From Reddit.com:
Facebook user Jun Shiomitsu has been collating and translating into English Japanese Twitter messages sent out about people's experiences following last week's earthquake. You can read them on his Facebook page but here are a few translations:
I went out last night to help some friends who were volunteering as security personnel between Machida City and Sagami Ohno City. I saw total strangers, both young and old, helping each other along everywhere I turned and was heartened with an overwhelming feeling of encouragement. I was so touched I hid behind the toilets and cried.
While most of the convenience stores near the station were closed because of the quake, there was just one Seven Eleven that was open. The employees had lit lots of candles and put them on the stores shelves. The cash register was not working and they could not take inventory, so the employees worked in threes, one reading up the item description and price, another punching the numbers into a calculator, and the last one using a flashlight to help them work. The store managed to operate both "cash registers" efficiently this way. Impressed!
A goth youth with white hair and body piercings walked into my store and shoved several tens of thousands of yen [several hundred dollars ] into the disaster relief fund donation box. As he walked out, I and people around me heard him saying to his buddies, "I mean, we can buy those games anytime!" At that, we all opened our wallets and put our money into the donation box. Really, you cannot judge people by their appearances.
Thought I'd share this inspiring action from fellow gamers out there.
Facebook user Jun Shiomitsu has been collating and translating into English Japanese Twitter messages sent out about people's experiences following last week's earthquake. You can read them on his Facebook page but here are a few translations:
I went out last night to help some friends who were volunteering as security personnel between Machida City and Sagami Ohno City. I saw total strangers, both young and old, helping each other along everywhere I turned and was heartened with an overwhelming feeling of encouragement. I was so touched I hid behind the toilets and cried.
While most of the convenience stores near the station were closed because of the quake, there was just one Seven Eleven that was open. The employees had lit lots of candles and put them on the stores shelves. The cash register was not working and they could not take inventory, so the employees worked in threes, one reading up the item description and price, another punching the numbers into a calculator, and the last one using a flashlight to help them work. The store managed to operate both "cash registers" efficiently this way. Impressed!
A goth youth with white hair and body piercings walked into my store and shoved several tens of thousands of yen [several hundred dollars ] into the disaster relief fund donation box. As he walked out, I and people around me heard him saying to his buddies, "I mean, we can buy those games anytime!" At that, we all opened our wallets and put our money into the donation box. Really, you cannot judge people by their appearances.
Thought I'd share this inspiring action from fellow gamers out there.