Sunday, December 30, 2012

Christmas, Break, Plans

So I've been on Christmas break for about a week now.  It feels nice going to sleep and waking up whenever I want.  We had Christmas dinner on Christmas followed by some gaming, PS3 and SNES emulator.  It was fun.  I got to talk to my parents on Skype and open the presents they bought for me.  Technology is really cool.  I can't wait to see just how far it'll get in my lifetime.

Last night my teacher invited me out to eat dinner with her and her husband.  We ate at a place called 福よし (Fukuyoshi) and they treated me to a LOT of really good seafood.  I don't even like seafood that much and it was good to me.  They kept talking about how expensive it was, so I'm guessing they paid around 4,000 yen for it all ($40).  She's a really cool teacher and the husband is a principal at a different school.  They're both planning to retire this March (Shhh!  It's a secret!).  I'll miss her.

Hoping to go down to the volunteer center this next week to see if I can volunteer to do some things in Kesennuma.  It would be really cool to help out the city if I can.  I just bought a Nintendo 64 along with one of the other ALTs.  Played games like Smash Bros., Mario Golf and such.  Brings back memories.  I still haven't decided if I want to stay another year or not.  Sometimes I feel like yes, sometimes I feel like no.  The one big thing is that once I leave here, it's almost certain that I'll never go overseas again to teach.  I've sort of been in and out of that throughout my twenties, and finally would like to start making a life for myself in the states.  Not sure yet.  I wish I could read this blog in 6 months and see what I ended up deciding on.

引退【いんたい】 (intai) retire; (P)

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Christmas Party, School Evaluations

Last Friday I held a Christmas party at my apartment.  It was fun.  Everybody brought a dish and we played a quiz game where the top spots got first pickings at the presents everyone had bought for secret santa.  The food was very good and we then moved to Stray Sheep for a bit before packing it up.  We asked if we could bring in some game systems for new years and the owner said yes, so that should be fun if we actually do it!


Yesterday we had school evaluations.  But unlike last year, they didn't let us see our individual grades or read the comments.  We just heard the good things the schools wrote about us and weren't let in on any criticisms.  More or less a waste of time, but nice to know that at least they do say good things about me.

I'm currently trying to play Final Fantasy 13-2 in Japanese.  It's a good way to study.  Just 3 days left until winter break!  Looking forward to Christmas!

冬休み【ふゆやすみ】 (fuyu/yasumi) winter vacation

Friday, November 30, 2012

Hospital Visit

I went to the hospital the other day because I couldn't hear out of my right ear.  I had planned on going after school but my teachers insisted that I go early.  I said ok I guess, and at the hospital I figured out that you can only sign in from the hours of 8 to 11.  The hospital closes in the evening.

Have you heard of this?  Holy hell, I feel like being super careful in the evening now.  I have no idea what people do if they break a bone at 6 pm.  Do they just wait until the morning? Plus they close on the weekends.  They told me to come back after my medicine ran out, which would have been Saturday.  I told this to my vice principal and he said that I'd have to go Monday since they wouldn't be open.  It's funny but scary.  Sure hope I don't break my bone at like 8 pm on Friday.  Goodness.

After 2.5 hours of waiting in line, I got to see the doctor.  She cleaned my ear out and gave me something to get medicine.  The whole ordeal, doctor visit plus medicine, cost me around $35ish.  That's cheaper than some people's copay in the states I think.  My vice principal noted how expensive it is in Japan, but I told him that my doctor visit alone in the states was twice what I paid overall for that.

医者【いしゃ】 (isha) doctor; physician

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Poker, 3 Day Weekend, Basketball Game

One of the things that I'm happy I'm in Japan for is the ability to play online poker again.  I'll probably never be able to stop playing.  Being back on Full Tilt is awesome.  Had a bit of a bad start but am back and playing decently well.

We get a 3 day weekend this week.  Not exactly the 5 day weekend I might get back in the states for Thanksgiving but good enough!  Planning to go down to Ishinomaki on Saturday morning, then to Sendai for the evening for dinner.  It should be pretty fun, and we're planning to go clubbing afterwards, just the Kesennuma people.  My neighbor said it best, that I don't stand a chance with the girls if the room is full of white guys, and he's right.

I went to a basketball game last weekend where Sendai played Yokohama.  Sendai was ahead for the entire game until the end when Yokohama came back and made it exciting.  Sendai ended up winning by 3 points.  It's funny because when the opposite team shoots a free throw, the home team BOOs them!  I never got over that and laughed each time they did that.  Good times.

My car has some problems, although I think I didn't explain them well, and they are going to try and fix the wrong things.  Sigh... I need better Japanese.

野次る【やじる】 (yajiru) to jeer (at); to hoot; to boo; to catcall; to heckle

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Survey asks: What makes Japanese citizens feel distinctly Japanese?

I read an article that can be found here that talked about what made Japanese people feel Japanese.  Some of the answers made sense, such as eating rice and miso soup for breakfast, putting natto on rice and drinking Japanese sake.  There were some responses though that were pretty egotistical and funny.  Here they are:

—When I wait in line without complaining. (Female, 31)

—The joy of drinking water right out of the faucet. (Female, 39)

—Even if I’m dealing with a difficult or unreasonable situation, I never show my true colors and keep my feelings to myself.  (Female, 24)

—When I get irritated with people who are unable to read a situation or pick up on the mood of a conversation. (Female, 30)

The comments from sore readers were much better though.  Here are some of the good ones:

--Complimenting his fellow gaijin friend/coworker/stranger for such amazing skills to handle chopsticks.

--When I smoke irregardless of who is sitting nearby.

-- When I pretend to be asleep on the Tokyo Subway and refuse to offer my seat for pregnant women.

--the only words in my vocabulary are sugoi, kawaii and oishii

--Surprised nobody mentioned the four seasons, which only happen in Japan.

--My girlfriend came over the other day and said "Make me feel like a Japanese woman!"
I told her to do unpaid overtime.




大和魂【やまとだましい】 (yamato/damashii) the Japanese spirit

Monday, November 5, 2012

Bunkasai, Sendai Night Out

On October 28th my schools had their Culture Festival, or Bunkasai in Japanese.  Both my middle schools have theirs on the same day so I can only go to one of them, which sucks because I'd really like to see them both.  I went to Niitsuki this year and the kids did the usual of singing and putting on plays.
This picture is of a bunch of kids doing Taiko, which is the name of those drums that you see.  Very cool performance.  The kids that write me letters were performing in this, although I can only see one of them here.  I like watching Taiko performances, especially when the people performing are close to me.  For a video of this, you can watch it here.  I'd like to learn Taiko but I'm definitely too lazy for that.



The school has an all member chorus thing going on where they all sing a few songs.  Afterwards they break into their respective classes to compete against each other for the top prize of a trophy that no one actually gets to take home.  It was fun watching and they actually sang pretty well for the most part.  Video here.



Last Friday a few of us went to Sendai to hang out.  3 of us walked into a bar and sat down talking to 3 girls.  The bar tender told us to get out if we couldn't follow his rules of having fun drinking, but we think honestly he was just jealous.  After we actually did leave, one of the girls that another ALT was trying to hook up with took off.  Worst part was was that he paid for the girls' bill which was 7,800 yen (about $85) and ended up getting nothing out of the night, but that was his fault for being dumb.  The bar owner followed us out and yelled at us to "fuck off," "you got a problem with me?" and to "bring it on" if we wanted to fight.  I would have egged him on a bit more, but if he actually did come running at me for a fight, and the police got involved, I would have been toast.  The Japanese justice system ALWAYS sides with the Japanese before the foreigners, no matter who was in the right.  The best revenge for that?  I got the number of the best one and now we are talking through phone messages.  Not sure anything will happen (she is 3 hours away from me), but it's nice to kind of flirt a little.

