This is not my original, but I've seen several variations of the same list on several websites, so I'm not sure who should get credit. Any of us gaijin who have lived in Japan for any length of time will agree that many of these are so true. Read and Enjoy!
You know you've been in Japan too long when.......
...you notice you've forgotten how to tie
shoelaces.
...you
rush onto an escalator, and just stand there.
...you
find yourself bowing while you talk on the phone.
...you
think US$17 isn't such a bad price for a new paperback.
...you
don't hesitate to put a $10 note into a vending machine.
...when
you are talking on the telephone to your parents and your father
says, "Why are
you
interrupting my explanation with grunts?"
...you
see a gaijin get on the train and think "Wow, it's a gaijin!"
...you
start thinking can-coffee tastes good.
...you
have trouble figuring out how many syllables there really are in
words like 'building'.
...when
you wait for the first day of summer to wear short sleeve dress
shirts.
...when
the first option you buy for your car is a TV set.
...you
don't think it unusual for a truck to play "It's a Small
World" when backing up.
...you
really enjoy corn soup with your Big Mac.
...you
think the opposite of red is white.
...you
leave your expensive bottle of Royal Salute with a sleazy
barkeeper and don't worry.
...you
can listen to the ads in FEN without falling around the floor
laughing.
...you
pore over the jikokuhyo looking for ways to avoid riding the
Shinkansen.
...you
appear for your first skiing lesson with brand new Rossignol high
performance
racing
skis and an aerodynamic racing suit with color matched goggles.
And then snowplow down.
...you
buy a potato-and-strawberry sandwich for lunch without cringing.
...when
you do "yanki-zuwari" waiting for a bus to come.
...you
phone an English-speaking gaijin friend and somehow can't bring
yourself to get
to
the point for the first 3 minutes of the conversation.
...you
stop enjoying telling newcomers to Japan 'all about Japan'.
...you
think 360 yen to the dollar is a reasonable exchange rate.
...you
automatically remember all of your important year dates in Showa
numbers.
...you
think every foreign movie title contains the word 'love.'
...people
stop complementing you on your Japanese, and start asking you
where you had your nose and eyes done.
...you
still remember your first drive in your brand new Toyopet.
...you
wonder why Prince Akihito is already getting grey hair, and why
you don't see
much
of the Emperor these days.
...you
think Masako is beautiful and Hillary is cute.
...you
noticed 7-11 changed its onigiri wrapping houshiki for the third
time.
...you
find a beautiful new way to eat natto.
...you
are not worried about speeding in the rain, because you know the
cops are only out there in good weather.
...you
think birds cry.
...you
think "English literature major" is a polite way to say
peanut brained bimbo.
...you
are not surprised to wake up in the morning and find that the
woman who stayed
over
last night has completely cleaned your apartment, even though
you'll probably never ever meet her again.
...you
get blasted by a political speaker truck and think "sho ga
nai..."
...you
think its cool to stand in the "Japanese only" queue at
Narita Immigration.
...you
go to New Zealand and consider traveling around by train.
...you
develop a liking for green tea flavored ice cream.
...you're
talking to your mother on the phone, and she asks you what "genki"
means.
...you
think the best part of TV are the commercials.
...you
think wet umbrellas need condoms.
...your
mother talks about "you foreigners."
...your
children call you Otosan/Okasan.
...matter
of fact, you've never even been skiing, but the rack looks great
on the car...
...you
have mastered the art of simultaneous bowing and hand-shaking.
...when
you think it's alright to stick your head into a stranger's
apartment to see if anybody's home.
...your
hair is thinning and you consider it "barcode style".
...when
you find nothing unusual in a television commercial for candy in
which a model
dressed
in a high school girl's uniform comes up behind another model
dressed in a
high
school girl's uniform, grabs her left breast, gives a devilish
grin, and skips away.
...you
think the natural location for a beer garden is on a roof.
...you
think that you can impress foreigners by drinking Budweiser.
...you
ride a Honda Cub with a sidecar.
...you
think nothing about seeing 20 ads for women's' sanitary napkins
during one movie.
...you
have run out of snappy comebacks to compliments about your
chopstick skills.
...you
think "white pills, blue pills, and pink powder" is an
adequate answer to the
question
"What are you giving me, doctor?".
...you
remember when Yamamoto Linda came on at the very end of the show
(NHK's
Yume
de aimashou) and kept her mouth shut.
...you
have discovered the sexual attraction of high school navy
uniforms.
...when
you no longer find anything unusual in the concept of "Vermont
curry".
