A Dragon In Japan

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Walked by this today and had to take a pic. This is actually someone's *house*. It's right in the middle of two skyscrapers. Must be a samurai who wouldn't move. I'm in Tokyo now, reading lots of signs that say things like "Space Create!" and "Button Is Pressed!" and hearing the word "kudasai" every 12 seconds or so.

-By Caleb Jones

Going directly from China to Japan is a fanscinating experience.  I have the unique opporunity to compare the Japanese to the Chinese in sharp detail.  And holy crap, there are some huge differences.

To be fair, in this post whenever I say "Chinese" I'm really talking about the urban, high-tech Shanghainese.  Most westerners don't realize that saying "Chinese" (like "Let's eat some Chinese food") is like saying "European".  China is huge and there are many different languages and subcultures, just like Europe.   I'm comparing Shanghai to Tokyo here, two big high-tech cities.

The Difference Between Japanese and Chinese Women

I am a very neutral, objective observer in this, because although I have slept with a few Asian women in my day, I have never slept with a Chinese woman nor a Japanese woman.  (At least prior to this trip.  Ahem.)

You probably knew this was coming, but yeah, Japanese women are clearly hotter than Chinese women.  This is my first extended visit to Japan, and going from China to Japan, the first thing you notice is how much hotter Japanese chicks are.  I've already talked about Chinese women, but Japanese women have sharper features, bigger eyes, and fuller lips.  All good.  However when some of these cute Japanese chicks put on a lot of makeup, they literally look like life-size dolls.  It's a little eerie and it creeps me out.

Japanese women, like all typical Asian women, also "suffer" from the same problem of lack of cheastage.  That aside, if you walk down Central Gai you're going to see some of the hottest women on the planet (again, assuming you don't mind small boobs Tits are one thing, but one nice surprise is that Japanese women actually have asses.  Chinese women's butts are flat as a board, but some of these Japanese women really are sporting some curves down there.  Very unexpected. I've been here a few days now I'm still surprised at how many "babies that got back" there are in Tokyo.  Pleasantly so.

Let's have some fun and do a a quick visual comparison between Chinese women and Japanese women, and you'll get a better idea of what I'm talking about.  I'll demonstrate with some horribly blurry pics I took (my photography skills are dreadful) of two of the gals I've encountered in my travels.

In China, a gal like this is considered hot:

Cute, feminine, pleasing to the eye, but not hot, at least not to me.  Some of you Asian guys or Asian-lover guys might think she's amazing.  A few guys in China certainly did. She has the typical cute Asian-girl body and a cool girly style, all pretty standard for a modern urban Asian chick.

Now here's a Japanese girl around the same age:

It's a little hard to tell because of my horrible camera skills (and why does my fucking Android suddenly take blurry-ass pictures?), but this chick is very hot (small boobs notwithstanding).  You can see how Japanese women look a little more Western.  As I said in my last post about this, that's not a good or bad thing, it's just what us American guys have been trained by society to like.

I will say that both these gals were very feminine and nice and submissive, and on those counts both of them have the typical American woman beat, and beat soundly.  I know a few guys who are REALLY into Asian chicks and this is one of their big reasons.  I get it... ...but big-boobed blondes are still my favorite and Asian girls will always play second-fiddle to my Barbies.  Talk about societal programming! Okay, enough about the women.  I'll address some other aspects.

Where The Japanese Are Better

1. Hotter chicks, at least to my very American eyes.  Just talked about that.

2. Tokyo is clean.  I've seen some clean cities in my day (the Central side of Hong Kong is almost spotless) but damn.  The Japanese are the cleanest people on Earth.  China is very messy, sometimes disturbingly so, at least to Western sensibilities.

3. Can I tell you how much I love Japanese toilets?  They spray your ass with deodorized water and it cleans it better than our barbarian toilet paper.  Why don't we have this in America?  If I had a few million dollars laying around I'd start importing and marketing these toilets to the US.  They just kick ass, pun intended.  I'm going to look into getting one for my home.  I'm serious.

4. Not only are they the most clean people on Earth, the Japanese are also the most polite people on Earth.  The Chinese scream in their cell phones on the subway.  I mean scream.  On Japanese subways, there isn't a sound, other than the subway.  The Chinese honk their horns more than New Yorkers (I'm serious.  More than fucking New Yorkers.  It makes you want to kill someone.)

