Monday, September 17, 2012

Growing up...

7 weeks back.
5 batches of cookies.
3 week long trips.
0 jobs.

I'm so bored.

I know. I shouldn't be complaining about how bored I am when everyone else is working all day, but you don't understand. I need to be busy. I need to be entertained! I've done some job searching (clearly not enough), but I mainly spend my day watching Family Feud and dancing in my underwear to music from last year while I get ready to go..nowhere. Oh, and I eat a lot of fruit and cheese.

Apparently while I was gone, all my friends decided they were going to grow up. Two friends got engaged and one friend moved to New York. Last weekend was my friend, Megan's, bridal shower. Aly, Kelly, and I threw her a beautiful bridal shower in San Francisco. It was so grown up and so cute, I had to share it. It was sophisticated and fun (finally something that represents my blog title). The Parisian theme tied in beautifully with the elegance of Kelly's parent's house. We served croissants and jam, sandwiches, salad, fruit salad, palmiers, and madelines. Aly rented linens and we made our decorations (no thanks to Martha Stewart). For parting gifts we gave out "I love Paris" tote bags and a wedding themed nail polish. Kelly came up with a game in which everyone gets a month from a calendar and they have to write a date idea for that month. Everyone came up with super cute date ideas, but I won. Heck yes. What was the winning prize? The centerpieces I made. Of course they're adorable, but what the heck am I going to do with Styrofoam balls covered in cupcake liners? I don't even have a place to hang my clothes. Anyway, we are super proud of how the shower turned out. Take a look!













suck it, Martha. My sign is better than yours.


The Fab Four: Me, Megan, Kelly, Aly






from left to right: the sister-in-law, the mom of the bride, the bride-to-be, the mother-in-law-to-be



 P.S. We are for hire.

**5 weeks until the Wedding**
**5 weeks to sustain my weight to fit into the unforgiving bridesmaid's dress**

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

The End


[From July 29]

I can’t believe it’s over. I’m going home.

Even though I am packed and on the plane back to America now, I feel like I’m on a really long, cold, bumpy train ride to some cool new place in Japan and I’ll have to go back to work in a week.

I didn’t cry when the plane took off. I thought for sure I’d be a hot mess. It’s not that I’m not sad to leave. I spent my last week at work, sobbing after each class, which is thoroughly embarrassing in front of Japanese people who show no emotions.

At my goodbye dinner/karaoke party one of my managers told me she doesn’t know how things are going to go without me. They seem to be going fine, so far. I haven’t got any phone calls or e-mails. She said I helped them so much. She didn’t tell me how, but it was nice to hear that. It made all the tough times there much more valuable and appreciated.

Looking back, this was truly an amazing experience. I complained a lot and really thought I wasn't going to make it, but I did and I have no regrets. I had a rough start, but my friends and family both know that I don’t adapt well to change. The same thing happens every time I move to a new place and am forced to pretty much start my life over. I spend my first few days or so genuinely excited to start my journey, but gradually become homesick or lonely, but worse of all stubborn. I refuse to make the process easier by extending myself and living life independently. Instead, I wallow in my own sorrow and call my friends and family in hopes that they pity me and sympathize with me. This always makes things worse. But at the time, nobody understands how I am feeling and therefore whatever they say is wrong. I really should write myself a letter now telling my future self (should I ever embark on a similar journey again) that it’s going to be ok if I would only get a hold of myself and stop being such a wuss.

Dear future self,
You chose to do this for a reason. Get over yourself and go make a friend. Don’t be a pussy.

Love always,
Your past
p.s. every time you cry or complain, a baby panda dies. They’re endangered. Check yourself before you wreck yourself and pandas.

**Dad, next time I go somewhere or do something new, please discreetly pass me this note from myself that way I don’t get mad at you for saying all the things I don’t want to hear because I know you’re right.

The year went by quickly. It was filled with A LOT of working hours, tears, jars of peanut butter, and questionable food. I’ve thought to myself more times than I can remember, “Is that edible?” In Japan the answer is always YES. In addition to eating chicken cartilage, I know I ate cow tongue and pig intestines. I ate some weird roots and twigs, things you would only eat if you’re a beaver, but I’m still alive so it couldn’t have been that bad.

August 7

Now that I’m home, it’s time to figure my life out. Step 1—fixing my resume to find a good teaching job. I’m just having some trouble updating it. I would write “English teacher” on my resume, what do I write in the description? Isn’t that a given? Well, eally the only requirements for my previous job were to be white and speak English. I can say that I have successfully completed my job, but I can’t really write that on my resume. Can I?