かかってこい! kakatte/koi: Bring it on!

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Japanese Trail Mix, Friends Back Home

This, folks, is the equivalent of Japanese trail mix.  You see peanuts and OMG yes that's fish in there with their beady little eyes.  I'll even eat the natto now in the school lunches but this stuff I'm really just not interested in eating, especially when it's so easy to not eat it and just hide it, meaning to throw it out later.  Beyond this, there isn't really anything that appears in the school lunches that I don't/can't eat.  I eat the natto when it appears to try and get a taste for it, which I don't think will ever happen, but maybe I'll at least be able to stomach it eventually.  It's part of my fight to get Japanese people to see that foreigners can and sometimes do appreciate Japanese things... just not their trail mix.

I get this in real life when I go back to the states.  Thanks Chiem Ay... er... Jin Ay.  I love my friends back home.  Even if I don't have many left, and even if they're scattered so I don't really have a "group" anymore, I still love them all.  I'm happy that they think of me and are willing to do things like this.  This is from one of my favorite Final Fantasy games, 3 in the states and 6 in Japan.  I used to know that game inside and out.  I miss my own school days.  High school and elementary school anyway, not so much middle school.









外国人【がいこくじん】 (gai/koku/jin) foreigner

Friday, October 12, 2012

Speech Contest, Headway with Students, School Lunch

Just realized I haven't reported on the speech contest results!  So this year all my students won something at the Motoyoshi speech contest which was cool.  For the recitation my students got 2nd and 4th, and for the composition my students got 2nd and 3rd (two students got exactly the same number of points so there were two 3rd places here).  The student who got 2nd in composition got to go to the Sendai prefectural speech contest, but she didn't win anything there, sadly.  I'm pretty pleased with my speech contest results actually!

Over 2 years:

8 students competed
7 students won prizes

2 students went to the prefectural contest
1 student won a 3rd place prize

The prefectural contest this year I think was a bit below the level of talent that appeared last year.   Some student from Sendai usually wins the top prizes and it was no exception this year.  But of course, like I mentioned last year, some students have a "limit" to their abilities, and it's mostly the ALT's job to bring out that limit.  I felt we were able to bring out that limit in my student, and even if she didn't win anything, we should be proud because we achieved her limit, which is really what is important I think.

Despite my lack of things to say to students I'm trying to force myself to say random things and I think it's been working a little so far.  The 1st years in one of my schools are finally warming up a little more to me which is good.  Same with the 3rd years in my other school.  I'm looking forward to seeing what the new first years will be like, but that's some months away still.

Every Thursday they put bread in place of the rice for school lunch.  I don't really like bread to begin with so it's tough when I like the rice paired with the soup as much as I do.  When they don't put fish stuff in the food I like it pretty much all the time.  Sometimes they put natto in which I do eat to try and get used to it, but I doubt I'll ever come to like it.

There's a BBQ tonight with 2 girls in nursing school.  It needs to go well.  I am still single and it sucks.

英語弁論大会 (eigo/benron/taikai) English speech contest

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Jazz Festival and Way Underage Alcohol Servers

It's been an interesting weekend.  First on Friday we went to see half a Pokemon movie and all of District 9, after which I don't really remember except I'm pretty sure we were drinking somewhere.  Then on Saturday we went around and looked at a T-shirt festival they had going on in various places in Kesennuma.  It was poorly advertised I think so not many people were around, but it was still cool.  They hung shirts out that people had designed and we got to design our own shirt and keep it for free.  Then on Sunday it was a BBQ in Oshima followed by beer pong and A's American Darts Bar.  Monday was a Jazz Music Festival where we punked some white people into believing I was Japanese.  Good times all in all.

I had two of my 6th graders run up to me and offer me sake (Japanese rice) from a big sake bottle.  It's a little amazing.  They don't think anything of it here!  Unfortunately I couldn't drink it because I had to drive in a couple minutes and the legal level here is 0.00%.  That's right, not even a sip!

酒【さけ】 (sake) (n) alcohol; sake

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Culture Differences

I've gotten pretty used to it because for a big part of my life I've been around people who grew up with cultures not so similar to my own, but if I think about it, trying to accept, understand, appreciate and live in a different culture is next to impossible.

For instance, living in Japan has presented a lot of these challenges up close and personal.  There are the easy things that most foreigners even enjoy, such as getting used to eating with chopsticks and bowing when you meet someone new.  People are pretty excited at doing things like this because they feel they are getting into the spirit of living away from home and experiencing a different culture.  They're right, but then come the more difficult things to accept and appreciate.

It doesn't take people from the Western world long to figure out what annoys them about Japan.  A few examples are as follows:

1. The Japanese education system.  Of course, the main gripes I hear about are the English education system, since that's what we have the most experience in.  They don't teach creativity, they don't teach communication, English is broken into hard formulas that don't resemble everyday communication, and the list goes on.

2. People take turns while driving at 1/4th the speed people do in the Western world, maybe slower.  Many other things about driving in general.  I could, and probably will, eventually write an entire entry about the differences of Japanese and Western driving.

3. Foods from back home, sold in Japan, aren't exact replicas.  The pizza is different.  They add fish to this, they don't add enough spices to that, and it never really stops.

4. Squat toilets.  Look it up in Google images and you'll know what I'm talking about.

5. Flattery.  One word in Japanese is all it takes for Japanese people to shower you in "Your Japanese is good/fluent!"  People are amazed when you can use chopsticks and will comment on it.  They are also super amazed if you can sing a Japanese song, even though they can get through all the Lady Gaga songs.  Again the list goes on.

6. The Japanese and foreigner line is thick and never erodes over time.  No matter how long you've been here, how good your Japanese is, if your knowledge of Japanese culture is deeper than theirs is, you will always be one of them, an outsider.  You can even marry a Japanese and you'll still make only a dent.

7. The directness, or rather, the lack of it.  The word "difficult" in Japanese is used to mean "no," and the way of turning you down is that people will say to your face that they want to do something, but will always be "busy" when you actually invite them out.


Despite only being here a little over a year and not talking to all that many foreigners outside of my own circle, I've heard encyclopedias worth of complaints from foreigners about things that Japan does wrong.  I don't mean to say that things won't be frustrating at times.  That would be stupid.  There's things people think are wrong with their own countries and cultures as well.  The main thing is that they complain in a way that belittles Japan and puts their own culture and ideas on a pedestal.  I've done it too.  Er... I do it too.

Just for fun, I'm going to make categories of people dealing with a foreign culture, mainly because I'm bored at work and don't want to fall asleep.

1. The Beginner- Sorry for my lack of creative naming, but I'm lazy.  Anyway this person just decided to come over without caring to research the country they were going to live in for some amount of time.  It gets bad when they still don't know what's going on after some months.  Ignorant lazy people these are.

2. Sour Grape- These people get here and think it's going to be fun and roses, but they just can't get over the differences of their home country and the one they chose to live in.  They don't want to make any attempt to integrate into their new culture, they just want all the people to adapt to the sour grape's customs.  They don't stay long, and if they do, they whine the entire time.

