My First Time Leaving the Country
The First Time I Left Love for Tokyo
I was fifteen and deeply in love the first time I left for Japan.
He drove me to the airport in Los Angeles, my suitcases packed for a three-month contract that felt like forever. I remember staring out the window so I wouldnโ€™t have to look at him. I cried the entire way there. I cried walking through the terminal. I cried on the plane. I cried somewhere over the Pacific, wondering what I had just done.
I thought I was brave.
I didnโ€™t know I was terrified.
When I landed in Tokyo, the world felt louder, brighter, faster than anything I had ever known. The signs were unreadable. The air smelled different. Even the silence between people felt foreign. I didnโ€™t realize how overwhelmed I was until two weeks later when I demanded to be sent back to Los Angeles. I told my agency I couldnโ€™t handle it. I was fifteen, thousands of miles from home, and drowning in culture shock I didnโ€™t have language for.
And yet โ€” my very first job?
I helped open Tokyo Disneyland.
I shot the cover and fourteen pages of Olive magazine.
On my first night in my model apartment, there were clothes laid out on my bed. Not wardrobe for a shoot โ€” wardrobe for me. Outfits I was expected to wear to castings. Plaid patterns. Oversized blazers. Menโ€™s shoes. Hats. Structured pieces that swallowed my California softness whole.
I loved it.
It felt like stepping into another identity โ€” one that was sharper, stranger, braver.
Back home I had a convertible Alfa Romeo. In Tokyo, they gave me a bicycle. They chauffeured me to auditions, but the bike was for riding around the neighborhood, weaving through narrow streets that smelled like soy sauce and rain. I pedaled through a life that didnโ€™t resemble mine at all.
I had left love at the airport.
And somehow, in the middle of my tears and terror, I was opening Disneyland in Tokyo.
I didnโ€™t understand what overwhelmed me at the time. I only knew my chest felt tight and everything felt unfamiliar. The language. The silence in elevators. The way people didnโ€™t hug. The way I stood out without trying.
Years later, when a CBS special came to Japan to film American Models in Japan, they interviewed me. I was older then โ€” or at least I thought I was. They asked me what I loved about Tokyo.
I smiled into the camera and said,
โ€œIโ€™m rich. Iโ€™m rich. Tokyo made me rich.โ€
What I meant was I was earning more money than I had ever seen in my young life. I had independence. Cash in envelopes. My own apartment. My own contracts. At fifteen, that felt like wealth.
Then they asked me what it was like living there.
And I said something I still cringe at.
I said, โ€œIf everyone has brown hair and brown eyesโ€ฆโ€
I didnโ€™t finish the sentence in a way Iโ€™m proud of. I was trying to explain what it felt like to physically stand out in a country where I looked different from almost everyone around me. I was describing visibility โ€” but it came out naรฏve, clumsy, and small.
I wasnโ€™t superior.
I was isolated.
Thereโ€™s a difference.
What overwhelmed me wasnโ€™t Japan. It was being fifteen, alone, and suddenly hyper-visible. Every train ride felt like a spotlight. Every audition felt like a test I wasnโ€™t sure I understood.
I had left Los Angeles crying over a boy.
And now I was on television saying I was rich.
Both things were true.
0:30
6
7 comments
Cristal Vancarson
6
My First Time Leaving the Country
powered by
 ๐ŸŽฌ  Memoir Skool ๐Ÿ“ธ
skool.com/free-fallin-1989-1364
Real stories from Hollywood to Japan in the 80s. A place to share memories, experiences, and step inside a memoir unfolding in real time.