I have spent this week recovering from jet lag and meeting with friends and family I have missed over the year, but I have also compiled a list of things I will miss about Japan

*        My coworkers
*        Weekend adventures with Mary and Valerie
*        Festivals
*        Fireworks
*        I will eventually miss Japanese food, but I’m not there yet.
*        People drinking on the trains before 11am
*        The trains. You can get across the entire country! Love it!
*        100 yen shops
*        Wearing slippers at work
*        Safety
*        The Lump and drinking until 6am
*        My sushi man-Anma
*        Photo stickers
*        Vending machines on the streets, even down the most random alleyways.
*        Cleanliness of convenience stores
*        Convenience stores in general
*        Beautiful scenery, even in a big city.
*        Don’t have to tip
*        Free tissue
*        Cute stationary
*        Bread stores everywhere
*        Karaoke
*        All you can eat and drink places
*        280 yen places-everything is 280 yen!

I know as time passes the memories will gradually come pouring out. While it’s still fresh in my mind, I’ve also thought of things I won’t miss…

*        Hot ass summers
*        People yelling in super high pitched voices
*        Squatting toilets (no more guessing if there is going to be Western toilet)
*        Androgynous looking men
*        The smell of fish and curry everywhere
*        Shrines. If I never saw one again I’d be happy. I’ve seen SO many and they all look the same
*        Clothes and shoes that don’t fit because I’m America sized
*        ATMs not being 24 hours and your own bank charging you for taking out money after hours.
*        Not knowing how to say what I want in Japanese and not being able to understand everything I read and/or hear.
*        Smoking indoors
*        Getting stared at
*        People carrying dead/dried fish on the train.


I am so glad to be home, but a little part of me thinks I would have been ok staying in Japan just a little bit longer. There are a lot of places I didn’t see and things I didn’t do because I only had so much time off. My host sister, Saki, and I made a promise to each other that I will come to Japan when she gets married and she will come to America when I get married. Who knows when that will be, but it’s something to look forward to.

I think I’ve wasted enough time since I returned home and now it’s back to reality. I have a dentist appointment soon. Until next time! またね!

**pictures and more posts to come**

**************************************
~さようなら   sah-yo-nah-rah  goodbye
~私は、日本を逃してしまう  wah-tah-she-wah-knee-hon-wo-nah-go-she-teh-she-mah-sue. I'll miss you, Japan.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

The Beginning of the End


Well, this week I started to tell my students I am leaving in a few weeks and that they will only have two more lessons with me, one of them being with the new teacher. Doing so has made me realize two very important things:
1) The new teacher will be here soon and I have yet to pack anything AND
2) How much I may actually like my job.
I cried. I cried a lot. I cried after my first class on Tuesday. I could barely get the words out. The moms cried too, and their kids didn't really understand what was happening. They are only two or three. The moms tried to explain, but we all just sat there for a moment and cried and then out of nowhere, the little boy just burst into tears. I don't know if he really gets it, but he knows mom was upset and I was upset, so he should be too.
I was so excited before to tell my students I am peacin' out of that joint, but it's turning out to be harder than I thought. I feel especially bad because many parents wrote super nice comments after parent observations the last couple weeks.
I expected my students not to care since they are used to teachers coming and going, but many of them have expressed sadness in one way or another. Many kids gave me a pouty face and a few of them just seemed shocked. One kid called his mom in class after I told him. The most touching response I got was from one of my junior high students. I thought he hated me, but I guess not. Whenever he says he’s had a bad day at school I always open my arms to offer him a hug, but that always results in a swat in my direction followed quickly by , “No, Teacher!” But this time, he leaned in and hugged me. In front of his mom!
Everyone, including myself, cannot believe that it’s already been a year. Some weeks were unbearably long, but for the most part it’s gone by very fast. And for that, I am mostly thankful. Working 12 hours a day, non-stop, five days a week, makes the work days disappear rather quickly, which is good. But my two day weekends always seem so short by the time I catch up on some sleep, do some chores, and run some errands; leaving me little time to explore and hang out with friends. I’m slowly saying goodbye to the friends I have made in Japan, but it’s hard to fit everyone and everything into my last couple weekends left when I’m supposed to be packing and preparing for the new teacher (neither of which I’ve done).
This weekend I am saying goodbye to The Lump in Numazu and to Heather in Hon-Atsugi, whom I met at follow-up training last November. She is leaving next Tuesday and wants to celebrate by going to a summer festival. Should be fun!
I had reminded Mr. Liar last weekend that I would be leaving soon and that my next visit would be my last, but he refused to believe me. I hope our goodbye isn’t as messy as Valerie’s was.
I have two more days to tell the rest of my students of my return to America. I expect more tears (from me), but it’s getting easier to say. More reflections and more posts to come. Perhaps after I finish cleaning and packing. I have one week left in my apartment!! Until next time! またね!
*********************************
New Vocabulary:
~新しい先生が来ます ah-tah-rah-she-sen-say-gah-key-mah-sue    a new teacher will come.
~泣きすぎてごめんなさい nah-key-sue-gui-teh-go-men-nah-sigh    Sorry for crying so much

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

I'll Never Understand....

