It's Sunday evening now, but I didn't update last night because I just kinda conked out from being tired.

In the morning at school yesterday I talked to one of Eri's students, who is an aerospace engineer. He's possibly moving down to the Tanegashima Space Center later this year because some of the things he's working on will be launching into space! So he came into my classroom and pointed it out to me on the map and we were talking about lots of different places near Kagoshima. (I was really happy he even said, "It's between Kagoshima and Okinawa" without me needing to prompt him). I'm excited for him, though it'll be tough for him to continue studying English if he does that.

In my 2-3pm Headways class I had a blast chatting with my student about software engineering and technical writing for almost two hours. His wife is a tech writer (in Japanese, but still) so we had this great discussion about active vs. passive writing, and word choices. Apparently, I didn't know this, but in Japanese to say to open a drawer you use the word 引く, to pull, instead of 開ける, to open. Akeru/hiraku are used more for "open a door, open a window, open a book" etc. But when you're doing stuff on a computer like opening a new window, or opening a file, or pulling something down from a menu, this all gets really confusing. And then there's all the stuff like "a new window is opened" vs "this opens a new window"...

So then I put up on the board a sentence like "The FooBar method is used to get a line of text from a file. If a valid file and number are given, the text string for the file line is returned."

And together with my student we rewrote this sentence to say "The FooBar method takes in a file name and a line number and opens the file and returns a string with the text on that line of the file. This method returns NULL if the file is not a text file, or if the line number is less than 0 or greater than the number of lines in the file."

He was telling me stories about how his wife apparently will go to designers and developers and yell at them for writing stupid specifications, and demands they change the interface or at least clarify their designs. He's like "They all hate her, but that's why I love her." Awwwww it reminds me of what I must have been like in a former life about 7 years ago.

I then had classes straight 4-5-6pm, because my flex student came in at 5. My 6pm student is going to Vancouver BC for the first two weeks of March! I'm really happy for him. He wants to visit Seattle too... not sure if he'll be able to do that. I should try to put together some stuff for him about the city, except of course, most of what I like in Vancouver is Japanese stuff. Which is silly to recommend to him! Shame it's not a month later, then I'd maybe be back in North America for a few days, but the school year here ends in February and starts in April, see.

T (one of our students) came in to talk to Eri in the evening about what classes he should take at GEOS starting in the summer. It seems like he's going to switch from her TOEIC class to my Sprint 6 / Mill B classes. That'll be interesting. Amazingly, Duane also stopped by to say hi (yaaaaaay!!!) so we all went out to dinner after we closed down GEOS a little after 8. Since T actually lives in Akabane we were like "dude, is there anywhere tasty and cheap near here that we can go to?" and he suggested pasta. So we went to this pasta place in La La Garden and it WAS cheap and tasty (seriously, I got a big plate of eggplant spaghetti for 661 yen which is like half of what it costs at the pasta place in the station) and they just let us hang out there forever. However, they had eggplant listed on their menu as "eggapple" in English which was... bizarre. Conversation was really funny too. Any time we were talking about normal things we'd slow down or switch into Japanese, any time we were talking about GEOS things we'd speed up in English. I felt really bad for T, but he kept making jokes about it so, hey, whatever. Duane and I also taught him very useful English idioms like "I'm going to KILL him!" :)

We ended up staying out until around 11pm, when the restaurant closed and they kicked us all out.

I went home and, oddly, after watching the sports news, I ended up playing Puzzle Pirates for about 2 hours. Not sure why, I just felt like it. I ended up going on an Atlantis mission for a bit... my FIRST Atlantis mission actually. We sank so we didn't get much of anything useful, though it was kind of cool to actually see the new stuff. Also for whatever reason the CO decided to make me a lazer-swordfighter so all I had to do was sit around and observe and swordfight when stuff came on board, and try Treasure Haul. So, I guess it was kind of cool.

And then I conked out. I mean, I had basically unfolded my futon and moved the laptop to the floor while playing PP anyway so I pretty much fell asleep on the laptop after logging out.

