Image: Julie McNamee
Ah, Japan. Often, Western countries are amused by what we see as the odd quirks of Japanese culture. Thus, first-time visitors of Japan may be surprised by a number of Japanese customs. One example would be their Christmas traditions.
While Christmas is not a national holiday in Japan, that doesn't mean they don't celebrate the holiday. It's just that they choose to celebrate with breasts and thighs. That would be similar to the way a ton of others in the world like to party, only I'm talking chicken breasts and thighs. The Colonel's chicken, to be precise. Yes, Kentucky Fried Chicken is a Japanese Christmas staple. KFC Japan enjoys their highest sales on that day of the year. "Merry Christmas! Original Recipe or Extra Krispy?"
Read about nine other ways Japan keeps first-time tourists on their toes here.
You may not even realize how different that can be from what you are used to until you go -and even more fun - when you come back. The Japanese are so quiet and polite that I actually found it more jarring coming home and getting on public transit at the airport - suddenly everyone is making noise, strangers talking to each other, couples yelling at each other on the train... yeah, part of me definitely preferred the quiet solitary feeling. :)
One thing Japan definitely isn't is quiet. It's loud, but in a different way to what Americans, and I assume other Westerners, are used to. There are speakers outside of shops playing music/ads to entice shoppers in, and once their inside, they're bombarded by small radios playing jingles on a 10s loop(I worked retail in school, and I think I'd have gone homicidal listening to the same tune that often).