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cherry blossoms
I am the laziest person on the planet :(

Observation 1: Japan has yet to discover WD-40. Every braking bike makes my ears bleed.
Observation 2: It is very easy to spend a lot of money here.
Observation 3/Prediction: Climbing Mt. Fuji may or may not kill me.


Amuse yourselves with this for now :)
cherry blossoms
PICTURES SOON I PROMISE.

Um. So, let's seeeee.

1) On packed trains (even only slightly packed trains), there is little to no effort made to keep yourself upright. If the train stops suddenly, you allow yourself to be thrown onto the person behind you. I do not understand this logic :(

2) I have seen way more nose-picking here than I've ever seen stateside, haha

3) Japan is a bag culture. Children going to school have a backpack, a small cloth bag (sometimes multiple) tied to said backpack, a quilted bag in their hands... Everyone has five million bags, all quite small! There's also the habit to use shopping bags as just, like...bags. Which leads us into...

4) There is an insane love of brands here. So, if you buy a bag from Coach, you'd better get a shopping bag to put it in that's just as ~*fabulous*~. Think Abercrombie and Fitch bags (sturdy, thick paper with woven handles) in every store everywhere, hahaha.

5) A (moving?) truck drove by us today and honked and waved at us. Japan sure is hilarious - like they've never seen a white person before!

6) Sometimes cold meds are not coated. BLECH.

7) The word for snot is literally translated as 'nose water'

Can you tell I have a cold?

Exciting!

  • Apr. 30th, 2009 at 7:16 PM
cherry blossoms


It's almost Golden Week! I get next Monday-Thursday off! Hopefully I'll stop slacking and post more pictures :)

More Observations Plus Pictures (Finally!)

  • Apr. 24th, 2009 at 9:47 PM
cherry blossoms
A few more funny things about life here, because Mom won't stop harassing me ;)

The other day we were crushed in the train in the morning. The commute has never been pleasant, but it was atrocious... I was, literally, standing on one leg, crushing this poor guy with all of my weight via my shoulder/elbow. I hid my face in Hillary's back the whole time! The funny thing is, you're not supposed to apologize, not supposed to really pay any mind to anyone. You pretend that you aren't on top of someone. Of course, I got the giggles, and they already think we're crazy, so...

On a totally random note, one of the best things about our phones is that they come with a million little picture icons. My friend Morgan summed it up best when she said "Some of them are totally random, too. Like, when are you ever going to need to use an animated picture of a rocket ship flying into outerspace when you're texting someone? The best thing to do is to put totally random ones in there. Like, 'I'm hungry *Mt. Fuji*'" I love my friends here!

Observations from Disneyland will come with Disney picture posts. Let's just say that Hillary and I stood out even more than usual.

I'm painfully behind on pictures :( )

A post about life

  • Apr. 14th, 2009 at 10:46 PM
cherry blossoms
Forgoing pictures for the moment, since I've been busy (read: lazy) and haven't edited any more. But I figured I should just do a general post about life here and all the things I've learned so far, especially since Mom is always hounding me to write more stuff down here :)

Friends: It's funny how I always have to relearn that it's really the people you're with that make the experience of going abroad even more enjoyable. Morgan, a friend who's been here since the beginning of the Fall semester, went on a late night walk with me. We talked about a lot of things, but at some point the discussion moved towards what this would all be like if we weren't here with all the people we loved. Japan is absolutely amazing. But the Japan I know is filled with hanami with my friends, runs to the arcade, and running around Tokyo. When I come back (which I will, trust me :) ), it'll be a whole new experience. This is both good and bad. I hope that next time I make it to Tokyo I find such wonderful people and do such fun things.

The Japanese: There are a few things the Japanese will not tolerate, and one of them is eating/drinking things past the expiration date. Morgan learned (or shall I say learnt? our New Zealander was very adamant about 'learned' not being a word) this first hand when a bunch of girls brought a loaf of bread to school and passed it around, eating it. She inquired, obviously, and got the answer that it would be going bad the next day. Her response was that you could eat it until it got moldy, and even then if there were little spots those could be torn off and the rest would be fine. They were mortified. The five-second rule also came into play, prompting the same response. We also don't get smushed as badly in trains as the Japanese do, which Morgan attributes to our 'gaijin cooties' (gaijin being foreigner). Everyone still stares at us.

Gaijin: The Japanese stare, but so do the other gaijin. It's like you have to acknowledge that there's another outsider, because you're one as well, and you're decently rare. It's actually really fascinating... I'm so used to the U.S., or Europe, where, unless someone's speaking (and even then in America this isn't the case), you have no idea where they're from. Here it's painfully obvious when you're an outsider. I didn't realize how strong I would feel this until I actually got here and experienced this sense of exclusion. It's not horrendous, but it's definitely there.

