Sunday, December 2, 2012

Gray day. Everything is gray. I watch. But nothing moves today.

People walk through the Bamboo Grove on a rainy Saturday afternoon.
Me at a park near the Bamboo Grove.
 Saturday marked my being in Japan for three whole months! It is also the two week mark before I leave Japan. Due to this ever pressing deadline, even the rain could not keep me and my roommate from going to Kyoto on Saturday. We visited Arashiyama and the Bamboo Grove, which is one of the sites I knew I wanted to go to before I even arrived to Japan. While I wish it hadn't been raining it was still a cool site to see. Also beautiful is the fall colors, or kouyou, in Kyoto.

Friday night we celebrated Thanksgiving here at JCMU. It was only a week late not too bad. It was amazing. The office staff cooked four turkeys and lots of the stuffing and mashed potatoes. Some of the students even helped make apple pie. It was a fun night where just about all the students and staff got together to enjoy a delicious meal.

Togetsukyo, or Moon Crossing, Bridge in Arashiyama

Monday, November 19, 2012

How did it get so late so soon?

Competitors tie their obi's and get dressed on stage at the Kimono Festival in Hikone.
My roommate all dressed up.
Robert Shelton all dressed up.
The best (and probably most obvious) thing I love about Japan is doing things I'd never get to go at home, like go to a Kimono festival. Sunday, my roommate and seven other JCMU students participated in it. Most just went and got all dressed up by professionals. They all looked beautiful and handsome. Two actually competed. While there are different categories to the competition the basics is the people are on stage, the clock starts, and they are judged on how fast and well they can tie their obi and dress them selves up. I'm so proud of friends who went up on stage and did it in front the crowd. 

This week also begins my less-than-a-month countdown til I'm back in America (25 days to be exact). I have very mixed feelings about this. On the one hand I miss home. I miss my friends, both at school and from Chicago. I miss my family. I miss driving. I miss my cats and dogs. I miss American food. Like a lot. I already told my roommate from Central that we're going to hit up a Mexican food restaurant when I see her, and I'm really hoping my mom picks me up from the airport with a Lou Malnati's deep dish sausage pizza (hint, hint). 

Even though I miss all those things I know when I get back to America there are going to be so many things I miss about Japan. I love the train system here. I travel to a new place just about every weekend here. I actually like not having a cell phone. I love learning a new language. It has been hard but that has just made it that much more rewarding. I'm going to miss the bejesus out of my roommate and all the other great friends I've made here. 

Until then, I'm going to enjoy the time I have left and make the most of it.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

When the drops stop dropping then the storm starts stopping.

The main walkway leading into the mountain.
Me standing next to a torii gate.
 Usually Friday mornings consists of a weekly test on my Japanese language skills followed by a "Friday Project" which ranges from koto lessons to calligraphy. This Friday the test was moved up a day so JCMU students could have more time at the elementary school we were visiting. I was not excited. It was the morning, I was tired, the idea of screaming first and second graders everywhere did not sound like a good time.

I was mistaken.

Visiting the school has been my favorite Friday project thus far. All the JCMU students got split up between ten or so different elementary schools in the area. I, along with three other JCMU students, visited 156 first and second graders at Takamiya elementary school. We waited in the principals office until a group of four second graders came, with their teacher, where they took each us by the hand and lead us into the gym where 70 or so children were waiting for us and started applauding as we entered. We were than sat down in front of all these children and they sang for us. This was followed by a game of dodgeball. It took me till I was in jail to figure how they play, but it was still a lot of fun. The children would just drag me to where ever I needed to go. The first graders second hour was pretty much a repeat except we made paper airplanes instead of dodgeball, which I'm pretty sure turned into gaijin target practice, but again still fun. Sorry there are no photos I was having too much fun.

Afterwards, my roommate and I spent the afternoon in Kyoto. We wanted to go to both Fushimi Inari-Taisha Shrine and Arashiyama, but the shrine was a bit more than we anticipated so we didn't make it to Arashiyama. The shrine is famous for the torii gates all lined up. It was massive and very impressive. Most of the pictures I've seen of the place are of the main walk way, which is flat. We come find out however it's actually built into the side of a mountain. It was a beautiful but exhausting climb.

