Monday, August 8, 2011

Summer and Year Two!

So it`s finally summer vacation here! Sadly, Japanese schools don`t work the same way as home and everyone still comes into work everyday. Currently it`s the 3rd week into break and even with an extensive list of projects to keep myself busy I`m finding that I`m either a) too freaking lazy to do them, or b) doing them and still incredibly bored. Don`t really understand myself how I can be bored while keeping busy, but it`s definitely something I`ve come to know quite well during the last year. A little stimulation please! Too much routine is driving me crazyyyy! So far this is a break down of my summer days--> Slide into the staff room by 8:15 and check out emails and online news, slowly prepare regional information for the new JETs, wander around and talk to students during club activities (which can take up to an hour at times), study kanji and other Japanese stuff, study Korean, and now then I`ll dabble with French. Random short-lived conversations with co-workers, running from bees that fly into the staff room until someone saves me, planning weekend activities and future prospective trips, 10 minute naps at my desk, and sometimes help tutor the basketball team in English, and leave at 3:30 on the dot. So as you can see there`s no end of things to do...but the days still seem to stretch on. Originally I planned on joining in some club activities every other day, but during basketball practice over a week ago I had a bit of a mishap (which was really no surprise) and will now be hobbling around for the next few weeks. The saddest part was that the girls were really excited that I was there and wanted me to come again :(  Clumsiness strikes again. dun dun DUNNNNN

On a much brighter note, it`s now officially my second year here on JET! Sadae-san, an older lady who is interested in English, invited me out for dinner last week to celebrate this. A lot of people around town have been asking me if I`m going anywhere or leaving Japan, and seem happy to hear that I`m staying for another year. I myself am feeling kind of ambivalent on the matter, and would like to blame it on having to work everyday.Yes, yes I shall.

Just realized I haven`t updated since April. Hahaha..ha...oops.

Quick update time...cue music~

May consisted of Golden Week, my birthday, and finishing up Musical performances. The first week of May here has three consecutive days off in a row, so I took two extra vacation days and headed 5 hours south to Kanazawa to visit old friends and host families from my high school exchange. As usual it was great to see everyone and was strange to see how much my younger host brothers and sisters have grown. My youngest host sister is looking into universities and has even done a year abroad herself in Australia. It really just throws me on how much time has passed since I was living there. Anyways, there was also a huge classical music festival taking place throughout the city, and was invited to three shows by one of my host fathers. I miss Kanazawa :( Many of the people I know there suggested I look into working there after JET, and I`m seriously tempted to.  My birthday was a great time! Some younger teachers/neighbours invited me over to have an okonomiyaki party, which was followed by the best chocolate mousse cake ever! My neighbour likes to cook, so I let her know that if she ever feels the need to whip up a huge sprawl to just let me know. So that was lunch time, and the evening was spent in Niigata City with other lovely ALTs at an all you can eat okonomiyaki restaurant. A lovely carb-filled day. And after that we headed to Round 1, an indoor activity place with mini-bike racing (I won our round! woo!), a plethora of sports, and arcade games. I also somehow broke my baby toe by banging it on the corner of some door. At the time it seemed better to play tennis barefooted...? But in all seriousness, is there really a reason to question yet another injury? Not so much...

June. Ohh June.. Any dreams I`ve had of becoming a rice planter were all over in the fraction of a second one Sunday morning. After really enjoying the harvesting part of the process last fall, Bryan, Nicole and I (plus Aimee) decided to come full circle in our harvesting experience. We even bought the triangular shaped hats to wear like the old people do, and rubber boots or socks to muck around the muddy water in. One look at that field though and it was game over for me. Thousands of tadpoles, water spiders, leeches, and one particularly disgusting bug that made me want to throw up, even now just thinking about it, ended my journey right there. I slopped into the paddy a foot or so in borrowed rubber boots, to plant maybe 10 baby rice roots, and then got my ass out of there. I ended up throwing the rice roots to everyone else for the rest of the morning. Bryan bravely went in barefooted and had no problems, and even Nicole was in and out, but I was more than happy to stand on the edge taking pictures and, more importantly, staying away from the things living in the water. I`ve decided that I`ll redeem myself with harvesting again this fall. A lot drier and barely any bugs. Cool beans.

