Posty

The blind signs

When I started using more public transport I noticed something really interesting. It isn't maybe something revealing but this thing is that people pay no attention to signs. Like, maybe not everyone and not to every sign they go by but the majority of them just do it. Where's an example: I go to school by train every day. Once last track was replaced by another one from other train and doors in this track weren't work. There was a sign, at their eyes level, on them with information that doors doesn't work. Even though some people tried to open them. Another example is an everyday situation in the underground. When you go up or down there's always a sign on guardrail which tells you to go by the right side. We just ignore this kind of stuff. Some of us listen to this signs but another half, the bigger one just do what they want. And maybe it is just because they are in hurry but in my opinion, it would be better for them if they just started going on one side. It

The power of words

Before the class, I had a small discussion with a friend of mine about music. It was really short and simple talk but I use than a word which made me think of some things. Like we all know students(and not only them but we see it best then) are lazy and do not really like to study. Maybe not every student but most of them. Anyway, we all had at least this one moment in our life that we had to do something but we didn't really want to do that. Like studying difficult things which we don't understand. Our excuse then is mostly like "Why do I have to know this if I will not need that in my life?" I use this excuse at least twice per day so I know how it works. But even some useless thing, ironically, can become useful. Yes, even that science bunk. When we know more we can make, like it was with my example, good and interesting talks. We can feel proud of ourselves that we know something new and now we can go learn something even more difficult. Every knowledge is importa

Would you like to turn vegetarian?

The decision about becoming a vegetarian is not really easy but I think I would comfort it. Knowing that being 100% vegetarian is better for me or our planet would help me stay with this decision. What I mean by "being 100% vegetarian" is that I am a half vegetarian. I gave up eating meat like beef, chicken, pork etc. but I am still eating fish. I just can not stop eating fish. But I would try to do this because of a good of Earth.

Is the £600 per night at the Mandarin Oriental good value of money?

Is the £600 per night at the Mandarin Oriental good value of money? I have to say of course it is. The hotel offers a lot of luxury services which we will not find in others, cheaper hotels. For example, in our hotels, we will never find the possibility to order washing our clothes or order something to eat in the middle of the night. Furthermore, we will meet there qualified staff who will do everything to make us feel the best while staying in the hotel. Naturally, we can find a less expensive place to feel good, comfortable and even luxurious but this place is worth the money.

Six types of Japanese Theatre part 2

Obraz
Bunraku puppets and puppeteers Bunraku is traditional Japanese puppet theatre. The puppets consist of hundreds moving parts. Each one puppet is controlled by three highly trained puppeteers. Some puppets can transform from human to supernatural forms such as demons before the audience's eyes. Takarazuka Review Takarazuka female actresses The group of all-female theatre troops founded in 1914 by a powerful Japanese industrialist. It is a unique theatre company which perform western style musicals with melodramatic plots. They sell around 2.5 million tickets a year. The audience usually consists of 90 percent of women. After each performance, Takarazuka fan clubs wait outside the theatre to see the actresses as they depart. Members stand in a strict order based on their status within the club as they wait. This is an amazing spectacle as it is unusual to see hundreds of people standing in a perfectly straight line. Dancing Geishas Geisha Dances There

Six types of Japanese Theater part 1

Obraz
Kabuki actors Kabuki is a type of Japanese dance-drama in which all roles are played by male actors. it historically created in pleasure districts and plays ran all night surrounded by food and drinks. Kabuki actors' names take the stage of their teacher, who is often their father or grandfather. they are first expected to live up to the height oh their teacher's career in terms of spirit, style, and skill. Noh actors Noh is a type of traditional dance-drama performed in masks. It is a unique art because all Noh plays are performed by only five schools. These schools have passed their traditions down for centuries. The masks are wooden and some of them have the ability to show different emotions by facing the audience from different angles. Kyogen actors Kyogen is a type of traditional comedy that features stock characters such a master and servant. It is heavy in slapstick and satire. Although actors are using an archaic version of the Japanese lang

Fushimi Inari Taisha

Obraz
Fushimi Inari Shrine (Fushimi Inari Taisha) is an important Shinto shire. It is located in southern part of Kyoto. It is famous for the thousands vermilion torii gates, which surround the paths behind the temple. The paths lead into the forest of the sacred Mount Inari. The temple is the most important of several thousands of shrines dedicated to Inari, the Shinto god of rice. We can see there many of fox statues. The reason of this is that foxes are thought to be Inari’s messengers. The foxes often hold the key in their mouths. They symbolize the keys to the granaries. At the very back of the shrine's main grounds is the entrance to the torii gate-covered hiking trail. It starts with two compact, parallel rows of gates called Senbon Torii ("thousands of torii gates"). The gates along the trail are are donations by individuals and companies whose names and dates of donation you will find inscribed on the back of each gate.The cost starts around 400,000 yen for a smal