There are thousands of torii gates located along the pathways.
One of the many miniature shrines located along the pathways.

Monday, November 12, 2012

What if Christmas, he thought, doesn't come from a store.

The view of Tokyo from the top of Tokyo Tower. It just goes on forever.
The Imperial Palace in Ginza, Tokyo.
Tokyo was different from every other place I've visited in Japan. I don't even know how best to describe it, only to say that two days was not enough to explore it.

Senso-ji Temple lit up at night.
My friends and I decided to take the Shinkansen to Tokyo on Friday morning. There was a bus we could have taken that would have been a lot cheaper but would have taken longer. The trip from Hikone to Tokyo would have taken at six hrs by bus or car but only took two and a half hours my Shinkansen. It was basically a plane on the ground. It even kind of look like a plane on the inside.  We stayed at K's House Tokyo Oasis in Asakusa. It was a great, clean, cheap hostel and the staff there was amazing and really helpful. Asakusa has an old feel to it and the hostel was a 5 minute walk from the subway. You can get anywhere you need to through the subway system and for ¥710 we got a day pass to ride most of the lines as often as we needed to.

Friday we went to Ginza and Roppongi. Ginza has a lot of high end retail shops much like Michigan Ave. in Chicago and the the Imperial Palace which you can't go into without reservations made ahead of time but is still worth going to to look around. In Roppongi we took an elevator 250m up to the top of Tokyo Tower. We really lucked out with the weather, it was a beautiful clear day and we could see for miles. It was amazing to see how all buildings are built around each other to pack everything in and yet there is still room for trees.  Later that night we wandered around Asakusa and found Senso-ji Temple. It is all light up and night and is one of the coolest place I've seen in Japan.

Saturday we hit up Shibuya and Harajuku for some shopping. Both places were insanely packed with people, Harajuku more so. I just couldn't get over how packed in everything was and how everyone functioned properly there. My highlight was sitting in the Starbucks looking out over Shibuya Crossing watching hundreds of people make their way across the street in the one minute that the lights are red. That night we ate at an okonomiyaki restaurant, Sometaro, that has been around since 1937.  Overall,  it was a great weekend.

Fun little side note: I always thought America was bad about rushing into Christmas, but here in Japan it started the day after Halloween. Tokyo looked like Father Christmas had vomited on it. There were Christmas trees and light and music EVERYWHERE.

I speak for the trees. I speak for the trees for the trees have no tongues.


Tyler Castner and I practicing with the Seisen University students, Misa Ariyama, Kotono Ootsuki, and Yuta Onishi before our live radio show.
Kotono Ootsuku, Misa Ariyama, and Tyler Castner after the show.
Two months ago I knew zero Japanese. Sunday I did an interview with Seisen University students on a live internet show, in Japanese. Was my Japanese any good? Probably not. Most likely it sounded like two year old repeating the only words he or she knows over and over again. None the less I was proud of myself. Tyler and I had been with working with the university students for over a month figuring out what we were going to talk about.

Aside from my horrible Japanese the show was actually a lot of fun. We talked about JCMU, our favorite Japanese food, anime and other aspects about our lives here in Japan. We broadcasted the show from the second floor of a cafe in Hikone. It was a really cool place that use to be post office. After we finished the show we all went downstairs and enjoyed coffee and cake.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

It's opener, out there, in the wide, open air.


The group makes it way up the mountain to the top of Azuchi Castle.
The ruins at Azuchi Castle
While majority of my time here is spent trying to learn the Japanese language, Saturday I, along with 5 other JMCU students, had the opportunity to help some junior high student practice their English. It was a lot of fun wandering through Azuchi. The students actually spoke English quite well. Each JCMU student paired up with JET ALT and two Japanese students.  We helped them answer question on a quiz about Azuchi Castle and asked them simple questions about school and their interests.
Azuchi is a place I would have never gone to on my own. It's not a touristy place. The castle is actually just ruins of what was once a castle, but it was very beautiful and serene there. All in all it was a fun day.
View from the top of our climb.

ASAP. Whatever that means. It must mean, 'Act swiftly awesome pacyderm!'