June 16th~20th was spent with the lovely Nicole in Seoul, South Korea. We were both really interested in going to the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between the north and south, as well as just checking out the country in general. I`ve been told that Korea is a `less cool version of Japan`, but I have to disagree. (I actaully enjoyed it a lot more in some ways, though that could have been because we spent the majority of our time in Seoul.) We were able to do lots of shopping at the markets and in the trendy downtown area. It was extremely hot and sunny our entire trip, which was nice but made walking around harder. We checked out the Namsan tower the first night we were there and enjoyed the cable car journeys up and down the mountain. One day I was even able to meet up with my friend, Mana, who was studying in Korea. So she showed us the Palace, a history museum, and then grabbed some food. I was surprised how much my Japanese came in handy when we were out shopping and such. If English wasn`t understood Japanese usually was, and we were even treated a little better by some shop keepers when speaking it! The DMZ tour was intense. Everyone had to dress conservatively (in 38 degree heat =/ ) and were given specific instructions for when were were in the DMZ area. Our tour bus was stopped at two checkpoints to check our passports, and then we changed to a military bus that took us right up to where the south and north have their talks. We were able to spend 2-3 minutes inside one of these little buildings, and got some photos with South Korean guards on the North Korean side of the building. So would this mean that we were `technically` in North Korea for a fraction of a minute??haha Then we were herded back out to take some photos. While this was going on, the North side was keeping tabs on us, and one of the women from our group started pointing at one of the guards, which just so happened to be one of the things we were warned against doing. From their perspective we could be holding a gun, so all of us near her were like `What the heck are you doing lady?!` All in all it was an interesting experience. Our hostel turned out to be more of a guesthouse and super laid back, but a little dirty and loud. Our room was located right beside the main living area where everyone hung out and drank every night, so it was hard to sleep, but overall I didn`t have any problems with the people themselves. Though it`ll come as no surprise, the food was probably one of my favourite parts of the trip. Bakeries with whole wheat bread, bibimbap, bbq meat restaurants, kimchi, and a fun yogurt place, just to name a few. :) I would go back for the food..and the men weren`t hard on the eyes either. Nicole and I found ourselves questionning why we were living in Japan. I am a full supporter of the 2 year mandatory military service hahaha!

July was super busy! Took the proficiency test at the first of the month ( don`t think it went so well =/ not a fan of the new system), had one of the best Canada Day`s ever with sushi followed by a bonfire on the beach! a Yosakoi performance, musical script writing party, RA Meeting and Harry Potter, flute concert with Sadae-san (her cousin was the flutist), and lots of end of semester/ good-bye parties. When all was said and done, I ended up going to 5 parties in one week. From our area 3 JETs left, Nicole being one of them. She`s gone to work at an Alberta International School in Macao (near Hong Kong) for the next few years, but we have plans to meet up for Christmas and to go visit her next Golden Week :) She will be missed, but we also have 5 new JETs in our area this year; 2 Canadian, 1 American, 1 from the UK, and 1 from Jamaica. It`s nice to have a bit more diversity among our ALTs cause last year was just American and Canadian.      

The weekends this month are shaping up pretty well. Went to my first soccer game Saturday night with Katrina and a new JET. Niigata has its own team, The Niigata Albirex, who are rumoured to not win a lot, but we kicked some butt there that day 4-0! Definitely a great first game. Also went to Marinpia, Niigata`s Aquarium, with Katrina and thoroughly enjoyed the dolphin show. I want to be one in my next life hahaha (I`m serious though). Sunday was spent showing Adele and Jhana around the Niigata Station area, and then we met up with some other JETs for a fireworks extravaganza. Two hours of almost non-stop fireworks. Some of them were really nice, but all of them were more or less set off at once and just became a huge mess in the sky. This upcoming Friday is the new JET Orientation where I have to do a presentation on Lesson Planning and Time Management, so we`ll see how it goes. Next Friday is a Beer Garden on top of some fancy hotel; Saturday is a KPop concert (EEEK!!!), and the last weekend is musical auditions/ home stay information session.