3. Expiring Grape- These people know a lot about the culture.  You can tell because they're always complaining about it.  They're in the country, and even entertain the culture and its ideas a lot of the time, but in front of other foreigners they can't wait to blow off steam about the "strange" ways of the "backwards culture" that they are in.

4. The Conceded- There are different aspects between home and the new culture.  These people realize this and try to integrate as much as possible, even if there are aspects they "don't get" or are frustrated by.  For the most part it's ok, but they still feel like blowing off steam every once in a while.  I feel like this most accurately describes me.

5. The Accepting- These people thrive in trying to know, understand and appreciate all aspects of the culture.  They are like the natives.  Things are the way they are just because they are, and are accepted as normal.  The things they complain about are the type of things a native might complain about, like government and such.

When you go live in a foreign country, you have to think about a multitude of things, from how to eat properly to things like knowing when it's appropriate to clap to celebrate or show appreciation.  Of course things are different, but that's usually just it.  Things aren't better or worse (sometimes they are), for the most part, they're just different.  I need to work on my appreciation of differences more, for sure.

偏見【へんけん】 (hen/ken) (n) prejudice; narrow view

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Miley Cyrus Look-a-like

There's a girl in a famous band here that looks exactly like the old Miley Cyrus.  Strange.



 
 
双子【ふたご】 (futago) (n) twins

Monday, September 10, 2012

Speech Contest Coming Up

Just like last year, this year there is a speech contest.  I'm staying after until usually around 5:30 to 6 to help out the kids with their speeches.  I've even gone in a few weekends.  One of my kids is doing a story about a mountain and a bird where the bird goes to the mountain every year to see if it's a suitable place to raise a family or not.  Another is doing a story about her name.  At Niitsuki one is doing a story on global warming effectively, and the other is doing the speech on organic fertilizer.  The students, not surprisingly, all have the same pronunciation problems.  They can't pronounce R, L, F, and TH.  Some other problems they run into are S on the ends of words and trying to put vowels on the ends of words where they don't belong.  Last year my kids did good, getting 1st in recitation, and 2nd and 3rd in composition.  Hoping they do good again this year, that they all get some prize of sorts.  They give prizes to the first 6 in recitation, and first 3 in composition.  The top 2 in recitation and the top spot in composition get to go on to the prefectural competition.  Go Jonan and Niitsuki!

Still trying to get a girlfriend, and still failing.  It's hard to match up to the white guys here who are better looking and more interesting than I am.  Don't really feel like giving up though.  Even if I do become invisible to girls when I go hunting with the 2 white guys who really know how to kill it in that department, my friend said it best, "I only need one."  Unfortunately that "one" is hard to come by.

彼女【かのじょ】 (kanojo) she; her; her; girl friend; girlfriend; sweetheart

Monday, August 27, 2012

Back to School, Dance Crew

It's freaking hot.  Not as hot as Taiwan was, but still hot.  I hate it when people say stuff like "that isn't ____, ____ is much _____er."  Like the winter here.  It gets down to -10C or so, and some people say that's not cold because they used to live in -30C winters.  Ok well go outside in shorts and a t-shirt during -10C weather then.  Or like when people say "English isn't hard, _____ is harder."  Sigh... the self-righteousness of people sometimes.

Anyway so it's back to school today.  In the morning we had an opening ceremony which I almost fell asleep through.  No classes today because the kids are having tests.  They have summer homework here and freak out when I tell them we don't have summer homework.  Also, tests right when you come back?  Killer!  The students always comment on how long the American summer vacation is.  It's pretty nice I tell you.  For those who say it's too long, you just don't know what to do with your free time.  Watching TV isn't such a bad choice!

I met some dancers over the past week.  They are very cool.  Hoping to hang out with them more in the future.  These people are the kind I was hoping to meet ever since I got to Japan.  I saw a dance performance they did on Saturday and they rocked it.  They do popping and locking, most have done it for a few years now.  I miss breakdancing so I'm hoping to get into dancing with these guys.  My body coordination has fallen by the wayside though, hoping for a comeback!


始業式【しぎょうしき】 (shi/gyou/shiki) opening ceremony (of the school term)

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Back in Japan, Minato Matsuri

Back in Japan now for almost a week.  It's been fun but expensive.  Got to meet the 2 Pierres who are both pretty cool.  Hoping to go girl hunting with one of them because it would be really nice to not be single anymore.


I got back just in time for the Minato Matsuri (Minato festival).  It was really cool, the first day they had some places where you could go play games and shop for things and eat different kinds of food.  They had fireworks in the evening.

The next day they lined the main street with mostly food carts.  The Olympic fencers who won a silver medal gave a speech (Go Kenta Chida!  He's my teacher's son).  I wasn't really listening but it seemed like they were pretty excited.

Next they had a dance on the street with all the middle schools, some of the elementary schools and some other groups participating.  It was cool, except that they played the same song for 3 straight hours (with a few 5 minute breaks in-between).  The name of the dance is called "Hamarainya" and means something like "let's dance."

I'll get to the price comparison pictures sometime later!

踊る【おどる】 (odoru) to dance

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Back Home

Been back in America now for pretty much 2 weeks.  Got to see a lot of people I had been wanting to see and overall I'm happy with the vacation I took back here.  I got asked by some people why I went home instead of taking a trip somewhere else.  Of course it's because I missed my friends and family, but the real reason is because I don't have a lot of close friends left, so the ones I still have here I want to keep a strong relationship with them.  I'm not sure where they'll be in a year or so, so it's good to visit them now.

It's the same every time I come back home from living in a foreign country.  I get into my room and it feels like the whole trip was just a dream.  It feels really weird and for a split second like I never left.  I don't really like the feeling because it feels like it cheapens the experience.  I don't know how to really explain it.

Next post I'm hoping to get some price comparison pictures up.  Should be interesting, Japan can be pretty expensive.

年休【ねんきゅう】 (nenkyuu) yearly paid vacation

Friday, July 20, 2012

Goodbye Rachel

Last Tuesday we had a goodbye party for Rachel at Frisa's place.  We had Mexican food and it was very good.  It worked out perfectly as we had planned to do this for a while but didn't know how to get Rachel invited without hinting that it was a surprise party.  Frisa invited her to go eat at a Thai restaurant while drunk so she believed him. It was a good night.

During the night we showed her a video that I had made (it took a month!) that had all the ALTs saying goodbye.  The video starts out with a few seconds of karaoke, followed by ALTs' goodbyes, then some pictures that I tried to arrange to tell a story (probably failed on this), then goodbyes from some of the shops that she really likes in Kesennuma.  Bloopers followed, and finally credits.  I also downloaded and burned to DVD all of her Facebook pictures as she had mentioned a while back that she had wanted to do that but couldn't reasonably (by the time I finished downloading all the pictures, there were over 10,000 of them).

And just last night we had another surprise (sorta) goodbye party where BOE members and ALTs met up at PinPon.  More good times.  The after party was at Stray Sheep, the BEST bar in Kesennuma!

Goodbye Rachel, after 5 years of Kesennuma!

I'm going back to Oregon for a while and will be back on the 10th of August, just in time for Minato Matsuri.  Looking forward to it!

送別会【そうべつかい】 (sou/betsu/kai) farewell party

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Japan America Differences Part 3

41. When people here are sick, they wear masks (those SARS masks if you remember those).

42. At least in middle school, every kid has to join some school club, whether it be the soccer club or the art club.

43. While America uses 3 holes on the side of its paper for binding, Japan uses 2 holes.  I believe this is the main reason Japan and America sometimes have a hard time being friends.

