Postby ClosetOtaku » Sun Nov 20, 2005 12:07 pm
Anime has changed my life in a lot of ways, not all of which I'll disclose here, but on the whole has done so for the better.
I'd watched anime on and off between 2000 and 2003; by late 2003, I'd almost completely stopped watching. I was (wrongly) convinced at the time that anime was pretty much derivative, mostly unimaginative, and simply hard to get access to.
In March, 2004, I watched Haibane Renmei, and that set a lot of things in motion.
I joined probably the most comprehensive Haibane Renmei discussion board on the net, [url=cff.ssw.net]Sekai no Hajimari[/url], and made many friends and acquaintances. I met people skilled in Japanese, in art, in writing, in music.
Now, I have always been interested in all of the above, but anime was the catalyst that made me decide I finally had to act on it (even at my 'advanced' age). I started studying Japanese language and writing, and reading Japanese literature. I started drawing again, this time taking it in disciplined steps. I began writing again after a long time, this time fanfiction, and putting it in front of others for comment and criticism. I began listening to other kinds of music, and started taking piano lessons. I also started watching other anime that came highly recommended from other members of the board.
Most importantly, though, I started taking trips to Japan. Living in Korea at the time, it was much easier to do than it would be from the States, so I tried to fit in as many trips as I could in my time remaining. I knew there were hard-to-find HR-related publications in the States that could be easily located at Mandarake, Animate, or even Kinokuniya. Armed with nothing more than a couple websites and a couple recommended map books, I traversed Tokyo, learned the subway system (not as easy as it sounds!), used survival phrases... and found everything I was looking for. By the time of my fourth and final trip to Japan, I was traveling on the Shinkansen, planning every detail of my own trips through websites and guidebooks, seeing sights like Hiroshima and Kyoto that I'd never thought I'd see.
I have to say that, without anime, I strongly doubt I would have done much of this -- I might have taken a side trip to Tokyo without full knowledge of all the things to see, the history and the culture... I might have done some drawing... maybe some writing...
Today, I find myself extremely busy with my job, unable to get free time to do much outside of work or family obligations. However, when I do, I am either playing board games (my first hobby), watching anime, writing... and thinking about drawing and playing piano (next on my list).
And, of course, if it were not for anime, I would not be here at CAA.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis