Monday, January 30, 2006

Wanted: Bumper Stickers

Anyone who knows me, knows I like bumper stickers of all shapes, sizes and statements. I like political ones (left only please), cute ones, feminist ones, big ones, little ones, colorful ones, silly ones, girlie ones, funny ones, serious ones, thoughtful ones, international ones, etc.! Every car I have driven has had just a few! Well, enough that even in a city the size of Portland (pop. about 1,000,000) I'm pretty sure my car was recognized around town!

But when I moved to Japan, I was hesitant to draw to much attention to my car, I wanted to check out the scene before making my move. Well, it's been 18 months. I don't know a single car in any of my school staff parking lots that have bumper stickers. There are only a handful in my apartment parking lot, and most of them belong to the other gaijin (foreigners). But it's time. I'm ready! I've started, but I need help from abroad!

Please send me bumper stickers!

Can you guess which car is mine? I'll give you a hint: it's lacking bumper stickers and it's the car parked gaijin style. I drive the stereotypically small Japanese K car. My Japanese co-workers on the other hand...drive massive cars!

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

My Secret Addiction

I listened to Madonna, Michael Jackson, Cyndi Lauper, Raffi, Marlo Thomas & Friends etc when I was growing up. But I also had a secret music love affair. And I still do! When I was a small child I saw a movie, a musical to be specific. And I’ve never been able to get the music out of my head. I used to listen to the tape endlessly as a small child. I still have the tape, but it’s warped and is barely recognizable. Now I own the CD and carry a copy everywhere I travel. I listen to this CD when I need to think, to reflect, and mostly when I'm in transit. I like to listen to it in the car, on planes, on trains and especially on Indian buses. When I’m in motion, I’m often taking a moment to check-in with myself.
    • Where am I? Where am I going? Where did I just leave?
    • How does this fit into the big picture?
    • Is there a plan?
    • Am I writing my own plan or following a plan that’s already been set out for me?
    • Where should I go next?
    • What else do I want to do in my life?
    • Where do I want to be in 5 years, 10 years, or 25 years?
I love the entire album, but this song has always been one of my favorites! Yes, I’m a big dork and most people make fun of me when they hear about my love affair with this CD. And now I’m exposing myself to everyone. So if you know who sings it and what movie it’s from, please leave it in the comments!


God, Oh merciful father
I’m wrapped in a robe of light
Clothed in your glory
That spreads its wings over my soul
May I be worthy
Amen

There is not a morning I begin without a thousand questions running through my mind.
That I don’t try to find the reason and the logic in the world that god designed.
The reason why, a bird was given wings?
If not to fly, and praise the sky with every song it sings.
What’s right or wrong?
Where I belong?Within the scheme of things

And why have eyes that see and arms that reach unless your meant to know there is something more?
If not to hunger for the meaning of it all, than tell me what a soul is for?
Why have the wings unless you’re meant to fly?
And tell me please, why have a mind if not to question why?

And tell me where, where is it written what it is I’m meant to be?
That I can dare to have the chance to pick the fruit of every tree
Or have my share of every sweet imagined possibility
Just tell me where
Tell me where

If I were only meant to tend the nest than why does my imagine sail?
Across the mountains and the seas, beyond the make believe of any fairy tale
Why have the thirst, if not to drink the wine?
And what a waste to have a taste of things that can’t be mine

And tell me where, where is it written what is I’m meant to be?
That I can dare to find the meanings in the mornings that I see
Or have my share of every sweet imagined possibility
Just tell me where
Where is it written?
Tell me where

Or if it’s written
Anywhere

Saturday, January 21, 2006

Day #5 at Seaside Valley

Another spectacular day at Seaside! The three sistas were back together again--strappin' on our boards and working the slopes! We haven't had any new snow this week, so the runs were well groomed but we managed a full day 8:30-4:00! Nice work Sistas!

And we got some quality time with our Koshi Boys. Hey, I have an idea, let's do it again tomorrow! Yeah! Apparently we have some work to do on our carving turns!

