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Sigourney Weaver and I Visit Iwamizawa in My Dreams
It’s February and it’s the coldest it ever gets in Iwamizawa. 4 a.m. and
sunrise is hours off. In four months the sun will have been up for 7
minutes and thirty seconds. But there is snow. And it is snowing.
Sigourney Weaver is all hat and mittens and in the Hokkaidō fashion
circa 2007 long quilted coat. I ask her how her eyeballs feel and she
rolls them at me as an answer. We walk down 1-chome (ee cho may)
in the middle of the street like it was the middle of the river like it
was Nakagawa and I was pushed from an eggshell balcony into 6 and
a half feet of snow. The ring fence around the baseball field clatters
and dings in the wind. But then the snow is batting and we are
insulated from every sound but ourselves. The dogs all shit on one
corner of the main road and their owners dust the white flakes over
the top with their feet. Come spring Sigourney Weaver can imagine
the results. She knows the truth of the melt. For now the shits sleep
on in the cryogenic darkness. Oh Sigourney Weaver, I say. Shall we
play pachinko? Shall we go to the all night kaiten sushi and take the
undulating fishes into our mouths? Or shall we drive to the big silent
city and wander the train station’s underground caverns of omu-rice
and makudonarudos. Let’s ride the subway in the last car and look
out into the tunnel receding behind us. Shall we pierce our own ears
with the cheap plastic gun kits from beauty shops where our faces are
the white ideal. Or we could buy Häagen-Dazs from the Keio Plaza
lobby vending machine and go upstairs to the feather beds and
plastic cube bathrooms you cannot stand up in. Sigourney Weaver
says: ‘Take me to your house short woman, I want to see you sleep.’
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