44. In English, people congratulate each other on the new year itself "Happy new years!" but in Japanese, people congratulate each other on the rising of the sun the day of the new year (more specifically, darkness giving way to light, and indicating that a new year is upon us, but yeah).

45. Japan speaks Japanese and America speaks mostly English (you don't say!)

46. At least in my city, there are bells at certain times of the day (6 am, noon and 6 pm are the only ones I can remember at this time) to remind you what general time it is.

47. Despite Japanese people being "quiet" and "polite," the way you get the server's attention in a restaurant is to yell "Excuse me (sumimasen)!" If they aren't around, you yell louder so they can hear you in the back.  In the states we usually just raise our hand or make eye contact.  There is also a button in many restaurants that you can hit to make a server come over.  Very convenient.

48. Not that there isn't a glass ceiling still in the states, but it's VERY apparent here and women don't have near the respect that men have.

49. Japanese houses/apartments have a small place just to take off your shoes at the very entrance of the house called a genkan.  Every Japanese take their shoes off before entering someone's house.  Not everyone does this in the states.

50. The Japanese say something like "excuse me" as they enter someone's house.

51. Books are read from right to left and open from left to right in general.

52. People brush 3 times a day in Japan instead of 2 (or in my case, 1 often times).

53. Japanese can't tell the difference between a green light and the first 2-3 seconds of a red light.

53. Speaking of lights, Japan calls green lights "blue" even though they are green in color.

54. Instead of DMV and emission checks, Japan has bi-yearly car inspections to determine if a car is still road worthy.  It can cost around $1,000.

55. ATMs can close.  WTF?  Very convenient in this CASH based society let me tell you.

56. When you receive change after paying for things, they hand you the dollar bills first and then the coins.

57. A lot of Japanese sit down when they take showers on little stools.

58. Nobody says "goodbye" on the phones here.  They just say something like "ok then!" or something to that effect.

59. People point to their nose when they point to themselves here.

60. Instead of just a wave when someone lets you in a car lane here, people honk or hit their safety lights for a few seconds.

It's taking a while to knock these ones out so probably going to go down to 10 at a time from now on.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Busy Month

So I haven't written for a while but it's not exactly because I'm lazy.  Well, I am, but whatever.  This month has been super busy for me as I prepare to go back to the states for a few weeks on vacation.  I'm trying to figure out what I need to do when I'm back, what pictures to take to show people, etc.  I also need to figure out my taxes as I've passed the deadline and have just kind of been "hiding" out and not worrying about them.  Probably not a good idea but I'll deal with that back home.

Also been trying to hang out with people who are leaving this year.  One of them is leaving Kesennuma after 5 years, the longest she's ever lived in one place, so that's pretty special.  I'm also working on some projects that are taking up a lot of my time.  They'll be well worth it when I'm done though.

I went to a place with Kevin over the weekend called Chuusonji 中尊寺 which is a temple located in Hiraizumi.  I went there mainly to buy souvenirs for people back home, but also got to eat a cool dish called Wanko Soba.  Picture below:
There were 24 bowls of soba and that sounds like a lot but each bowl only had a little bit in it so it worked out to be a little more than a normal meal.  It was good.

This was the 2nd time I'd been to Chuusonji and it sucked because both times it was raining.  Maybe if I go again it won't be raining.

Not sure if I'll get a chance to update again before I leave to the US, probably will, but if I don't, eat dirt!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Time in Japan

I learned a few days ago that one of my close friends back in the states broke up with his girlfriend.  What sucks is that this happened a few months ago.  It's sad because they had been going out for a few years and I thought they made a pretty good couple.

I like Japan but for the most part I'm not having any luck making Japanese friends like I had hoped.  Japanese people are a very group oriented people and as hard as it is to make friends, the ones I do make aren't interested in letting me into their groups, which makes it easy to drift away.

In contrast, back in the states, I do have some close friends.  It's not many, and as they all have their groups of friends it's more one on one than anything else, but I do have them.  But I feel like the longer I'm here the farther away I get from them, and that makes me sad.  I'm already not very good at social situations so trying to make new friends on my own does not sound like a fun task.

I don't think I can do more than 2 years in Japan.  If I didn't have any friends or family back in the states it would be an easy 5+ years.  But the lack of Japanese friends, lack of real job satisfaction and the drifting from my good friends back in the states makes it really hard to do more than 2 years.

I am also more in love with what Japan appears to promise, its potential, than I am with its reality.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Japan Junior High School Sports Competition

So over the weekend the middle schools had their sports competition where they compete with other schools in their prefecture (could be wrong about this and probably am).  I went to see basketball and ping pong.

One of my school's girls team got blown out by around 13 to 60.  One of the girls cried after the other team got off to a 13-0 run in the start.  Sucks.  The same school's boys team did better and won with a score of around 55 to 43.  My other school's girls team ended up winning with a score of around 33 to 20.  Neither team could shoot the ball, luckily for them.

Went to watch ping pong after lunch, and the boys didn't fare so well in either of my schools, but one girl killed it!  She won the whole thing and will go on to the prefectural tournament.  I think it's the prefectural tournament, which would mean my earlier guess of schools in prefectures competing would be wrong.

Picture of my students killing the tournament!

中総体 【ちゅうそうたい】 (chuusoutai) Japan Junior High School Sports Competition

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Shaken, New JET, States Visit & Mooland

Been a while huh?

My car's in the shop, not because it has anything wrong with it, but because they have this car inspection/insurance that has to get done once every 2 years.  It can cost hundreds and up to over a thousand dollars, and if stuff is wrong with your car that they ask you to fix, you have to fix it.  It sucks and I am expecting that in a week I will get a huge bill seeing as my car is 14 years old and probably needs things done that will cost a pretty penny.  On the other hand, it keeps cars in great overall shape and is likely the reason they seem cheaper here than elsewhere.  The ridiculous price of this bi-yearly insurance called "Shaken" (pronounced shaw-ken) drives the value on cars way down.  You also don't see that many used cars on the road because they are just too expensive to maintain.  Makes people like me who have cheap cars cry.

We've already found out who will be coming to Kesennuma this summer, at least one person.  His name is Pierre but we don't know who he'll be replacing.  He seems cool.  I sure hope he is, normal people can be a breath of fresh air sometimes in this JET program.  You have to do an interview and I seriously don't know how some people made it through.  But anyway, we're getting one more person and I hope that person is cool too.

I've got a ticket back to the states, set for July 23rd to August 9th.  I want to make it back for some festival that'll be happening on the 10th.  I'm excited to see my family and friends who I haven't seen for a year.

I went to this place called Moo land (In Japanese it's pronounced Mow land, as in mow your lawn).  Below is the best picture I took of the whole place.

車検【しゃけん】 (shaken) vehicle inspection

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Japanese Chipmunks... I mean Women

I haven't taken the time to research it as I don't care about it that much, but among some girls there is this trend of raising the pitch of their voice to obscene levels.  I write about this now because there is this one woman who comes in to my schools sometimes and does some paperwork for a while before leaving.  She is here today.

She's got to be in her mid to late 40s but she sounds like she's breathing some concoction of half oxygen half helium.  It drives me up a wall listening to her try to be all cute and young sounding when she doesn't look the part at all.  If the others teachers are bothered by it they sure don't show it.

One time I was in a convenience store and one of the clerks was a woman that did this.  A customer dropped something and she made a sound, but I could hear her normal voice, which was much lower, in that sound.  It has to be annoying to try and warp your voice all the time like that.

