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Retiring Gaikokujin's avatar

Completely agree regarding the beauty of Japan. It has some areas of exceptional beauty and most cities have pockets of beauty but they are mixed in among hodgepodge architecture and, of course, the power lines. Someone once said that Japanese people 'have an eye for beauty and a blindspot for ugliness'. They can marvel at the beauty of an ancient shrine and ignore the concrete blocks of functional buildings all around it. I think there is some truth in that, and after decades here I think I am coming to be a bit like that myself!

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Tirion's avatar

I couldn't agree with you more about the very questionable beauty of Japan - Japan's built environment, at least. I have always found it paradoxical that a culture which appears to be quite obsessive about orderliness, neatness and tidiness seems to tolerate so much ugliness in its villages, towns and cities. It is, in my experience, rare to see a pretty village. The ubiquitous telegraph poles and hideous spaghetti wires, which spoil 99.99% of views of Japanese villages, towns and cities are particularly offensive; and the tatty timber buildings that look so unloved are also a blight. It seems that the average age of a Japanese house when it is demolished is thirty. So wasteful. Wouldn't it make more financial and environmental sense to build durably for the long term and maintain obsessively?!

I don't agree with you so much about the natural landscapes though. I'm no connoisseur, but the Japanese Alps, for example, seem to me to be every bit as stunning as those of Europe. As for autumn, yes the colors are just as gorgeous as those of New England or anywhere else, but there is for me an underlying sadness about autumn, prelude as it is to the cold, dark days and stark, bare branches of winter. I prefer the promise and new life of spring, sakura and returning warmth!

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