Join Our Newsletter
  • Visit Our Store
  • Come Write for J-List!
J-List Blog
Visit J-List - Your Favorite Online Shop and Friend in Japan
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan
No Result
View All Result
J-List Blog
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan
No Result
View All Result
J-List Blog
No Result
View All Result

Learning New Skills in Japan

Peter Payne by Peter Payne
13 years ago
in Your Friend in Japan

When you live in Japan, you naturally develop a new set of skills in order to survive. Very few streets are named in Japanese cities, and when I arrived here I had to actually teach my brain to think in more spatial terms, e.g. turn left at the beauty shop then right at the pachinko parlor, rather than using street directions. Japanese homes lack central heating, and a common way to heat a room is to use a kerosene-based “fan heater.” There’s a sensor inside that turns off the power if the unit is bumped or overturned, something that fills the room with unpleasant kerosene fumes, and foreigners living in Japan learn very quickly not to place the heater in a place where it’ll get kicked, and get good at smoothly moving it across the floor without setting off the sensor. Because Japan packs slightly less than half the population of the U.S. into a space the size of Nebraska, there’s naturally less room for people and their cars, and if you drive here you’ll develop the ability to back into a tiny parking space like a pro. While learning Japanese isn’t fundamentally harder than any other language, some areas seem difficult for foreigners, like the way Japanese people write kanji for each other by drawing the character in the air — my brain just isn’t equipped to process invisible finger strokes like that. Also, the Japanese like to attach sounds to numbers, for example 084 becomes ohayo (good morning), 3476 is sayonara (goodbye) and 39 is san-kyu (thank you). Back in the dark ages of the early 1990s, everyone carried around “pocket bells” (beepers) that could only display numbers, and my students would send messages of surprising complexity to each other.

Living in Japan will teach you new skills.

Tags: carsgaijinJapanese languageLearning Japanese

More Posts Like This

When The Subtitles Substitute Name For Onii Chan
Your Friend in Japan

Onii-chan, No! When Translators Don’t Follow Japanese Naming Conventions

by Peter Payne
1 year ago

How do you feel when you're watching anime and a character uses an honorific like "Onii-chan," but the subtitles use...

Japanese Is Similar To Spanish Blog
Your Friend in Japan

Why Is Japanese So Similar to Spanish? Let’s Compare Both Languages!

by Peter Payne
1 year ago

Everyone knows that Japanese is a hard language to learn, right? But I found it surprisingly easy, partly because it...

What Does Bitch Mean In Japanese

Bitch Means What in Japanese?? Nine Times Japan Changed the Meaning of Words

1 year ago
Is Japan Xenophobic

No, Japan Is Not Xenophobic. Here’s Why.

2 years ago
Watashi No Shiawase No Kekkon

‘My Happy Marriage’ is a Serotonin Boost For Your Brain

2 years ago
Learn Japanese Through Anime! Otonari No Tenshi

Learn Japanese With Anime! Otonari no Tenshi-sama Edition

3 years ago
Next Post
Jlistfront Pvc1sc W

My Favorite Japanese Foods

Trending Today

The J List Jav Actress Ranking 2025
Your Friend in Japan

JAV Actress Ranking: Who Are The Top Stars on J-List in 2025?

4 months ago
Banned Anime You Can't Watch Anymore Blog Post
Your Friend in Japan

Banned Anime!? Anime You Can’t Watch Anymore in the Age of Streaming

7 days ago
The Top 10 Jav Actresses Article
Your Friend in Japan

The Top 10 JAV Actresses to Browse During J-List’s Sale!

6 months ago
Summer 2025 Ecchi Anime Web Cover
Featured

Summer 2025 Ecchi Anime and The Streaming Services of Culture

5 months ago
The 10 Best Anime Characters Who Have Sex
Your Friend in Japan

The 10 Best Anime Main Characters (Who Actually Have Sex)

9 months ago
Get the Newest Figures from J-List - Your Favorite Online Shop and Friend in Japan
J List Anime Gift Guide 2025
Your Friend in Japan

ANIME GIFT GUIDE 2025: Looking For the Best Anime Gifts? Use J-List’s $40 Holiday Coupon!

by Peter Payne
December 4, 2025

ANIME GIFT GUIDE 2025: Looking For the Best Anime Gifts? Use J-List’s $40 Holiday Coupon!

Does It Count If You Lose Your Virginity to an Android? Yes, It Does

The Kasane Minazumi 1/7 Figure Embodies Confident Shyness

Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End Season 2 Continues the Adventure

Sawaranaide Kotesashi-kun, Episode 9 — Knead Knotty Muscles in the Dark!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Discord
  • YouTube

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.