Like an idiot, I had left the stove burner on with my teapot on top of it all night... even though it was low heat, by the morning the water had all boiled out, and actually I didn't wake up until like 1pm so I'm not sure how long it was heating empty like that. Oops. At least my apartment didn't burn down, I guess, but I need to either get a waterheater or be more careful in the future.

I spent today mostly relaxing -- I did laundry, and I prepared some of the curry I bought the other night at Max Valu. This was middle-spicy chicken curry and it was REALLY tasty so I'll probly go for it again even though it was like 260 yen for the package. And... I don't know where the afternoon really went. I looked at some plane flight prices -- I really gotta buy plane tickets home for Carnival so I can really plan for it. But there's like ninety things I want to do in one week in America :(

I'm gonna head up to a movie theater in a bit to see Kagehinata no Saku, and then tomorrow I'll probly actually go into Tokyo for the afternoon, since I only know one movie theater near here showing Zenzen Daijoubu, and it's in Shibuya. And then my brain will explode from too much Japanese. But I'll also maybe stop by the Tokyo Dome and other stuff for the first time in ages, maybe. I'm a moron though and missed the Hoshino Japan exhibit at the Hall of Fame, and the new 1990's exhibit doesn't start until Tuesday so, whoops.
What do you think are the most important English phrases and words when playing Settlers of Catan?

I am not just asking this randomly. I am asking this because today during my 9pm Headways class, one of my students seriously brought in a copy of Settlers of Catan, AND WE PLAYED IT DURING CLASS. Of course the catch was that we had to do everything in English (despite it being a Japanese copy of the game). It turns out the guy who brought it in had played once or twice before but I think he was a little unclear on the rules of the game, and the other guy hadn't played before at ALL, so we explained the rules to him in English for a while as well...

But, see, some phrases are actually useful ones to drill into people. Such as "I'd like to trade rock for sheep", or "Does anyone have any clay?" or "Do you have a 3-to-1 port?" whatever. So I actually AM teaching some sort of English to them -- plus we're working on vocabulary words like "production", "probability", "strategy", etc. They asked if we could play again next week -- the student who brought it in said, "I don't get to play board games at home!" and he even LEFT THE COPY OF THE GAME with me at GEOS, thus ensuring we'll play again... and so I want to make some real English lessons out of this. Vocabulary words, sentence structures, and even a way to discuss the economics and strategy of the game. I think it could be a lot of fun for all involved.

We actually didn't finish a game -- at 10:30 one of the students said "I really should go home now... my wife is not going to believe me if I tell her I stayed out all night playing board games with my GEOS class, is she?" :)

Oh yeah, after work today I went to Kawaguchi to smash buttons play Pop'n'Music. While waiting for the machine at one point, I went over to play UFO catchers. On a whim I tried one of the tray ones, wondering if my old strategies for them would work. It did. On my first try I got 3 of these "Littlebony" plushies and on my second try I got a fourth one. I'm debating figuring out a way to give them to my kids' class on Friday... like if they behave, or something. I dunno.



Sadly, though, all of the other plushies I was vaguely interested in the UFO catchers there, are now gone. As in all of the Hello Kitty stuff, and these fuzzy Pink Panthers I'd debated trying to get one of for Eri, and such. Alas. I know, I also said I wasn't going to play these stupid UFO catchers anymore, but when I see the tray ones it's sometimes just too tempting...
dr4b: (fighters yukio tanaka 1980s)
Things I am getting really tired of:

Being sick
Being cold and hiding under my kotatsu
Snowstorms in Tokyo
That Erik Bedard trade
Sho Nakata

But. With the imminent return of baseball season, apparently Norihiro Komada is back as a commentator on Mega-spo! And just as entertaining as always.