I've got to get a video of this woman sometime because it's so surreal.

栗鼠【りす】 (risu) (n) squirrel

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Ryoko Aota

So around the middle of March I met this girl through mixi which is basically the Japanese Facebook.  We talked back and forth for a while online and through text messages and phone calls.  I knew she liked me so we agreed to go out.  I met her a few times and it was fun.  But not even a month later her uncle died.  During this time her family gathered up and kept asking her about when she was going to get married.  Then she got sick and had to go to the hospital, where her parents again asked her about marriage.

30 is a big age for Japanese women.  They are supposed to be married by then.  Not sure why but that's just how it is, and she was a few months from 30.  The questioning apparently got to her and she was embarrassed by the fact she couldn't tell her parents about me because we weren't going to get married since I will be leaving to the US in the future, so she ended the relationship.  I actually knew she was going to do this eventually, but I didn't know it would be so soon.  But that's ok, because now I still have time to find and develop something substantial.

I'm tired of being single...

独身【どくしん】 (dokushin) bachelorhood; single; unmarried

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Japan America Differences Part 2

Continuing the list  from a few posts ago, here are some more differences.  As I get past the the biggies, I'll probably start finding and listing a lot more small and subtle differences.

21. Parents don't discipline kids.

22. People will leave their car running while they run in and do business somewhere for many minutes at a time.

23. Japan claims to have four seasons, but they really only have two.  One is called "Natsu" which means "too damn hot," and the other is called "Fuyu" which means "too damn cold."

24. For the most part, Japanese assume that all foreigners cannot speak Japanese.

25. No such things as detentions, suspensions or expulsions in schools.  In fact, the teachers are THRILLED if the bad students even come to school a lot of the time.

26. When people pour you beer, half of the cup is filled with foam.

27. In the bigger cities, they have a train system that is efficient (even if overly expensive)

28. Japanese people will say you are super awesome if you can use chopsticks or speak 2 words of Japanese (whether they actually think this or not is debatable).

29. The school system in general, by design, promotes closeness of the students and teachers.

30. No tipping anywhere!  And you generally will get awesome service in restaurants.

31. Many toilet seats are high tech and will be warm in winters.

32. There are bars here where guys or girls can go to talk to really good looking people of the opposite sex.  You can spend lots of money on alcohol and such, but it's just for talking. (Called kyabakura, snack, or host bars)

33. At restaurants they will give you an "oshibori" or a wet towel (sometimes really hot) to wash your hands off with before settling in to eat.

34. Japan, while years ahead in cell phones, for the most part doesn't know what Wi-Fi is yet.

35. Even at the lowest of jobs (fast food restaurants and such) you will find people who work HARD and take their job seriously... usually resulting in awesome service.

36. Eating raw fish and eggs here is normal.

37. You can't drink without eating something, whether it be edamame or peanuts or SOMETHING.

38. No guns allowed in Japan.

39. Ratio of hot to not hot girls in Japan easily eclipses America's ratio (my opinion obviously).

40. Going back to trains, they are ON TIME.  If your train is set to arrive at 8:00, you will catch it if you get to the platform at 7:59.  You'll have missed it if you arrive at 8:01.  No joke.

四季【しき】 (shiki) four seasons

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Hanami

Cherry trees are a big part of Japanese culture and if you've never seen them they are quite a site to behold.

But not for long.  Depending on where you live in Japan (and of course elsewhere in the world) they can bloom anywhere from January until May, but it only takes about 1 week for the trees to come full bloom (満開【まんかい】) and about a week after that for the petals to start falling.

It is customary to take walks and have picnics in areas with the trees.  This is a path near my home and most of the time the trees are bare and you can see an old granny walking along the path for exercise once in a while, but once the petals are in full bloom there are people walking along the paths and I saw a few people having picnics with their families.  So nice...

The only thing that sucks about this whole ordeal is that it's all over in the span of around 2 weeks.  Not all the trees bloom at once so when they do, you might only have a few days to appreciate the entire beauty of it all, provided there's no rain, then the pedals start falling and then you're done.  It's just my opinion, but I think Japanese are really taken with transient things, which is why they love cherry blossoms so much.  It's only for a short time, but for that short time you get this awe inspiring beauty that can even give ugly people with bad personalities a shot at a date (if you can get your potential significant other to the tree sites).  Also, April is the month where business start their new years and when the new school year starts, so it's also looked at as the beginning (or transitioning into) of a new year.  If this isn't on your to-do list to do with a loved one before you die, it should be!

花見【はなみ】 (hanami) (n,vs) cherry blossom viewing

Friday, April 27, 2012

Japan America Differences Part 1

Going to be writing a few of these, 20 at a time, and will keep adding as I figure out more things.  If I refer to "here," I'm talking about Japan.

1. Japanese drive on the left side of the road.  The steering wheel of the car is on the right side, but the gas pedal is still on the right side.

2. Even at a small and insignificant crosswalk with absolutely no cars, the majority of Japanese people will stand there and wait until the crosswalk light turns green.

3. There's no daylight savings time or anything here, so in the summer, the sun rises at 4:30.

4. There are no school buses.  Students walk or ride their bikes.

5. In a lot of Japan, houses don't know what insulation means.

6. There are toilets here where you have to squat down to use them because they are basically holes in the ground.

7. Japanese people go to the hospital for the SMALLEST things.  Case in point: They go when they have colds, and they get medicine.

8. Recycling is a nightmare here.  You have to tie up papers and cardboard with a certain string, make sure to rinse and clean the cans and unscrew the tops.  Fail to do this all just right and it won't get picked up by the garbage trucks.  On top of that?  Recycle day is once a month.

9. Business that requires you going to some center (bank, DMV, etc) takes a LOOONG time.  You thought the DMV in America was bad... hoo boy.  Maybe it's just that way for foreigners.

10. The banks have the worst hours in the world.  9-3, only from Monday to Friday.

11. The "close door" button in elevators actually works here, and everyone uses it.

12. The speed limits force you to crawl.  Except for a road here and there in my city, the speed limit is 25 mph.  That's twenty-five boys and girls.

13. They have public baths called "onsen" where you bathe naked with everyone else.

14. If you're looking for a vending machine, well, more accurately, it's almost impossible to NOT see one no matter where you look.

15. On the other hand, you could search all day and never find a trash can unless you go to a store.

16. Convenience stores are actually convenient.

17. When people don't understand something they tilt their head to one side.

18. Japanese people will be saints to your face, and demons when your back is turned.  As long as you can't see what they're doing, anything is fair game (gossip gossip gossip)

19. Japanese can finish their work in a few hours, but will spend often over 10 hours at the workplace doing who knows what (this is to give off the feeling of "everyone's working together," even if only 1 or 2 people actually have something to do)

20. Deviation from the book is UNHEARD OF.  Suggesting to do something different is met with bewilderment and often rejection.

違い【ちがい】 (chigai) difference

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Driver's Test 3, Exactness of the Japanese

If you fail the driver's test you get this same little slip of paper that looks exactly like the one to the right, but it's pink.  On April 12th, 2012, Tuesday, I PASSED!  This time I didn't change much about my driving because there wasn't really much left to change.  The guy told me I did a good job and that was it.  It really depends on the tester I think.  I heard they could be racist towards Asian foreigners and I think it's totally true.  Japan's Xenophobia was out in full force but I smashed it to pieces.  I am licensed in Japan baby!

