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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>Promises</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p>Recently I repeatedly heard the word &ldquo;congratulations.&rdquo; Although I was  not receiving those heartfelt greetings directly, I was touched all the  same. People often say, &ldquo;Praising people makes them grow.&rdquo; I suggest,  &ldquo;Hearing people being praised also makes you grow.&rdquo;</p>
<p><img height="336" width="225" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue29/Promises/Promises_1.jpg" />The occasion  for all these &ldquo;congratulations&rdquo; being tossed about was a friend&rsquo;s  wedding. The gathering was an island ceremony for two surfers who had  moved to our outcropping of land drifting on the seas of southern Japan.  Friends of the couple made preparations on a grassy plot of land with a  view of the ocean, and the pastor stood before family and friends as  the couple exchanged their promises. <br />
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For those of us used to island living, it was a day of unique  perspectives. The men shuffled nervously about in collared shirts, and  the women enjoyed dressing to the nines in all the latest fashion. It  was definitely a more stylish look than the swimming gear or work  clothes we normally wear. Those in attendance split into two lines along  the sunlit and fresh green grass. The bride, in her white wedding  dress, proceeded past the guests, showered with &ldquo;congratulations.&rdquo; <br />
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Soon oaths were signed, vows exchanged with a curt &ldquo;I do&rdquo; and  the veil was removed for a kiss. I noted all the ways promises were  made&mdash;they were signed, spoken and expressed in action. These promises  also take place in our daily lives and should we stray from the path  with any of them, lies can be told and trust can be lost. <br />
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This was truly a day for &ldquo;high tide&rdquo; (an old Japanese expression  meaning &ldquo;things going your way&rdquo;). Celebrating marriage means people  have reached a decisive point in their lives together. A promise until  &ldquo;death do us part,&rdquo; understanding the human existence is marked by  reaching one goal and then setting out for the next, a process which  continues ad infinitum. If you break it off or give up half way, you can  end up in a losing cycle of blame and complaints. <br />
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As the ceremony reached its end, we guests lined up, and each  presented a single flower and a heartfelt &ldquo;congratulations&rdquo; to the  newlyweds as they made their way past. Yet the bride and groom were not  the only ones confirming commitments that day. The ceremony was a  reminder that we all have promises to keep, and I thought to myself,  &ldquo;Men and women are truly complex and blessed creatures.&rdquo;</p>]]></desciption>	
	      <author><![CDATA[Mitsuharu Kume]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Sat, 17 Jul 2010 06:11:34 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/column_rss/60</link>
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