Though, something's very wrong when I see footage of some guy in high socks pitching and I think "Dang, he's hot", and then I realize... crap, that's Koji Uehara, who is definitely NOT HOT. Hiroshima's Soyogi, on the other hand, is hot. Though his voice is surprisingly about an octave lower than I expected him to sound. And then later on I'm watching as they show the Ibaraki Golden Golds playing a game today... apparently freaking KIN-CHAN pulled a daida ore! He's only, you know, 66 years old. Or something like that. (He shares my birthday.) Anyway.

I have a bunch of things to make a photopost out of, but apparently Dreamhost is down. So either a little later tonight, or sometime tomorrow.

As for the rest of the day, I still have a cold. Bleh. I spent one of my classes today teaching a student some slang, oddly enough. It's very hard to explain the differences of "up with" "down with" "up to" "up for" and so on. For example:

"What are you up to this weekend?"
"Eh, not much."
"Are you up for seeing a movie?"
"Yeah, I'd be down with that."

"Hmm... do you feel up to seeing a movie?"
"Eh, nah, I'm pretty sick, I came down with a cold this week."
"Down with colds! Up with movies!"

But, aside from being hoarse and all, it wasn't too bad a day. I ended up completing my Englishification of my cheapo Japan map, making big English signs for it ("Where are you from? I'm from Ehime." "Ehime? Where's that? It's on Shikoku. It's near Kochi." "Tokyo is bigger than Nagoya. Sendai is not as cold as Sapporo." "Osaka is about 400 kilometers west of Tokyo.") which are just phrases from various Sprint lessons. It looks pretty cool. Now I just have to finish making my Seattle poster.

I ended up staying at GEOS really late though... Eri and I were going to go to dinner but she wasn't done working until like 9pm. We got pasta at the place under Akabane station again. I had the melanzane again and it was all yummy, but she ordered pepperoncini pasta and I'm not sure she realized it was going to be REALLY SPICY. Whoops.

It's not like I had any plans besides coming home and trying to stay warm, of course.. which is kind of what I'm planning for tomorrow. Just relaxing. I'll probably leave my apartment to get lunch or dinner and other than that I think I should just stay here and try to get well. Or something like that. I mean, especially since it's snowing... riding my bike home in the snow was quite an adventure. This was my first time really riding ON snow; the other times have been through snow but without it stuck to the ground at the time. Funny, but the part of my body that hurt the most when I got home was my arms. Stabilizing a bike in snow is kind of a pain. Fortunately I didn't fall off the bike or get hit by a car or anything, so I win. I guess.
For the first time in ages, my Friday kids' class went really well.

I basically filled 50 minutes as such: 5 minute warmup, 15 minutes on the textbook stuff, 15 minutes on the Spelling Puzzle Game, and then 15 minutes of a city game which I thought up this morning.

The Puzzle Game involves me showing them pictures from Phonics and they have to spell them out with alphabet puzzle letters. The girls love it, the boy hates it, and thus the girls "competed" against him by actually spelling words, while he ignored all of us and built random colorful alphabet things. After they had gotten all 10 words right, the girls were like "don't we deserve a prize? like for US and not for HIM??" and for once, I agreed with them and I got out glittery Winnie-the-Pooh stickers and gave them to them. They were absolutely delighted.

For the City Game, I had made a big paper 3x3 city map grid, and then I had the 5 vocab buildings and then I told everyone to draw their own building on paper. They LOVE drawing. So the boy drew a firehouse again, the girls drew a school, a piano school, and a hospital. I drew "my house" and put it at the bottom of the map. Then I got out the secret weapon -- a Doraemon I had picked up at Daiso. I said in a funny voice, "Hello! I am Doraemon!!!" Apparently, kids also love Doraemon, by their reactions.

So Doraemon comes out and stands next to "my house" and says, "WHERE IS THE POST OFFICE????"

One girl points to the post office card and says, "Koko." The other girl says "Go straight!!!"

So Doraemon starts walking along the "street". When he gets to the post office two girls yell "STOP!!!" and then another girl says "lefto", the other girl says "lighto", and I say "It's on the right", which they repeat. Kind of.

Then Doraemon demands, "WHERE IS THE MUSEUM????"

