goldenspines wrote:There's no way to really enforce what people can and cannot do in the bathroom
Nate (post: 1407407) wrote:If that's true I'm going to start a black market for illegal firearms in the bathroom.
Always at the cutting edge of current events, aren't we Yamamaya.Yamamaya (post: 1407364) wrote:(well this is from a year ago but w/e).
Ante Bellum (post: 1407423) wrote:And then you grow this into an entire crime ring with that bathroom as your main base. Eventually others begin to take notice of your power and they too start bathroom gangs. But when they try to fight you to take away your bathroom, an all out war erupts and your bathroom is blasted to pieces. So you go and take over their bathrooms thanks to your superior firepower, and from then on you are known as Nate, Lord of the Bathroom.
Nate (post: 1407407) wrote:If that's true I'm going to start a black market for illegal firearms in the bathroom.
Fish and Chips (post: 1407424) wrote:Always at the cutting edge of current events, aren't we Yamamaya.
Yamamaya (post: 1407451) wrote:
From what I understand Japanese bathrooms are much cleaner and advanced than the bathrooms in American schools so it would remove some of the gross factor from eating lunch on the toilet.
Wyntre Rose (post: 1407460) wrote:Uh...not where I lived, they weren't. o.0 Most of them were cleaned with water ONLY - and a very large percentage of the toilets were porcelain trenches in the ground. Throne style seating was rare in public places, even schools. Now, I lived in a little rural farming community surrounded by mountains - not all of Japan is bustling metropolis like Tokyo - so the bigger city schools are possibly different? And that picture had a student sitting on a "western style" toilet, so at least that is different. But yeah, their idea of clean and ours is a little different. They thought I was a germaphobe because I use soap to wash my hands after going to the bathroom...
Yamamaya wrote: From what I understand Japanese bathrooms are much cleaner
Wintyre Rose wrote:Uh...not where I lived, they weren't. o.0 Most of them were cleaned with water ONLY - and a very large percentage of the toilets were porcelain trenches in the ground. Throne style seating was rare in public places, even schools. Now, I lived in a little rural farming community surrounded by mountains
ShiroiHikari wrote:That's funny. I was under the impression that Japanese in general were germaphobes. I mean, they FREAKED about the pig flu, and they make people wear masks when they have colds. Or maybe that's only in the big cities.
Wintyre Rose wrote:But I've also heard that masks have another function besides not spreading germs...I can't remember exactly what it was, now. Something about keeping your mouth and nose area moist? I could be wrong, though, it's been a while, and I don't know that I ever understood all the reasoning behind it to begin with.
Shao Feng-Li wrote:Pfft, I'd be up for banning food from the bathroom. That's just gross. It's the crapper for Pete's sake.
" wrote:RustyClaymore 11:27 - Ah yes, Socks is the single raindrop responsible for the flood. XD
KhakiBlueSocks (post: 1407733) wrote:I would make a joke here about how eating in the bathroom is, in the long run a big time saver...but I do believe I shall decline.
You make a very good point. I spent very little time in big city Japan, so it's probably quite different from what I am familiar with.Kaori (post: 1407663) wrote: Keep in mind that these are students at major Japanese universities like the University of Tokyo. None of them are studying in any extremely rural area.
This. And the first time I saw someone who was making dinner for me walk straight from the bathroom to the kitchen to start preparing food, and realized that she did NOT use soap to wash her hands...yeah. I just kind of had to learn to switch my brain off when it came to stuff like that. lol. And when you wake up in the morning, and there's ice in the sink because it got THAT cold at night, and the little space heaters are turned off when you sleep so you don't burn the house down? Well...let's just say you change clothes at super sonic speed those mornings.The Japanese are a strange mix of the ultra-modern and the . . . not. There are still many old-fashioned habits that persist in Japan. They wash their hands, often without soap, almost always with only cold water (only Hokkaido in the north has restroom taps with hot and cold water, I’ve heard). They will clean floors on their hands and knees with a wet rag sometimes, or at most with a swiffer (that’s because nothing high-tech is needed to clean the flooring in Japanese housing, unlike carpet). They measure rooms by how many tatami mats would fit in the room, whether or not it has tatami flooring, and most apartments do have one tatami room. Their houses usually do not have centralized heating and air conditioning. Most of them don’t have dryers, so they hang their clothes up outside to dry. Everyone does this. During the rainy season, they hang up their clothes inside to dry.
I was teaching English in Yamagata, which is in the Northern part of Honshu, as a part of my college program. And while it was really rural, most places used Roman numerals, and the natives spoke Japanese, though the two lady pastors I lived with, who grew up in the Kanto region (which is where Tokyo is located) said they couldn't understand anybody when they first moved there, and had some pretty major culture shock.@Wintyre Rose: That's cool that you were able to live in Japan for a while. Where were you in Japan? Were you studying Japanese? Teaching English? If it was as rural as what you describe, it must have been one of those places where even numbers are written in kanji more often than not and nobody speaks Japanese. Is that an accurate description of what you experienced?
Wintyre Rose wrote:I was teaching English in Yamagata, which is in the Northern part of Honshu, as a part of my college program.
And while it was really rural, most places used Roman numerals, and the natives spoke Japanese,
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 178 guests