Monthly Archive for September, 2007

On Breakfast and Tofu

Food in Japan has been an interesting experience… Being a vegetarian, it’s been hard not to come across meat accidentally. Be it in rice balls, or beneath some pefectly innocent-looking noodles. I thought I was the kind of vegetarian that hated even the thought of animal oils touching my veggies, but it turns out that starvation, and expensive food sometime work wonders on your morality.

That being said, I’ve still made the attempt to eat as comfortably as possible. Afterall, the reasons for my vegetarianism are for economic and social and environmental reasons, and not so much in the ‘animal consciousness’ vein (by not so much, i mean not at all). At this point, meat seems just gross, devouring corpses and eating flesh just seems extremely repulsive. So although I’ve been upset when I find accidental meat in my meals, I’ve actually been just eating around it.

As many of you know, I love breakfast. I will eat breakfast for every meal of the day. In Japan, however, it has been hard enough to find a rice or noodle dish without meat, let alone breakfast!

Enter the Royal Host…

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sweet, sweet Royal Host.

In the evening, Royal Host seems like your average ‘Japanese-Take on American Dining’ Restaurant. It has steak, and Chicken Fingers, as well as the Japanese basics of Fish, Tempura, Rice, Noodles, etc. But in the morning is where it truly becomes my breakfast paradise. PANCAKES! FRENCH TOAST! RE-FILLABLE COFFEE! EGGS ANYWAY YOU WANT THEM! For the past week I have been going nearly every day at 8am to wake up, have several cups of coffee, get filled and read, all while listening to the CBC World News at 6 (EST) Podcast.

Besides breakfast, I’ve learned what to look for and what to ask about. Tofu at the grocery store comes SO cheap and you can get it in any variety (deepfried, soft, firm, and even in patties!) and is so versatile in cooking. Or should I say “cooking”. Egg and/or Tofu sandwiches with Ketchup seem to be the food of choice these days, but mostly because I was waiting for my first paycheck. I look forward to learning how to cook Japanese Vegetarian cuisine and furthermore, finding interesting ways to use the plethora of Tofu!

It might seem as though I’m looking for a typical Wester cop-out to eating Japanese food, but you have to understand that as a vegetarian, if you don’t find a specifically vegetarian restaurant, you’re going to get meat. It’s just the Japanese way, so to find staples like breakfast and grocery store tofu (they have a whole section! it’s as big as the dairy sections!!) has been an absolute life saver!

A Cat Named Schrödinger

I don’t know whether I’ve made a bit of a breakthrough in my own understanding of the issue, or it’s just that I am now again re-grasping the notion, but it’s just seeming much clearer to me this morning than it has been recently.the premise that:

‘a thing (an object in the world) is meaningless and is only invigorated with meaning by my viewing of it’

is entirely off track of how a thing has meaning, and about what meaning is entirely. there is no back and forth on meaninglessness. things that are without meaning are things that are unknowable, and really have no worth (or possibility) of explanation.

are the words on paper dead? no. entirely not. the point is that nothing is dead, if it enters in to your consciousness it is meaningful, it is something.

the recognition of an object suggests already that it has some kind of semantic weight. the spectrum of meaning is the spectrum of reality.

it depends on a kind of horizon of consciousness, not in ‘what you can see’ but in ‘what you can know’.

how does it come about that an arrow points?

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with all this in mind, let us think then about perspective.

the issue at hand might only be problematic in our pre-conceptions of it. for example:

Mathematically, in space and time parallel lines will never meet. However, we assuming here in this mathematical proof that we can have such a thing as a ‘god’s eye view’ or an objective viewpoint. Although it is the case that on paper we can draw itand on the ground we can follow it, but doesn’t it say something that we can truly never see a straight line? Even from space, there is always a concave.

Perhaps the problems what we encounter in quantum physics and in theories of time and space (as they also apply to issues of morality, or social contract) is that we are looking at the world entirely in the wrong way, and assuming that we can look at it through a clean lense.

Who’s Left and Who’s Leaving?

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It’s a strange thing starting over. I haven’t been outside of Canada very long, but it feels as though it’s been months. This, I think is mostly due to the incredible amount of information being driven through my retinas and other sensory holes with such fervor.

As to reiterate the problems I’ve been having in my last post, ‘Time’ might mean a height of the sun in the sky (or in the universe) at an agreed upon point, or it could mean the maximum amount of thoughts one might cram in to a given duration or period. Either way, it feels like I’ve been out of my element for a lot longer than what I’m used to.

It’s odd that I am constantly feeling like I’m forgetting something, or that I should have bought more groceries, or every four hours feeling as though I should take the non-existent dogs for a walk. Isn’t it strange that the hardest part of being in a country where you can’t understand any of its residents, is how empty and quiet your own private space feels?

I miss my dogs and my girlfriend.