How it’s done in Japan

person holding silver pen signing photographers signature

I have an aversion to aspects of Japanese culture that just aren't a thing in NZ. This is something I have to get over, as it's part of living here and I always find myself procrastinating on these aspects and having to deal with them at an inopportune time.

Perhaps the most obvious thing would be that a passbook is still a very normal part of banking in Japan. Passbooks haven't been used in NZ for at least 20 years, and I find it outright annoying to have to keep updating mine when I can do everything I need online. Then there are some forms of payments (usually when working for the City Hall in my case) where I have to physically print out something and use my Hanko to stamp it, otherwise I won't get paid!

I have recently come across yet another problem. In Japan you have to register your car's parking spot (if it is a 'Futsu-sha', or anything bigger than a 'Kei car'). This is because there is a limit of parking in Japan, and for us this is especially important when the snow falls because everyone needs to guarantee they have a parking spot! That's all fine and dandy, but when you move you have to let the police station know so they can update your driver's license (they actually print the new address on the back), and updating your car's parking spot is a separate issue. It would make sense for these two things to happen at the same time, but since when has anything made sense in Japan. Anyway, I didn't update my car's parking spot, and so when it comes time to pay tax on the car, it gets sent to my old address. I now have to drive to a place about 20 minutes away just to fill out a form. Computers be damned!

But it's part and parcel of living here. If you're choosing to live somewhere, you're also choosing to live with its quirks, I guess.

ENJOYED THIS? HAVE MORE.

MOUNTAINS OF WISDOM

Subscribe to my yamabushi newsletter

RECENT BLOG POSTS

hands of people reaching to each other
Knowledge that knowledge is not power is power.
close up photography of ant
The one constant thing in life is change.
person holding blue ballpoint pen writing in notebook
Better communication, better results.

YAMABUSHI BLOG POSTS

photo of female scientist working on laboratory
Experience / experiment
Get on with it
white drone flying over brown leafless tree
Learning through action

RANDOM POSTS

hand metal music musician
Finding your voice
pexels-photo-5799379.jpeg
Don’t make move until you really have to
man in suit jacket standing beside projector screen
My Content First Policy
Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Tim Bunting Kiwi Yamabushi

Get In Touch

Sakata City, Yamagata, Japan 

tim@timbunting.com

Share this:

Like this:

Like Loading...
Scroll to Top