The Language: One great thing is most everyone is sweet about us being totally helpless at Japanese. Hillary, my friend who came over with me, had a hard drive failure in her laptop this morning. Being the resident tech geek, I went to assist. We managed to find screwdrivers that fit, and then pretty much went to an electronics store and thrust the dead hard drive at them, saying that we needed a new one. Much was said, though the only thing we understood was that what they had was too big, and we needed to go to the other store. We did, and the poor woman at the counter attempted to explain warranties to us while we stared blankly and tried to throw English words to assist her, as if she'd know the words if we said them to her. What was nice, though, was that everyone apologized for not being better at English. We, of course, did the opposite. Some men helping us with directions when we first got here were insanely impressed that we could just thank them in Japanese. It's refreshing to have someone be nice to you when you butcher their language.

Random: I'm also beginning to really appreciate ovens. I want to bake so badly! Still, I have no room to complain. I'm ridiculously spoiled here in that I have a burner and a mini fridge in my room.

Have I mentioned that Japanese television is hilarious? We watch a lot of game shows, and end up screaming at the TV with the audience.

I reaaaally need to get going. I have a huge quiz tomorrow and it's late :( Let me know if you guys have any questions you want answered, or pictures of anything! We're doing shabu shabu tabehodai again tomorrow (all you can eat meat shabu shabu. It's amazing~), so I'm sure that'll bring some more exciting pictures. Love you all!

Hanami and Akihabara

  • Apr. 9th, 2009 at 6:31 PM
cherry blossoms
Things have been going great here! I'm mostly settled in, though we still spend about every day walking around for 5+ hours. Yesterday I'm pretty sure we left around 1pm and got back around 8pm. PHEW! Lots of walking, which is good for me :) We went to Ginza, walked back to Akihabara, and generally just...messed around. Classes start in about 4 days time, and I'm anxious. It looks like at least a few of my classes will be fun, and Hillary will be taking all but one with me!

I can see why no one ever wants to come home. Everything seems so magical here! My phone is amazing, there's a ton of good food and, as weird as it is, all the public toilets in restaurants and karaoke places, and even at our school, have heated seats. It's like I'm living in the future! And I guess, for most of you (actually, all of you) I am ;)

A few shots of Hanami, plus my and Hillary's trip to Akihabara )

Cherry Blossoms Etc.

  • Apr. 5th, 2009 at 8:49 AM
cherry blossoms
Ahaha, whoops! Sorry everyone. I forgot to make the whole directory public. It's fixed now, though, so you should be able to see the pictures :)

So yesterday we went out to sit and watch the cherry blossoms at about 5pm, and didn't leave until around 10:15pm! It was nice, even if by the end it was freezing, kind of drizzly, and my butt was numb from sitting on the hard ground on a tarp for 5 hours. Morgan came over afterwards and we talked 'til 2am (whoops), and today Hillary and I are going shopping.

More pictures! This time so you can see them! )

That's all for now! More pictures to come :)

First picture post! The abode

  • Apr. 4th, 2009 at 3:15 PM
cherry blossoms
So, after a little bit of a bumpy start (starvation), things are really looking up. It's totally amazing here! Last night after taking a rather horrific placement exam that we all felt pretty poorly about, Hillary and I went and got our bus passes. After that we went back to the school and people watched for a few hours (after I bought a hoodie and bag which I'll take pictures of later) before going to a welcome party thing. The party was...not very exciting, but we got to see a few neat things and were accosted there by our friends Morgan and Ben, who have been here for half a year already. We were dragged with them to karaoke, which was way more fun than expected (we were there for two hours!), and then off to Shinjuku to the gay district to go to a gay dance club for an hour or so until we caught the last train back home. It was really fun, and really tiring! Hillary and I are just relaxing a bit today, and will go watch the cherry blossoms in an hour or so. Tomorrow we'll probably go shopping, and then Monday we get to go register with the government to get our foreigner id cards (we just call them gaijin cards) and our cell phones.

Click here to see pictures! )

I wish I had time to post more, but we're about to go look at the cherry blossoms, so I'll have to post more later :) Miss all of you, but I'm having a blast at least!

Here!

  • Apr. 1st, 2009 at 2:55 AM
cherry blossoms
 I'm in Japan, safe and sound, but wayyy too tired and hungry to say much else. I'm happy, but also horribly freaked out. Miss you all already.

First Post!

  • Mar. 30th, 2009 at 9:03 PM
cherry blossoms
Okay :) This is going to be my Japan journal! I'll still be posting on my normal one, but this is for so my family has something to watch, and so I don't spam up my normal journal with photo sessions (though, depending, I might do that anyways).

I leave tomorrow morning for Tokyo. I'm completely and totally freaked out.

I'll make a post (with pictures!) when I arrive at my home for 4 months <3