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March 16, 2011
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A report
from November to Present (March)
Last moth was very exciting my host family took me to Kyoto. I saw
famous temples and shrines such as Kinkaku-ji and Kiyomizu-dera.
Kinkaku-ji is probably the most famous temple because it is the only
golden temple in Japan. The temples and shrines I have seen so far have
only been made of interlocking blocks of wood or stone. Those temples have
withstood earthquakes some over centuries. While in Kyoto I had some of
Kyoto’s famous omuriusu (fried rice with an omelet on top) it was
delicious. My Japanese is progressing at a steady rate due to the Japanese
classes that I am taking. However it is very hard to remember all of the
new words I am supposed to learn. I am of the belief now that the less
English your host families speak the better. All the other kids that have
had host families that don’t speak any English are much better at
Japanese. Japanese people, when I ask them to repeat themselves they
automatically assume that I cant understand them. When in reality they are
just speaking too fast. One thing that has surprised me is that I have yet
to be home sick and I have never felt better (minus the freezing weather
and lack of winter clothing). Winter is beautiful over here. There is
almost six inches of snow already! I also recently had my first encounter
with hail oh boy was that fun! Hail is small and very painful it was
almost a 10 minute run home while being pelted by freezing chunks of ice.
It really feels like Christmas for once its cold and beautiful. My host
family’s “Christmas Tree” is about 1 foot tall and is fake but on TV there
are hundreds of commercials about Christmas and gift giving the
differences are kind of funny. There is one problem however my room never
seems to warm up and the heater I have is small and weak. I don’t like
freezing at night. For the past week I have woken up too see my own breath
hovering in front of me like a small cloud. In the morning I never want to
get out be because its just so warm compared to the morning air. It has
gotten so cold I wont wear contact lenses because they will freeze my
eyes. The cold is a double edged sword of fun and pain. Well Christmas is
around the corner now there are more Christmas commercials on TV and
winter break is coming up. The weekend before winter break lets out my 3rd
host family “borrows” me for a weekend and takes me to Kobe, near Osaka to
see an illumination. The illumination was beautiful and I got to me my 3rd
host family as well. There was a problem however my school lets out on the
day before Christmas and on Christmas day there is a rotary orientation so
there goes some fun there but I was able to skype with my parents and open
presents so the Christmas spirit was their. After the orientation and
Christmas my entire family starts preparing for New Years Day which is
huge in Japan it time to visit family and have fun. Well I was thinking
like and American and stayed up to see the new year on new years eve.
After about 5 hours of sleep my host family wakes me up and says get ready
were going to visit family! So I spend the day with my host family’s
family. But that was only one half of the family that I saw the next day I
visited the other half. Now I myself like my family they can be really
funny at times but spend the day with another persons entire family was
kind of weird. Other than visiting family there are feasts it is usually
eaten between lunch and dinner and I can go on for over an hour. The food
was delicious and some traditional food you can only eat at New Years. The
rest of winter break was uneventful. It was spent studying and having fun.
January was fun that month I learned to Ski and Snowboard . So my host
family takes me on a trip to the mountains, being Japan it was a one day
trip. On the mountain there was literally meters more snow than then city
it really surprised me how much more snow there could be! So I rented a
snowboard and figured out how to actually more with it, I went down the
bunny sloop. After falling literally hundreds of times I learn the basics
of snowboarding. Later I find out that the Rotary president of my club is
taking me skiing next weekend. This time there was an instructor…who only
spoke Japanese. So while improving my Japanese I also learned how to ski.
Two birds with one stone. After learning how to ski and how to snowboard,
I believe that skating and skiing are similar. While surfing and
snowboarding are similar. Also during January I joined the Kendo club at
my school. Kendo is the Japanese are of sword play. Kendo unlike
traditional sword fighting like fencing has a very different set of
stances and set attacks. In Kendo your feet almost never leave the ground
so you must learn to more quickly. I was quickly accepted into “the
group” at the kendo-bu (Kendo club) partially all the guys that practice
Kendo are all very different which makes for interesting conversation.
What’s really surprising is that in my Kendo club the girls outnumber they
guys at least 2 to 1. After join the Kendo club I seemed to be accepted
more at school which was good. February was a really sad month all the
exchange student that kept us company left we had three good by parties
each for a different group of exchange students. Of the 14 exchange
students we had here there are now 5 left. But within all the sadness of
their departure there is an upside, I am now a Sempai. Sempai translates
to something like a mentor a friend and a teacher. I also understand my
science and history classes. In Science were balancing chemical equations,
which I find a fun challenge. The fact that I understood the class shocked
everyone in my class it was pretty funny watching the expressions on their
faces. My history class is not a history class, it a memorize dates and
wars class. Its really easy to follow but the teacher doesn’t explain
anything he just hands out pre typed notes and reads them to the class,
this surprised me. With all the free time in class that I have, I learned
how to study for hours on end. That skill will no doubt help me in
college. This month my rotary club gave me a yukata which is a traditional
Japanese informal summer attire. Even though I have had it for a week now
I still don’t know how to wear it, its very confusing. This week one an