Why is it that even after being here for 11 months I am still finding new things that I find so weird? All the other weird things I have previously posted about (Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3) are seeming more and more normal, but here are 21 more things I still haven't gotten used to yet...


1. grown-ass men read comic books in public. On the trains and buses. In coffee shops and restaurants. Sometimes, they will hide the dirty ones in other books or newspapers. Not so slick.
2. grown-ass men also play hand-held video games on trains. 
3. grown-ass men have hello kitty key chains and charms. I really hope that's your daughters purse. Oh, you don't have kids? ...Are you a pedophile?

4.  Stores play Auld Lang Syne when they are closing
5. Parking. How do they do it? They all back into these teeny-tiny spaces or park horizontally in their driveways. It's baffling. Don't ever again underestimate an Asian driver's ability to park a car. 
6. folding bikes. It's weird, but cool. I kept seeing people bring these very oddly shaped bags on trains, but could never figure out what they were until I saw a bike wheel poking out one time. I've never actually seen the bike itself in its folded state, but I'm like 99% sure that's what it was. 
7. everything plays a song. crosswalks. Fax machines, garbage trucks, incoming and outgoing trains, washing machines rice cookers.
8. Girls wear fake hair and fake eyelashes all day everyday. You're in sweatpants and an over-sized T-shirt, going to the market, but you went over kill on the hair and make-up. I don't get it....
9. men have more bling and tighter pants than I do. Not cool.
10. rent a car places. There are so many. Why? Why do you need like 5 on one block?
11. book covers. Most of the books sold in Japan are the same size and you can purchase book covers (like how we used to cover books with old brown paper shopping bags) in cool patterns and whatnot. 
12. scrunchies. I don't think they ever lost their popularity here. I'm not proud to say, but I own some. And I wear them. Only in my house..
13. flushing sounds. Some toilets make a flushing sound the moment you put any pressure on the seat. Not only does it scare you at first, but it's very confusing because you can't tell when you've stopped peeing. Other toilets you can turn on and off the sound. Most women here use the sound when they use the facilities. I don't see the big deal. We all know what you're doing in there...
14. they give you a plastic bag to cover your shopping bag when it rains.
15. major cause of train delays are jumpers.sad, but true. 
16. passport photo booths. Yes. No need to go to Costco and take your passport pictures and then take them to the post office. Just go to a photo booth. What's even more surprising is finding them on the street in the middle of nowhere.
17. awkward silences on trains, buses and in elevators.
18. They have many signs that tell you how to use the toilets. If you can read the sign, you should know how to use a toilet.
19. older men and women like bands that teenagers like. In America there seems to be a huge generational gap in favorite genres of music. Not in Japan. 
20. poorly written English. It's so funny. I know it's probably expensive to hire a translator, but seriously...What the hell is that supposed to mean?
21. Apparently all Japanese people get all their 6 or however many shots they get at birth or something and it leaves this ridiculous scar on their upper arm. 

This is on some stationary I bought at the 100 yen store.
*Happy time with you.
We friend teddy bears.
It is always the same. It is the same indefinitely
There are so many things I haven't discovered yet. I highly doubt I will find more things before I leave, but I post them if I do. I have less than 3 weeks left in my apartment, less than 4 weeks left of work, and 32 days left in Japan all together. I have many many more posts to catch up on, so...Until next timeまたね!
********************************
New Vocabulary:
~まんが  mah-n-gah  comic books
~歌 oo-tah  song
~英語  eh-ee-go  English 

Golden Week was Forever Ago...Part 3


Finally. Part 3. Hopefully this will be the last of the Golden Week posts, as I am nearing the end of my stay in Japan and have many other things to tell you too! Also, their trip ended about 7 weeks ago and I am beginning to forget what happened. Alright, onward to Osaka!