JCMU students take their picture with one of the 70 children that attended JCMU's Halloween Party.

My roommate and I as Minnie Mouse and Katniss.
Last week JCMU held a Halloween party for Japanese children to come and experience a little bit of American Halloween. Halloween in Japan, up until recently, has been entirely non-existent. Even now it is not the same as in America. There is no door to door trick-or-treating, no season stores that pop up in the month leading up to it, no haunted houses, and no pumpkins being carved. In fact it was quite difficult to find any Halloween costumes, most students made their own. All Halloween really is here is some cutesy decorations at some stores and restaurants and the occasional party.

With so many Americans in one place, JCMU offers a unique experience for Japanese children. After our weekly test on Friday, JCMU students set to decorating the building. We set up games, put up streamers, and transformed the library into haunted library. Around 70 children and their families showed the evening. They got to get their faces painted, play musical chairs, bean bag toss and walk through the haunted library. After all that they got to experience trick-or-treating by going to some rooms in the dormitory. It was a lot of fun for both the children and us students. After the kids party some students from local universities came for food and costume contest.

Taylor King helps with paints a girls face. Face painting was one the more popular activities at the party.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

One fish Two fish Red fish Blue fish!

Jellyfish at the Osaka Aquarium.

One of the worlds tallest Ferris Wheels in Osaka.
Saturday, I visited the largest city I've been too since I've come to Japan. Osaka is not the place for the claustrophobic; there is no shortage of people.  It was fun seeing all the different shops, and there were plenty, but our main intention in going to Osaka was the aquarium. As my roommate put it, it was probably the most touristy thing, outside of temples, that we've seen. It was also one of the most fun. I love aquariums and this one was huge! It didn't just have fish but animals too. You start by riding an extremely steep escalator to the top of the building and then work your way down.  My favorite was the penguins that darted through the water. While I didn't take them up on the offer, after seeing the octopus you could go buy some to eat. After going through the one of worlds largest aquariums we rode one of the worlds largest Ferris wheels. It was very cool to see the city all lit up at night. All in all it was a good touristy day.

Friday, October 19, 2012

Teeth are always in style.

The obi of a kimono tied into a bow.
Melville sensei helps Kayla Vaillancourt tie her obi.
A couple of weeks ago I tagged along with my friends as they bought kimonos. While they are beautiful I opted on the side of practicality and didn't buy one because: one they are expensive and two I have no idea where I would ever wear one back in the States. Today I had the opportunity to learn how to put one on.

I never wanted to take it off.

I felt a little like Mulan and my inner child relished in it (she's my favorite Disney princess). Even though it was slightly like being strapped into a corset and my feet couldn't move farther than five inches apart I was in love. Melville sensei just laughed as she tied it tighter and said this is why old people here don't have back problems. It was no easy task putting one on. You have to lift the fabric here and fold this way and tie one strap here and another there and then you wrap the obi around you and tie it all up. Eventually we all got it and we looked great.
The ladies try and figure out how to tie their obi's after Meliville sensei demonstrated it.
Robert Shelton and Peter Marheine figure out how to put on the obi.
My beautiful roommate Kendra Snelson models the final product.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

All alone! Whether you like it or not, alone is something you'll be quite a lot!

A shrine that is less than a five minute walk from my school.
Really steep stairs.
This week was a bit of a struggle bus. I had an almost melt down mid-week because I was getting frustrated with my language class and a little homesick. In case you were wondering Japanese is kind of hard to learn. At least for me it is. However, the week did end on a high note with my professor telling me she was impressed with how much my Japanese has improved.

Friday was also fun because we got to do interviews with Japanese people from Hikone or near by towns. I was nervous going into it because I was afraid they wouldn't understand my questions or I wouldn't be able to comprehend their answers, but thankfully it went well. The first hour I practice my Japanese and the second hour they practice their English. It was difficult and there was quite a few times I had to turn to my partner to confirm or ask what it was they said, but I overall it was fun. I was surprise by how many people came out for it and the age range. There were some younger people but most of people were housewives with ages ranging from 40 to 70. My favorite was talking to man who is now retired. We talk about our love of travel and beer. He has been all over the world.

