CHAPTER 6 — Nine Auditions a Day Tokyo modeling was a machine — and I became one of its gears. People think modeling in Japan is glamorous, but they don’t understand the schedule, the grind, the exhaustion, the running, the subway transfers, the bicycles, the van rides, the heat, the humidity, the snow, the endless outfits stuffed in a bag, the composite cards, the smiles, the “arigato gozaimasu,” the bowing, the waiting rooms, the hallways filled with girls from every country in the world. Nine auditions a day. Every day. And then — seven days of work. That was the rhythm of my life. One day of running around the city for castings… and then a full week of jobs because I booked almost everything I went out for. It wasn’t arrogance — it was reality. I was extremely popular there. The clients loved my look. My energy. My expressions. My reliability. My timing. My professionalism — even at fourteen, fifteen, sixteen. I was the girl they kept calling back. Seven out of nine jobs? Sometimes eight. Sometimes all nine. Tokyo was a city that tried to break most girls — but it built me. I thrived in it. And the wildest part? The last three years I spent in Japan… I didn’t even have to do auditions anymore. I would land in Tokyo, walk into the agency, and within hours the phone was already ringing off the hook with bookings. No castings. No competition. No waiting rooms. No swimsuit-in-a-lobby moments. I would just roll into town, work nonstop, and roll right back out. That’s how strong my name was. That’s how wanted I was. That’s how much Japan loved Kuri-chan. But before I got to that level, before I became the girl who didn’t need castings anymore… there was one audition — one casting among the nine-a-day madness — that changed everything. The Okinawa job.