...you
think 4 layers of wrapping is reasonable for a simple piece of
merchandise.
...you
don't find anything strange about a city that puts a life sized,
red-and-white
painted
Eiffel tower imitation in its center, as well as a scale model of
the Versaille Palace for its Crown Prince.
...you
are only slightly puzzled by "Melty Kiss."
...a
new Gaijin moves to your neighborhood and you know immediately
you will get his mail for a while.
...you
think the meaning of a red traffic light is: "Hurry up! Ten
cars now in quick
succession,
and then we'll think about slowing down."
...when
you get on a train with a number of gaijin on it and you feel
uneasy because the harmony is broken.
...you
ask fellow foreigners the all-important question "How long
have you been here?" in
order
to be able to properly categorize them.
...when
looking out the window of your office, you think "Wow, so
many trees!" Instead
of
"Wow, so much concrete!"
...when
you find yourself thinking "great, it's almost time for Paul
Harvey, have to turn on the radio."
...when
you sing FEN's "Here's what's happening around the Kanto
plain" song aloud in
your
car while air-drumming.
...you
think NHK is "the Japanese BBC."
...you
think curry rice is food.
...the
Yakult lady knows you by name.
...you
think it is quite OK to play volleyball with 12 people per team.
...when
in the middle of nowhere, totally surrounded by rice fields and
abundant nature,
you
aren't surprised to find a drink vending machine with no visible
means of a power supply...
...and
when you think nothing of it when that lonely vending machine
says 'thank you' after you buy a coke.
...you
stand before a sign on a bridge and ponder the possible meanings
of "Bridge
Freezes
Before Road."
...it
takes fifteen seconds of deep thought to recall the first name of
the President of the United States.
...you
have a favorite bush to pee behind.
...a
non-Japanese sits down next to you on the train and you get up
and move. You're
not
prejudiced, but who knows what they might do?
...you
are outwardly appalled to see someone pour miso shiru over rice,
but do it in private yourself (neko meshi).
....you
only have 73 transparent, plastic umbrellas in your entrance
because you have
donated
27 to the JR and various taxi companies in the past few months.
...you
have over 100 small, transparent plastic umbrellas in your
entrance even *after*
donating
27 of them to taxis and JR recently.
...you
realize it's perfectly reasonable for the Post Office to
designate you as the local
redistribution
agent for all letters addressed in yokomoji.
...when
you absolutely do not possess the ability to mispronounce
Japanese words
"like
a non-Japanese would."
...when
you pay over 6000 yen for a lipstick and realize a few days later
how much you
really
spent. (Or 7000 yen for a Captain Santa T-shirt. -Pete)
...when
your arguing with someone about the color of the traffic light
being blue or
green...and
you think it's blue.
...you
are proud of yourself for beating the system by buying a case of
Labbatt's Blue for 160 yen a can.
...you
think rice imports should be prohibited, because Japanese
consumers would never buy imported rice.
...when
you think one kind of rice tastes better than another kind.
...you
get a "Nihongo ga joozu" and feel really insulted.
...you
see a road with two lanes going in the same direction and assume
the one on the left is meant for parking.
...when
you think Japan actually has only four seasons
...when
you pull out your ruler to underline words.
...when
getting ready for a trip you automatically calculate for omiyage
and you leave
just
the right amount of space in your suitcase for them.
...you
manage "yankii-zuwari" without anything propping up
your heels.
...not
only do you overcome your childhood training and spit out the
mikan membranes,
but
you discover the knack of peeling the mikan so that the peel
forms a neat
receptacle
for you to spit the membranes into.
...when
having gaijin around you is a source of stress.
...you
watch the grocer's with interest to see when the price of mikans
will break.
...on
a cold autumn night, the only thing you want for dinner is nabe
and nihonshu.
...you
return the bow from the cash machine.
...you
can't find the "open" and "close" buttons in
the elevator because they're in English.
...when
you think children should have to walk around in the freezing
cold with only
short
sleeves and shorts up to their butt (to make them strong!).
...when
you think that coffee goes perfectly well with squid pizza.
...you
can do arithmetic using man, oku, cho. and kei.
...you
sympathize with your Japanese student because her daughter is
baka because
she
wears spring tops with winter skirts and you both sit down to try
and see what can
be
done about this wild child.
...you
count things with chuu chuu tako kai na.
...you
cound things using the ni no shi no ro no ya no to song.
...you
can't read your kids the Three Little Pigs without giggling when
you get the part
about
"Not by the hair of chinny chin chin."
