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Sales staff in Tokyo are speaking more English

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I am not sure if it is because my friend looked like a foreigner during my latest trip to Japan or sales staff are now more courageous to speak English. Even an " obaasan " (auntie) waitress could ask us "English Menu?", which was quite a surprise for me. It seems that the depreciating yen really helped Japanese tourism and the service line is finally picking up English. Now... I wonder if that Immigration Bureau at Shinagawa has more staff who could speak English or Chinese. It was strange that nobody there could speak a foreign language although everyone who goes there is a foreigner. Luckily the forms are in English and Japanese, whew!

Collecting luggage at the airport

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Yup, it is a battle at our airports with people and carts crowding near the belt... I miss flying~

Day 9: Shinjuku Awaodori Review (Japanese traditional dance theme restaurant)

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If you want a nice restaurant in Tokyo to chill out with friends/colleagues and experience traditional Japanese culture at the same time, this is it! Shinjuku Awaodori Restaurant  (新宿 阿波おどり) is a new Japanese traditional dance themed restaurant located right outside Shinjuku station's East exit and sits right next to ABC Mart (shoe shop). Very convenient!

Day 8: Hitachi Seaside Park to see Red Kochia

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Kochia is actually Bassia scoparia (syn. Kochia scoparia), which is a kind of grass that turns red during fall. You can see the sea of red at Hitachi Seaside Park (ひたち海浜公園) in October but 19th Oct was the last day in 2014 to see this plant before they change to brown.

Day 7: Kawagoe Festival 2014

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Kawagoe Festival is an annual event held every year in the 3rd weekend of October. The place is within 40mins train ride from Ikebukuro and has buildings preserved from the Edo period.

Trompenaar's Cultural Dimension: Internal Direction Versus Outer Direction

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Based on Trompenaar's dimensions of culture: Internal Direction Versus Outer Direction (How People Relate to Their Environment) http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/seven-dimensions.htm Americans are vocal about their opinions and believe they can change their environment. On the other hand, Japanese tend to avoid conflicts and remain silent to maintain harmony with other people. Foreigners often find it irritating because we do not understand if their silence means consent, still thinking, or rejected. As for Singaporeans, we are a mix of both due to our traditional values but westernised education. Previous cultural dimensions: Collectivist and Individualist Neutral and Emotional Universalist and Particularist Specific and Diffuse Achievement and Ascription Sequential Time vs Synchronous Time

Day 6: Otaku Special at Akihabara, Odaiba and bonus: Nakano Broadway

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Akihabara Well actually we went to Tsukiji for early sushi lunch first but I won't blog about it since I already covered the topic in my  Tsukiji article  last year. Do note that they will be moving out of Tsukiji in early 2016 to allow redevelopment for Olympics 2020.

Day 5: Mt. Fuji, Oshino Hakkai and Grape-picking day tour

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My friend had never visited Mt. Fuji before so we signed up for a day tour from HIS Travel. We departed from Shinjuku early in the morning and we reached there within 2.5-3 hours by bus. This wasn't my first time at Mt. Fuji's fifth station and you can read about my previous trip here , when I visited a farm and an ice cave.

Blogspot.jp domain is down

It is strange but the entire blogspot.jp has been down since this morning. If you clicked on a link in my article that doesn't work, please change ".jp" in the url to ".com" Thank you!

Day 4: Chilling out and being interviewed

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So the main reason why I visited Tokyo again was because of an interview by a Japanese major company for their staff magazine. I am not allowed to disclose any information right now but hey, I can post my "selfie" first! The interview took like an hour or so with me sweating profusely because of the walk from the station to the office. (I hope my photos turn out fine...)