Kansikuva näyttelystä NO SIGNAL : A Japanese Backpacker's Philosophy from the Last Analog Age

NO SIGNAL : A Japanese Backpacker's Philosophy from the Last Analog Age

Podcast by WHITETREE

englanti

Kulttuuri & vapaa-aika

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Lisää NO SIGNAL : A Japanese Backpacker's Philosophy from the Last Analog Age

Some journeys can't be Googled. Some lessons can't be streamed. In December 2000, Macy left Sapporo, Hokkaido with a rationed budget and zero digital safety net. Over 16 months, he hitchhiked Japan then crossed Asia overland — Korea, China, Southeast Asia, New Zealand, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan, and India. No Signal is a philosophical travel podcast unlike any other. The era: 2001, before smartphones, works as an antidote to our hyperconnected world. The perspective: a Japanese lens of surrendering to flow and finding meaning in friction. The tone: equal parts comedy and quiet philosophy.

Kaikki jaksot

18 jaksot

jakson Episode 18 — The Sentence That Rebuilt the Ground kansikuva

Episode 18 — The Sentence That Rebuilt the Ground

Can a single sentence rewrite the physical reality of the ground beneath your feet? Fresh off a freezing, sleepless night train, I step into Beijing with no smartphone, no GPS, no guidebook — just a hostel address scribbled on scrap paper and a paper map I cannot read. A stranger's pen circle becomes my entire universe. What my Hokkaido-trained brain reads as a ten-minute stroll becomes a punishing march through a city built on an inhuman scale. In this episode, I explore three things: * The friction of analog survival — surrendering control when there's no blue dot to save you * Two economic eras colliding — cold, profit-free service as a strange badge of authenticity * The power of narrative — how twelve words at Tiananmen Square turned empty stone into a roaring theater of history Tomorrow, on the same sidewalk you've walked a thousand times, what invisible history waits beneath your feet — needing only a storyteller to switch it on? Macy grew up in Hokkaido. He now guides small groups through its mountains, forests, and hidden cultural layers. Visit english.whitetree.jp [http://english.whitetree.jp/]

14. heinä 2026 - 19 min
jakson Episode 17 — Surrendering to the Crowd kansikuva

Episode 17 — Surrendering to the Crowd

When did you last completely let go of control? It's past 10 p.m. in 2001. A ferry churns across the sea toward mainland China, and I'm awake in the dim lobby — no map, no translation app, not a single word of Chinese. Then a stranger steps out of the shadows: Mr. Wang, a Taiwanese seaweed trader who becomes my accidental raft into the unknown. What follows is a masterclass in surrender. From an army of merchants hauling ten-foot carts through customs, to a freezing overnight train where all I had was my Hokkaido jacket, this is what happens when you stop forcing the world to bend to your schedule. Three themes explored: * Surrendering the ego of the "independent traveler" * Why polite queues dissolve in a crush of humanity * Finding radical presence inside pure discomfort When you eliminate every ounce of friction from your life, what human connections are you accidentally filtering out? Macy grew up in Hokkaido. He now guides small groups through its mountains, forests, and hidden cultural layers. Visit english.whitetree.jp [http://english.whitetree.jp/]

7. heinä 2026 - 20 min
jakson Episode 16 — The Void Between Two Clocks kansikuva

Episode 16 — The Void Between Two Clocks

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

30. kesä 2026 - 23 min
jakson Episode 15 — When the City Broke, We Skied kansikuva

Episode 15 — When the City Broke, We Skied

Past midnight, a multi-lane intersection in the heart of a global capital sits utterly silent — buried under the heaviest snow in 32 years. Then, cutting through the stillness: the click-clack of ski bindings. Two figures carve down an empty avenue, turning a citywide collapse into a midnight playground. This episode follows my first weeks in Seoul, 2001 — no smartphone, no translation app, no digital safety net. What begins as a fight over a cup of coffee becomes something much larger. Three themes explored: The "tiny ego death" of losing your small, curated comforts Human vitality found in the cracks of rigid systems — the subway merchant's "hungry spirit" Kuu (空) — emptiness not as void, but as pure possibility When the systems you rely on suddenly break down, do you freeze and panic, or do you find a way to surrender to the chaos and play? Macy grew up in Hokkaido. He now guides small groups through its mountains, forests, and hidden cultural layers. Visit english.whitetree.jp

23. kesä 2026 - 17 min
jakson Episode 14 — The Stranger Who Surrendered His Ego kansikuva

Episode 14 — The Stranger Who Surrendered His Ego

What happens when you say "yes" to a stranger you met in an internet café — and that stranger turns out to be a national pop idol? In early 2001, I crossed the strait from Kyushu and dropped into the sleepless neon of Seoul on the very first day of my overland journey across the Asian continent. No map app. No way to know what I was walking into. What I found instead was a hidden city — and a rule I never expected: that the deepest access comes not from pushing, but from letting go. This episode explores three themes: * Surrendering the ego — how shedding the "independent backpacker" identity unlocked doors a guidebook never could * The weight of hierarchy — Korea's hyung dynamic, where an invitation isn't a suggestion but a mandate * The value of being a stranger — why having zero expectations made me strangely magnetic When you stop trying to control the journey, who do you become? Macy grew up in Hokkaido. He now guides small groups through its mountains, forests, and hidden cultural layers. Visit english.whitetree.jp [http://english.whitetree.jp/]

16. kesä 2026 - 21 min
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Loistava design ja vihdoin on helppo löytää podcasteja, joista oikeasti tykkää
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