...you
bow to other drivers who give you the right of way.
...you
fully understand the concept of "cute culture."
...you
look forward to the porno reviews at midnight on Fuji TV.
...when
you believe that the perfect side dish to eat with a juicy, deep-fried
pork chop is
a
pile of raw, tasteless, shredded cabbage.
...
it doesn't surprise you that a case of beer has the same per unit
price as a single can.
...
you think cod roe spaghetti with chilled red wine is a typical
Italian dish.
..."natsukashii"
comes out of your mouth instead of "what you're saying makes
me so
nostalgic
that I must look like one of those wide-eyed manga characters
with a tear rolling out of my eye."
...you
start to recognize BGM as a meaningful genre of music.
...walking
into a crowded bar full of non-Japanese makes you nervous,
because they
"look
dangerous." (This was passed on to me second-hand, I'm not
that far gone, yet.)
...you
buy a Christmas cake on Christmas Eve.
...you
walk to the local seven eleven in your wife's shoes.
...you
run for the Yamanote line pushing people left and right, jump on
the train holding
the
doors open to let your bag follow you on. Because you know there
will not be
another
one for at least a minute.
...you
no longer pay any attention to what anyone does when you sit down
beside them on a train.
...when
you accompany your "no" by the famous waving hand-in-front-of-nose.
...when
you're impressed with a girl with a 94 cm bust (Hosokawa Fumie).
...when
you write or phone home and say things like "In Japan we..."
...you
find yourself apologizing at least three times per conversation.
...when
you let your car idle for half an hour while you go shopping.
...you
find your self asking all your foreign acquaintances what their
blood types are.
...you
find yourself practicing golf swings with your umbrella on the
train platform.
...you
take practice golf swings on the train platform *without* an
umbrella in your hand.
...you
buy an individually wrapped potato in the supermarket.
...you
think that "Lets SPORTS yOUNG gAY CluB" is a perfectly
normal T shirt logo for a middle aged lady.
...you
have to pause and translate your phone number into English before
telling it to someone.
...you
have a friend who lives in an apartment building called CREME
SODA.
...small
skinny hairless men turn you on (for ladies).
...you
order a "bottle of draft" in a pub.
...you
are speaking in English but all references to money are in
Japanese.
...you
pull up at a gas station and wait for a bunch of Norman Rockwell
type attendants
to
jump out and clean your windshield.
...when
you say that one of your hobbies is "doraibu."
...you
think no car is complete without a tissue box on the rear shelf
and a feather duster in the trunk.
...you
ask a gaijin colleague who wears short sleeves in October, "Aren't
you cold?"
...lunch
is yesterday's leftovers out of a Hello Kitty bento box.
...when
you draw a sharp distinction between "English" and
"English conversation."
...you
use the "slasher hand" and continuous bowing to make
your way through a crowd.
...all
of your December Sundays are reserved for Bonenkai hangover
recovery.
...back
home, you are disappointed when Dominoes doesn't have corn pizza,
and the
driver
is disappointed when you forget the tip.
...you
glance at the clock and accurately predict the next line of
dialog in the TV dorama.
...you
feel an irresistible urge to point your windshield wipers
outwards when you park
your
car in a ski resort.
...you
go to a coffee shop in your home country and order "American
coffee."
...you
put eleven 10 yen coins in the vending machine before you notice
it's sold out.
...you
see some real cleavage and think WOW!
...you
buy tickets to a Tigers' game and spend time practicing the
cheers.
...you
forget about July 4th, but get all worked up over Tanabata.
...it
takes you three attempts to fill in a check correctly (happened
to me last night).
...you
have to think about it to remember what a 'check' is.
...when
you develop the fine sense of Japanese manners that prevents you
from facing
traffic
when you take a leak outside (sorry ladies!).
...you
start shunning foreigners you meet far away from your
metropolitan abode in
Tokyo
(they're probably not worth talking too, you know).
...you
remember when shouchu was not a chic drink drunk by high school
girls, but
rather
one drunk under the railroad tracks by construction workers who
never take off their haramaki.
...you
remember when the average Japanese person under about 30 did not
have a telephone.
...you
remember when telephones were almost always placed near the front
door and
next
to them was placed a little box or jar to receive 10 yen coins
from people who
stopped
by to 'borrow' your phone.
...you
remember when public telephones had just been put out on the
street that could
be
used for out-of-city calls as well as inside the city, and had a
sign on them to
indicate
this new high-tech function.