Repeat ad nauseum. Somehow the girls never got sick of directing me-as-Doraemon around. I get the vague impression they actually don't really know left from right in their OWN language let alone in English, but it was ok. They really delighted in yelling at Doraemon to run back and forward and stuff, and when they gave me the wrong directions and I went the wrong way they yelled at me to go the right way, too. Teehee. But they mostly yelled in English. Which is what counts.

The girl who usually doesn't try to follow in English at all even was getting into it. She gave me a ponytail holder, which I put around Doraemon's head, and you can see it in the picture below:



Wheeee, just wait until next week, when our town will gain a bookstore, candy store, etc.

Now, if only I wasn't sick, life would be good. But today I was even really hoarse, which just plain sucked. I tried hard not to sound funny but it was just impossible. Sigh. I'd give anything to wake up tomorrow and not be sick already :(

Nodo-ze

Feb. 8th, 2008 01:37 am
dr4b: (pouty)
I hate being sick.
Even worse, I hate being sick and being at work.
And even worse, being sick with a sore throat when my JOB is to talk.
Also, I am under my kotatsu once more. No, my heater works just fine, it's just... COLD here. I came home and turned the heater on, turned the kotatsu on, hid most of myself under the kotatsu... and haven't been able to convince myself to leave it. You know, people sometimes say that a lot of stuff goes on under the table in Japan, and they'd be completely correct.

Anyway, I had 5 classes today, and NONE of them had an even number of students. That just sucked, because I had to actually do a lot of talking. Normally, what I do for teaching is, I start off a class by presenting a grammar or language or vocab point for the day, and then I pair my students up and give them a whole bunch of activities to do to practice that point in various ways, and we'll usually listen to a conversation on a CD and read it aloud in pairs as well. I'm not SUPPOSED to talk, I'm supposed to listen and guide and answer questions, for the most part. BUT, if there is an odd number of students (or only one student or a private lesson) I have to do a lot more talking, because I have to be part of one of the pairs. Which kept happening today. And I tried my best to make the student talk as much as possible when I was in a pair, but still, they like to ask me questions too. But by the end of the day my throat was really faltering, and my voice sounded low and flat, and I was even coughing a little. I explained that I have a cold and apologized a bazillion times, but... yeah.

Still debating whether I'll try to go to a doctor tomorrow if I don't feel any better in the morning. Argh. I think I could manage it in Japanese just fine -- having looked up that "nodo" is "throat" -- but I dunno, I'm just sort of scared of doctors. Someday I'll have to accept, of course, that my body can't just bounce back from any sickness on its own, now that I'm not really all that young anymore. But for the time being I still try to believe that.

Quote of the day, during a guessing game in class:
Student [rolls 'what' on the WH-dice]: "What... did you bring back as souvenir from there?"
Me [talking about a trip to Toronto]: "Hmm. Beer. And donuts."
Student: "Did you go to... visit Simpsons?"
dr4b: (pop'n'music space dog)
Hrm. They apparently updated the GEOS website with the pictures from last week and here's Akabane. Sadly I think there was some mistake in encoding and my mdash's became question marks. Oops. Oh well, no big deal.

So, I've had a sore throat and stuffy head for two days now. It was a little less sore today, but there was more mucus in my head. I've just been chaining Tylenol and some decongestants... I have to wonder how long I should go before I actually see a doctor about this. What sucks is that I might be inadvertantly making OTHER people sick, but I'm guessing I caught whatever this is from someone around GEOS anyway, so whatever. Somehow I have been surviving my classes, which is pretty amazing if you think about it. I had to have a bottle of water with me in class today for when my throat got dry, though. I hate being sick.

Today was my brother's birthday. Or maybe, more like, today will be my brother's birthday in America. I drew him a birthday cake on my whiteboard and got Eri to take a picture of me with it on my cellphone so I could send it.