I am amazed at how far even the Japanese students will go to get something "perfect."  When I tell students that there is one tiny letter missing in a word, they often will erase the ENTIRE SENTENCE and rewrite it just to get that letter in perfectly.  If something isn't drawn perfectly, instead of erasing the small part that is wrong, they will often erase the entire drawing (or portion of whatever they are drawing) and start over.  Can't they just fit the little letter in?  Can't they just erase the one small part of the drawing that is wrong and start over?  Even if it is something trivial like drawing a bird in a square for a game of animal bingo, the drawings have to be perfect.  You will often see multiple erase marks on things like these, even though it's not the drawing itself that matters, and they might not even hand the drawing in.  Despite how far Japanese students are willing to go on things like these, I don't think I've ever seen a student get 100 on a test before.  So much for that part of their OCD not transferring into studying.

合格【ごうかく】 (gou/kaku) success; passing (e.g. exam)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Entrance and Graduation Ceremonies, Teacher Transfers

Entering and exiting middle school is, I guess, a big deal.  I remember when I entered middle school there was nothing to welcome us and we got some lame recognition thing at the end where a lot of students didn't even bother to dress up.  In Japan, the graduation ceremony is like that of a high school graduation ceremony in the states (a rather big deal), and there is a formal entrance ceremony that is almost as big.

It seems a little silly because the whole thing is SO structured it's ridiculous.  After going to the stage and doing whatever, students have to walk to a certain spot before making a 90 degree turn to walk back to where they came from.  Also what's really funny is that there is a person who announces that something will be announced, for example:

School coordinator(教務主任): And now the announcement of the beginning of the ceremony.
Vice principal(教頭): The ceremony will now begin.

Each segment has to be completely separate as well.  For example, the principal will walk up to the stage, give his opening remarks, walk off the stage, sit down, stand back up and walk right back on the stage (after the announcements of course) to hand out awards.  He couldn't just stay up on the stage between segments even though he's going to be doing the next one too.

Also, the teachers have a random chance of being shipped to different schools at the end of each school year, which begins in April (as opposed to North America's September.  Not sure about other countries).  Each year some teachers leave and new ones from who knows where come in.  Most seem to get transferred after 4 or 5ish years, and some can stay as long as 10.  They think it's funny that teachers in North America stay at the same school their whole life usually.  There are good and bad things about both systems, but for whatever reason, the teachers who are leaving and staying has to be kept a secret until the official meeting, even though it doesn't really affect anything if people know beforehand.  When I say teachers have a random chance of being shipped off, I guess I should say that anyone who works at the school.  Accountants and even janitors could be shipped off to some other school.  One teacher I have came from a city 2 hours away, and other teachers could be moved even further.  The only exception is the ALT (except for special circumstances), most likely because the max period of employment for JETs is 5 years anyway.  So glad I'm not a teacher in this country.

Taking the driving test for a THIRD time tomorrow.  I am going to shoot a damn monkey if they fail me again I swear.

三度目の正直【さんどめのしょうじき】(san/do/me/no/shou/jiki) Third time's a charm

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Driver's Test 2, Convenience Stores, ATMs

Driver's test round 2 back on Tuesday, and again I failed.  This time the guy said that while I looked left and right before the intersection, I looked a half second too late, so he couldn't pass me because I just barely looked.  What makes me really irritated about this is that all my intersection crossings were at red lights, so I'm going to stop anyway, what does it even matter if I look left and right before I stop?  The testers I believe are pretty racist, as I've heard before.  Of course a white guy who was there passed on his first try.  This will easily be the most aggravating thing I do in Japan.

The convenience stores in Japan are amazingly convenient!  The main ones are 7-11, Lawson, and Family Mart, and there are others also.  You can pay bills, make copies or send faxes, stand there and read comic books, buy concert and amusement park tickets, and buy really good lunches that the staff will heat up for you.  I've been to convenience stores more in my 7 months in Japan here than I have been in all my life in the states.  True story.

What's not so convenient are the ATMs.  Japan is a cash based society.  It is not uncommon for people to be walking around with hundreds of dollars (tens of thousands of yen) in their wallets/purses, and maybe with no credit card.  Knowing this, you'd think that Japanese ATMs would transcend Batman!  But they don't.  In fact, Japanese ATMs CLOSE.  That's right, in a cash based society the only thing you might be able to get money from closes.  I think they close around 9 on weekdays and maybe 6 on weekends (in huge areas like Tokyo I'm not sure, but I think they have 24 hour ATMs).  This is ridiculous.  It's like saying credit cards are unusable after 9 PM.  Does anyone understand this?  It's even better that Japanese bank hours are from 9 AM to 3 PM, so basically unless you take paid leave off of work, you can never get to the bank before it closes.

コンビニ (conbini) convenience store

Friday, March 30, 2012

Graduation and the Japanese Driver's License Test

Been slacking a bit but whatever!

The 3rd years (9th graders) graduated a little over 2 weeks ago and it was pretty awesome.  There was a graduation ceremony that felt just as formal as a high school ceremony back in the states.  I told some of the teachers that graduating from middle school wasn't such a big deal in the states because you couldn't do much with just graduating from middle school.  In fact, high school is mandatory in the states so it makes it even less of a big deal.

Students walked up and received diplomas and this went on for about maybe 20 minutes or so?  Can't remember.  Afterwards the 1st and 2nd years (8th and 7th graders) sang a song for their upperclassmen.  It was sad to see them go even though I hadn't been with them that long but for the most part I was glad to see them go (don't tell them that though!)


After the ceremony in the gym, students (I'm assuming since I didn't actually go up there with them) went back into their homerooms and said their final goodbyes and signed their year books before coming downstairs to a hallway filled with the younger students who congratulated them and said goodbyes and thank yous.  The teachers got in on the act too and people were handing out flowers and other gifts.  One of the 3rd years is going to sign up for a program in the states and he has a chance to go to Oregon if he gets in!  When he came down I gave him my email and told him to contact me if he got into the program.  Hope he does!


Before going home, a girl saw me, turned, and with a big smile yelled "Dustin!  I... forget... you!"  I was about to go over and German suplex her, but her friend helped her out and she corrected it into "Dustin, I remember you!"  It was sweet.  We made out after.  Ok no we didn't.  But she wanted to.  Ok maybe not.

So!  I had heard that the proctors for the Japanese Driver's test were racist.  I decided to give them the benefit of the doubt and give it my all.  The practical test for the license isn't very practical.  It doesn't test your driving ability as much as it should and they pick on the smallest things.  There is a part in the test called the crank and it's basically 3 90 degree turns.
    =
  ||
=
My drawing sucks but that's the general idea of it.  You can back up 3 times if you think you'll hit the curb or a wall.  I had to back up zero times because I am awesome.  There is also a part that's basically the shape of an S and you have to navigate through that also.  These 2 parts show that you can navigate Japan's narrow roads, although the crank might not really exist in real life as it is on the test.

I nailed the test.  I know I did.  I did everything right.  But that moron decides to ask me, right after we finish "Do you drive like that in America?"  He gave me a LIST of stuff I didn't do (half of it I know I did) and at the end told me I didn't know how to hold a steering wheel even though I had been 10 2ing it the whole time.  Racist bastard!  I'm taking the test next Tuesday again and if I pass I'm not thanking him!

