncoming logging truck. <br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730289_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730289_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730289_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Negotiating the streets of Mendocino, we located the<br />SeaGull Inn. It's a lovely, small B & B on a small<br />street near the heart of town...which is only about<br />10 blocks square, packed with bookstores, curio shops<br />and museums...a wonderland for strolling about town<br />and taking snapshots.<br /><br />In the center of town is an imposing building (I think<br />it was the Masonic Hall) with a wooden sculpture of<br />Father Time and the Maiden. There is some discussion<br />about whether Father Time is cutting the Maiden's<br />hair or braiding it...a discussion never resolved.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730299_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730299_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730299_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />We visited the Mendocino Headlands, a picturesque<br />setting of the blend, sometimes conflict, between<br />land and sea. I recall walking along the headlands<br />with driftwood artist Byrd Baker in the 70's. Byrd<br />specialized in sculpting whales from driftwood. He<br />claimed that viewing the whales cured him from his<br />alcholism and gave him a new insight to life. He <br />contributed much to the Mendocino Art Center and<br />community.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730346_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730346_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730346_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Leaving for Oregon from Mendocino without a final<br />visit to the late Val Pawek's ranch, given our<br />schedule to somehow get to Ashland, Oregon, seemed<br />impossible, but we did it anyway, as previously<br />photographed. What made this mad dash to the ranch<br />so meaningful was what happened when we were there.<br /><br />One of the duties that Val gave me was to make sure<br />the horses that he kept for other people got their<br />daily excercise. I was the only tenant on the ranch<br />who knew how to ride a horse. I only paid $25 a <br />month rent to Val, so I figured that bareback <br />horseback riding was a fair tradeoff, plus cooking<br />Austrian food once a week. $25 a month...even if I<br />had to shoot some rabbits now and then. What a deal.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730353_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730353_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730353_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Winding through some unpaved, gravel and limestone<br />backroads through the "Pygmy Forest" (trees hundreds<br />of years old, yet no bigger than a large bush...<br />nature's own version of the Japanese 'Bonsai' tree),<br />we finally came upon Val's ranch. I had a feeling<br />of elation, yet a bit of nostalgia & sadness. As<br />we were preparing to set about on our drive to Oregon,<br />a black colt came running across the meadow, perhaps<br />to know who we were, perhaps to wish us well on our<br />journey. It stopped and nodded its head...perhaps it<br />was Val's spirit. I wonder.  <br /> <br /><br /><br /><a name="more"></a>

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<title>A Journey of Journies</title>
<description>I have to admit that I felt some uneasiness before ourrecent almost-three-week-long trip to the United States.I experienced a certain amount of anxiety, almost trepi-dation, about the trip. Previous excursions to the U.S.had been marked by ...</description>
<dc:subject>日記</dc:subject>
<dc:creator>ウオーラー・マーティン</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2008-08-05T10:34:20+09:00</dc:date>
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I have to admit that I felt some uneasiness before our<br />recent almost-three-week-long trip to the United States.<br />I experienced a certain amount of anxiety, almost trepi-<br />dation, about the trip. Previous excursions to the U.S.<br />had been marked by unfortunate events, either present, past<br />or onsuing. My 1988 business trip to Minnesota was greeted<br />by -30C temperatures and a blizzard. The 1989 venturing forth<br />featured a catastrophic earthquake as I was lunching with my<br />sister before viewing the SF Giants vs. the Oakland A's<br />World's Series. The 1990's forays were eneventful, except<br />two of our friends divorced shortly after we returned to<br />Japan. Our 2000 trip was blessed by seeing in the Mllennium<br />at my sister and brother-in-law's new dream house on Whidbey<br />Island, Washington. In 2001, I went to the US when my mother<br />died shortly after the Sept. 11th catastrophe.  <br /><br />I hadn't been back to the US for 7 years. From reading<br />foreign language newspapers, the situation in the US<br />was reported to be dire...social & economic woes, etc.<br />Soon after landing in San Francisco, I found that a bit<br />of positive thinking can go a long ways. Sure, gasoline<br />prices were much more than they were on my previous<br />trips...but so what? Living in Japan had accustomed me<br />to using public transportation to the max.<br /><br />We were here to visit friends and places we loved and<br />nothing would deter us from that task. This blog is<br />mostly devoted to our experiences in Mendocino, on<br />the northern California coast, 150 miled from San <br />Francisco.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730001_resize1.jpg" alt="84730001_resize1.jpg" width="180" height="240" border="0" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730001_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730020_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730020_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730020_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />First, people we love. The first photos are of Lenny<br />& Gloria Grosso and John & Susan Ristow. They were<br />originally from the Philadelphia/Trenton are and were<br />my good pals & associates from the Mendocino days, <br />when I had the Prince of Whales Restaurant there.<br />The next photos are of the Ristow's opulent back<br />yard and of a nearby farmer's market where a cornu-<br />copia of fresh fruits & vegetables are available.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730022_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730022_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730022_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730045_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730045_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730045_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />We rented a car and drove through the Anderson Valley<br />and Redwood groves along Hwy.20 to the coast.We took<br />a breather at the Heritage House, a gorgeous inn/<br />resort where I used to work. The photo is of my<br />former house near the Heritage House which is now a<br />flower shop.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730265_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730265_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730265_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730273_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730273_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730273_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730274_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730274_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730274_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Two miles up Hwy.1 was my Prince of Whales restaurant,<br />which I either have, or will write about. We stopped<br />at the Seagull Inn before having a night's rest.<br />Finally, we stopped at Val Pawek's ranch, where I<br />spent many happy times when I had my restaurant.<br />More of this to come in my further writings.<br />We then ventured on to Ashland, Oregon. Mo' to<br />come, Ya'll.<br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730282_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730282_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730282_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730343_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730343_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730343_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br /><img src="http://martins-table.up.seesaa.net/image/84730354_resize1.jpg" width="320" height="240" border="0" align="" alt="84730354_resize1.jpg" onclick="location.href = 'http://martins-table.seesaa.net/upload/detail/image/84730354_resize1.jpg.html'; return false;" style="cursor:pointer;" /><br /><br />Yurz,<br /><br />Martin<br /><a name="more"></a>

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