The Japanese have a reputation for being innovative and coming up with new ways to make everyone’s life a little more convenient. I had my first taste of this phenomenon when I bought a crappy Datson B-210 back in college, which sported a single key that worked in both the ignition and the hatchback and didn’t mind whether it was upside-down or not, which was a lot more convenient than the dual keys that came with the Mustang I’d owned before. When I came to live in Japan I was greeted with many more of these small but much-appreciated innovations. First there’s the faucet that juts out of nearly every toilet here, giving you a place to wash your hands with the clean water as it runs into the tank after a flush, or the spring-loaded toilet paper holders that let you insert a new role with a flick of your wrist. The toilet seat heater/butt washers also fall into the “extremely convenient” category. I’m a big fan of margarine tubs in Japan, which have little holes in the lid that allows you to keep a butter knife half-in and half-out of the tub, so you don’t have to get a clean one from the drawer each time you butter toast. They also have blocks of cheese that’s already pre-sliced, so you can pull off a piece without cutting it. If I were in charge of coming up with new products at a company in the U.S., I’d mine Japan for ideas til the cows came home.
Saying Goodbye to the Japanese Squat Toilets
There are many strange and unique things to discover when you come to Japan. Buying that first canned coffee from...