Friday, August 31, 2007

The sun sets early here (6-6:30ish) as it moves on to your side of the world, thus it always feels much later than it actually is. The side streets are also so quiet that you get a feeling everyone is in bed and your normal conversation voice is disturbing their sleep. The only insulation Japanese homes have is the rack of clean clothing drying on the balconies, and yet on the walk home you may hear a distant TV or crying baby and that's it.

What a day! I loved it but I could fall into bed (or, futon on the floor with a small bag of beans for a pillow) right now. This morning was the semi-formal opening ceremony for the Asian Studies Program students. They told us we're their biggest group of students enrolled for a semester, rounding out around 440. 260-some of those are Americans, but 37 countries are represented. After several speeches, we were treated to a buffet luncheon. I remember luncheons in America: pork roast, mashed potatoes, three bean casserole, iceberg lettuce + ranch, iced tea, etc etc. Luncheons in Japan: raw beef, fatty chicken, unagi (cooked eel), tuna rolls, spicy shrimp dishes, hand-held pyramids of rice, green tea, Coke Zero (?), and probably the most delicious desserts one could ask for. It's little things like that that challenge my ideas of what's normal or even what's right (shouldn't it be cooked??). It's just food, but it means much more.

Later in the day was our "field trip" to Kyoto, a nearby city that is a huge tourist attraction for its beautiful temples. The point of the trip was to get us familiar with taking the train to Kyoto as well as to interact with local Japanese Kansai Gaidai students. They matched one Japanese for each foreigner and we traveled in small groups. Luckily my friends and I were matched with several of the Japanese girls who live in my Seminar House. They knew English hardly and we know even less Japanese (me being the worst), but we actually ended up forming great friendships with them. Japanese girls my age are my favorite people to interact with; they're so excited about everything you tell them ("Aooh! Kentooky, ne! Like Ken-took-ee Flied Chicken?! Yehh!"). I bonded with Amiko-san specifically. We were the only ones who were willing to be line leaders. We talked about our respective boyfriends in verrryy slowww Ennglissh, and in GirlWorld that means we must really feel comfortable with each other.

Kyoto itself was gorgeous. Even tourist shops in Japan seem wonderful to me, just for the novelty of it. I should have bought an "I [heart] Kyoto" shirt, ne? The city was very mountainous and we climbed a huge hill dodging cars and taxis to get to the temples, but the view was worth it. I took many pictures of today but I can not post them here yet. Still waiting for that laptop thing to work out. The Japanese prefer to remain isolated from the rest of Asia, the world, and each other really (there exist many "rivalries", as between Tokyo and Osaka), and this is why I imagine foreign electronics do not work here.

So I registered for classes, which start on Monday. I am in Spoken Japanese 1, Reading & Writing Japanese 1, The New Japan Economy: Culture, Society, and Power, Visual Anthropology, and Culture & Everyday Life in Japan. 5 classes total, just so I get the needed 16 credit hours for Wooster. They discourage us from taking 5 classes because they like to stress how we need to "get out of the library and experience Japanese culture first-hand"... which to college-age students likely means different things than what they intend. Hopefully I can handle it all and still "get out". I guess holing up in the library at Wooster was okay since there wasn't much culture to experience there anyway.
I do miss Wooster though. Maybe what I miss most about it is getting honked at while walking along the main road on campus... Japanese men do not honk to get your attention or to express their feelings about you being a girl and they being a man. I don't know if that's only an American thing, or only a Wooster townie thing.
Well, if you didn't catch the dry joke, I do not miss such a thing and would never miss it.

The end for now. Pictures to come sometime next week. Hopefully I'll go somewhere interesting again soon. Downtown Osaka is likely next. See the REAL Japan.
Love love.

2 comments:

carly said...

Andrea, you are an amazing writer. It sounds like you're having an amazing time and I can't wait to see pictures.

Katie Hubert said...

give it time, men are sure to give you a whistle sometime soon.

私はあなたを愛しています

KEH