...you
remember non-wanman buses in the Tokyo area. Buses still have
signs (at least
someplaces)
which say wanman (one man) to tell people that there is no ticket-taking
person.
Buses in days of yore used to have such people, making the bus, I
guess, a
two-paason
bus, but nobody ever referred to them as two-paason or two-man.
...you
remember almost no bars who could think fast enough to refuse a
Caucasian
client.
Nobody expected them. But then nobody expected the Spanish
Inquisition either.
(No
one expects the Spanish Inquisition!)
...you
remember with great fondness what it sounded like to hear
hundreds of geta
hitting
the pavement when the light changed to green for the pedestrians
waiting to
cross
at the Sukiyabashi intersection in front of Asahi Shinbun
headquarters.
...you
keep looking for new copies of Gegege-no-kitaro and Hi-no-tori
manga at the local bookstore.
...you
have copies of nengajo post cards from a Showa date.
...you
claim a seat at a Wendy's by putting your bag on it, fully
expecting it to still be
there
when you return with your burger.
...when
you start saving up for a Japanese burial plot.
...you
get excited by words like: "health," "soap,"
"fashion," "image," and "pink."
...you
are willing to travel enormous distances just to take a bath.
...you
mistake ownership of equipment for possession of skill when
discussing your hobbies.
...you
expect the elevator girl to announce every floor for you, even if
you are alone with her.
...you
stop saying "doitashimasite" when the vending machine
thanks you.
...you
keep interrupting a perfectly good English conversation with
regular exclamations
of
eh, un, ah, heeey, and oh yeah (aizuchi).
...somebody
crashes into you and you apologize, insisting that the accident
was your fault.
...you
watch Rex three times but don't bother to see Jurassic Park.
...you
think you know the meaning of "internationalization."
...when
you read "lets fit together" at your local sports club
and don't immediately think of sex.
...when
paying $2000 in gift money to the landlord of your new apartment
doesn't make you really angry!
...the
English rendition of any Japanese company president's corporate
welcome makes perfect sense to you.
...you
consider it acceptable to watch a classical concert on NHK BS in
mono while the
baseball
is broadcast in stereo.
...you
remember when Kin-san and Gin-san celebrated their 50th birthday.
...you
go home for a holiday and ask your dad which rubbish bin to use
for burnables.
...you
see Japanese people on the street who remind you of people back
home.
...you
expect to have the plot of a detective story explained to you
both before and after the showing on TV.
...you
feel perfectly normal stepping out of a bank with $50,000 in cash
in a cute paper
bag
in one hand, and a box of soap in the other.
...you
think menchi-katsu, kim-chee, and coffee sounds like a good
breakfast.
...you're
at an American restaurant and wonder why there's no bottle of
Tabasco on the table.
...you
begin to spell last names in CAPITAL LETTERS.
...you
vaguely think about visiting New Orleans to get a glimpse of
"the real America."
...it
does not strike you as strange that an attractive, fashionable
and career-minded
young
woman who went to high school in the United States, graduated
from Harvard and
studied
at Oxford has never, at least as far as the Imperial Household
Agency can tell, had a boyfriend.
...you
are back home and expect chocolates on Valentine's day.
...you
have mastered the art of run-walking to create that important
busy image.
...you
are surprised the urinal does *not* flush automatically when you
walk away from it.
...it
does not annoy you when a map is oriented in a direction other
than north.
...you
understand why a young girl, newly employed at a trust
association, would
comply
without complaint to her boss's order to go and get her picture
taken for listing
in
a girlie column in a local newspaper.
...you
are not surprised when, after the young girl gets murdered in
connection with this,
the
bank says it cannot take any responsibility because she was
acting on her own
initiative
in what was a personal, non-work-related matter.
...it
is worthy of comment when a little English passage on a T-shirt
or cereal box is not all that bad.
...you
think nothing about a residential building covered from top
bottom in white bathroom tiles.
...you're
considering buying an ashtray for your bicycle.
...you
think that, in a crowd of Japanese, the presence of another
foreigner breaks the
wa,
although for some reason your presence doesn't.
...you
start saying things like: "Yes, I can't do this."
...you
face driving winds and wade through knee-deep water to get to
work.
...you
go to a public beach and leave all your litter behind in the
sand, for the benefit of tomorrow's visitors.
...when
you beat the "obatarian" to the last seat, and actually
think you won a victory.
...you
simultaneously listen to All Things Considered, watch the NHK
local news and
read
your e-mail messages on the Internet.
...when
on a visit some home, you say something like "Wow, a dollar
buys so much!"
and
are surprised to find everyone looking at you funny.