Back to the slopes in Bertha, the "cool" red beetle!

Friday, January 20, 2006

Looking For Comedy in the Muslim World

NPR's radio interview show "Fresh Air" hosted by Terry Gross*, interviewed Albert Brooks, the director, writer and star of the new movie Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World, opening today in the USA and Canada.

I love movies about crossing cultures! But hearing the title of this movie made me cringe. I have to say I'm really tired of the way the media, be it the news, movies, radio or the internet portray and talk about "The Muslim World." It's as if we are talking about another planet in a different dimension. "The Muslim World"--they must be aliens from a far off galaxy, a people we don't understand, a species different from our own. And while we may treat them like that, we don't need to perpetuate that idea and myth. Do we talk about "the Asian World," "The European World," or even "The African World?" I know we don't refer to "The North American World." Why then must we say "The Muslim World." Maybe I'm getting stuck on lexus, but as a cultural anthropologist and an English teacher, I know language influences culture, perceptions, stereotypes, etc. So, until we change how we talk about people, we will never change our ideas of them!

It seems obvious that we say it because we have no idea what lies beyond our own little box, wherever that is and whatever it might be. We don't want to think that Muslims are a part of our world, so we place them in a world of their own. We have no idea what life is like in predominately Muslim countries and what we hear about on the media doesn't sound pleasant.
But come on people, are we really so blind to believe all the shit we hear and see. How can we put up with the way an entire faith is represented? And I don't even want comments about the fundamentalists, every religion has them. I have even got some in my family! So don't make that argument!

Getting back to the movie, I am eager to see it, but I'm not sure if I'll be able to sit through it without making endless judgments. I'm already upset by the title for so many reasons. And while I think the Director does have good intentions, I'm not sure if I'll agree with what he thinks is culturally sensitive and what he thinks is culturally appropriate comedy. There is a fine line when you are making fun of other cultures in the name of comedy. Some people do it well and others suck at it! I'm not sure where this movie will fall...I'm curious!

Okay, back to the title. Another reason it annoys me is because the movie takes place in India and Pakistan. Immediately when I heard the title, I thought "Oh it could be interesting if they are researching comedy in Iran, Iraq, Saudi, UAE, Qatar, Egypt, etc." So, that is where my own stereotypes of "Muslim world" come into play. I automatically assumed it was about the Middle East. But it's not at all. India probably has the 2nd largest Muslim population in the world. And Pakistan is predominately Muslim. But India is also made up of Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Christians, and Jains. And from listening to the interview with Albert Brooks, it sounds like he interacts with people from all these different backgrounds. So, why call it "looking for comedy in the Muslim World." He isn't interacting with people from just one faith. He is interacting with people from many faith backgrounds. He is interacting with people from India and Pakistan, the Indian subcontinent, Hindi, Urdu and Arabic speaking people. There are so many ways of classifying people, why "The Muslim World?" Also, if you say "The Muslim World," and you are only talking about Muslims in India and Pakistan, it's excluding a HUGE Muslim population! Indonesia has the largest Muslim population in the world! Why not include them? Not to mention the significant Muslim populations in the Middle Easy, Europe, Africa, and America. So, it's not really looking for comedy in "The Muslim World" at all, is it? It's looking for comedy in Northern India and Pakistan, with Indian & Pakistani Muslims. And I bet what they think is funny is VERY different from Indonesian Muslims, Saudi Muslims, Egyptian Muslims or New York Muslims!

Comedy is fluid. What one culture finds funny, another doesn't. What one generation finds funny, another finds offensive. What women find funny, goes right over men's heads. What men often find funny, pisses off women. Comedy changes constantly and is very cultural and very individual. I think what the Director and the movie are trying to do is enlighten the audience of this point and also broach a subject, specifically, interacting with Muslims, that Americans seems so scared of. Lighten up everyone! When it comes right down to it, we all like to laugh. We all like to be entertained. We all like to enjoy ourselves. We like to be with family and friends.