earthquake of an 8.8 magnitude struck Japan lucky I was not on the west
coast therefore avoiding the earthquake and the following tsunamis. I did
feel the earthquake though it wasn’t as big as it was on the west coast it
still surprised me. For those of you wonder what an earth quake feels
like, it felt like some one was trying to jerk a rug out from under my
feet. I am glad this disaster did not strike Kanazawa.
My Emotions over the past months
Form December to February I was feeling really bad. I was focusing on
how unfair things were to me. For example: my school, friends, and just
life in general. My School is very academic in my prefecture it is the 3rd
highest school. Because it is the third highest school everyone spends
their time studying thus I had a lack of friends who would do anything
with me. So at school for the most part I am ignored. Add that to feeling
inadequate compared to the other exchange students who had lots of friends
and all these fun stories about school. When ever I tried relaxing around
the other exchange students I was called immature. When I wasn’t relaxed I
was “a wet blanket”(someone who‘s not fun to be around). It seemed like
the other exchange students didn’t care about my feelings or my problems
only themselves. Most of the time I would get angry over little things,
like people on the bus. I started hiding my emotions because no one want
to see someone not having fun especially not on exchange. So as the days
grew worse, and my moral plummeted nothing changed. It just kept getting
worse. Because of my bad decision to hide my feelings the Rotarians and my
host family didn’t know how bad I felt. Every advancement I made was
overshadowed by doubt and foolishness on my own part. Every day was darker
than the last in my mind I dreaded doing anything with anyone and I had no
idea how to fix it. So as I reread the rotary guide book I found out I was
having a bad case of some culture shock. Knowing that I quickly worked
through my problems. I made my problems mountains when in reality they
were mole hills. Then I thought of this nifty little quote to sum it all
up “When knowledge is given it is not learned but when knowledge is
learned what you earn is wisdom“. I know it sounds kind of cheesy but it
summed up all my feelings. After working through all my problems I feel
great once again.
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October 23, 2010
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I have been very busy over here on this side of the planet. My host family
has shown me lots of very interesting things, and taken me places to
participate in many events. I traveled up into Noto (the northern half of
the Ishikawa prefecture) and visited the Wajima market. At the market
there were traditional arts and craft for sale hand made obento boxes and
chopsticks and lots of fish. While there I learned that to make the
traditional obento boxes and chopstick you must first make the boxes (or
chopsticks) out of wood then paint them hundreds of times to have a nice
smooth glossy finish. I also visited Kiriko Hall. Kiriko’s are giant
lanterns ranging from 1 meter tall to 15 meters tall and can weigh up to 2
tons. Kiriko’s are used at festivals to celebrate.
I
also visited other fascinating places like a light house has remained
unchanged for hundreds of years. In
Kanazawa I visited the Ninja-dera
or Ninja temple. I must say its was like a five year-olds dream there were
hiding places everywhere traps hidden doors it was awesome. I also visited
one of the world heritage sites in the
Toyama prefecture.
The world
heritage sites are famous places where traditional houses are made. I
could not read the pamphlet to see what else was done there but that’s
what I saw and it was amazing! The only thing so far that I haven’t liked
is the no picture signs wherever anything interesting or cool is.
I also
participated in kinpaku or gold leafing and I now have a pair of partially
gilded chopsticks. I have practiced traditional Japanese crafts and skills
thanks to my host family. One such skill was rokoro or pottery it is a lot
harder than it looks. First you must make the clay workable by hitting it
for a while. Then you must wet it and put it on a spinning table. It’s
really hard to explain the rest and I don’t have any pictures because my
hands had clay on them. You must shape the clay so you have a “bulb” at
the top then you use your thumbs to make and indent. You must then widen
the indent. Most of my attempted pots and bowls collapsed on them selves
do to the spinning. I managed to make 3 bowls 1 pitcher and 2 cups. One
skill I went to try was practicing the traditional Japanese drums. I must
say it was awesome there’s no experience quite like it. I had the most fun
my hands were shaking after all the drumming I did.
I have started
language classes and my language skill seems to be coming along quite
nicely and can basically understand most Japanese except at my school. My
high school that I am attending Nisui koukou it’s the second highest
ranked high school in the Ishikawa prefecture. That makes my classes about
10 times hared the students study everyday and have no free time. Some
days I am the center of attention and some days I am ignored.
Understanding most classes is out of the question I can only understand
math some world history and calligraphy. Math is extremely hard they are
do trigonometry and pre-calculus in there heads and this is a first year
class the equivalent of freshmen! I must thank my AP European history
teacher because without him I would understand nothing in my world history
class.
Life at home here
is great I have gotten used to living a Japanese-ie lifestyle. First
question everyone asks thought how’s the food is the food ok over there
your not starving are you? The food here is better than any food in
America ever the
fast food is better you can go to a conbini (convenience store) buy food
and have a tasty lunch or snack. Yes there is rice at almost every meal of
everyday but the rice here is so much better than rice in
America. There is
only 1 food that I did not like so far and that was jellyfish its
surprised me it was crunchy and like week old Jell-O not very tasty. My
host family has done so much for me they are the best and I am so sad to
be leaving them on the thirtieth, yes in one week I will be making my
first host family change.
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One of my cups |

