My own private limbo

Last night I went to watch Inception. I quite liked it.

Before last night, I was feeling a bit sceptical about the film. Is it just me, or so many action/fantasy films from Hollywood lately are remakes of The Matrix, Mission: Impossible or something of the sort? There is so much creativity (or lack thereof) spawning from the trunk of inspiration that goes from The Matrix to Blade Runner, all the way through Dark City and Ghost in the Shell.

Bullet-time, martial arts, alternative realities and simulations are cool. Those representations are also rich in suggestive images of urban decay and dark hypertrophied cities. I’m all for that, you know. But aren’t we overdoing it?

There’s a bit of that in Inception, too. Fortunately, in this particular case Christopher Nolan has managed to write a story that is both entertaining and provocative. And the intense soundtrack by Hans Zimmer fits very nicely.

Still image from “Inception”

I write about Inception first as an excuse. Truth is that, at the risk of becoming definitely a bore to my family and friends, this post is about Japan and my appetite for Japan. Again.

My emotions about Japan are difficult to explain. Even before I visited the country for the first time (and long before I told anyone close to me about this interest) I felt strangely attracted by it. In some sense it is only logical in my case, for I get easily bored with the environment I live in, and in Europe Japan (still) represents one of the most extremely exotic, yet reachable, places in the world.

Today it dawned on my that my image of Japan, and Tokyo, isn’t but an imagined, personal place that is utterly unattainable. My own particular vision of that part of the world is at risk of becoming a sort of personal “limbo” (in the Inception meaning of the term): an unreality that grows the more sophisticated and tempting the more you indulge in it… and one that can destroy you if you aren’t able to tell reality from dreams.

Japan is to me a perfect land of material progress, urban development, money, rules and the future.

Of course not.

I’m lying. I am well aware of the imperfection of anything that exists, by definition. Italy wasn’t my panacea eight or nine years ago, London didn’t make me happy either, and so far I don’t feel as comfortable as I would wish living in Madrid.

Still image from “Inception”

At times I find myself on the streets of Madrid, idly watching people talking and walking around me, when suddenly that particular smell I found in some hidden residential area of Kobe hits me out of the blue. There is a little girl skipping happy ten meters from me and I can’t help swapping the setting, so now she’s in a pier in Yokohama at dusk. There are wild colours in the sky all across the bay and silent old people on bicycles gently pass me by as they ride home. Or maybe it’s raining like hell. It doesn’t matter, because it’s beautiful and different and surprising anyway.

Why do I keep on seeing Japan all around, like Dominic Cobb sees his dead wife in every corner?

It is also a permanent contradiction for me: I’m pretty sure I could be in Japan by now if I had started working hard on it three or four years ago. I long for it, but I don’t seem to be able to commit to it. I’m procrastinating and writing posts like this one instead of directing my efforts towards that goal. That contradiction is the more annoying at times when I’m confronted with alternatives and need to make bold decisions. Did I mention I just became 30? I won’t deny the influence of such a symbolic date in this post (it’s such an stereotype), but I think there is more than that.

That contradiction of mine is another hint telling me that that Japan is not real, is not what I want. As if somewhere very deep I knew that it’s just an imagined alternative reality. As if I knew it will be disappointing at the end.

Or maybe I’m just scared of trying.

14 Aug 2010 Films, Images, Japan, Life, Videos

4 comments so far

  1. katarsis — 15 Aug 2010 18:31
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    I think your “own private limbo” could be somewhere you are. And I think you can be happy everywhere you are too. The matter is LIVING, not think in living. You are the same, you are YOU whereever you are. That´s a real fact, I think…

  2. malglam15 Aug 2010 19:07
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    Todos tenemos nuestro propio país imaginario, donde refugiarnos cuando lo necesitamos. Si se basa en un lugal real, cuanto más tiempo estés imaginando más alejada de la realidad estará tu imagen mental.

    En tu caso se aplican dos de mis frases favoritas, elige la que más se ajuste:

    - “Ten cuidado con lo que deseas, por que se puede convertir en realidad”

    o bien:

    - “Do you want a productivity tip? Go away and do it right now”

  3. nico27 Aug 2010 9:06
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    ummmm I know what do you mean… Japan is an amazing country, but seems unreal even when you are living in (I know that I am a lucky bastard…)
    When I was a teen, I was dreaming with the possibility to live in Japan, it was my “Teen Dream”… my life has been twisting a lot, and finally, I have had the chance to live in Japan (I feel sorry again for being so lucky bastard T_T )… and I can tell you that after living here for a while, I still enjoy of small things like it was my first day in here… There is something magic in here… And I only can feel thankful and lucky to have this chance…
    At the same time, I really understand what do you mean, I remember perfectly the days before I moved to Japan… After so many years dreaming Japan, I was scared to confront the reality of the everyday life… but, I am never been disapointed about it… yes, I know “a lucky bastard”…
    But if it was you really want, JUST DO IT!! life is too short for regreting…
    Best wishes
    Nico

  4. Robis — 4 Nov 2010 10:17
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    I liked your post and I think your moving right way (thinking way). My experience shows that our imagined unreal, happy cities or countries and perfect society’s somewhere far away always is part of our belief, but when you get there your stereotypes collide with realities of those places and once you absorbed all emotional needs, changed your stereotypes and evolved, in your mind born next destination point which promises you to fill missing bits for your always hungry soul. My point is that change of location is the best thing that you can do for yourself and the goal is to become an ultimate cosmopolitan. :)

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