I've been in downtown Tokyo for several days now and have yet to hear a single honk.  The Chinese, even dainty little women, will regularly hock up flem and spit right on the sidewalk, right in front of everyone, like it's no big deal.  It's cultural from thousands of years ago...they have a spit god who lives in your throat whom you constantly need to remove.  I'm serious.  Interesting, but it's still gross. Anyway you get the point.

I'm not saying the Chinese aren't helpful and polite; they are far more so than Americans.  It's just that the Japanese have even them beat on the politeness thing.
Where The Chinese Are Better

1. Number one, top of the list, the Chinese are motivated.  They're number two and they hate being number two. They go out of their way to tell you "This is what they did in New York, this is what they did in Tokyo, but look at what WE did."  There's a hustle in urban China unlike anything I've ever seen anywhere.  It's one of the reasons I like it so much.  They're out to make things happen and take over the world.

In Tokyo, you get the sense that the Japanese are content going to work, coming home, reading manga, making female sex robots, and watching ridiculous game shows.  Not that these are bad things, but they don't buzz through the streets with fervor and purpose like the Chinese.  They don't push the entrepreneurial envelope like the Chinese, and feel like they don't really need to.  I'm not saying Japanese don't work hard, I'm saying they work hard for the status quo.  Japanese complacency (if you can call it that) is almost...American.

Like America, Japan has been on top for a long time, and feel no need to keep pushing the envelope (other than with high tech gadgetry...I might buy my daughter a robot dog while I'm here). Japan is content being Japan.  China wants to be the center of the world.  (And soon will be.)

2. Because their infrastructure is new and Japan's has been around a long time, Shanghai's subway system beats the shit out of Tokyo's.  Tokyo's is larger, but not very intuitive.  In Tokyo, you have purchase a ticket (or use a subway card) every time you transfer from one subway line to the next.  I can't begin to tell you how dumb this is and what a hassle this is, because you're always transferring lines.

In Shanghai, you just select where you want to go, and the computer does the rest.  In Shanghai, every station has multiple  easy-to-find maps showing the street locations of all exits.  Tokyo, no.  You're on your own.  There are signs pointing to an "Exit 4" but you have no idea on what street corner you'll emerge.

Good thing I carry a tiny compass with me when I travel or I would have wasted hours walking in wrong directions over the course of my trip (I still wasted some time even with the compass).  In Tokyo, there's no way (or no easy way) to just select the station you want when purchasing a ticket.  Instead, you have to choose yen amounts and hope that they match your destination and route.  Sometimes there's a wall chart telling you what amounts to use, but usually you don't even have that.

In Shanghai, you just touch the station you want to go to on one of the touch-screens, and the computer figures everything out for you, even the transfers.  Subways in Tokyo are nice (and spotless clean of course) but are clunky compared to the cool trains they've got in Shanghai.  (Japan's actual trains, like bullet train and the Sky Liner, are extremely cool and still second to none.  I'm talking about the subway trains.)

This is an example of why I didn't say the technology is better in Tokyo than in Shanghai.  Ten years ago, it certainly was.  Now?  In the Pudong district of Shanghai you'll see technology that blows the shit out of anything they have anywhere, including Tokyo.  I couldn't believe some of the stuff I saw.  Tokyo is very high-tech, but China is moving upwards fast.  Faster than anyone, including Japan.  It's a little scary.

3. This is more of a personal opinion  but I'm a big skyscraper guy.  That's one of the big reasons I travel to large cities; I'm a architectural skyscraper junkie.  In Shanghai (as well as other Chinese cities such as Hong Kong, Beijing, and Guangzhou), you have literally some of the tallest, highest-tech, most amazing skyscrapers in the world.  I sat in the highest observation deck in the world in the Shanghai World Financial Center (the third tallest building in the world) looking down on the Jin Mao tower, which is the fifth tallest building in the world.

Tokyo just isn't a skyscraper kind of town.  Yes, there are some skyscrapers here, mostly in Shinjuku (Tokyo's version of Manhattan), but Tokyo isn't vertical like Chinese cities.  It's more like a gigantic Los Angeles, with bazillions of small and medium-sized buildings that just go on and on forever.  The tallest building in Tokyo is the Midtown Tower, which is a midget compared to the buildings I hang out in when I go to China (and it's ugly and boring-looking to boot).

