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10.27.2003
Dear Dad,
Greetings from Kyoto!
Tell Grandpa that even though he's been here (back after the
war), things have changed a lot since then. For example, there's
lots of smog, and they have beer in vending machines.
Anyway, I know you wanted
me to let you know when I got here safe. You didn't say that
you wanted me to write, but I know you did just the same. I did
a lot of thinking on the plane trip over here -- it's a 16-hour
flight, and I forgot to bring anything to read -- and I realized
that your silence, your lack of communication, and your low-key
hostility towards me is just a mask to hide your real feelings.
People of your generation were raised to suppress their emotions,
or to disguise them as contempt. People of my generation, though,
are freer and more honest about the way we feel, and that's why
I'm telling you: I love you, and I'm going to make you proud.
I know that the career
I'm about to embark on wasn't your first, second or third choice
for me, but I've accepted the fact that I don't want to be a
fireman, a police officer or an architect, and so should you.
I'm guessing this wasn't your fourth or fifth choice either,
but usually once you got past architect your face got red and
you started to cut all your words short. (I hope you're still
taking your blood pressure medicine -- for yourself, and all
the loved ones in your life!) I know that once you realized
that I was determined to pursue the life of a professional athlete,
you tried to direct me towards baseball, football and hockey,
only to be frustrated by my inability to throw, my unwillingness
to run, and my childhood fear of ice. But I was determined --
and I am determined -- to see my dream of making in the world
of big-time sports come true.
Now, I know what you're
saying. We've had this conversation again and again, in many
different locations, over the computer, in person, at bars, via
the US postal service, and on the phone at a variety of different
volumes, and in various degrees of sobriety. But Dad, despite
your constant naysaying and your misguided attempts to streer
me away from what I really want to do, I am going to make
it as a professional sumo wrestler.
You don't understand or
appreciate the sport, and that's fine. You don't have to appreciate
it any more than I have to appreciate bricklaying or accounting
or whatever it is you and mom do. You don't think it's a real
sport, even though I've proven to you time and again it is. You
You don't understand the rules, even if I explain them to you
in English. You complain because it's only televised on ESPN.
I've heard all your arguments before. But whatever you think,
it's a big sport here in Japan -- it ranks behind only baseball,
judo, motorcycle racing and arena football. The greatest champions
are able to command tens of thousands dollars in endorsement
fees; that's Woody Allen money.
Of course, you don't think
I'm going to be a great champion. You don't think I'll be able
to make my dream come true. I've heard all your arguments and
put-downs time and time again, and it's a testament to how much
I believe in myself that I've been able to get this far despite
all your negativity. It continues to amaze me that you can both
know so little about this ancient, graceful eternal sport and
be so damn sure that I'm going to fail at it. (Forgive my language,
but I've been told that there is no swearing in Japanese, so
I'm trying to get it all out of my system ahead of time.) You
laughed at me and swore that I'd never make it. Well, they laughed
at Doug Flutie when he said he could win the Super Bowl. They
laughed at Babe Ruth and said he was too fat to hit 70 home runs.
And they laughed at Seabiscuit when he told them he could win
the Kentucky Derby. And just like them, I intend to prove you
-- and "them" -- wrong.
I've been studying this
list of words I wrote down watching the basho (that means
"tournaments") on TV. I did really well when I dressed
up in the fat suits and did that sumo-simulation like in Charlie's
Angels at the karaoke bar, and I think that's a good indicator
of how I'll do against real competition. And most of all, despite
all the people who say 138 pounds is too light to make it in
the heavyweight world of sumo wrestling, I've been eating as
much as my job as a caddy at the Kyoto Nikkei Rooftop Golf Resort
will allow me to afford, and I have every reason to believe that
I can put on the necessary 300 pounds by the time of my first
tournament in March. I believe I can do it. And some day you'll
believe it too.
Anyway, I gotta go. I'm
making lots of friends here already and tonight the guys are
going to take me out to Benihana, which is an authentic local
restaurant. I think my roommates really like me -- I still don't
speak the language that well, but they're always pointing at
me and laughing. I'll send you another letter tomorrow night;
I need to get home early, or else Inori grabs the top bunk.
Love,
Ira
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