But will I think this movie is entertaining? And given the title and all the associations it has, will I be able to see past it? I'm not sure! But I do want to see it!

All you folks over there in that far off strange land I like to call "the North American World," send me your reviews. And when it comes out on DVD...someone, please send me a copy!

* And while I'm on my soap box, I think Terry Gross is extremely annoying. I'm not saying I could do better at interviewing people but I don't think she is anything special. My issues: she likes to hear herself talk, she asks rhetorical questions, and she doesn't listen to her guests. I'm constantly talking back to her when I listen to the radio show. But I put up with it every morning because I like the people she interviews! And she does get me going.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

www.myheritage.com

Upload your photo (or anyone else's) and find out what famous people you look like! Well, supposedly. I'm not sure this technology is all that scientific and it is a little reminiscent of the science of determining race based on facial measurements (what's that called again?...yah, yah, yah, I was an anthro major). Although my face seems to be an interesting blend of Latin American, Asian, and European.


My results in order of likeness: Kate Winslet, Irene Cara (Flashdance), Ninet Tayeb, Benazir Bhutto (first female PM in Pakistan), Gwyneth Paltrow, Aung San Suu Kyi (Burmese Nobel Peace Prize Winner), Annette Bening, Winona Ryder, Naomi Watts, and Tom Hanks.

What do you think?? Do I resemble any of these people?




I had to do my family too...

My dad's results: Francisco Varela, Linus Torralds, Romain Rolland, Jose Sarmago, Jan Peter Balkenende, Hritwik Roshan, Mel Gibson, Monica Seles, Golda Meir

My mom's results (don't hate me, we might need to try a different photo): Anastasia Myskina, Alain Delon, John Belushi, George H.W. Bush, Francis Ford Coppola, Helmut Newton, Francisco Franco, Herbert Marcuse, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Dag Hammarskjold

My sister's results: Paul Allen, Nicole Kidman, Rock Hudson, Jennifer Aniston, Carl Sagan, Kirsten Dunst, Martina Hingis, Annette Bening, Elton John, Zayed Khan

Monday, January 16, 2006

Winter Vacation Diary Entry

This last week, I have been grading a lot of winter vacation English diaries and essays. 99% of them are about going shopping, watching movies, the cold weather, eating Christmas cake, and going to school on their days off for sports practice. Nothing unusual and nothing all that interesting. Every student writes about the same stuff!

However, I got one diary entry that was a little different! In the 18 months I’ve lived in Japan, I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve talked to my students, friends or acquaintances about WWII. I know it’s not a fun topic of conversation but it is a really significant one. And honestly, I’m surprised it doesn’t come up more often! I know anger and resentment exists, but it isn’t publicly displayed. Feelings aside, it just isn’t discussed. So, I was pleasantly surprised to read this student’s diary entry. Not only did the student decide to bring up a topic that is usually left in the closet, he did it in English! Here is the entry, before my corrections!

I visied my rerative to listen a story about World War II. It’s social
studies homework. He was in Japanese navy from 1943 to 1945. When he
was 16 years old, he volunteered for navy.

It didn’t volunteer, everybody say “He is a fool, he is strange, he is the enemy of
Japan.” He must volunteered. He had a very strict training in the
navy, but he didn’t go to a battlefield.

War is finished before start his attack. He came back to Toyama. But Toyama has the U.S. terrible bombing. He came home somehow his family were lived. They
welcomed him very much!

He said to the end, “We must guard the country, but we mustn’t make war.”

He is 77 years old already too.

The men who has experienced war are decreasing now.


I wish I could go and talk to the grandparents in this area and listen to their stories. I love listening to my own grandparent’s stories! There is so much to be learned from them. We all need to take the time to listen! It’s one of the things I miss most about being away from the grandparents I have left.

Sunday, January 15, 2006

Running Into People

Today has been a strange day, not because I did anything that unusual or exciting, but becuase I kept running into people! It was a weird day, but a great one at that!

