Thursday, June 28, 2007
Trouble With Air Conditioning
I woke up shivering with my blanket pulled up tight around my chin. I turned my bedroom into a meat locker, with the AC was cranked down into the teens. I dreaded what was behind my door. I slid the rice paper back, and the blanket of humidity pasted to my skin.
If someone asks me which I like better, the heat or the cold, I never hesitate with my answer that I like the heat. I'd take boardshorts to long johns any day of the week.
When I arrived at school, the office ladies gave me the ear-to-ear smiles and multiple bows I'm used to. But today, all the windows were open and the single rotating fan that accommodates the entire office of 15 moved back and forth as they all looked at me and said with a bit of concern, "atsui, ne."
I agreed.
Yes. It was really hot.
As I went into the teachers lounge, the teacher's daily morning meetings had just finished, and nearly every teacher sat at their desk leaned back frantically fanning themselves. They mumbled to one and other, again, and again.
"Atsui."
For the 30 teachers in that crammed in the teacher’s office, a total of four fans knocked the air around in hopes that it would bring a bit of relief. And it was only 8:30.
"Good Morning, Luke."
"Good Morning," I replied to the teacher at the desk next door.
I pulled out my handkerchief from my bag to blot my beading forehead.
"It's hot, isn't it?" He said while fanning himself with his hand and tugging on the collar of his polo shirt.
"Yeah, it is."
All of a sudden the bell rang and my teacher whisked me off to our first class. The students were quiet and lethargic. Completely unenthusiastic, preoccupied with what method they would use to fan themselves for the next fifty minutes.
All the windows were wide open and everyone hoped for a breeze. No such luck, but finally the bell rung and I made my way back to the teachers lounge.
As I stepped through the sliding door, all the teachers were still huddled around, having the same conversation. They continued to fan themselves and just talk about it.
I leaned back in my chair as my neighbor asked me again how my last class was. And I told him that it was fine, just hot. I continued to look up at the fans as they rotated and made the rounds hitting the necks of the sweating teachers sitting below.
It was at that point when I looked up and saw it. An Air Conditioner. Not just a little window unit with three settings. A full-blown chrome industrial Air Conditioner. It hung right in everyone's face, in the center of the Styrofoam ceiling.
Was there something I was missing?
It took me a minute to process.
I don’t think I need to go into my train of thought here. But I thought, "If that thing works..."
I leaned over to my neighbor who was now fiddling with the fan above us, trying to adjust the speed.
"Hey is that an Air Conditioner up there?" I whispered across my desk.
"Yeah."
"OK." I had to pause. "Why isn’t it turned on?"
"Luke wants the Air Conditioner on!"
He slid by me and jogged across the room where he was met by 3 other teachers, and fiddled with the thermostat on the wall.
"No! Wait...I didn't say that!" I said to the other teachers as they sat there staring at me, smiling.
There are a few things at work here. The teachers were smiling for 2 reasons. The first reason was that I was the foreigner scapegoat. I asked for what I wanted, even though I didn’t really ask. Many things are just assumed in Japanese speech. It was assumed that I wanted the AC on. And for one person to ask for something, something that might affect an entire group is very un-Japanese. Because, who knows? Having the air conditioning turned on in a lobster pot of an office, might just "inconvenience" somebody. The second reason for them smiling is that they were genuinely thrilled that they wouldn't have to suffer for the rest of the day.
So, after about 20 minutes, the sweating and fanning stopped in the teachers lounge. The cries of "atsui" (hot), turned to "suzushi" (cool) as students and teachers escaped into the teachers lounge between periods. Even the secretary’s office followed our lead and turned on theirs after we had on ours. A revolution had just taken place.
I want to go back and clarify what I said about the smiling bit. It is certainly not my intention to cast the teachers in a malicious light. I think they were smiling because it's not what they would have, or better yet, could have done. Not to get too Japanese Sociology 101 on us, but typically, ‘speaking up’ is not something that they do. It just took someone who wasn't so Japanese, i.e. me, to get what everyone else wanted without any rift.
What would have happened if nobody said anything? It was only 9:30 when I dropped the bomb, but from the looks of it, the fanning and loosening of ties could have gone on all day. It would have been interesting to see how it would have transpired. Another hour? All day? Who knows? It would have been almost worth the sweat to see how long the discomfort could have lasted with the air conditioner hanging dormant in the center of the room, staring everyone in their sweaty faces.
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1 comment:
Haha, good stuff bro. Say, I know you're on an adventure now, but have you read Shantaram yet? I'm about half way through, well I should say disc 14 of 35 :P Anyway its a pretty great story, and for once I actually recommend the Audio disc. the reader does a really good job with all of the characters. Anywho, Heard it was raining pretty hard down there in Kumamoto-ken...
Well see ya later!
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