Going to Kyoto

Sunday 5 May 2019

Inari is the Japanese fox spirit. It is worshipped in Shinto Buddhism for many things, but particularly for the success of the rice harvest, used for food and also to make sake.

The main Inari shrine in Japan is at Fushimi, a short train ride south of Kyoto. It has 4 kilometres of trails up a wooded hillside lined with thousands of beautiful orange arches called torii that lead to dozens of individual fox statues, each one regarded as a messenger of the Inari. 

A visit to the Inari Fushimi complex was one of the highlights of a holiday we took in Japan about a decade ago, and I hope to see it again in the first week of June. I’m excited to be going to Kyoto as a delegate of the World Parkinson’s Congress being held there over four days.

I haven’t been to the WPC before (the last one was three years ago in Portland, Oregon) but I gather it’s the leading global event for Parkinson’s research, therapies and awareness. Apparently, everyone who’s anyone in the world of PD is going to be there. On the registration form there were boxes to tick for researchers, students, therapists and so on, but also PWPs and their families. So on the one hand there is the opportunity to learn a lot of cutting-edge science, and on the other hand I hope to meet some fellow bloggers.

Given the cost and the long-haul flight I hadn’t been planning to go.

But then I was having lunch with three of my PWP buddies yesterday and discovered that they were all going, along with assorted spouses and family members. After a bit of persuasion, I had a look at flight options and hotels, and suddenly it didn’t look so expensive. Plus I need a “holiday” anyway after an exhausting few months at work.

Japan seems a fitting country to host the WPC. Perhaps thanks to the Inari, the Japanese are a very healthy people and Japan is the country with the highest life expectancy in the world. But with the large elderly population comes the curse of diseases like Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s.

People pray to the Inari for many things other than agriculture. When I visit Fushimi Inari this time, I shall find a quiet shrine and say a little prayer of my own.  To help us find a breakthrough in the search for a cure. A cure for not just ten million people around the globe who currently have Parkinson’s, but the many more to still to come.



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