1) Linea and I went to coffee with a woman who works at the Kurobe gym. She took us to a small back street coffee shop/cafe on the far side of Uozu, near the ferris wheel, where a former lifeguard at our pool now works. We had no idea where we were going when we started out in the morning, but were pleasantly surprised to find this cute new hang out. I couldn't stay long because I was meeting two friends for lunch, coincidently also in Uozu. I joked with Linea that it would be really funny if I ended up back at the same place for lunch. I said my good-byes and met my friends in a shopping mall parking lot, jumped in their car and low and behold...drove back to the same cafe!! As I walked up the steps and say Linea and Yuki in the window we all started laughing. I mean, really, it was a 40 minute drive from our apartments. We both got invited to the same place at the same time by different friends! Weird!

2) On my drive back to Nyuzen, I got a phone call from a girl I met at our monthly International dinners. She called to invite me to her house for dinner, TONIGHT...NOW! Invitations like that don't come often, so I told I would be right over. I walked in the door, greeted the family and when I opened the door to the living room...who was standing there? Another ALT, Kyle, from 3 towns over (other side of the Uozu ferris wheel, 45 minutes away). I was so surprised and shocked to see him. I had no idea he would be there. We both looked at each other a little confused and were taken by surprise at the situation. We enjoyed several hours of food and conversation before I finally took him to the train station at 9:30! The international community is small, but it was odd to see him in my town without knowing before hand that I would be running into him, it was weird!

3) I got back to my apartment about 10pm, Linea and I decided to go for a late night walk considering the March like weather. This is the FIRST time in 18 months we have ever gone for a walk together, let alone at 10pm. As we are leaving our building a car is pulling in, who is it? It's Johnny P, of course! So he parks his car, and the Nyuzen crew enjoyed an evening stroll together....it was a beautiful brisk January night! Considering we all live in the same apartment building, it's not weird to run into each other. But I have gone weeks without seeing either of them because our schedules are so different! So, really, it was pretty unusual!! As we walked we talked about our days like a family sitting down to dinner together. It was super cute! I like my family away from family!

August 2005

India: The Journey
Part II

It’s mid-November (and now mid-December, and now mid-January), and I’m finally sitting down to write about my trip to India in August. I’m not surprised it’s taken me this long, but I’m a little frustrated that I haven’t done it sooner. India is one of those places that can be hard to describe and put into words. And when I look back on the trip, as great as it was, it was exhausting! The last thing I wanted to do when I got back was relive it right away. But even though it was exhausting, it was very successful and went smoothly. At least from my perspective it did. Ask the others that went with me, maybe they have a different story!

So back to the story! I think we had just arrived in Madurai at 6am via overnight train from Chennai……..

We were greeted with jasmine flower garlands. Jasmine is the scent I associate with South India. Jasmine garlands dangle from women’s braids. Many women buy fresh jasmine every morning and wear it on a daily basis as a natural perfume. Through the heat, dust, and bus exhaust, the scent of jasmine cuts through it all and is welcome relief. We were also greeted with several welcome speeches and handmade cards for every teacher. We all stood there in a daze, smelling jasmine and listening to welcome speeches after getting off the overnight train and entering an India we only still had expectations for.

I can’t imagine what the others were thinking at this point. But I knew we had an extremely long, exhausting and overwhelming day ahead of us. But I was so happy to be home, to be with the people I love so much, that I didn’t care what was happening next. That first day I was reunited with all my friends from the SEED Center, my good friend Prof. Premila Paul and my wonderful host family. After showers at the hotel, my host mom served us ALL a wonderful breakfast of my favorite foods: tapioca/lentils with sugar, iddiyapum with coconut milk, and idlis with sambar. I swear she is the best cook in India!!

After eating our first home-cooked meal we were escorted to the American College campus where we had been invited to be the inaugural speakers for an event being sponsored by the English Department. So before we knew it, we had stepped off the train, been greeted by 20 kids from a slum, eaten breakfast at the home of a middle-class family and were seated in front of several hundred English Department B.A./ M.A. students at an elite college. In less than 6 hours we had encountered a wide spectrum of India’s diversity.