We took a local train from Kyoto to Osaka that took about 50 minutes. Our hotel was in an area called Namba (難波), a happening part of town. Dragging our luggage and trying to find our way out of the station was difficult. I think my iphone was drunk. It kept changing it's mind about our location and proximity to an acceptable exit that would lead us to our hotel. Turns out, no smartphone or even person could lead us to our hotel. Why? Because it's inside a pachinko parlor. And there weren't any signs suggesting a route to get there from the main drag. That's why. We asked some guy and he pointed us a direction and then we still didn't know, so we asked this girl who apparently worked at a dart bar nearby. She walked us all the way to and then inside the hotel. So nice. Once we checked in, we wandered around the area a bit and found the same sushi restaurant we had eaten at the other night. We ate there again, but this time sat next to this nice couple. The wife forced her husband to talk to us in English and he helped us order some sake and talked with us about his time in America (I think...that sounds familiar, but I have already forgotten). I talked to the wife in Japanese and then she made him take our picture for us. After dinner, we stopped at the dart bar for some drinks and games. No, not darts. They had Jenga, the alligator game (where you push his teeth one at a time until he bites?), waterproof Uno, and 黒ひげ危機一発 (koo-roh-he-geh-key-key-eep-pah-tsu), a game with a pirate in a barrel that you stick swords into until the pirate pops out. Directly translated, "A Black Beard from Crisis". Megan and Kelly turned in early and Aly and I stayed to watch a flair bar-tending show. Impressive. 










The next day we visited Osaka Castle (大阪城). I know I went here years ago. I have pictures, but nothing looked familiar. I do remember it was raining when I was there last. My memory sucks. Luckily there was no rain, but some kind of dance festival, so we watched as different groups performed similar dances to the same song, over and over again. We went inside the castle and up to the top observatory deck. It was a beautiful day, but really crowded. We descended from the top, stopping on each floor. We cooled down with ice cream and shaved ice while I dodged the many pigeons dive bombing the crowd. The girls wanted to do some gift shopping, so from the castle we went to an area called Umeda (梅田) in search of one of my favorite stores in Japan, Loft. Again, my drunk-ass phone pointed us in the wrong direction, but we eventually made it there and shopped around for a bit. We went back to our hotel area and had dinner at an Izakaya (居酒屋), a pub/bar like place and finished the night at another round of karaoke, singing 90's songs for two hours.

 



To the castle!


View from the top

They wanted to charge you like 500 yen to put the hat on. F-that. 



We had our own dance party

any literate person shouldn't need directions on how to use a toilet.

This is the largest stone in all the castle grounds.
  





The time came for Megan and Kelly to part with us. I cried, like a little bitch, and Aly made fun of me, but it's cool. We said our goodbyes and Aly and I headed for Nara (奈良). We walked through the deer park, fed some deer, and made it to the largest wooden building in the world, Todai-ji (東大寺) that holds one of the GIANT Buddhas. We spent a great deal of time trying to take a picture of us high-five-ing Buddha. There is also a cut-out in one of the wooden posts that is supposedly as big as Buddha's nostril that you can crawl through if you dare to do so. Last time I was here with my family, I didn't do it. This time I did. Wow, that was embarrassing. I almost got stuck. People were either cheering me on or laughing at me, I'm not sure. I was so focused on getting through there that I didn't even notice the group of Japanese girls pushing my feet through. No help from Aly though. She was too busy laughing her ass off at my misfortune of being stuck in a tree trunk. It doesn't matter how I made it out, but I did it! WINNING! We left Nara to head back to Namba to meet my old host sister, Emi, for dinner. She took us to Kushi-ya (串家). It was an all-you-can-eat skewer buffet that you fry yourself at your table! Each table is equipped with a deep fryer and you can choose as many pre-made skewers as you like! I think there might be one in Shizuoka. 


I love Japanese signs. 

Nara's mascot. 

I spy.....a deer.

Crackers!

Oh, they're for the deer. 

 



Supposedly if you touch this statue where you have some sort of ailment, it will cure it. Aly's ass hurts. 




This isn't going to work...

...wait for it... 
I did it!
 

  The next day Aly and I took some photo stickers, returned to Shizuoka, did some shopping, took some more photo stickers, and then had dinner at my favorite sushi place. She was very brave and tried everything that Anma gave her. 




I have no idea what was in the shells on the left, but that is Taro Root on the right. 

Anma is the best!
And just like that, my Golden Week was over. I went back to work and Aly went back to America.  I had such a great time with my friends here. Thank you, guys, for coming to visit me! Soon enough, I will join you in America again. I can't wait. Until then! またね! 
**************************************
New Vocabulary:
アリはアメリカへ帰りました Ah-ree-wa-America-eh-kah-eh-ree-mah-she-tah  Aly returned to America. 
~ゲーム遊びました geh-moo-ah-so-be-mah-she-tah We played games
~ 通れない toe-reh-nah-ee  Can't get through