...you
stun yourself with the reverberation you put into the "r"
of the Bakayarrrrrroh! you
let
rip at the chimpira who'd just triggered his automatic umbrella
too close to your face.
...if
the words CM, OB/OG, TPO, and OL all make perfect sense to you.
...when
get into the habit of mentioning to people that they're gained
weight when starting conversations.
...when
you try to get a girl to "teach" you her phone number.
...if
you think you're actually worth the salary you earn.
...when
the neighbor asks to borrow some nori and you have it in at least
3 varieties.
...you
think Budweiser is a famous international beer brand.
...when
the footprints on the toilet seat are your own.
...when
you pull up to a stop light at a completely level intersection,
but engage the hand brake anyway.
...a
job arrives at your door on Saturday evening, to be done by
Monday, and you don't blink.
...you
think there is something vaguely sinister about open spaces,
healthy trees and grass.
...you
believe that Tokyo has four seasons, even though it rarely snows.
...you
hear a new item still referring to the gate crusher incident as
an 'accident' and don't blink an eye.
...you
are convinced there are no illiterates in Japan.
...you
don't hesitate to serve Calpis water to foreign visitors.
...when
your daughter goes to swim school twice a week for over a year
and she has
not
been taught to swim and you understand and do not question it and
think that
run-on
sentences with no subjects like this are normal.
...if
you remember having to request an international phone line.
...when,
on a trip home, you say out loud exactly what you think 'cause
that's what people do here.
...when
you visit Tokyo and make a bee-line for Kinokunia and the Virgin
mega store.
...you
read the store name "WARE HOUSE" as "WA-RE [our]
house," instead of "warehouse."
...you
think those clear plastic umbrellas keep you dry.
...when
you have no problem with a pencil case that proclaims "the
Earth is not only for a human."
...when
you use the word "sharp-pen" and can't remember the
English name [it was
'mechanical
pencil' last time I checked].
...when
you begin all sentences with: "ano-ne"
...you
plug your waapro into a consento and consider a pipe cut and
don't understand
why
your friends say you speak funny.
...you
hate Dave Specter because he speaks better Japanese than you.
...somebody
asks directions, you don't have the slightest idea where they're
talking
about,
but you give them directions anyway.
...you
have an irresistible urge to state the obvious.
...you
can't have your picture taken without your fingers forming the
peace sign.
...when
you have a heated discussion with four other people, and you all
have the same
opinion,
but you take turns actively stating that opinion again and again,
getting more
and
more excited in the process.
...you
have a favorite "sha-bo" that you like to write with.
...(for
males) slightly embarrassed by something when in company, you
reach behind
and
put the flat of your hand behind your head, give a little smile,
a sharp intake of
breath,
and start, but do not finish, a small bow.
...after
your shower, you catch yourself pulling on your shorts with the
towel still wrapped around your waist.
...when
you ask your wife if the rice cooker has been set for breakfast
...your
yukata sleeve snags on the keyboard when changing disks.
...when,
back home, invited to a diner party, you try, *discretely* to
take off your shoes
...when
back home, in a public place such as a restaurant or a coffee
shop, you are
really
disturbed by the sound of the conversations in your native
language.
...when
you believe that buildings are made by incubating the site in
blue plastic sheeting for nine months.
...after
breaking your wari-bashi apart, you clash the two together to get
any splinters off.
...when
you rush home from work to catch the last few minutes of sumo.
...you
first let yourself in and then (from the inside) knock on the
door and shout "hello".
...you
walk through your neighborhood, and a house that was there
yesterday is gone without a trace, and you don't blink.
...you
think the refined way to eat spaghetti is without a spoon.
...if
you remember when the foreigner you saw most often on TV was Roy
James.
...if
you know who Roy James was.
...if
you remember that Roy James was Japanese of Turkish ethnic origin.
...when
you begin to think the holiday that falls on December 25 is
spelled, "X'mas".
...when
you hear Christmas songs in February and don't have a "Japan
attack."
...when
you always say 'Christmas song' instead of 'Christmas carol.'
...when
the Christmas music in the stores does not make you feel at all
sentimental like it used to.
...you've
discovered that the real meaning of fatherhood is never being
able to take a bath by yourself.
...you
don't even do a double-take at seeing, next to a display of
whistling kettles at
Seiyu,
a device for testing the whistle of a kettle before buying it.
...water
and sewage lines are to be laid under the same road, and you
fully expect the
road
to be opened, closed, bitumened, and then opened, closed and
bitumend again within one month.