We managed to pull off the inauguration talk and even included a game of janken (rock, paper, scissors)! After the talk we were feed a meal of mutton biriyani on a banana leaf and headed back to the hotel for some r & r before our appointment at the slum school later that evening! Later that night, at the SEED Center, we were again given royal treatment. As soon as we stepped out of the rickshaw students were waiting to remove the evil eye with a special ceremony and chili water. Then they gave us a tour of the center explaining all their club groups and each room’s function. Later they performed songs and dances for us and gave us delicious South Indian tea. It’s hard to compete with a room of Indian children. They can always out perform! But we gave an introduction that involved a beach ball, facemasks, and some singing! And at the end of the night we were all adorned with a new type of garland….nametags!

That night we left exhausted but I left smiling. I left ecstatic that I had managed to get back to India and bring 3 rickshaws full of teachers to meet the SEED students. It was a great day!

The next two weeks were similar to the first day. We visited an engineering college and each gave 4 lectures on a variety of topics including: interview skills, disaster preparation, working and living abroad, and Japanese culture. We visited an elementary school and played games, sang songs and introduced the students to Japanese culture. We visited the local temple, markets and restaurants. And every night we visited the SEED center.

The SEED center is located in a slum of Madurai called Karambali. It borders a wealthy neighborhood of huge houses and sits behind the Gandhi museum and next to the law college. But the SEED students live in 1-2 room concrete block like houses with corrugated metal roofs, one right next to the other. They don’t have indoor plumbing. They have to go and collect water from a central pump. During droughts, the water may only come for a few hours every few days. There are showers constructed over the sewers on the streets. And every morning and evening everyone in the slum walks to a nearby field to use the public outdoor toilet. They live on government land. Nobody owns land or their own house. The government could decide to reclaim it at any time. Most houses have a TV and some electricity, but not all. And most people don’t have a telephone. Many children in this neighborhood have to leave school at a young age and start working to support their families. Girls, especially, are made to leave school at a young age and get married. But with the help of programs like SEED, they can continue their education and stay in school a few more years!

The SEED students have endless reserves of energy! Every night we were there we lasted about 2 –3 hours, but they could have gone all night! But in 2-3 hours we managed to do a lot with the students. We sang lots of songs, danced, played games and made lots of noise. We did other more learning focused activities like country lessons, a sushi making night, a camera workshop for the older kids, and we wrote letters to Japanese students.

But probably the best thing we did with the students was spend a day in the mountain town of Kodaikanal with them! Over the course of the year leading up to our trip, we tried to raise a little money to bring with us. We wanted to do something with the kids they don’t normally have access to. So, we hired 9 vans and piled 150+ kids, volunteers, and teachers in the vans and headed up to the mountains. The van ride itself was an experience. We sang songs, played games and even danced in the vans. But as soon as the mountain roads started it got quieter…the kids starting feeling the effects of motion sickness. And we had just stopped for lunch. It was a bad combo, and I think almost every kid stuck his or her head out the van at one point or another. But it didn’t dampen their spirits or their appetites. When we stopped for lunch, several kids got out of the van, puked on the side of the road, and then sat down with their lunch and started eating rice with spicy sambar! Crazy!!

We visited all the famous sites in Kodai: the waterfalls, pillar rock, coaker’s walk, and even took boat rides on the lake. For many kids it was their first time in a van, first time to the mountains and first time in a boat or on a lake. It was fun to see their wide eyes, their smiles and to be able to share in the experience of someplace new with them! It was also fun to get out of the SEED center and be able to interact with them in a very informal, relaxed setting! The college girls have gotten so much better at English and have also gotten much braver! We had a great time talking about all sorts of things, but mostly about John and their huge crush on him!