Never a dull moment. Well, the weekends aren`t anyways. haha

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Earthquakes and Sakura

So unless anyone has been living under a rock for the past month or so, Japan was hit with (one of) the worst earthquakes in history on March 11th. It was a normal school day for me, made better by the fact that it was Friday and some other ALT friends and I had planned a Mexican food party for that evening. There I was at 2:50 pm, sitting in the teachers room gmail chatting my little heart away, when the entire room started shaking. For the record, shaking is NOT cool. Luckily, the earthquake in my area was ranked at only a 5, so everything stayed intact and in their respectable places. But holy frig, it just kept going on and on and on! In total the earthquake lasted 3 minutes. I remember speaking with the teacher beside me while it was happening:

Me: Umm... are earthquakes supposed to last this long?
Teacher: No, this is really weird.
Me: (Starting to panic) Ya...weird.... (holding back tears and a breakdown)

I`m very grateful that I was still at work with people who are used to earthquakes and knew what to do in that kind of situation. And I`m somewhat proud to say that in the almost three years of having lived in Japan, that was my first real earthquake, but definitely not my last. After an emergency meeting with the entire school in the gym, it was decided that the after school clubs should be canceled and everyone sent home. All of the teachers crowded around the TV in the teachers room and waited for news from the rest of the country. The span of the earthquake was unbelievable, and we all watched horrified as coverage of the tsunami played in front of us. Which leads me to the next thing to be grateful about: living on the Japan Sea side and not the Pacific. We thankfully had no tsunami here.

Confused as to whether I should stay home or not, me and my ALT friends decided to go through the with Mexican food party..mainly because none of us wanted to be left alone. Aaron, Nicole, and Bryan had all invited various staff members to join in our little get together, but for obviously reasons many of them canceled. In the end about 10 people came, which turned out to the perfect number for Aaron`s apartment to hold. That night I stayed at Nicole`s but neither of us got much sleep due to the every-two-minute aftershocks, and the screaming warnings from our cell phones. We finally just turned them off at 4 am and decided that if another significant quake was going to happen, well, it`ll just wake us up now won`t it. The next morning brought a phone call from the police and my BOE supervisor, wanting to make sure that I was okay, and if I could please move my car. Nicole`s apartment parking is pretty much non-existant, and though I hadn`t had any problems with parking there in the past, the recent events were making the police much more active.

We were also supposed to be going to Niigata City that day for the first performance of the charity musical `Shamisen Hero`, but it was canceled. Actually, a lot of things were canceled within the next few weeks, including most, if not all, of my evening activities. With nothing to do in the evening, and encouraged to save electricity, most of my evenings were spent watching TV in the dark under my kotatsu. After that first week of intermittent aftershocks, the earth seemed to have calmed down; that is, until about two weeks ago when I was shook awake by 4.0 quake, centered yet again in the Fukushima/Miyagi part of the country. I`m actually very worried about another bad quake happening again because I don`t think that the nuclear reactors would be able to handle another tsunami. For now the situation seems to be somewhat under control, but I`m continuing to monitor the news. If it gets REALLY bad, then I`ll think about going someplace else, but for now I`m staying put.