The first time I had some free time in Tokyo, I headed right down to the Mori Tower, went right to the top to the 52nd floor, and looked out at Tokyo at night in all its glory.  It was very cool, but it wasn't the virtual spiritual experience I had when I was having a drink on the roof of the Roosevelt House in Shanghai looking across the river at Pudong.  That one experience alone was highlight of my trip.

4. Better food.  Hey, I love Japanese food and I've had some food in Tokyo that is some of the best shit I've ever eaten, but authentic Chinese food is still better.  I haven't weighed myself on this trip (don't have a scale) but I'm confident I've gained a few pounds back that I lost earlier this year while on this Asia trip.  I'm going to have to hit the yogurt and almonds pretty hard for a while after I get back.  But it was worth it.  Um mmm.
Other Observations

Unlike in China, there are white people here speaking English.  Not many, but there are some, and "some" is more than "zero" when I was in Shanghai.  I guess I'm not surprised.  Westerners, especially Americans, have always viewed Japan as cooler and safer than China, which to them still seems a little alien.

My apartment in China was not new, not especially clean, but it was nice and large.   My apartment here in Tokyo is exactly the opposite.  It's meticulously clean and spotless, with nice new furniture and a high-tech bathroom...but the entire apartment is just a hair larger than my bedroom in my house back in the USA, and my bedroom is the smallest room in my house.  Not only are apartments small here in Tokyo, but everything is small. Elevators, escalators, subways, showers.  I'm a big guy and I'm it seems like I'm always crashing into shit whenever I'm indoors here.

The Japanese dress better than the Chinese, however Japanese men not only all wear suits, but they seem to all wear the same suit.  It's pretty funny.  Japanese women are slightly more stylish than Chinese women, but not by much.  Japanese women definitely dress more sexy/slutty than Chinese chicks.  One of the many funny sights here is to see a bunch of nerdy Japanese businessmen walk down the street and on the same street is some slutted-up hottie looking like she's on her way to a club (even though it's 3pm in the afternoon).  The contrast makes me smile.

This is going to sound a little silly, because it is, but for my entire life I have always envied Japanese men's hair. No, I don't want to look like a Japanese man, I just want that hair.  Ever since I was in high school I always wished I could have that jet black hair that was perfectly straight.  My hair is dark, but not black, and has always been wild and hard to tame.  Japanese guys have this perfectly straight hair they can do anything they want with. Some of them end up having some of the wildest, geek-sheik hairdos I've ever seen...and I'm not talking about the young punks, I'm talking about some of the middle-age businessmen!

One of the styles for women here is to dye (or is it bleach?) their hair a very light brown instead of the standard Japanese black. Not blonde, just very light brown.  I have to admit it looks pretty good, even though I usually hate brown hair on women.  What's funny is that a lot of the women that do this seem to travel in packs.  I guess that's to be expected, with Japan's (and really Asia's) collectivist mentality. (Which is the big thing about Asia I hate.) You think I'M obsessed with big tits?  Dude.  The Japanese are way worse.  These bastards practically worship big tits here.  (As well they should.  Good job, Japan.)  I thought it was just limited to their animation, but now that I've watched some Japanese non-animated television and been in their stores, I've realized this obsession is all over the place.  Closeups of obvious giant cleavage is comically common.

Why then am I not seeing more Japanese women with big fake tits?  I've seen one or two, but that's my point.  One or two.  When I go to Los Angeles or San Diego, I see fake tits everywhere (and I'm a happy man for it), but here, where there are images of big giant boobs everywhere, I don't see any women who actually have any fake ones.  A very interesting dichotomy.  A big-titted Japanese woman would absolutely clean up here (and anywhere!) and snag any man she wanted.  There must be something more to this.  Fascinating.

40% of people in Japan smoke cigarettes.  Good fucking god.  It sucks for non-smokers like me.  Hey, I married a smoker once and a lot of the women I date smoke, so it's not like I'm not used to it, but it's actually difficult to escape the cigarette smell here no matter where you are.  Sucks.  It's funny, because in China it's difficult to escape an odd, day-old food smell no matter where you are.  (I dislike both smells, but I assume if I lived in Asia soon I would be accustomed to it and not even notice.) That's all for now.  Gotta get back to a project before the weekend hits here and I head out of the city to explore rural Japan.  (It's kinda cool being a day ahead of everyone else.  I could get used to this.  Now if only Asia had buxom blonde chicks...)

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