A traditional house at
the World Heritage site |

My Chopsticks |

RYE at the beach |
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One of the beaches I
visited |

Nisui Koukou (high
school) |

one of the bowls I made |
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August 29, 2010
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My flight schedule began at 7:00am in Miami
International Airport. I arrived at Dulles International Airport and
proceeded to run to my next flight which started loading passengers about
10 minutes after I arrived. After boarding my flight I proceeded to stay
awake for the entire 13 hour flight that was ahead of me. When I landed in
Narita Airport I was exhausted then I went through immigration and
customs. A little side fact the airport either wasn’t air conditioned or
not to the level of American air conditioning I was sweating in no time.
After checking my luggage again I made my way to the terminal. Once in the
terminal I met the other three exchange students. Lastly we boarded this
tiny airplane with wings that folded! It was a fifty minute flight to
Komatsu airport in Kanazawa. So after a long hectic flight starting on
August 20th at 7:00am ended in Komatsu airport with three other exchange
students who will be in District 2610 with me. As we went into the baggage
claim we say our families holding welcome signs. We grabbed our luggage
and ran over to say “konban wa” good evening. We all had wonderful signs
and I wasn’t expecting it. On the drive home I realized we were on the
opposite side of the road driving cars that don’t exist in America. When I
arrived home I was formally introduced to my entire family Ojisan (my host
grandfather) Obasan (my host grandmother) Mama (my host mother) Risa (my
host sister). After that I went to bed.
I awoke the next day at 4:40 believing it was the afternoon but it was
actually 4:40am. So I waited for the rest of the family to wake up. After
eating breakfast and watching TV I couldn’t understand my host family
showed me my high school Nisui senior high, and down town Kanazawa.
I was then told we had to get some food for lunch walking in the
supermarket shocked me Japanese signs and advertisements everywhere, food
and vegetables I have never seen before. While walking around asking
question I notices that I was a bit too tall because I was hitting signs
on my head as I walked. When we got home my host sister showed me how to
make Okonamiyaki which is a cabbage pancake with fish or ebi (shrimp) and
toped with a ultra thin slice of pork. After its cooked we put Japanese
barbeque sauce on, then dried fish shaving that literally look like their
dancing on the barbeque sauce, toped with mayonnaise. I tried my hardest
but I still fell asleep after this. Risa woke me up and told me to get
ready, that night they took me out to dinner and it was steak. When I got
home I watched National Treasure with Risa and explained some of the
American jokes.
The next day I toured Nisui and realized that I will have a locker and I
need at lest three shoes for school one to walk to school in, one to walk
inside the school in, and one for gym class. While walking around I see
how clean everything is at home and even in the streets there is no trash
or even dust or dirt. That afternoon I was invited to go Karaoke-ing with
my host sister and her friend Yuki. As it turns we had to go wake Yuki up
he sleeps in late. So once we got there we rented a box (you private
karaoke room) and spent four hours karaoke-ing even though it only felt
like five minutes.
The next day I became a registered alien in Japan and I signed up for
weekly Japanese lessons as well. After the lessons I realized how hard it
is going to be to learn Japanese.
This weekend my school was having a culture festival and all the students
were participating so I went to the school and was amazed at what happened
in just two days! There were stands out side and the class rooms were
changed into attractions and activities! My class was running the haunted
mansion. I tried most of the food there and most of the activities
available. It was like the games we played during our second Rotary
orientation were all the rules were different and you couldn’t speak.
So far I am having a great time finding similarities and differences in
Japan and I believe that this is going to be the best year of my life!
Thank you everyone who has made this possible! |