卒業【そつぎょう】 (sotsu/gyou) (n,vs,adj-no) (1) graduation

Monday, March 12, 2012

March 11th, 2011, 2:46 PM

A year has passed since the most devastating earthquake in Japan's recorded history.  Even if you don't know anything about Japan or care, you likely found out about this not long after it happened.  I remember I was sitting at my computer in the early hours of the evening when my mom came up and told me a huge earthquake had just hit Japan.  I turned on the news and they repeatedly showed clips of the tsunami invading the land, taking with it cars, homes, boats and trees.

A lot has happened and there have been big clean up efforts and lots of money donated.  But there is still a lot, A LOT of clean up left to do.  They just paved one of the roads destroyed by the tsunami in my city yesterday.  There are still a lot of buildings that haven't been touched as far as clean up.  There are still places that have rubble piles a story high.  It will take many years for Japan to recover.  Remember the Haiti earthquake?  Their people are still without homes in some places.  Japan isn't a 3rd world country, but disasters like the one that happened to Japan don't get fixed over night.

One of the events I went to gave people the opportunity to write a wish on a piece of paper, strap it to a glass bottle and light a candle inside of it.  The event I found out was actually orchestrated by my teacher's niece.  There were quite a few candles and people were still making out wishes by the time I had written mine, which was a little later in the evening.

This one says something like "I pray your heart is at peace."  Yes the object to the left of it reminds me of a tooth.  There were quite a few other ones wishing for a stronger Japan and ones wishing for their relatives to rest in peace and all that jazz.  It was pretty touching.  Obviously I couldn't grasp the whole meaning of the events because I wasn't here for the whole ordeal, but still it was very moving.



On a separate note, my teacher's daughter's name is Rei.  Just so I don't forget, which I probably will.

大震災【だいしんさい】 (dai/shin/sai) (n) great earthquake (disaster);

Monday, March 5, 2012

Graduating Classes and Japan Puberty Stage

School lunch with "Congratulations" dessert
The school year ends in March, and early March for the graduating class.  As it is, my 3rd year junior high school students (9th grade) are finishing up this week, with a graduation ceremony on Saturday.  I only knew them a little more than half a year, but will be sad to see them go (except for one class who doesn't talk at one of my schools, good riddance to the lot o' ya! Haha)  The final lesson is them writing stuff about their teachers, embarrassing moments, fun times, predictions for themselves in 1 week, 1 year and 10 years, and writing down who is most likely to be an actor/actress, be a doctor, get rich and who will go to jail.

I'm nearing what I think is my puberty stage in Japan now.  When I first got to Japan and for the first few months I was still trying to figure out how things work, what teachers expected of me, and trying to see how I could get the students to connect with me.  Now I more or less know what's going on and what I should be doing.  Case in point: This blog is being written during work.  OH BAM!

Trying to think of what to do with my 2nd years (8th graders) for their last class.  Maybe Jeopardy or something.

卒業式【そつぎょうしき】 (sotsu/gyou/shiki) (n) graduation ceremony; graduation exercises

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

How to Interact with Foreigners

First off, a disclaimer: Most of the time, Japanese are not consciously meaning to be patronizing or condescending, they are just acting the way they do because they were brought up that way.  It is not necessarily wrong, just different.

This guide was written as a joke for Japanese people to better interact with foreigners without annoying them (first hint, it's in English). As for me, I have experienced all of the following except the staring one, and many of them I get every single time I meet a new Japanese person.

1.      Chopsticks- Yes, we can use chopsticks.  Every Japanese person asks if we can use them.  Foreigners who come and live in Japan and can’t use chopsticks are the exception, not the rule. What to do instead: Nothing!  It’s normal, so treat us like you would towards Japanese people that can use chopsticks.  Is it so impressive that your 4 year old can use them too?


2.      Good Japanese- Please don’t tell us our Japanese is good after hearing 2 words come out of our mouth (this is not an exaggeration).  It’s not what we want to hear, especially if we know it’s not good.  What to do instead: Wait until the conversation progresses a little bit.  If we are actually good, then go ahead and say it.  If not, ask us if Japanese is difficult, or some similar question.

3.      Culture Differences- Just because we don’t do something in our country the way Japan does it doesn’t mean it’s uncivilized or whatnot.  Don’t talk, make gestures or make sad noises like it is. What do to instead: Use a curious/interested tone when you respond.  Appreciate that cultures are different, not better or worse.

4.      Speaking Attempts- If we speak Japanese to you in the beginning, we’re expecting a Japanese answer back.  Don’t run away yelling that you can’t speak English, and don’t try to baby or simplify every single word. What to do instead: Answer in Japanese!   Also, even if you think we won’t understand a word, try saying it anyway.  Worst case, you were right, in which case you can baby your words.  If we don’t understand your baby Japanese talk, then feel free to run away.

5.      Making Plans- For the love of cute kittens, please don’t tell us you want to hang out, and cancel the day of.  It’s really annoying to be stuck with no plans on what is likely one of our days off.  We understand this is Japanese culture, but it still pisses us off. What to do instead: If you don’t want to hang out, lie right then and there that your bed ridden mother needs her ass wiped, or something to that effect.

6.      Becoming Japanese- Most if not all foreigners have this idea that we can come over and with enough effort, become an EQUAL part of the Japanese society and your individual world.  Over time, we realize how silly of a dream this is.  The old timers that aren’t still fooling themselves realize that no matter how well we know the culture or the language, or how much we like anime, we will NEVER be fully accepted into Japan.  There are many reasons for this, but I don’t want to write a library. What to do instead: This is tough, because as a Japanese person you may not even realize you are shutting us out.  Just try to treat us as a Japanese person, and do your best to forget about the barrier that is “foreigner.”  Good luck, no one really succeeds.

7.      Japanese are Shy- If foreigners ask why Japanese people are so quiet or don’t like to talk, we get the answer that “Japanese are shy.”  If you think deeper into the meaning of the word “shy,” you find out that it really dances around a fear of being rejected or not accepted.  Sticking out is a no-no in Japanese society, so everyone is the same.  Just look around and count the number of hair dye colors you see (brown, anyone?).  Unless you are cute or hot, you will definitely be rejected if you are “being shy.” What to do instead: Foreigners are used to being rejected by “shy” Japanese.  Therefore, if you are cool and talk to us, we will love you!  Don’t think you’re cool enough?  If you talk to us, you are.  End of story.  Usually.

8.      Staring- In a zoo you stare at animals because they are different, exotic, cute, and it’s interesting that they kind of have an idea about what’s going on but they don’t fully grasp the situation that they are in.  Japanese stare at foreigners for the same reason.  I must admit that I don’t get this because I am Asian.  What to do instead: You know, foreigners do the same thing to each other because we can be just that rare in this country.  It’s fine to take a look, but unless they are asking you to stare (by wearing some outlandish accessory or piece of clothing), please avert your eyes after a second.

This deserves a guide for foreigners to interact with Japanese people while in Japan next.

動物園【どうぶつえん】 (dou/butsu/en) (n) zoo

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Toothbrushes, Speed Limits, School Lunch, Girlfriend Decision

This post follows no order of any sort.  Sorry about that.  Just decided to write on random observations before I forget about them.

Apparently Japan's toothbrush companies are only looking at the size of Japanese people's private parts when they decided how big to make their tooth brushes.  Imagine what a child size toothbrush looks like, and that is the size that Japan's adult uses to brush with.  I like what I consider normal sized toothbrushes, but not sure I can draw the rest out until I go back to the US to visit.