At the end of the day, we waved good-bye to all the vans, and wished them a safe trip back down the mountain! At this point, we had been in India about a week, and had been going, going, going, going for 5 days! That may not sound that exhausting, but add international travel, new food, extreme heat, hundreds of energetic kids and a new culture in a 3rd world and we were on the verge of burn out already!!! Originally, we had planned to visit a school in Kodai for two days and do English activities with them. But it was obvious we just couldn’t do anymore! So we cancelled that school visit and instead we just enjoyed the free time, cool air, good food and time to reflect!

We ate Tibetan food, Italian food, chocolate, fresh fruit, had a few beers, went shopping, and slept! The school we were supposed to visit had booked our hotel. We kept the reservation the first night….but after sleeping in dirty rooms, listening the wind blow through the hallway all night, and experiencing multiple power cuts, and being cold on top of that, we left as soon as we could in the morning and moved to a clean, bright, resort hotel. Each room had a garden terrace and there was grassy lawn where we laid out a blanket and enjoyed an afternoon nap in the mountain sun! It was a NEEDED change. When I was traveling in India before, I stayed at plenty of guesthouses with little to no amenities except the bed and a faucet. And if I was backpacking again, I might do the same…but not on my vacation! There was NOTHING relaxing about the first hotel!

In Kodai we said good-bye to Angela & Patty. They were headed to Pune, near Bombay, where Angela studied abroad in college. The rest of us returned back down the mountain for another 4 days in Madurai with the SEED kids. We continued our evening activities with them and on Saturday we had a farewell DAY! It wasn’t just a quick little farewell because that’s not the Indian way. It was a full day affair. We got there at 8:30am to get dressed! The female teachers were given and dressed in saris, costume jewelry and got our nails painted. The male teachers were given and dressed in dhotis and new shirts. And after the finishing touches had been applied…we were shipped to the local government slum school, via our rickshaw driver, Ganesh, for a morning of dancing, singing, speeches, and presentations!

We were all seated in a line in the front with the best view, like we were royalty. It was all a bit awkward and uncomfortable, but it’s also the Indian way. We were told we should prepare something for the morning, but in true Indian fashion, we also weren’t sure if we should plan a 10-minute activity, or three hours! Luckily, we were only given about 30 minutes to play a few games. With hundreds of kids sitting on a dirt field, huddled in the shade of one tree at 11am under the hot sun, we decided to pull out the beach ball self-introduction game and play a few rounds of janken again. Most of the SEED kids go to this slum school, so they were able to help all the other students catch on quickly. Leaving the school was absolute CHAOS!!! Kids were everywhere, trying to talk to us, touch us, get our signature, take pictures with us, etc. It was absolutely overwhelming. I don’t envy superstars that have to put with those kinds of crowds on a regular basis.

Back at the SEED Center we were adorned with henna before we were served lunch that had been made by all the kids and their families. I’m not exactly sure how they coordinated it, but they had asked us what our favorite foods were the day before and low and behold, all that food was at the good-bye party! All the kids had brought their lunch with them, but we were each assigned a student who served us our food, returned with more of anything we requested, and sometimes even feed us with their own hands! After lunch was finished and cleaned up, the real good-bye ceremony started. Each grade (or standard as they say) presented us with a dance or song and tied friendship bracelets on each one of us. Our wrists were covered by the end of the ceremony and our cheeks hurt from smiling endlessly for hours! The ceremony continued with more singing and dancing interspersed with a thank you speech written for each one of us! At the end we were asked to sing and dance, which we did without hesitation! Finally, we sang a song that I introduced (but did not write) to them several years ago. It’s called “Say When.” It was a song I used to sing at camp and sang to them as a good-bye before. They made me sing it again! It was painful and I was sobbing through most of it! Saying good-bye to people who are always excited and happy to see you when you walk in the door and who give endlessly, is not easy, emotionally and physically! It’s impossible to conceive of never seeing these kids again, especially for me! Every time I leave the SEED Center I know I have to come back. But just getting out the door with all the handshakes, high fives, hugs, last minute games of janken or thumb war and promises to come back, is a never-ending process!

