Sunday, August 29, 2010

Rubber duckies down a slide.



It is almost deathly quiet. A barely audible flip of a page drifts over periodically from the right and the vibrations more than the sound of the air-conditioner adds to the tension that the figure sitting at the desk closest to the wall is feeling. She has delayed long enough; it is time to make her move. Slowly she rises from the desk and instinctively allows her right leg to bare more weight than her left. She slides around the corner and past a teacher sleeping lightly on his arms, it is just before lunch and there are only about six eyes in the staffroom to even take notice and none seem to do so. She curses softly under her breath as her shoes squeak while she takes little steps past the bin busting with recycled bottles. The door is reached by putting one nonchalant foot in front of the other but once outside she starts to run. There is nobody waiting in the corridor and the girl lifts two tissues from her capri pants pocket. The bright sunshine of the outside balcony barely reaches her face as she finally gets to blow her nose.

I know I am being a little gross, but I really miss getting to blow my nose in public or at least when I need to. Here I would get less dirty looks if I were to sing the national anthem in my birthday suit. Something that I expect many of you would not miss however is the lack of `nomihodai` in South Africa. Nomihodai means all you can drink and of whichever poison you have made your mistress. Anything from melon juice to whiskey is on the table for a set price and I know some rugby manne that would make Japan think twice about this little venture.
Well on Friday I experienced my first enkai (work drinking party) with only the fairer sex in attendance. All the lady teachers and myself went to a Spanish restaurant and as I would get some odd looks if I did not at least booze it up a little I chose white wine as my escort for the evening. I did not really over indulge but Roland tells a different story (I think it involves me falling off the couch when I got home but it is best to ask him) and we all had a really great time. I remember speaking a lot more Japanese and I am hoping that, that was really the case and I did not spend the evening chatting in Afrikaans. Either way it was a great way to get to know the ladies of my school and eat some fantastic food. Nothing like a bit of wine to make raw octopus taste like top class calamari.

After sleeping late (which sadly is only till 9am these days), Roland and I met up with ducky and made our way to the water park found not too far from where I live. The three of us lathered up with 2 liters of suntan lotion and jumped into the circular pool that with the help of some strong jet propulsion creates some wicked currents. As is to be expected from the two charlatans I refer to as friends, I was forced via peer pressure to go down the scarily high super tube. I was relieved to see the word yukuri (meaning slow) next to a picture of a little man sitting as opposed to lying down. Ducky and Roland opted for the speed demon option while I yukuried by bum down the slide. Emma even closed her eyes because you can never have enough terror in your life. All said and done it was super fun and I even managed to lie down all the way during one of our attempts.



Our evening was spent at a traditional Japanese summer festival and all three of us were coerced into dancing in a vast circle to the tune of taiko drums and eerie singing. Once again the festival food was amazing and more than twenty people came and thanked us for joining in or asked us to come again the next year. I am slowly getting used to bowing more that fifteen times in one conversation.

Festival food!!!

Summer Yukata!!!
 I have fireworks filled plans for next weekend but more on that later. For now I will leave you with a quote written on the tissue box, standing on my desk. `Puzzling scenes that may come and go in everyday life. They make me feel lovely. And I feel very familiar with them. Let me be one of the things that make you smile`. Oh and you do tissue box, every day.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Have you hugged a clown today?


It`s not everyday that you see a red faced devil, horns and all, happily posing for a photo with a baby in each arm, but I feel I might be getting ahead of myself a little bit, so let me rather take you back to this last weekend. At the risk of balancing on the border of bragging, please allow me to say that weekends in Hiji are fan-friggin-tastic. On Saturday Roland and I made our way into Beppu in search of a screen to match his newly arrived computer. This however proved to be a fair bit easier said than done and while Yamada Denki (the huge two story electronics store) carried everything from a camera that can airbrush your face to flawless perfection to an electric toothbrush for your poodle, they were sadly lacking in the screen department. All they had on offer was one scruffy little flat screen for monitoring emergencies hidden in a cobwebbed corner. We had to make another plan. This contingency plan landed on our doorstep last night in the shape of a monster 27 inch monitor that barely fits on our dodgy little desk. We ordered him from Japanese Amazon on Sunday night and are still smiling at how cheap he is compared to his South African brothers.


The rest of the day was spent sweating to death at Harmony land (Hello Kitty World) where we were served up two huge platters of super cute. For breakfast we rode the huge Ferris wheel (yes I shouted at Roland for making it rock back and forth), for tea time we rode an amazing 3D ride, for lunch we controlled our own mini rollercoaster around a very high track (yes I shouted at Roland for making it go too fast around corners) and for dinner, along with hundreds of other Japanese families we watched a spectacular fireworks display.


