I am actually a little sad to leave Sydney. The city and country have been a great adventure and the fellow travelers delivered a real joy. One of my newfound German friends happened to enter the hostel lobby while I was waiting for the airport shuttle.
She is from Karlsruhe, where Dad’s family lived in Germany. There was a genuine sense of warmth and care. When the van pulled up there was a tangible tension of two people who likely will never see each other again holding on. Release. Turn. Walk to the van. Look over shoulder. (Still there.) Dump bags in the back. (Still there.) Walk along side the van to the front seat. Wave. (Wave back.) Van jolts forward. (Still there and waving.) Out of sight. Moron! No e-mail or contact info. One of these days I will learn to command the moment, relinquishing fate.
The international terminal at Sydney Airport was a complete zoo for 8:30 am. The Qantas queue stretched around the corner and then the length of the terminal. Unbelievable! My flight left at 10:25am and this line represented at least three hours of doing the luggage shuffle. After an hour and fifteen minutes of curling my 19 kg main pack and 11 kg day pack there was a “final call” for the Tokyo flight. In Australia this gives free reign to walk directly to the front counter. Whew. Saved.
Our flight was half empty, translating into an empty seat next to me for the 9 hour and 15 minute flight. The entire experience was completely enjoyable, with service and food exceeding that we received on the top deck of the 747 flight to Sydney in June. (Sorry KJ. Thanks for the once in a lifetime top deck experience.) Arriving in Tokyo, most of the passengers were relaxed and without the typical trans-Pacific grog.
For some reason, I was completely unintimidated by entering a country where hardly a spoken word and definitely not a single written word was comprehensible. I had directions, what else is there really?
Easily grasped in theory, but when directions fall short, in the execution of exiting the subway to a neon-enhanced darkness, what is there to do? Simple. Find a young looking couple on bikes and ask. The couple in their early 20’s had great energy for solving my problem, but just like me little comprehension of exactly what we were attempting to communicate. Finally, like a Rosetta stone discovery, the young man saw a phone number on my hand written directions. Borrowing his girlfriend’s phone he dialed. “Moshi, moshi” was his greeting and then surprisingly he handed the “trinket dangling” phone to me. After a brief conversation, it was clear which one of the six streets that fed into this subway mole-holed intersection led to the Tokyo Hostel.