While in Japan I lived for about a year and a half
in what is known as ‘weekly housing’. As I never organized my own
accommodation, I still do not know why it is so named. Perhaps the contract
renews on a weekly basis, or you only have to give a week’s notice if you are
leaving.
At any rate, weekly housing has a bad rap. When I
told my students at Tokyo City University that I was staying in such a joint, I
was met with knowing looks. Can you hear your neighbours? they
asked.
On March 15, 2011 I was living in weekly housing in Fuji city,
feeling very much on edge following the massive earthquake which had struck
four days earlier. Suddenly, at about half past ten at night, there was a
violent paroxysm of shaking. A quake had struck Fujinomiya, just a few miles to
the north. My wife and I bolted downstairs into the darkness.
The power cables at the end of the car park were
swinging from side to side. The few cars, mine included, were rocking like
drunks. My left leg practically seized up from the surge of adrenaline that
shot through my body.
Fearing another tremor, we were reluctant to return
to our weekly housing, so we stayed in the darkness for about half an hour. A
hundred metres away I could see the shadowy bulk of the shinkansen line. No
trains passed, the earthquake having triggered an automatic shutdown. It was
dead silent and, curiously, most of our fellow residents were nowhere to be
seen. Our minds turned to urgent questions: should we load up the car, would
our flights leave as scheduled, would there be another tsunami? Eventually we
climbed the steps and went indoors.
Passing beyond the sham wooden door that opened
into the living area, the first thing I noticed was the TV. There was another
sound in the background, though. Curious, I hit the mute button. The
unmistakable noise was coming from the flat next door. My neighbour was
snoring! In true Japanese style, he was utterly exhausted, so much so that he had slept through a terrifying
earthquake.
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