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Shimabukuro Sensei called on a friend who was vice-president of a local bank and learned of a building in nearby Nakanomachi that would suit Suenaka’s needs, and his modest income. The low concrete structure housed a laundry in the left half, with the right half empty. There was a sliding, wooden warehouse-style door, four windows, no bathroom (“We went outside in the back of the building. All the plants there grew nice and green!”) and fifteen-hundred square feet of space; not a palace, but it would do, especially since rent was just fifteen dollars a month. Suenaka signed the lease.

Now that he had a building, Suenaka needed mats to make it a dojo. Again, Shimabukuro was there to help, putting Suenaka in touch with a local tatami (rice straw mat) maker who was a good friend of his, and from whom Shimabukuro purchased his mats. The tatami maker was more than willing to provide Suenaka with the mats:

“He said, ‘They’re special made . . . how many do you need?’ He was selling the mats for about five dollars each, which was ah incredibly low price even then, but he said he’d give them to me for about two-fifty apiece! Today, a standard residential tatami is about two-hundred fifty dollars, each. The tatami maker was selling residential tatami for two-and-a-half dollars, and the thick judo mats for five, so he was giving them to me for half price, and it took him the better part of a day to make just one, because he made them all by hand. But I didn’t know any of this. I said, ‘Boy, I’m gonna need about forty mats . . . that’s a hundred dollars!’ All he said was, ‘Please, come in, watch.’ And I watched him make a mat from scratch. I watched him gather the straw and bundle it, twist it, compressing it down, all by hand. After about two hours of watching him, he hadn’t even begun forming the mat yet. And that’s when I bowed and said, ‘I’m very sorry. Please forgive me. I should pay you more!’ But he said, ‘No, I’ll give you a discount, that’s okay. You’re a friend of a friend.’ I felt so humble, so small. They were exceptional mats, and I learned another lesson.”

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