Many of my friends know that I can sometimes be a creature of excess – beneath a relatively mild exterior, I have a streak of recklessness. Perhaps this vein in me has helped inspire a little experiment I started today. Basically, I am now homeless. I have moved out of the guesthouse in Kanagawa, and will join the ranks of the so-called net cafe refugees, who spend their days as normal people and spend their nights in internet cafes. My thoughts on this were threefold.
Not too shabby
First, it’s a cheap intense form of cultural immersion. This isn’t just a “wild and crazy Matt idea” – as I alluded to, people do this every day. About 1.5 years ago, there were estimated over 5,000 such refugees and given the waves of layoffs, more people will be doing this very soon. The furnishing isn’t too bad, just slightly smaller than a standard closet…
Showers, coffee, fast internet
Second, it’s a way to save money. For my tiny single, I paid about 50,000Y/month, roughly $18/night. For a 7-hour stint in this internet cafe, I can pay only 1,000Y ($11). For a trip into central Tokyo and back, I once paid at least 400Y; now, I walk out of whatever cafe I happen to sleeping in. I’ll be measuring my new budget against what I would have been spending to see how effective this strategy is.

3,000 Y to my name
Finally, if we’re going to be poor in Tokyo, let’s drive it into the ground, utterly and completely. I have 3,000Y in my wallet and a 2-week wifi pass redeemable at McDonalds. My only source of income is my tutoring. Basically, we will see whether I have reached a financial equilibrium in Tokyo without a stable teaching job. It’ll be like a worst-case scenario for an aspiring English-teacher…
Every night, I will sleep in a different internet cafe throughout the city, and by day, I will haunt various regular cafes, McDonald’s, subways, and public parks, weather permitting (which, unfortunately it is not at the moment). Everything I have is laid out below, and I encourage you to visit the Flickr picture which explains each item.

My worldly possessions for the rest of our time in Tokyo
Think I’m nuts? Let me know, and stay tuned for a daily update of my new lifestyle…
looks cozy! best of luck. what are rob and brian’s plans? why didn’t they venture out with you?
Dude, this is awesome!!! Can’t wait to see what transpires.
Hi Matt,
You mean crazier, right?
Also, does that mean we can expect to hear from you more since you’re spending all of the this on the internet, or at least near computers?
Hi. Best of luck with your job hunt Matt. I am doing roughly the same thing here on Guam. Sell newspapers in the morning and perhaps an odd job(I walk away with about$35 a day for papers will make $50 when school starts up). Shower at the free pool. Get a decent meal at the grocery deli and straight to the net cafe. Prices here are $3 per hour or $20 for all day pass. This month $10 pass Monday-Friday. Customers get 10% mileage(nice).Laundry place not too far away.
Think my scenario is easier than yours. It NEVER gets cold here and there is a WW2 cave close by I can stay in if need be. Plus the owners of the cafe let me store a small amount of my things here. Very basic but at least I can pay my own way. Construction work in the future.
Would like to hear how things go for you.
Jeff
Hi Jeff,
Luckily, my misadventure ended awhile ago, but it’s definitely stamped quite vividly in my memory. That sounds intense and hardcore, especially if you’re considering the WW2 cave. Nice job on the laundry – never really figured that one out beyond washing in the cafe bathroom or shower. Are you by chance recording or blogging about your experiences?