The flying samurai sisters

08 April 2016 - 02:36 By Reuters

Forget cherry blossoms and slices of raw fish. The Japan on which Kris Hernandez has pinned her dreams is the thud of body slams, sweat and garish costumes - the world of professional women's wrestling."I fell in love with it - the drama, the excitement," the31-year-old from the US said of her first encounter with this unusual side of Japan."I was on the edge of my seat with every move, thinking 'Oh my God, how come they are not dead? Can I make a living doing this?'"So Hernandez, who lived in San Francisco, became the first foreigner to train from scratch and work her way up into Japanese women's pro wrestling.She quit her teaching job and shared a house with women wrestlers, living off savings as she began a tough training regimen."I was pretty poor then, but I wanted to become a wrestler so badly. I would walk four hours across Tokyo to get to practice, do three-hour training and then get the train back," she said.She made her debut in August 2014 under the name Kris Wolf, wearing a costume with a wolf's head and tail.Even in this world, which Hernandez says is harder-hitting than its US counterpart, Japanese rules on hierarchy come into play."It's kind of militant. You don't talk to the senior unless you are spoken to," she said.The money is not huge - she earns $250 (about R3875) for a weekly show."I was doing it because it was cool," said Hernandez, who is now on a break after a concussion.The brutal reality of the ring is masked by a strong fantasy element that feeds its popularity with fans, most of them men.But the rough and tumble may also be an outlet for many of the wrestlers in a country where women are usually expected to be demure and cute."Sometimes it's a part of themselves that they cannot normally express," she said."I have met so many that are so sweet and shy outside the ring, and then you get into the ring and they explode."..

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