Apart from that, the new school year started up again on April 7th with an entrance ceremony for the new 7th graders. I still can`t get over just how strict ceremonies are taken here. The graduation ceremony in March for example, the entire school spent two or three days practicing down to the minute how everything was supposed to run. Of course this meant a well executed ceremony, but I don`t know, it kind of takes the fun out of things. I guess it`s just my cultural background talking. But I would have thought that smiling at least would have been allowed at a graduation ceremony. Some of the kids were trying really hard not to smile, and ended up twisting their faces into a kind of painful smirk. Anyways, I`m just SUPER happy that classes have started up again. I had taken the last week of March off to laze around and do nothing, because I thought that if I had to be sitting around and be bored, then doing it in the comfort of my own home was the best option. Boy I was happy I did too! The first week of April, even though the students were there and classes had technically started, I still didn`t have anything to do, meaning really long days.

Last weekend the musical was held in Itoigawa, which just so happens to be in the southern part of Niigata...and I live in the most northern part. So, surprise! The drive took almost 4 hours one way for me..and that`s with speeding pretty much the entire way there and back...and minus the 45 minute wild goose chase I had set us on by going the wrong way at the Nagaoka Junction (oops :/ ), but it did mean that I was relieved of any directional supervision :P We were originally supposed to go to Hanami (Cherry Blossom viewing) with a bunch of other JETs at Takada Park (voted the 3rd best night-viewing spot for hanami in all of Japan!), but it was raining so we gave up on that idea. The rain did stop in the evening, so we went back then and I`m glad we did. Most of the sakura (cherry blossoms) were in bloom, and there were lines and lines of food stalls, which are probably my favourite part of Japanese festivals. And by probably, I mean that they are.

                          (The lights reflecting the sakura on the castle moat. So pretty!)
                                         (Me and my boys, Bryan and Thom :) )
                     (This was taken from on top of a nearby hill, overlooking the festivities)

After performing for a quaint crowd of 10 people, team Murakami booted it for the highway and home. We left at 7:45 pm and made pretty good time, arriving in Murakami at around 10:45. Since it was Sunday the roads were pretty bare, so I made it home by 11:30. As tired as I was, I had a restless few nights after due to my most `favourite` rodent in the world, the mouse. As some of you know, I had a problem with mice in my res room last year in university, and at home too. I hate them. They totally disgust me. So far they haven`t made an appearance inside my house yet, but I can hear them running around the roof area and in the walls squeaking away and probably planning a full take over. Demise- a- la mouse. FML!!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Snowboarding Misadventure

So this should really be a post about the amazing Christmas I spent in Thailand, or the wicked New Years in Tokyo, but I`m going to catch up on the present first and work back from there. Just thinking about all of the places I went and the things I saw over those two weeks isn`t exactly encouraging me to take the 10 hours it`ll probably take me to write about it, but I promise I`ll get to it...eventually.

And it`s official. I passed in my contract for another year here in the Niigata countryside a few hours ago. I was expecting to feel a heavy weight in the pit of my stomach, but thankfully all I felt was hunger and a lightness of knowing that yes, I do have a job for at least another year. I think this calls for a celebration, once this stupid ailment that has a good grip on me ever decides to screw off. I`ve been warned that most ALTs get sick in February, but mine has been ongoing since getting back from Christmas break, so anytime now, right?! haha

As usual my weekends have been spent doing musical rehearsal all over the prefecture. It`s really coming together now, which is great since our first performance is about a month away! Due to some scheduling conflicts and some of the other musical members` families coming to visit them (where are MY visits by the way?!?! I hope you`re detecting the bitterness. You know who you are!), the performances have been pushed back into May. Not exactly what I expected when I first got into this thing, but I`ve accepted it now. Plus, we`ve got some pretty great people in our group, so it`s just a nice excuse to see them for an extra two months longer than originally planned :)  I would have to say that the part I`m doing, one of the near-blind Moon Police, that`s right, I get to play a ghetto police officer from the moon (you know you`re jealous) in which we break out into Thriller followed by an amazing J-Pop dance combo, is a pretty sweet part. Mostly me, Bryan and Nicole, the other two ALTs from Murakami, get to bumble around onstage the entire time. Should be a piece of cake! I call this everyday life. Really hope that it all comes together and can`t wait to get it started!

