Poor or selective? It can be trained, you know...
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Was fast asleep whilst the tremor occurred so missed all the excitement!
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Just saw it on BBC News,hope no one is hurt.Formalities aside,it must have been really cool though!
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I didnt notice it at all to be honestttttt.
[COLOR="Purple"]As I grow to understand less and less,
I learn to love it more and more. [/COLOR]
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PA got it right about how living in Japan will give you a good perspective (or San Francisco). I lived in Tokyo for 10 years and then San Fran for 5 years.
They are terrifying in Japan because they are so often and memories of them are so strong. I was there during Kobe and if I am forgetting things but about 10,000 died, mostly from fires. I remember being horrified to learn that families were still living in shelters five years later.
I taught in THE tallest building in Asia, at the time it was... it was built on rollers. It was so crazy. The restaurant on the top floor (I think it was like 60 or 70 floors) so the top floor would start swinging just with a strong wind. I was in that building only once for an tremmer. they had this reassuring female voice in Japanese saying how this was the safest building to be in in the world as Japanese women around you started sobbing and I wondered which direction to start running and would the building follow me or go on the rollers the other way.
San Fran seemed a lot easier as they were much rarer but I started wondering if that was a good thing or not. Maybe it was a good thing to let off pressure every once in a while???
slightly gory part coming up here... My apt building survived the really big earthquake in SF around 1906. It was very rare for that area as all buildings had collapsed. The basement was used as a mortuary. I never told the Japanese BF as he would have freaked!
stay safe,
frank
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