Naked in Japan

There were naked women everywhere. I was still stuck by the entrance, hugging my towel to my still clothed chest. Welcome to the Japanese public bathhouse! My adoptive mother, Chieko, pulled me inside.

I knew it was true, logically speaking, that people were naked beneath all their clothing. Still, I must iterate that there is a distinct difference between knowing the woman next to you has breasts and then actually seeing them. My poor sheltered mind was realizing I wasn’t the only one to have skin…and other such covered things.

Towels, jacket, and socks all went into the locker easily. It was just like the girl’s locker room back in high school, I assured myself, except completely different. Finally, and with great amount of confidence and self persuasion, I stripped down and joined the crowd of pinkly flesh. The trick, I found immediately, was not to look down. The moment you looked down you realized you were naked, kind of like in those dreams where you accidentally go to school without any clothes on.

Chieko instructed me to cover up what I could with a smaller towel as she led me to the showers. These were not usual shower stalls, but stools with individual hand nozzles and a basin. Shampoo, conditioner and body wash were provided.

Each stool was only two feet away from each other, but within my small space I gained the sense of a personal bubble as I scrubbed every inch of my body. These women, from the elderly to the children, were not judging me. To them, this was a regular bath. When I expected to be stared at for my bigger build and lighter skin, I realized no one cared. I was sitting in a room full of nakedness and nothing was awkward about it.

After our showers we visited several different hot pools. Some women talked in groups, but most stared off into space or at televisions placed around the premises. The jet pool was hot enough to boil a fish, and depending on where you sat powerful jets were aimed at different parts of your back and torso.

We visited a sweat room, and then a sauna, where we sat in silent meditation. We rubbed salt all over our skin as we waited. The salt was good for exfoliation, and also left my dry skin healthier.

I saw many types of bodies while we soaked. Women I saw as skinny turned into boney creatures, tangled in their long spindly limbs. Older women sagged and reminded me of what will happen to my own body one day.

For the first time I realized what I saw in the mirror was normal. Scars, stretch marks, pimples, rashes, freckles, bumps, bruises, hair, rolls of skin—I saw all of it. I may not be as small as so many women in Japan, but I sat with a rejuvenating sense that I was okay with my body.

We soaked until I was completely flushed by the heat. I emerged from the water as a new, refreshed person. I became a more confident young woman. I was also very clean.

As Americans we are brought up to relate nakedness with awkwardness, and there is no true preparation for a public bathhouse. Realize that cultures differ, and if you want the real experience you can’t be afraid to let go. It is hard to imagine ever being embarrassed by anything ever again. After you share a bath with a dozen women in your birthday suit, most other things seem mundane in comparison.

So, I recommend to any of you venturing into the land of the Rising Sun: strip down and dive in. You’ll never be the same.


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12 Responses so far.

  1. Lekkit says:

    Wait a minute… You seriously mean that you don’t usually go naked when you’re in the bathhouse? As long as it’s not a mixed dressing room or something (which I haven’t heard of yet) we do the same in Sweden. And to be frank, I thought everyone did it. I have never even thought that it could be embarrassing to be naked around people of the same sex. But when I think about it, I could see it happen. Not to me, though. You’re not the only one who discovers new things about nakedness.

    And I hope that Episode #3 will be uploaded somewhere I can watch it too.

  2. Rask says:

    Whooo!!! Go Kristin! I’m happy for you– and proud of you. That is indeed something you don’t often experience here in America– particularly the non-judging you part. Sounds very cool, and oh! How I envy you to have such relaxation >.< school is working me to the bitter bone…

  3. Sunja says:

    @ Lekkit: Yeah, in America you take private baths…and that’s assuming you take a bath at all. Most people I know only take showers. Crazy, I know. And I will upload all of my episodes to YouTube this next week when I get back from spring break.

    @ Rask: Maybe it’s time you pulled out some of that LUSH pampering?

  4. Rask says:

    As soon as the ASA house gets a bathtub, I will >.> Or you know, when I go home… which is gonna be at Easter I guess…

  5. Mashuu says:

    So, when are you gonna upload the picks of this particular event, eh? >.>

  6. Mashuu says:

    And by picks i mean pics. As in pitchers. Of what went on inside the bathhouse thinger. Not sketchy at all.

  7. Teh Ekim says:

    LMAO! I was wondering when someone was going to ask where the pictures of the bathhouse were.

  8. Teh Ekim says:

    And as a side note Lekkit, I haven’t had a “bath” since i was 8.

  9. Sunja says:

    @ Rask: You needs one of those shower emotibomb thingers…or the toner tabs…or…or…a private masseuse.

    @ Mashuu: YOU GET NO PICKS. =P That would be rude. And I might get my camera wet…which would make me so so sad. Get your own onsen.

    @ Ekim: You should try one sometime. With bubbles. And incense. Aaaand a personal masseuse. You and Chelsea could have a spa day! oooh my goodness, what a glorious idea! :3

    I apologize.

  10. Rask says:

    …we’ll have a spa day alright.

    WITHOUT YOU

    WHAT NOW

  11. Rask says:

    CELLY WILL BE IN OUR SPA DAY TOO

  12. Sunja says:

    OMG. I still want a masseuse…

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