...when
reading a novel where the main character finds himself in Tokyo,
you think to yourself "Cool! Tokyo!"
...if
you've written "XYZ" on the message chalkboard in
Shinjuku station that appears in
City
Hunter (Hi, Adam).
...if
your only desire is to go for a long drive with Paul Harvey or
Rush Limbah on FEN.
...when
you mentally convert your dollar assets into yen to figure out
your personal wealth.
...if
you can remember when Kirin was advertised as coming from the
sparkling waters of Mt Fuji.
...you
think people abroad would snap up a book with "too long in
Japan" quips.
...you
have learned the art of riding a bicycle while holding an
umbrella over your head.
...when
you spend 200,000 yen for two nights and three days sight-seeing
in Kobe
(travelling
from Yokohama, two adults and one child who still travels and
lodges free) and don't get angry.
...when
you use phrases like "abundant nature" in letters.
...when
you buy a ski rack for your car, but you don't own any skis.
...and
a true story: When you are visiting relatives in the States (and
when you think of
it
as "visiting" and not "going home") and the
phone beside the bed rings early one
morning
and, in a daze, you pick it up and mumble "moshi moshi."
And then when the
person
on the other end says something in English about "is this
the right number?" to
half-knock
you out of your daze and you mumble "hello hello."
...you
are turned away from a club because you are not Japanese, and you
are not offended.
...you
think it 10 visits to the dentist to fix a tooth is reasonable.
...when
NHK warnings about landslides, heavy rains, lightning or fog make
you feel
reassured
that someone is benevolently watching over you.
...you
decide to take a foreign visitor to see an old temple, a kabuki
play and Ginza.
...when
the first accessory you buy for your motorcycle is a flip-up
license plate holder.
...when
the next thing you buy for your bike is a clock.
...when
a "bike" is never a bicycle.
...you
think "white" is the color for cars; except for
Ferraris, in which case it is "red."
...when
you think it might be a groovy idea to get one of those
multicolored dragon
tattoos
on your back right after you get your panchu paamu.
...when
you go into a coffee shop and head right for the Golgo 13 manga.
...when
you've realized the cosmic fact that, no matter where you go in
the world, you
can
find Golga 13 mangas in a 7-11.
...you
are doing your thing at a urinal and are not in the least
disturbed by the two old
ladies
who are cleaning up and chatting within aiming distance.
...you
are embarrassed to death because the phone number on your name
card has changed.
...you
believe that Japanese atrocities in WWII are approximately
equivalent to American atrocities in Vietnam.
...you
feel constrained to comment regularly on how good beer tastes
after a hot bath
as
if you'd just discovered it.
...when
you know there aren't nine prefectures in Kyushu.
...you
are embarrassed because you don't have the NHK sticker on your
door and the neighbors do.
...you
draw an X (shime-kiri) on the envelope flap after sealing it.
...you
return from a hiking trip with brand-new, unscratched, unsoiled,
top-of-the-line hiking gear.
...you
think "for beautiful human life" is a nice advertising
slogan.
...you
are jealous of your friend because the camera strap that came
with his new
Minolta
camera says "With you for the best scenes of your life"
and yours doesn't.(Another true one)
...you
are disgusted by the thought of someone eating miso soup with a
spoon.
...you
find a telephone booth that is not plastered with stickers of
sexy young ladies and find something is missing.
...you've
passed through all the Three Stages of Eye Aversion when meeting
other foreigners.
...while
eating dried, shredded ika (squid) with your beer, you say things
like, "if my
friends
at home could only see me now."
...you
know instinctively that Matsuda Seiko comes before Matsutoya Yumi
in a karaoke book.
...you
yearn to have a remote control in the bathroom to control the
washlet, boudieoux, butt-dryer, etc.
...you
are not surprised when, in an old home in rural Japan, you use
the bathroom, only
to
find a giant color poster of James Dean staring at you in the
hallway
...you
think James Dean is one of the most important actors of the 20th
century.
...when
you can sing the Japanese versions of Uchusenkan Yamato (Star
Blazers)
and/or
Mach Go Go Go (Speed Racer).
...when
you have sung the theme song to Uchisenkan Yamato atop Mount
Fuji, a bottle
of
"Regain" in hand and are proud of this fact, and have a
picture of it on your homepage (true story).
...when
you hear words like "crunky generation" "mooney
man" "Bongo Friendy"
"charmy
green" and "mapple" and do not get the heebie-jeebies.
