You’ve been in Japan too long when you see a road with two lanes going in the same direction and assume the one on the left is meant for parking. Since Japan is quite a small country, with half the population of the U.S. crammed into an area 1/25 the size, it’s not possible to make the roads as wide as some of us would like, and in some cities (notably, old castle towns that didn’t get bombed during World War II) there are roads so narrow a car and a bicycle couldn’t fit side-by-side. Since buying land for parking spaces is expensive, it’s common for some business to expect customers to park on the street in front, despite the fact that cars stopping along the road effectively closes off one of the the two lanes of traffic. Many convenience stores are like this — you can see five or six cars idling in front of a Seven Eleven, often with with the keys in the ignition and the cars running, since no one would steal your car in Japan.
Why Did I Watch a Film About Isoroku Yamamoto on Pearl Harbor Day?
I have a minor obsession with films released in the year of my birth, 1968. The other day, I was...