This Is Japan

Explore everyday life in Japan

Fitness Day

image

The second Monday in October is a national holiday in Japan known as “Fitness Day”. During this three-day weekend, many cities across the country hold marathons, and many people, sometimes as couples, sometimes as groups of coworkers or as families, plan active outings and two-day getaways. My family and I celebrated the day by going to a local pool.

image

The building that you see in this picture is a garbage incinerating facility. The heat and the power that are generated from this incinerator are used to heat a number of exercise and bathing pools at the swimming center we went to, which stands about four-hundred meters away from this incinerating facility.

image

This swimming center is a popular exercise facility for people of all ages. It offers an onsen-like bathing facility, a children’s pool with a small slide and fountain, a variety of shallow, warm water pools that have lines of jet-fed ergonomically shaped seats running through the middle of them, and it also has an oval-shaped walking pool with a strong current that is often full of people: seniors getting their exercise, parents holding or pushing their young children around in tubes, and slightly older children in goggles playing tag or just splashing around.

IMG_0494

This year, Fitness Day happened to fall on October 10, which is also known as “Eye Care Day” in Japan because when you turn two tens (10/10) on their sides, they look like a pair of eyes and eyebrows.

_ _

0 0

“Eye Care Day” is a day which is used to remind people about ways to keep their eyes from being overstrained. The current advice being mostly about monitoring the time we spend looking at screens. To all of you Steemians out there, let that be a reminder to you to take up your Steem Fitness Challenges, turn off your computers, your TVs, and your cell phones, and give your eyes a rest.


Image Credits: All images in this post are original.


This is an ongoing series that will explore various aspects of daily life in Japan. My hope is that this series will not only reveal to its followers, image by image, what Japan looks like, but that it will also inform its followers about unique Japanese items and various cultural and societal practices. If you are interested in getting daily updates about life in Japan, please consider following me at @boxcarblue. If you have any questions about life in Japan, please don’t hesitate to ask. I will do my best to answer all of your questions.


If you missed my last post, you can find it here Sunday, Fun Day.

H2
H3
H4
3 columns
2 columns
1 column
3 Comments