Sunday was Ducky day and me and my quieter half went to visit Roland`s second wife in Kunisaki. Oh my goodness, by Japanese standards Ducky lives in Buckingham Palace. I was under the impression that my apartment was a good size but at her mansion I kept looking around for the moat or at least the changing of the guard. After hiking down her corridor for many days, we finally made it into the lounge and just in the nick of time too as we had been running low on food and water. While I would be loath to give up my close proximity to the train and everything exciting in Hiji, her nice sturdy bathtub does make my box filled with water look decidedly sad. We stole some of her internet and ordered our screen and then it was time to get back into `Ouma` (that is the new name we have given our little car after a few days of use). You see grandma is still very strong and loves walking around town but you don`t take grandma up a mountain and you don`t make grandma run marathons to Nagasaki or Kumamoto. We also realized with much regret that you don`t buy Ouma a lemonade scented air freshener that smelled nice in the shop because after an hour behind the wheel you will lament the fact that it smells like someone spilled a two liter Sprite on the back seat.



Monday came a knocking with some unexpected adventure. After having taken the train into Oita so as to attend a meeting in the city, I was glad to catch a lift back with Ducky. We had stopped at this insanely awesome secondhand shop and browsed the isles of Louis Vuitton bags and playstation 3`s till about 20:30 ish. When we jumped back into the car and when no sound at all escaped as Ducky turned the key, we knew we were in for a bit of trouble. Roland attempted the old push start but the car was as dead as any plant I have ever tried to grow. We asked the owner if it would be ok if Buta (meaning piggy) could sleep in his parking garage that night and then headed for the nearest train station. After wearing fancy shoes all day I had developed two prize blisters on my heels and when the second one popped I had quite enough of my shoes. Shoving my baby dolls in my bag I walked the streets of Beppu bare footed. I must have looked beyond peculiar as I tried to hide my feet under some bags of shopping while we grabbed the train home. Ducky then stole `Ouma` as Kunisaki is yet to get round to installing a train, so she would not be able to go to work the next day if she did not have a car. I hear `Buta` has had some surgery and is recovering nicely.

You cannot really tell here but Ducky had a pretty big house.

Then Tuesday the sweetest English teacher you will ever meet and I asked my vice principle if we could sneak out and go watch the dancers at the local shrine festival. There was fan dancing and samurai sword cutting and even a clown in the traditional Japanese fashion wearing a hilarious mask with a skew mustache. At one point he stole a little boys cap, making him ball his eyes out, he then threw a huge amount of candy in the air and everyone grabbed a few treats, after which he stole the same little boys’ candy causing more water works. Roland even got a big hug from the jester, much to the delight of the all Japanese audience and finally we get to the red devil. As the performers portrayed Japanese mythology through dancing and plays a big scary demon stalked the audience grabbing tree branches that the audience had brought along from home. They would have a tug of war and I think the aim of the game is to let the devil win but one little girl got so excited she clung on for dear life and the devil had to concede defeat. It was particularly sweet watching him pose with all the little kids and babies, most of whom stopped crying the moment he gave them some of the yummy candy he carried in his pocket.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Ninjas on a train

The train to work and back
A Ninja followed me home as I tumbled down the hill that leads to my school from Oga station. She was dressed in black from the tips of her toes to her glove covered fingers. She sported a mask and a hat was wrapped completely around her head. This particular ninja also happened to be about 60 or 70 years old from what I could tell. You see the ladies of my town fear the sun like I fear my little brother-in-law washing my dishes. They are never without a hat or a parasol and many wear gloves in 35 degree heat. The ninja and I jumped on the 4:34 train and as always the seat to my right and left were left empty. I am one of only two foreign girls in my town and the locals still treat me with a little trepidation or at least caution. I think it is less about being nervous around me and more about not wanting to bother me but if I say `konnichiwa` 1st they cannot reply fast enough. I have however stopped a two year old from crying in the post office, his little eyes staring at me until I left the building and I have a slightly sickening feeling that the woman who bumped her little red Nissan into the car in front of her did so because she was straining to see what this foreign girl had bought at the local supermarket. I hope I am wrong.