...when
you get tired of taking pictures of men doing tasshon (stand-'n-pee)
outdoors.
...when
you see signs saying "please do not tasshon here" or
"beware of chikan" and
don't
think call your mom to tell her.
...if
you have, at any time, been engrossed in an "easy reader"
novel or other work
intended
for ESL learners (Love Story, 1500 word level, I couldn't put it
down).
...if
you're thinking that you can use this document as a discussion
topic to kill an hour of your English class.
...if
you can sing along with the "Ishimaru Denki" or "Bunmeido
Castella" commercial songs.
...when
you have an ATM card in your wallet called Happy Time Card Dick.
...when
you think powdered coffee creamer is "milk."
...when
you think that JET is Japan's Peace Corps.
...when
you abbreviate White Day as "H.D." (for 'Howaito') on
your palm as a reminder
to
buy some chocolate for your girlfriend. (I did this!)
...when
you can't remember whose picture is on all the money and coins
from your native country.
...when
a truck backs up playing the Parade of Lights theme from
Disnelyand and this seems cute to you.
...when
your hair turns white upon hearing of a gaijin friend who slept
in his tokonoma
because
he thought that was what it was for.
...when
you've learned to write you fours so that they don't look like 9s
to the Japanese.
...if
you think that people from America can't pick up things on the
floor with their feet but Japanese can.
...if
you never turn your headlights on during the day because Japanese
people never do it.
...if
you can write the kanji for eikyou right now, while reading this.
...when
"short-timer" gaijin say to you, "So, you gonna
stay here forever or what?" and you get annoyed.
...if,
when the store you made a special trip to is closed that day, you
calmly turn
around
and go home, perhaps making a note of the store's teikyubi in
your mind.
...a
foreigner who just got here asks "is it legal to have beer
on the train?" and you laugh out loud.
...when
that same foreigner who has just arrived as a "theory about
Japan" (such as
"everything
is about death here") and you listen with mock interest,
making mental
notes
to add to your "you've been in Japan too long page when"
page later
...when
that same foreigner says something like, "After I learn
Japanese..." and you smile privately to yourself.
...if,
right now, you're not sure what year it is in seireki.
...if
you say things like "almost students are late to school."
...if
you have great difficulty using a romanized Japanese dictionary
because you are
thinking
in a-ka-sa-ta-na order instead of alphabetical order (the truth
can hurt).
...if
you can write the kanji for eikyou and know what it means, but
can't think of the word in English.
...if
you don't wonder that all Japanese believe their ancestors were
samurai.
...when
you are uncomfortable using the word "bathroom" for
"toilet" since they're really totally different
...when
you know what it is to wake up in the morning and find a
chopstick wrapper with a girl's phone number on it.
...you
come down on Americans for saying "Americans" when they
*really* mean
people
from the U.S.......while all Japanese around you refer to people
from the
U.S.--and
not Canada, Mexico or anywhere else in the Western Hemisphere--as
"Amerika-jin."
...if
you think there is nothing strange about watching the Superbowl
half-time sports
news
and having the newscaster tell you the outcome of the game,
before they've broadcast the second half.
...it
is mendokusai for you to differentiate between count and non-count
nouns in English.
...when
you have learned to substitute 'tissue' for the word 'Kleenex'
because you know
that
everyone will understand you better.
...when
you know what an 'American dog' is.
...when
you put on your jacket and slippers, go down to the Daily Store
and pick up a package of Perky Bit.
...when
the ~ character means "from" to you (as in, 2:00 ~ 3:00).
...when
you've noticed a marked tendency to say 'this one' instead of
'this' when using the word as a noun.
...if
you've read Jeff's book about Seiko.
...if
your weight, shoe size, and height in the English measuring
system have ceased to be relevant for you.
...if
you have mastered the art of starting your car without getting in
it yet.
...if
you think there that blue and light blue are totally unrelated
colors.
...if,
while home for Christmas, you go up to a clerk in Mervyn's and
ask them where the
toilet
is, causing them to look at you strange (apparently I should have
said 'restroom' or\ something).
...if
you have mastered that squeezing a lemon slice with the
chopsticks thing so that
you
don't get lemon juice on your fingers.
...if
you have problems differentiating between "ancestor"
and "decendent"...
...when
you pronounce the 'e' in 'aloe'...
...when
you complain about your "permer."
...if
you think a pine tree is found in toplical locales.
...if
you absolutely do not posess the ability to refer to the Nation
of George Washington
by
any other name than "the States."
...when
you tell someone your TEL.
