I am in Tokyo!! 🙂 I only had time to arrive to my apartment, unpack everything, buying some stuff for the apartment and going to have dinner in my same street, and now back “home” to write a few lines and early to bed to profit tomorrow’s day. 🙂
* The trip went pretty well. I flew through Frankfurt so I could practice some German in the first flight. The flight from Frankfurt to Tokyo has been really long. Fortunately, I could sleep a little bit, not as much as I would have desired, as I did not have the chance to take an aisle seat, so I was pressed between the window and my seat neighbour. But three films, the dinner and the breakfast entertained sufficiently.

* I wrote in a company blog some time ago, that I think border control as we understand it today should have future. We need a visa (which you apply with a lot of papers, later on, in the plane, you need to fill in a couple of forms justifying why you are going to Japan, and so on, then you go and explain what you have written to an immigration officer, and later on to a customs officer. At the end, almost 30 minutes of queuing.
* In total, it took me about 4 hours since the aircraft landed until I got to my apartment. It’s true it’s quite far from the city, and that I took a bus instead of trains, but it is still a lot. Oh, sorry, it was not a bus, it was a limousine. 🙂

* What’s your impression about Tokyo? Two things come to my mind: first, the humidity. It’s really tough to be outside (or inside with open windows). The image I have seen from the bus, and after a short walk in my neighbourhood, it is a bit chaotic. Old and new, small and big, colourful and grey houses together, small streets that look like the entrance to a house, lots of cable everywhere, streets and railways cross at different heights, etc.

* I like globalization. I like being able to find olive oil in the closest supermarket to my place. I just did not like the price. (1000 yen = 6 euros)

* Language is a real problem. I still don’t know how I managed to know the time the supermarket closes (23.00), because no one spoke English there. The same happened with the taxi driver, or in the restaurant. The worst thing is that I say some times to them “tack” or “hej”… Hehe.
* By the way… Tomorrow, I will show you some Japanese in the daily life…
* Ohhh! And Carlos Sastre just won Tour de France!! Perfect timing. 🙂
One day to take a flight to the capital of Japan…
… using a well-known and reliable airline as Lufthansa…
Lufthansa cancels more than 500 flights as pilot strike at subsidiaries continues
And I was not checking news at all! My brother told me about the first one, and a friend commented me the other one in a casual e-mail…