My station during spring.
 Ah but I digress, the trains, oh the wonderfully fast, clean trains. I have fallen head over heels for these beautiful beasts that take me to and from school each day. They are on time to the minute and you do not even have to hide your money in your shoe or eat an orange in order to look poor (feel free to ask Roland about this theory which I think he has revised since landing in Japan and paying more for an orange than a pair of cute shoes). Everyday I look at the mountains and the rice fields and the homes dotted in amongst them. Two little girls no more that eight years old ate their lunch next to me the other day and I felt distinctly jealous that I could never see my country in the same way unless I robbed a bank and then took the blue train home. I did not however take my new love to Yufuin the next day as I was lucky enough to grab a lift with the coordinator of the camp and the only other foreign girl in my town.

My station during the winter
 What a chaotic couple of days. The theme of the camp was a murder mystery set in Las Vegas and while the instructors played out the murder, we the group leaders helped the kids to solve the crime. There was a veritable love octagon and secret romance was the order of the day. A poor rich man was strangled with a pearl necklace and then it was up to me and my new 11 little friends to solve the crime. As well as playing Watson and Holmes we also had a treasure to hunt, an obstacle course to get stuck in, a quiz to master, a play to direct, an artwork to create and a tricky dance to learn off by heart. By the end of the camp I had run a marathon and shaken my booty to poker face by lady Gaga a million times.

We are all super red after getting our groove on
I am told that I will be the leader of group C4 who I immediately christen as group dynamite, the joke is lost on the Japanese kids but the sentiment is not and we end up being by far the most explosive group in the bunch. I have two very clever boys and nine very flirty girls. This fact becoming plain as day while engaged in our 1st activity of the camp. During the treasure hunt our objective is to take photos of clues that we figure out. We were miles ahead when one of said clues led us into the TV room where two of the male instructors were taking a bit of a load off and resting on some chairs. The necessity of taking a photo of the remote control flew out of the window as my ladies swarmed around the poor instructors. They were now employing their best English of the day to say `Good morning Casino owner Greg and floor manages Pat, how are you guys doing?` It took a few shouts of `less flirting more hunting clues` to tear the ladies from their pray.


The next clue also gave me some cause for concern, we needed to take a picture of a camera but what group would allow you a chance at getting further ahead. My fears were proven unfounded as four of my ladies tackled the poor boy holding the camera for group C3. I still have the picture of the half pinned, half strangled boy and it still makes me giggle when I look at it. If I taught those 11 kids any English at all during that first activity it would be `if old Freda can run up these stairs so can you`. Needless to say team dynamite won the treasure hunt in the style of true pirates.


We were spectacular at sports and our play, called `the big samurai mafia fight` was performed in front of the entire assembly to much laughter. We might not have been as skilled at art but what we lacked in talent we made up for by using half of Japans reserves of glitter glue on our project. Even Elton John would have blushed at the sight of it. Then came the dancing. Everybody learned a choreographed dance to the tune of poker face and that evening we all shook what our mamma's gave us in unison. It was pretty amazing actually and I think I missed a few steppes every time I would stare at the precision of everyone around me stepping in time.

The next day I was elevated to revered status when I showed my ladies a picture of my blue eyed, blond haired man. One of my flirtiest girls, who appropriately enough dreams of becoming a flight attendant in the future, told me that she would study even more English so she can marry such a handsome man one day. I am still not sure how I feel about this but hey at least she will be fluent one day. At the end of the camp I received a monstrous cheer and a card filled with thank you notes, I was very touched and will miss my mischievous little flirts and the sweet, shy boys who put up with them.

The murder mystery crew
 All that crazy exercise did however claim its pound of flesh and on my return home I caught a nasty little Japanese bug. I am not all that sick but it did force me to wear a surgical mask to school so as to not infect the entire office. So when the 4 o`clock bell rings today there will be two ninjas boarding the train and making their way home.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Prehistoric Japan


I live in Jurassic park, true story, if you take away a few man eating dinosaurs, you are left with Oita prefecture. As we drove from the local airport, down a road lined with every single shade of green, I found myself humming the theme tune of said movie in my head. The bird sized butterflies and dragon flies also add to the prehistoric atmosphere. Everything is lush and all the trees, bamboo and ferns are huge. Then the highway opened up suddenly to rice paddies as far as the eye could see. At the time I was fascinated by all this rice but after having eaten a grapefruit sized bowl of it everyday for breakfast, lunch and dinner it is starting to lose its appeal. As I am the adopted daughter of a very kind Japanese family I have only had 1 slice of toast so far and no coffee and while I am sure all the green tea that I am politely drinking is very good for me I am hoping that I aquire the taste sooner rather than later as at the moment it still reminds me of wood flavoured water.