...when
you are capable of uttering a sentence like, "What do you
like, shampoo?"
(instead
of "What shampoo do you like?"), just because there are
no other native
speakers
around you.
...if
you love Coffee Jelly like nothing else.
...when
you read a book about the 100 Most Influential Men in History and
wonder why
they
left out Emperor Meiji and Clark-hakase.
...when
you are at home with Melon Bread.
...when
you "send" someone to the station (or "send"
a person standing right next to you a gift).
...if
you have adjusted to Japanese automatic doors, which are oh-so-subtly
different from the ones back home.
...when
candy is always hard and "muscat" is your favorite
flavor of canned crushed ice.
...when
you "put in" gasoline into your card (instead of "buy").
...when
you visit your home and when trying to enter your bedroom, you
first try to slide
the
door open, then pull, then just before you yell from frustration,
you realize you gotta push.
...when
you find it normal to eat curry wrapped in a donut flavored piece
of bread.
..when
in your home country, you take all your bills to the local 7-11.
...when
you watch a rented video, you no longer notice the Japanese
subtitles.
...when
you read the subtitles to make sure they're right. If they're
not, you have a fit
and
claim how much better of a job you could've done.
...when
riding a woman's shopping bike has no effect on your male ego.
...when
you finally accept the fact that OIOI is "marui" and
not "oi! oi!"
...when
you like and sometimes crave "umeboshi taberetto".
...when
you can count singing the "ni no shi no ro no ya no to"
song
....you
don't bat an eye when you pay a $1 for and then gulp down a can
of "Pocari Sweat"!
...you
can remember when the "meter drop" on a taxi was 110
Yen.
...you
initiate the applause when a drunk finishes his song on the last
train home!
...you
get into the elevator and immediately push the "close door"
button.
...you
get into the elevator and intentionally stand in front of the
control panel so no one
can
push the "close door" button.
...at
a Japanese restaurant in the States you call out to the waitress
"Summasen!"
...you
get disgusted when a "foreigner" tosses his business
card on the table to you.
...someone
asks you your blood type (nani gata) and you answer "Gata
Gata".
...you
are ignored at a government office because everyone is afraid of
having to try to
deal
with you in English. So, you catch someone's eye and INSTANTLY
give a quick
head
nod knowing they will "knee jerk" nod back and having
recognized your presence
must
ask you what you need.
...you
are asked what kind of gasoline you want and you reply "Hai
Auk". (All true)
...you
miss seeing Taiho and Kirinji during the Sumo matches.
...
you find an old foreign exchange receipt that shows you got 360
yen for your $1.
...you
remember the fight from Osaka to Yonago used new YS11's.
...you
long for the days when a bowl of curry rice was 150 yen at the
Kobe Curry House.
..
you remember reading the Kansai Action newspaper published by
Isokawa san.
...you
find the souvenirs you bought at Osaka Expo 70.
...the
youngest son of your host family that you used to carry on your
shoulders to the
sento,
gives you his work phone number.
...you
fire up the 512K Mac that your friend bought for you at the
Tachikawa PX.
...you
eagerly wake up at 5:00 in the morning to go fishing at the
neighborhood pier
knowing
that your chances of catching anything over 3 inches is between
slim and none.
...you
look at pictures of your Honda Z.
...you
have lost the subtle difference between the phrases "I'll be
waiting in the car" and
"I
am waiting in the car."..while back in the U.S., you go to a
Japanese restaurant and
feel
very ill when observing other non-Japanese patrons sticking their
chopsticks point
first
into the center of their filled rice bowls (only done with rice
for a deceased individual in Japan).
...you
automatically fashion a chopstick holder out of the waribashi
wrapper by tying a simple knot with it.
...you
know how to make a 1 yen coin float in a cup of water (float a
piece of tissue on
the
surface, carefully place coin on tissue, gently knock tissue
under the surface
without
touching the coin, carefuly remove tissue).
...you
return to the states and find it odd that there is no speaker
blaring music for you
when
the pedestrian crossing signal is 'walk.'
...you
return to the states and discover, much to your annoyance, that
you simply can't
function
without a car in most major cities.
...you
discover most of your caucasian friends simply cannot sit "Japanese"
style on
the
floor (seiza) and wonder why you are not in pain when you do.
...you
actually look forward to the bip bip beeep tone that most TV
stations broadcast
every
hour on the hour right before a show starts.
...seeing
big time U.S. celebritities hawking products on TV is not unusual
to you.
...when
you practice "safety driving."
...when
you pronounce words like "mix" as having three
syllables.
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