Saturday, July 24, 2010

Crazy Finals Week

My bad, another week with hardly a post! That's okay, it was finals week for me so very busy. And since I made an A- in the second course (and an A in the first), I'd say it was definitely worth it!! Let me update you on my fun week.

Last Tuesday my mom made me obentos for lunch because Takumi also needed one for his summer camp-type activity. Summer vacation has started for the kids here; it's only about a month long. I bet if we had a shorter break in America, even two months instead of three, there wouldn't be so many dumb Americans.

We had really good pizza for dinner. :D

Look how cute my host dad and brother are!


On Wednesday I think I just studied all day. There was the first big final exam on Thursday, then a speech and test to prepare for on Friday. I procrastinated a lot but I ended up deciding to make a poster.

On Thursday my friends and I met Bjorn at the station. He was so late that I just ate my obento in the station, haha. Then he and my friends ate at a fish restaurant near Kaihimmakuhari station. After that, we went back to Kanda and he played Wii in the SALC with some English majors. Then we went to my house, played Othello, talked to my host brother, and I made my poster. For dinner we had monja!! It was really good but I failed at making it correctly. Fortunately my host mom made it beautifully, as you can see in the picture.

Friday

I was really nervous about my speech and the second final test, but they both turned out to go a lot better than I thought.

After class, my friends and I may or may not have gone to the Aeon to buy drinks before the Sayonara party. Haha. At the party, there was sushi, pizza, salad, and everyone's host families. Mine couldn't come due to very hard work at the end of every month, so I missed them. But I got to meet other people's families again and it was great. The first-year class each gave thank-you speeches but thankfully (ha) I didn't have to, being a second-year and with my host family not there.

Here's a picture with me, Sachi, Yuumi, and Rie (2 students from Kanda University). It got a little sad to think about everyone leaving the friends at KUIS and their host families, even though I don't have to until the 28th, and then I'll see my host family again on August 1st. I don't want such nice people to be halfway across the world from me! I hope we can see each other again. Most of the students have to go home on Sunday, so they got pretty sad. At least at the party it was fun. Here's Ethan and Robert giving their speeches.





After the Sayonara party, Robert, Ethan, and I went drinking with Sachi and her host mom and 12-year-old sister. :) Her host mom is sooo funny, loves getting drunk every Friday and doing crazy things. Every Monday Sachi would tell me about her host mom's antics the previous weekend (like pulling out the freezer drawer and falling down with ice cream everywhere) and I would say, "PLEASE let me hang out with your mom!!" So finally we did. :D And her host mom was so happy to meet me that she wrote "Caroline" on the calendar for Friday, haha.

Anyway, we went to a restaurant with plenty of alcohol and had a great time. Despite my efforts I actually did not get drunk at all but I did have some really delicious drinks, like mango yogurt cocktail (see photo) and one very colorful drink that was called, "Fairy in the Forest" (to Sachi's mom's great amusement) and was labeled "Carbon Offset", haha. Who knows why. Sachi's mom's friend and her daughter came to the drinking party too, and it was neat to meet them. The girl has a test in two days and the results will affect whether or not she can get a scholarship to go to Wisconsin for a year. She seemed so smart and great at English!

One of my friends having a good time at the restaurant. ;D

We all said goodbye after the restaurant and it got pretty sad. I rode the same train as Sachi so we said goodbye there. :( I miss her mom!!! And since Sachi goes to school in Massachusetts and lives in California/Hawaii, I probably won't get to see her much. But she's friends with a guy I knew from Hoggard, so she said she might carpool with him and come visit me. :D

Sachi's shoe tan.


Saturday (today)

I woke up delightfully late, read some emails, and then got ready for a day with uncertain plans. After looking through my Japan guidebook (thanks, Emily!) I decided during breakfast to go to Tokyo Station and Nihombashi. It was a good decision, but way too hot outside.

After arriving at Nihombashi station, I first visited the Nihombashi (Japan's Bridge) bridge. :) It is very famous and measured as the center of Tokyo. It was built in the Edo period and marked the origin/convergence of all of Japan's roads. It was rebuilt in 1911 as it is now.

I saw this really neat statue beneath it.