Luckily, the good-byes were extended over the next day. Some of the teachers left that night, so after saying good-bye at the SEED Center we packed up and shipped everyone to a fancy hotel across from the train station. We invited all the college students and volunteers from SEED to join us for a buffet dinner. We were each assigned to several students. For almost all the students and volunteers it was their first time at a restaurant that set forks, knives and spoons on the table. It was their first time using a cloth napkin. It was their first time at a buffet. And it was their first time eating North Indian or Continental food. Before letting them loose we gave them a lesson at the table about utensils, real glass glasses, napkin placement, and how to eat the food they would serve themselves. We encouraged them to try using a fork and knife, but I never use a fork and knife to eat Indian food, so why should they? After awhile they reverted to their hands again, but they all gave it a valiant effort! The dessert table was their favorite! And it wasn’t long before the waiters were running to the kitchen to restock it with more sweets and a lot more ice cream!

When we were first presented with this idea of taking students out to a fancy hotel and teaching them how to eat at a nice hotel, it sounded very colonial to me—“teach the savage how to eat like the white man.” But the Director gave a valid point, it’s part of their education to know about other cultural practices. The meal would have been a small fortune for these kids (we paid of course), about $5 each. But in the US we spend more on that if we go to McDonald’s. So, we also gave a lesson about the differences in cost of living! But we still didn’t tell them how much it was. It would have seemed wasteful to spend so much money on a meal, very extravagant indeed! But in our Japan/US/Canada world, we spend the same amount if we go out with friends on the weekend! Regardless of the financial morality of taking them out to a fancy meal, it was a lot of fun and a festive ending to our trip. They all came to the train station with us and we saw most of the teachers off to Kerala on an overnight train! It was another sad good-bye, tears, hugs, handholding and last minute cards and gifts!

The next day I spent with my host family eating, talking, napping under the fan, and more eating (of course)! They took Owen & I took the train station, bought us parcels of food for our two day journey to Pune and we said our last good-byes. But the SEED kids and volunteers also came. My family has never understood my relationship with SEED. They are middle-upper in the caste system. They didn’t like it when I was a student studying about the untouchables and they have never been supportive of it. It was a little awkward having the two extremes of the caste system standing around me, not interacting AT ALL, but trying to say good-bye! I was still standing on the platform as the train started pulling away. It was like a scene out of a movie. I jumped on the train, stood in the open door and hung out the train as I waved good-bye to 20+ kids, volunteers and my family! Matt was standing at the back of the crowd, his blonde head sticking out amongst the sea of black. I saw him smirk. It was a bit dramatic, I must admit!

Owen and I settled into our overnight 12 hour train to Bangalore. We arrived at 5am, it was cool and the station was pretty quiet! And that’s where Part 2 of our summer journey to India concludes! More of the journey later!!
And with any luck, I"ll republish Part I in the near future as well!





Monday, January 09, 2006

Seaside Snowboarding





We love snowboarding!!

Today was a PERFECT day at Seaside--look closely and you can see the ocean in the background! The park was crowded, but the back lifts and slopes were still pretty quiet. And the woods trail was ideal!! We even ate lunch outside in the sun! It was fantastic! And we met up with our favorite Kyoshi Bar boarder boys. Fun was had by all. Next Saturday anyone??






Thursday, January 05, 2006

私 の 正月

New Year's is one of the most important holidays in Japan! So instead of traveling to distant warmer lands, or heading to the mountains for snow, I decided to spend this New Year's with my adopted Japanese family--who graciously invited me! Thank you, it was so much fun!!

The first day after leaving the cold dark depths of Toyama was the most beautiful day I've seen in months! The sun was bright, the sky was crystal clear! Natsuki and I headed to Kamakura, the home of one of the biggest buddhas in Japan! We visited The Buddha, and even got to tour inside the statue, created about 800 years ago! We also toured a nearby temple over looking the Kamakura bay. And ate delicious soba.

New Year's celebrations revolve around FOOD! We ate and ate and ate! New Year's Eve lunch, I cooked burritos/quesadillas for the family. They were a hit. Last time I visited them I made tacos. So next time, I promise to cook a non-Mexican dish! Maybe Thai?