Saturday I spent the day by myself which was pretty much a first since I've been in Japan. I don't mean I just went to the shrine by myself but there was no else there. It was a really cool place and I enjoyed wandering through the hillside. There were a couple different pathways you could go explore. It was fun though my legs were tired by the end. Japan never seems to have a lack of stairs.


Sunday, October 7, 2012

Just tell yourself, Duckie, you're real quite lucky.

Deer crowd a man with treats for them in Nara.
The Great Buddha statue located in Daibutsu-den hall.
A short walk from the Kintetsu Nara station puts you in Nara-koen. A large park in a city that was the first permanent capital of Japan if only for a little while. The park is the located of Todaji-ji which houses the famously large statue of the Buddha. And it was large. The hall in which it was held, Daibutsu-den hall, was equally if not more impressive. It was rebuilt in 1709 and is the worlds largest wooden building. I was in awe.

My favorite part of the trip was the deer. They were everywhere. Before we even actually got the the park area we were surround by deer. Friendly, pet-able, wild deer. Unless you were in a building you were not out of site of deer. We even had one join us for lunch. The park itself is gorgeous. It was a mix and of forest and open grassy areas.  Nara has been my favorite place I've visited.


If you never did you should. These things are fun and fun is good.


A beach near my school.

This week marks my being in Japan for over a month! I've gotten use to the way most things are done. While there are some things that annoy me, I find a lot of things make sense.

Showers: The bathrooms here are tiny, at least in the dorm. Thankfully I'm short. I'm pretty sure anyone over 5'8" has to crouch to get their hair wet. In order to get hot water in the shower or the sink you have to press an on bottom and select what temperature you want (It looks like a thermostat). This makes sense to me. Water only gets heated when you need it to be hot. Fun fact though, the controls that are by sink also control the one in the shower. So, for example, when your in the shower in the morning and your roommate is done using the hot water for the sink and she turns it off, the hot water goes off in the shower too. And it gets cold. Fast.

Waves breaking against the shore.
Shoes: Different shoes are needed for indoors and outdoors. When coming in from outside you have to take off your shoes and put on your indoor shoes. This is true for our dorm. When we walk in the building we have to take off our shoes and put on other one, and then we we get to our room we take off the indoor shoes as well. Japan is all about cleanliness. It is actually a good way to keep dirt out. Though it is mildly annoying when your hands are full of groceries and there are other people trying their shoes from the same place as yours.

Transportation: I love the trains here. Even though they get crowded as you move toward, they are clean, timely, and, aside from the bullet trains, relatively cheap.  It cost me less to go to Nagahama and back than it does for me to take the Metra into Chicago.  I also love riding my bike everywhere.  Does it suck when you want to buy out all of the grocery store and are limited to what you can fit in a basket and backpack? Yes, but I instead of making trips to the grocery store every two weeks like I would at home I now go once or twice a week. Not the end of the world.

People: I have yet to meet an unkind person. Sometimes you just get stared at for being the only foreigner in 50 miles. Some people want to just test their English and get a photo with gaijin. I love riding my bike down the road saying “Konichiwa!” to everyone I think will say it back, most say it first.  Everyone my friends and I ever have ever asked for help has given us some. They are also very forgiving when I have no idea what they’re trying to say to me.

Classes:  Studying abroad would be really great if it weren’t for the whole studying part. My culture and society class is great. It’s in English, we take field trips, and I enjoy the subject. My language class is hard. They weren’t kidding when they said intensive. I get frustrated because majority (and by majority I mean everyone except for one other guy and myself) has taken at least some Japanese and most times I just do my best to not look like a complete fool when my sensei calls on me. Though to give the program credit I sure do know a lot more Japanese than when I first started. I’m also extremely grateful to Melville sensei for being patient and working with me.

On the same note, even though I do get frustrated when I can’t understand people or read a sign, common sense has gotten me pretty far. A good sense of direction helps too.

It all began with a shoe on the wall. A shoe on the wall shouldn't be there at all.


The view of the garden from the tatami room at JCMU.
The teachers show us how a tea ceremony works.
Friday I got to see and participate in a tea ceremony. The ceremony involves one person making matcha (a powdered form of tea) and presenting it to others. The tea is also accompanied with some sort of sweet. The process is very structure. There is a place for every item and a certain way to use each item. First we got to watch how it was done. One woman would sit there while the other made and brought her tea.