(Warning: All criticism in the following paragraphs shouldn`t be taken to heart; it`s just how I really felt at the time)

In an effort to add yet another sport? skill? activity? to my already full calendar, I allowed Bryan to talk me into trying snowboarding last weekend. Not that he really had to try too hard, I`ve been wanting to try it for a long time now, it was just the poor geography of Eastern Canada keeping me from actually doing it. So bright and early last Saturday morning we cruised down to Wakabuna Ski Resort, which is only a 30 minute drive south of Murakami city. I rented some gear and got to learning the basics.

Why oh why was I not blessed with any sort of grace or heaven forbid, balance?! After being hauled up to standing for the first half an hour and then left to my own devices while Bryan and Nicole took off up the lift ( no way in hell I was going up so soon!), one of Aaron`s Japanese friends took pity on me and tried to teach the poor stupid foreign girl how to stand on the board. Now, I try to take criticism constructively, I really do, but when I`m just learning something for the first time and obviously frustrated just back the hell off. I`m not exaggerating or being humble when I say that I`m really just not good at sports in general.  This man didn`t understand this, and continued to `instruct` me for the next hour or so (`bend your knee, bend your knee`)..until I had successfully gotten down the mountain with all appendages intact and ran into Nicole, with whom I stuck like glue to for the rest of the day. I`m sorry that my long legs don`t bend as well as your short ones old Japanese man, and I`m sorry that no matter how many times I told you this fact (in Japanese) that you just didn`t get why I wasn`t already a snowboarding queen under your tutelage.  After that I more or less had a great day. I fell fewer and fewer times (minus the time we decided to try the `other` trail...which wasn`t the best idea we had all day), and by my 5th and last run, I had only fallen twice and was leafing (is that what it`s called?) back and forth across the slope at a fairly good pace, if I do say so myself. That`s not to say that I didn`t brilliantly wipe out, oh let`s just say more than you can count on one hand, but I just laughed it off. After years of (attempting) to play sports, what else can one do except to laugh at their own inability to stand on both feet?

I was SOO incredibly sore when 4 o`clock came around and a little woozy from bouncing my head off the snow like a basketball (read: earlier stated wipe outs), but I felt that we had indeed deserved to get us some curry from the Nepalese restaurant, which as usual was the right choice :) Naan=happiness, simple as that. The drive home to Sanpoku was an interesting time...not. I  had to pull over twice due to nausea, and actually drove the speed limit for once cause my head hurt so much. By the time I got home everything was wobbly and I couldn`t stand. Exhausted I went to bed and didn`t move until my alarm went off the next morning. Rolling myself out of bed, cause my legs and arms had more or less abandoned me, I noticed that the nausea and wobbliness hadn`t gone away. So I rested all of Sunday, and didn`t eat anything. Come Monday I dragged my sorry ass into work and somehow managed to get through my three classes, though thank god two of them was just a reading test and I was able to sit the entire time. Noticing that I wasn`t able to speak as loud as I usually did without getting a headache and that the nausea and wobbliness was still there in full force, I admitted defeat and decided that it was now time to go to the hospital. The doctor suggested a Cat Scan, which thankfully showed that my brain was alright, but had done some damage to the part that controls balance and nausea and would probably be out of sorts for the rest of the week. Of course I would be the one to have a mild concussion. And here it is 4 days since the cause of it all and everything is still looking pretty wonky. :( The only good to come of this is the lack of appetite that had begun to sneak up on me again over the past month. Not going to lie, it felt nice not feeling the need to eat all 900 calories of the school lunch today just because there was rice still left in my bowl. Take that rice gods! Go fatten up someone else with your over-leaden carbs! I miss potatoes :(

So there, that`s my snowboarding misadventure. Equipment is beginning to go down to clearance prices lately, which begs the question, do I keep up with this whole winter sporting facade or should I just bow out now while the majority of my braincells are still intact.

Any thoughts on this, concussion?