Then I walked around the area a little bit, lingering in front of air-conditioned door entrances. Just to cool off, I went into a famous store in Nihombashi, but when I saw the clearance shoes were 15,000 yen (more than $150) I felt both bored and uncomfortable so I left, haha. I saw this huge building that was so big it couldn't fit in my camera view, no matter how I moved around. On my walk, I went into the Tokyo station, which has a huuuge, underground mall in it. I got some omiyage and a little bit of air conditioning. Then I ate lunch at a fast-food but amazing Japanese place. I got pork with rice and miso soup for a total of 290 yen! That's maybe $3 or $3.50. It was maybe even healthy.

Then I walked all the way to the Tokyo International Forum past the Tokyo Station. It was SO HOT and yet I know it's worse in a lot of the US, dang. Anyway, the TIF was in my Japan guidebook for its awesome architecture, built like the hull of a boat, and it did not disappoint!

It was actually really breathtaking. There were a bunch of huge exhibition halls, and a teddy bear convention going on. ;) I would have gone in but it was 1000 yen! I am not that interested in teddy bears but a lot of Japanese people were.

Standing at this angle, at the very top, the building was really hot. I'm sure they didn't bother to air-condition the top, so it was probably a really energy-inefficient building. But so cool to see.

Then I walked really far to the Imperial Palace. I got lost, so a nice young guy helped set me on the right path and even walked with me for 5 minutes. I saw this awesome samurai statue in the park next to the palace gardens. I also saw a lot of people sleeping or resting in the short grass in the shade. I bet they were cooler than I was but I couldn't imagine sleeping outside anywhere in that heat.

I couldn't go even into the Imperial Palace gardens but the surrounding area was really cool. Here's the famous bridge that forms the entrance and a little glimpse of a part of the palace itself.

Because the palace occupies so much land in the center of Tokyo, surrounded by huge skyscrapers that were built so high because of the cost of land, it is said that the Imperial Palace sits on a piece of land worth more than all of California. Compare these pictures. They would form a panorama (top being left and bottom being right) if I weren't lazy with photoshop.
So much open space, you'd never think to find it in the middle of Tokyo!! And that's not even the gardens, it's just a huge path in front of the gardens.

By that time I had run out of water and was kind of miserable due to the heat. Ethan called and said he would eat dinner with his host family, so there was no reason for me not to return home. That was pretty good for me, actually; I was and still am exhausted. I bought some mango juice and took the fastest route home that didn't involve any more walking!

After an ice-cold shower and hot bath (which oddly felt really good on my aching feet that had been so hot earlier), I saw that my host mom had made tomato ramen!! I love it so much that she gave me the recipe so I can make it at UNC. Can't wait, that stuff is amazing for anyone who likes tomatoes.

Tomorrow I'm giving an English lesson in the morning to a boy named Kouki. I hope I am not a bad teacher! I've given Spanish lessons to English-speakers and English lessons to Spanish-speakers but never English lessons to Japanese-speakers. I hope we practice pronunciation a lot because I always know about that. :) My host mom lent me a textbook to use. The lesson will be two hours and then I'm eating lunch with his family. His parents are professional cooks so I bet it will be delicious!

In conclusion: I am so glad that my class is over although I really don't want to say goodbye to my friends. I want to stay here longer but part of me is ready to go back to the US. I wish I could have a longer no-school break, though. :)

2 comments:

  1. The Tokyo Station has some cool-ass architecture! I mean, my God, what a cool building! The Sayonara party sounds tearful, though. :,) You'll have to write them a lot, and in Japanese. By the way, have you typed on Japanese computers? I was watching this one movie in which someone was typing either on a Chinese or Japanese keyboard, and they'd type a few keystrokes, and then it'd suddenly change into a different character. Is it like they type in the phonetic sounds and it changes automatically into a word? Yeah, that was a random question, but it's something I've been wondering.

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  2. A + A-, congrats.

    Yea for maybe or maybe not having got drinks ;D.

    Dude Sachi's host mom sounds HILARIOUS. I would love to meet her too!

    Cool building ;O.

    It is sad to say goodbye to all your friends, but I'm sure you all became really close after all the great experiences you had in Japan! Hopefully those friendships will continue back at UNC (for those who will be there).

    I also totally understand not wanting to leave, yet wanting to leave. For me in India, by the end I still loved it and didn't want to leave but part of me was DEFINITELY ready to get back to the U.S.

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