So if you’ve never had the opportunity to lose a wallet in Japan, I have a funny story.https://twitter.com/mrkirkland/status/949606142153338880 …
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After 30 minutes he found a Chinese factory worker, who (I later found out) spoke neither Japanese nor English. He hands the worker the wallet, gives him an unintelligible instruction, and walks off. The worker sees my foreigner card and freaks out on my behalf.
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Relevantly: I’m subject to arrest without this document. So spurning the opportunity to do the obvious thing and tell the cops, he walks around for 30 minutes until he finds a white guy. The white guy, a tourist, is incredulous. “As if I’d know random American.”
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The white guy being visited by his foreign friend, though, lived in Ogaki. So of course I was in his address book.
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Thus begins my first and only conversation in Chinese, a language that I speak precisely one word in. Luckily for me, the three words of Japanese the Chinese gentleman understood included “foreigner registration card”, and once he said that I looked for mine and freaked.”
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So here’s a problem for you: how do you communicate “Meet me at the X” without a common language. Answer: “McDonalds?” “McDonalds? MCDONALDS.” “McDonalds shi shi.”
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End of conversation
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I was out with a group of friends at an all-you-can-drink dance club in Osaka, and we all got separated after the 5am last call. *TWO* of my friends lost their wallets, both of which were same-day couriered back to our school and in hand by 3pm.
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