After watching them perform the ceremony, we got to be the guests and were given sweets and tea to drink. The sweets get passed down the line. After you finish the sweets you are able to drink the tea (but until you finish the sweet). After picking up the cup, you have to hold it in your left hand and turn it clockwise two times so that the Shomen (the design on the cup) faces outward. When finished drinking you must always wipe the rim. During the entire ceremony you are suppose sit proper on your knees. I'll admit my legs cramped up; I couldn't sit like that the entire time. One student asked the women if their legs hurt to which she replied they always hurt. She also gave a warning to us as we got up to watch out.

When receiving your tea you must bow to the host serving you.

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Oh, the things you can find if you don't stay behind!

The golden pavilion of Kinkakuji in Kyoto.
The gardens at Heian jingo shrine in Kyoto.
 Of all the field trips I've ever been on for school this one takes the cake. Saturday a bus load of JCMU students went to Kyoto for the day. The first stop of the day was Kinkakuji. We only had about half an hour there but that was enough to be impressed. The golden pavilion sits out on a pond surrounded by walkways.

The second stop was my favorite of the day. The gardens at Heian jingo is one of the most beautiful places I've ever visited. Walking weave through the garden and over ponds. We fed fish and turtles. We even saw a bride and groom getting their picture taken. I found out the women was wearing a head covering to hide her "horns of jealousy". The shrine here was impressively large and beautiful.


Carp expecting to be fed.
The last stop of the day was Kiyomizu-dera. A temple located in the side of a mountain. It had an amazing view of Kyoto from the top. While all these places that I visited were amazing the thing that got me the most was how many foreigners I saw. Where I currently reside I don't see any other "gaijin" than those of us in the program. In fact, we are usually so surprised when we see non-Japanese people we can't help but point it out.
Heian Jingo

Kiyomizu-dera

Today was good. Today was fun. Tomorrow is another one.


Members of the Shorinji Kempo group at one of the local universities display their fighting skills for JCMU students Friday morning. Kempo is a fighting style that focuses on 3 categories: goho (hard techniques: kicks and punches),  juho (soft techniques: drawing out and throwing) and seiho.
The sensei demonstrates a move.

Despite every starting out every Friday with a Japanese language test, they are pretty great days. After the test members from a local universities' Shorinji Kempo group came to JCMU to show and teach us some moves. While we only learned the some basics, like throwing a punch and breaking someones grip, it was fun to move around and learn them. It was also very impressive to see them demonstrate more moves. The sensei has been practicing since the end of World War II.

After showing off my amazing fighting skills I got to show off my skills in the kitchen. A Japanese student, Yuco, came and taught my roommate, another student, and I how to cook curry. Not only did she teach us how to cook it but she also taught us some origami. I made crane. Yuco upstaged us all by making a crane, a box, and a two different bunnies. The curry tasted amazing and we have some lovely table decorations.

My cooking skills were put to the test even further that night when me and another student made vegetable tempura. It took us a few tries to get the batter right but we got there. Three kitchens were used that night to make enough food for over 20 of us. A good time was had by all.

Brad and Yuco making little origami bunnies.
Yuco making an origami game.
The finished products.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Things may happen and often do to people as brainy and footsy as you


A teacher performs a song on a koto.
A koto with the music sheet and picks.
 After the test Friday morning, we (my fellow JCMU students and myself) had the option to go to a koto lesson. A koto is a 13 string instrument much like a guitar and played somewhat similarly. You use picks on your thumb, index and middle finger to pluck the strings. The teacher that played for us has been playing for over 12 years. After she played for us and taught us the basics we were able to try in out for ourselves.
It was also my first time being in a tatami room. The room if what most people imagine when they think of old school Japan: woven mats covering the floor, sliding doors with the off white thin paper covering the openings, and they look out over a traditional Japanese garden. 

Deanna learns to play a song on the koto
Deanna plays a song on the koto.
The koto teacher explains to Ashley how to follow the music score and play the koto.



Koto Lessons from Kaitlin Thoresen on Vimeo.