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By Joanna Franco. By Harriet Corns. By Contributor. By Nasir Fleming. By Danielle Conlon. I mean, does it for you? An onsen is the Japanese word for hot springs, thermal baths, saunas — all of that. Being alone in Tokyo, I knew there was no better time for this. Prior research on Google will show you that onsen are everywhere in Tokyo.
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For full functionality of this site it is necessary to enable JavaScript. Here are the instructions how to enable JavaScript in your web browser. Regular visitors to Japan will know all about onsen. Here in the West we'd call the nearest equivalent bathhouses or Turkish baths, both of which have rather fallen out of favour in recent times. Not so in Japan, where the strict rituals involved in taking the waters in an onsen border on the religious. It's not for everyone, that's for sure; especially if you don't like getting your kit off willy-nilly in front of strangers. I don't mind at all, which is why I found myself sitting naked in the open-air hot springs of the Kouno-Yu onsen with a bunch of local gentlemen when, on the wooded hillside above us, a lone deer came ambling along.
I have an attitude declaring that when abroad going to museum is a great way to understand a city and the culture of a country. I should honestly add that going to a gay sauna is another way to have an unfiltered idea of what people do and like. Culture and sex are intertwined. I spent some days in Tokyo with friends last year: we followed the book of things to visit, the markets, the restaurants, the stores, the temples, the museums, the streets. I stole a couple of hours for myself and went to 24kaikan sauna, in the Shinjuku area, which seemed quite popular on Google. It was a first time in many ways, It made me feel the country. First, the place has a sign which is quite visible from the street, something unusual compared to the saunas around Europe. Then, even if I had read the instructions online, I felt confused for the first 15 minutes, which is basically the rule in Tokyo for every first time you are doing something: even ordering food or taking a train. I stepped into the place with my shoes, but no, big mistake, guests are supposed to take them off immediately, not even one step inside. Then I tried to wear my flip flops as people do in London, Munich, Rome… , but no, again I was reproached by the man at the counter: barefoot is the rule everywhere inside.