First up was a prefectural meeting and then my super sweet supervisor escorted me to my ride while pointing at the driver and enthusiastically saying `boss`. My Kouchou Sensei or principle was very friendly and obviously nervous as he speaks no English. I was told a little bit about Hiji and then the three of us watched Pokemon on the TV mounted on the dashboard of Kouchou Sensei`s car. After picking up my main suitcase it was off to my new Buddhist home. The family who looked after me for those few days were just down right amazing. On the last day I even shed a little secret tear as the house mom still presented me with rice bowls and chopsticks (even though they did give a little giggle at my less than masterful technique, especially when I would cut tofu into so many little blocks that I could eat it as a yogurt). The first night however was crazy, they could speak all of 5 English words and my Japanese is at a toddlers level so there was much waving of arms and drawing of pictures. I took a traditional bath, which meant I sat on a little chair and used a shower-head to wash up, then once clean I relaxed in a hot bath.

Seeing as it was my 1st meal, my new family pulled out all the stops. Raw line fish, raw abalone and this weird creature that lives in a shell, also raw obviously. For someone who picks raisins out of hotcross buns and olives out of salad I was an amazingly good girl. I very calmly ate everything that was put on my plate and pulled the kind of face that restaurant critics employ when sampling the house special, always followed by `ah yes, very nice` or `oh how interesting` in Japanese. Inside my head of course I was going `oh my gosh, why is that so crunchy` or `did that just move, I swear it moved`. After supper I fell onto my futon and asked myself what the hell I was thinking with this little move to Japan stunt but the next night`s food was very tasty and throughout the week I was delighted to discover just what a skilled chief my substitute mom really is. She is also very good at coming to my rescue when I run into the kitchen shouting `big` in Japanese and making the universal hand as a spider running up your arm sign. Twice she had to vacuum up huge, super fast spiders and while this may not be all that Buddhist of her I was not going to question her religion as she saves my scardy cat ass.

My home-stay house

I am now living in my new apartment and will tell you all about my awesome town in the next post. I am loving it in Hiji and will be spending the next few days at an English camp dancing and chatting and most likely blowing the old Vuvuzela more than once or twice. Miss you all as always.

Monday, August 2, 2010

To Tokyo!!!!



My first experience in Tokyo was that of a particularly valuable sheep. From the moment my little hooves touched down in Narita airport, a score of smiling, waving JET-helpers directed me from person to person as fireman used to do with buckets of water back in the day. It is as if little Bo-Peep had informed the folks in charge of JET that a particularly useless bunch of sheep were on their way and that if they kept smiling this might just be enough to not start us into a wide scale panic. The Helpers were so excited that I genuinely thought I was the first person off the plane. Before we were even on the buss, one of our SA crew reinforced our noisy foreigner status by blowing her vuvuzela at full steam, much to the amusement of all the locals. Then we were off in our thankfully air conditioned buss.


 My mind, after staring at a mountain covered in grapevines for the last few years could just not accept Tokyo as a reality. As I sit here now, a week later, I still feel wholly disconnected from the memories of those three days. While I was making my way to the Keio Plaza in the company of some fine South Africans, I felt as if someone was tightly holding onto my brain, which I was to discover a while later while standing in the Sky bar on the 43rd floor is not nearly as jarring as having it dropped all together. On the last night of our little holiday before our foreign bubble burst, some of the SA guys and girls made their way to the top of the hotel. I wish with all my heart that I had the ability to tell you all what I saw out of that window but I really don`t. Try to imagine 50 electrified Cape Towns, make the buildings 15 times taller and strip away the horizon of everything other than windows, concrete and light, in every direction. While I have taken many mental pictures in my life, Tokyo broke the camera and burned that image into my mind till the day I die.



The orientation was a circus and I loved every moment of it. I loved that not one person could guess where I was from, I loved that any mention of the world cup converted the most stubborn of awkward silence into a heated debate, I loved my roommates, I love Mike and Shelly for allowing me to latch onto them like a lost puppy while they expertly navigated the train stations to get us to Akihabara, electric city and I loved that we were able to buy Shelly a laptop by stringing the Japanese words box, new, personal computer, now, carry, us in no particular order with no particular grammar. I do not mean to alarm you but Japanese people speak Japanese, even in tourist friendly Tokyo it is rare for someone to help you in English and this fact became even more apparent when I landed in Oita. I will however save that train of thought for my next post.

When in doubt, follow Mike
 I miss you all very much and hope you are all saving lots of yen so you can all see the city, I cannot even begin to do justice, for yourselves.