酒喵
酒喵

日本酒入門與酒造旅遊的專門家

Clean Out Memories #1 Y2K

First time to Hakone: 2000 AD!

When I first started traveling to Japan, it was considered a trip to Tokyo that was a group of relatives and friends, and during a few days I left the team to go to the place I wanted to go.

At that time, the most famous scenic spots in the suburbs of Tokyo, and there were more information, of course, Hakone. You can take different means of transportation to enjoy the scenery of the altitude difference, and there are hot springs and handicrafts to see. Naturally, you need to find out.

Buy a free pass and spend a day in Hakone, leisurely.

When I first go on a self-guided trip to Japan, I take notes very seriously. At that time, it was not an era when you wanted to fly. The frequency of traveling abroad was about once a year or once every two years. Naturally, you would use a folder to carefully record your itinerary/foreign currency exchange slip/air ticket/accommodation reservation/attractions. Save by date and location. After 10 years, I became a veteran of Japan's independent travel, and it was automatically simplified into a transparent loose-leaf bag, one bag for one trip (laughs).

Tickets from 21 years ago or so were put in folders and stuffed into lockers and barely taken out to look at, so they still look new. Just as a souvenir, as for all the information before the next departure, we have to check it again.

Maybe, when the next big cleaning, I will take out most of these materials and throw them away, so I don't know.

Many things are not really important, and even their own existence is not an important thing. Those little thought books (or troubled or fake or self-imposed), which are covered with tourist badges and handwritten, are thrown away in batches when cleaning every few years.

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