NO SIGNAL : A Japanese Backpacker's Philosophy from the Last Analog Age
It's 9:30pm. You're starving. The ship's restaurant is open, you're standing inside it—and the cook says "we're closed." Then he points at your watch and says: "That's Korean time." In 2001, I boarded a ferry across the Yellow Sea, leaving Korea behind without a phone, a translation app, or a single blue dot to tell me where I was. The moment the ship hit international waters, it became a floating piece of China—new clocks, new rules, a culture I thought I understood dissolving in front of me. This episode explores three things: — Surrender: what happens when you lose every safety net at once — Time as agreement: how a steel ship became a physical time machine — Friction as connection: how being lost, hungry, and foolish led to a shared meal with a stranger from Taiwan When was the last time you relied entirely on the kindness of a stranger just to find your next meal? And if technology erases all friction, will the stranger disappear too? Macy grew up in Hokkaido. He now guides small groups through its mountains, forests, and hidden cultural layers. Visit english.whitetree.jp
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