New Year's food is all symbolic! There is food to bring you wealth, health, smarts, long life, fertility, etc. I avoided the fish eggs, but otherwise it was all great!

Starting with dinner on New Year's Eve, we drank at every meal for 24 hours! None of us were ever really drunk, well, not really! But we sure did enjoy our champagne, wine, beer, sake, godiva liqueur, kahlua, etc! At one point we just stopped pouring drinks and just started taking swigs from the bottle! Mai...you are CRAZY!!!

After drinking most of the evening and ringing in the new year with the TV comedians, we all passed out and most of us slept late, getting up to another meal beautifully laid out on the table with more sake! Next to each plate was a chopstick holder with each of our names written in kanji. Being that I'm Scandahoovian, my name doesn't translate to kanji very well! But luckily, I was staying in a family with kanji experts! So, this is "Kirsten" in kanji. They told me the direct translation, but after all the sake, I forgot!

After stuffing ourselves and finishing off the sake and some beer, we geared up to visit the temple. Some people visit their temple starting at 12midnight. But you can go anytime on New Year's Day to pray and get good luck charms for the upcoming year! We took a train to a nearby temple and it was packed. I never saw the end of the line, we (the girls) decided to observe instead of participate. We looked at some smaller shrines, threw some coins, rang the bell and said our prayers. And I was presented with a New Year charm, I requested pink! I'm not a pink kinda girl. But it's supposed to bring me something great this year! (Now is the chance!)

The girls decided to walk home while dad stood in the shrine line. We drank a hot sake milky drink on the walk home. It was delicious! But I think it was just sake flavored, non-alcoholic!

To continue celebrating the New Year we headed to karaoke and sang to our hearts content while sipping more wine and other fruity alcoholic beverages! yum! Natsuki and I did a few great duets! And Mai and I are going to enter a bi-lingual karaoke contest one of these days!

In addition to great food, temples and family bonding at the karaoke parlor...there are endless New Year's decorations to be seen and admired! This is one of the decorations in their home. It's actually the back side of a paddle used in an anciet traditional Japanese game that's like badminton.

Baffy, the famous lab! Her photo appears in a 2006 Calendar of super cute labs in Japan! She is a cutie. But a real daddy's girl. She loves to curl up on her dad and fall asleep! It's the cutest! I tried to teach her some English, but she wasn't interested in becoming bilingual at this point in her life!

Tokyo Disneyland was next on the agenda. I have been to California's Disneyland twice as an elementary school student, but this was my first time to experience Disneyland Japan style. But really, the only thing Japanese about it, was Minnie and Mickey dressed up in kimono for New Year's. And there was some Japanese food. And all the gift shops were geared to the omiyage industry. And the all the guests were decked out in crazy Disney gear. So, it does have a different flavor and feel. But it was a little like stepping into America. English signs were EVERYWHERE! And a lot of the announcements were in English, some weren't even translated. It was my first time on a lot of the big kid rides!

Ayaka, Natsuki, Mai and I left the house before 7am, arrived before the gates opened at 8am. And left after the electric parade and fireworks just minutes before closing at 10pm. We arrived back home a little after 11pm. It was a LONG DAY! But so much fun. Luckily, Mai is a Disney expert and got us into everything! We never waited more than 30 minutes and that was during a holiday! Next time we are going to Disney Sea!! Apparently, you can drink there! ha ha ha!!

I have been hosted by the Chimura family several times now! It's time for the Chiba-ken urban dwellers to make their way to Toyama for a weekend of inaka craziness! I promise to make it a weekend you won't soon forget. There will be hotaruika, mochi, wakame, onsens, izikayas, karaoke...the possibilities are really endless!

But what I learned over the course of the holiday was, even a quiet calm suburban family has it's crazy moments! Thanks for including me!

Back to Toyama--the cold, the snow, the inaka craziness! I had a great vacation. I enjoyed my first Japanese New Year's with the crazy Chimura family. I'm looking forward to my next visit! Thank you!!