Not sure I talked about this before, if I did, then it's just that amazing to me that I have to talk about it again.  Except for maybe 1 or 2 roads in my city, the speed limit EVERYWHERE is 25mph (40kph).  If you think that's slow, it is.  It's like driving through a school zone, except it's the whole city.  Even the freeways are only 50mph (80kph).  Nobody really follows these (except for the old people), and you can find people doing 75mph+ (120kph) on the freeways all the time.  Like usual, whenever I drive I always have this fear that I will be the one who gets caught for doing what everyone else does.  The tickets I hear aren't cheap either, in the range of a few hundred dollars for breaking the speed limit.

When I first got to Japan and started eating school lunch, it sucked.  I felt like they barely give you any food and I was still hungry after finishing.  A little over half a year has passed and now I found myself being content off the school lunches.  Not full, mind you, but content.  The teachers eat the same amount of food that the students do, that means I eat as much as a 7th grader.  Adults need more food man!  Amazingly, my elementary school likes to give me seconds which is about the only reason I like teaching there.

I have officially decided that my trip to Japan will be a failure if I don't get a girlfriend here.

制限速度【せいげんそくど】 (seigen/sokudo) (n) speed limit

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Hokkaido, The Rest of the Time

We went over on a ferry around 7 PM which had a nice restaurant or two and it was pretty nice for a ferry.  We slept in bunk beds and arrived the next day around 10 AM or so.  I met that idiot woman the first day but that was mostly detailed below so I won't talk about it anymore.

The first day I got to see the ice sculptures which were really cool, along with a few snow ones.  

The second day I  went ice skating and told some kids my nickname was God.  I ate some famous Sapporo ramen (which wasn't as amazing as I'd hoped) and saw some snow light festival which would have been really romantic if I had someone to go with.

The third day I went to the Sapporo Beer Museum, drank a beer at the end of the museum and got a migraine.  The migraine effectively ended my Hokkaido trip.  I went back to the hostel we were staying at and laid down until 3, when we had to board a bus to go back to the ferry.  The ferry ride was rough.  Lots of rocking and I still had my migraine hardcore.

I didn't write much, but for some reason I don't feel like writing about Hokkaido.  Oh well, sorry.

 氷像【ひょうぞう】 (hyou/zou)  (n) ice sculpture

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Hokkaido, The Stalker Story

So I went to Hokkaido over the weekend for a winter festival which I'll write some more about later, but this story warrants a post all on its own.  Fairly bizarre.

Before going to Hokkaido I was talking to this person on mixi, which is the Japanese Facebook for a little while.  She lives in Hokkaido so I said we should meet up since I was going there.  She agreed.  We met up and talked for a while and she seemed normal enough.  A little ways through the conversation she started talking about a set of stalkers that she had following her around.  I didn't think much about them but I noticed that every time I went to talk about something else, she would draw it back to the stalkers.

We went to karaoke and sang for a bit, but I noticed she kept messing around on her phone.  After a while I asked who she kept messaging, after which she told me she was replying... to her STALKER!  WTF!?  This stalker was messaging her non-stop and she was empowering him to do so by replying to his every dribble.  I finally realized that this woman was a couple marbles short of being retarded.  As the night wore on it became more and more apparent that she was the kind of person who wouldn't be satisfied in a 100 ft. pool of attention.  She complained about him mercilessly but I could tell deep down she was enjoying all of this.  Sick, sick woman she is.

Just when I was about to think of an escape plan, I got this sick idea to stick around and try to mess with her emotions and see how far I could drive her in her fake hate towards her stalkers.  I agreed with everything she said and put her stalkers down right along with her.  Maybe it's behavior I'm not proud of, but that doesn't mean I didn't have fun doing it.

We went to a fortune telling place where the fortune teller proceeded to tell her that she should cancel her planned trip to Okinawa because some numbers on a piece of paper weren't in her favor.  The fortune teller also told her she needed to involve a 3rd party into the stalker issue or else nothing would get solved.  After leaving the fortune teller, she promptly called her flight agent, cancelled the flight and remarked about what a good choice it was to go see the fortune teller that day.  Grade A Idiot.

Afterwards we went to McDonalds where she said she was going to settle things with one of her stalkers, an Indonesian guy.  I asked how she was going to do that, and she said she was going to call him, tell him to come to McDonald's and tell him face to face to not contact her anymore.  Great idea right?  She was interested in when the last train was, but couldn't figure it out on her phone, so she asked some girl next to her for help, and ended up befriending her in the process.  I introduced myself to the girl also to try and get some relief from the crazy woman, and after a while the stalker showed up.  Show time.

Woman w/stalker at McD's
I started talking to the random girl a bit, and in the background we could hear the crazy woman half yelling and hitting the table as she berated her stalker.  After we talked for about 10 minutes I looked over and couldn't believe what I saw: That crazy woman was smiling and laughing and talking happily with her stalker!  Immediately my thought that she craved attention of any kind was proven true.  I began to think she just attached the title "stalker" to this guy so she would have something to talk about. (Note: later on I would ask him why he was here, since he lived at the opposite end of the country, and he replied "it's her birthday."  Yeah, he's a stalker).

After around 2 hours or so she decided that her and the girl were going to go to a host club.  A host club is a place where girls can go and talk to a bunch of hot guys for the price of up-your-ass-expensive (Note: They have one for guys too, which is more prolific, and is called a Snack bar, or "Snakku" in Japanese).  She wanted to leave me with the stalker so I said fine.  After they left, I asked him a few questions then said I'd be heading back.  I had had enough of those people for a few lifetimes.

To top it all off, the day after I got back from Hokkaido, she announced that she had decided to go out with her Indonesian stalker, and apparently plans to dump him in July for some reason.  Her father does not approve, so she isn't talking to him anymore.  Pretty sure the English language doesn't have a word for a woman like this.

天然ぼけ【てんねんぼけ】 (tennen/boke)  (n) natural airhead; person prone to making silly mistakes

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Translation, Girls and Hokkaido

If I posted already about this then sorry, I forgot.  Anyway, a few weeks ago a group of 30 Korean teachers came over as a sort of cultural exchange thing and I was invited to be a translator.  I don't speak Korean, but was set up with some English teachers so it was translation from English to Japanese and vice versa.  2 of the Korean teachers went to a Japanese couple's home to see what Japanese life was like.  It was interesting.  They bought beer and sushi and ate it at the couple's home and sang songs.  The next day there was a dinner at a hotel and I got to eat free dinner.  I got paid around $100 for the 2 days of translation, except $60 of that is in gift certificates and haven't found the places I can use them yet.  I liked the experience and will do it next year as well if asked.

I am currently enjoying being ignored by Japanese girls.  I have been trying to find some dates to go on but failure keep creeping up in my vocabulary whenever I try to talk about the experiences.  I was hoping that I could use my foreigner card to attract some girls but it hasn't been working to my advantage yet, and actually is probably working against it for the majority of girls I've talked to.  Reason being, there aren't a lot of girls who are interested in foreigners or English in my city, being so small and all.  Thus, the remaining girls can only be won over with Japanese.  I am not good at talking to girls in English... should be pretty obvious what I'm trying to say there.  I am envious of the ugly white guys who have 10s at their side, girls that, if they were in the USA, wouldn't even give them the time of day.  I am still not getting the time of day.  Not giving up though!  One day I will know what time it is!

Going to Hokkaido this week.  This Thursday actually.  It's going to be fun times... hopefully.  As long as I can avoid too much contact with the JETS (foreigner English teachers) who annoy me, I should have a good time.

失敗【しっぱい】 (shippai)  (n,adj-no,vs) failure; mistake; blunder; (P)