Also, today the new teacher Jon arrived. Hard to make a decision on him yet as he spent most of the day with Hannah. He is tall and British and mumbles a lot and I can barely hear him a lot of the time; we'll have to work on that. Apparently his welcome party for the Urawa school is on 2/23 so I'm thinking I'll try to go to that, maybe, we'll see. He also gets to live in a nice apartment in Urawa rather than a crappy apartment in Warabi like Duane did. I went to introduce one of Eri's students to him and it was really funny because she did the exact same thing with me that she did with Eri when I first met her, being all shy and like "omfg what do I say what do I say?" and asking me questions in Japanese to confirm before saying anything to Jon and Hannah. Funny how times change. My gosh, tomorrow (2/7) will mark EXACTLY 6 MONTHS since I started teaching. Holy crap.

Conversation today with my 11-year-old:

Me, pointing at calendar on whiteboard: "What is today?"
Her: "English Day."
Me: "Wednesday."
Her: "Wednesday."
Me: "What is this?" [points to Saturday]
Her: "Birthday."
Me: "Really?? Saturday is your birthday?"
Her: "Yes. Saturday." [starts drawing a cake in the 2/9 square]
Me: "How old will you be?"
Her: "Twenteen."
Me: "What? You mean twelve?"
Her: "Oh. Yes. Twelve."
Me: "What is this day?" [points at Thursday 2/7]
Her: "Piano day."
Me: "Err..."
Her: "Juku day." [points to Monday, then Tuesday, then Friday, then Saturday]
Me: "Juku every day?"
Her: "Juku Monday. Juku Tuesday. Juku Friday. Juku birthday."
Me: [tries not to laugh]

And then for some reason we started singing the days of the week to the tune of An Pan Man. Fortunately, as usual, she can't ask me how the hell I know songs like that. Go me.

Later in the day I taught my Headways class about phrases like "getting grounded" or "down-to-earth" and whatnot. Funny how the concept of getting grounded doesn't seem to have been applicable to most of my students. One even said "Well now these days if a teenager is bad, parents just won't pay for their cellphone bill."

Then, after class one of the guys was like "Also I noticed on your poster, you have a game there, is that Catan?" "Yeah... you know it?" "Yeah, I love Catan!" The other students wanted to know what it was, so we tried to explain... and the first guy said he'll try to bring his set to class sometime so we can all play in English. Hahahaha that would be the best thing EVER. I suppose it wouldn't be completely bad to drill them in saying "Anyone want to trade rock for sheep?"
Today was just your "average" Friday, I suppose. Eri and I went for kaitensushi again, and then shopping at Daiei to get some school supplies. I also went and took out money and paid my bills... somehow I rang up a whopping 12,000 yen electric bill this past month, probably just on my inefficient means of heating my apartment. Yikes.

Apparently the mail tried to deliver something while I was in the shower this morning. I think it was probably the envelope Carl said he sent me with mail and whatnot.

Oh, and just for myself to remember: Mini-taiyaki! Wheeee yummy.

For lack of a good way to talk about today I think I will just post a few more pictures, aka The Last Few Days As My Cellphone Sees It. Yeah, there is one photo of me in this batch. (It's really for the benefit of my parents, who don't care about seeing pictures of random stuff in Japan, but do want to see pictures of their daughter.)

mini photopost )
dr4b: (fighters hichori GO!)
It's Hichori's birthday today! Yay!

The other night, I was riding home in the train, and we got past Nishi-Kawaguchi, and the announcer says, "Tsugi wa, Oji. Oji degozaimasu." Except the next stop was actually Warabi. I'm not actually sure most people noticed.

Oh my FUCKING god I just saw a TV commercial for Intel with Kimura Takuya, Nomura Katsuya, and Tanaka Masahiro. The first two are in the Miyagi dugout talking about the latter. That was BIZARRE. (And no, I don't mean the Giants player, I mean the SMAP guy.)

And, yeah, I got a new heater this morning! So far so good! It seems to be warming my room and it also seems to be quieter than the old one! Very exciting. I basically sat there on my laptop for an hour and a half while they were installing the new heater this morning. Funniest part was when they realized the cord wasn't long enough to reach where the plug in the wall is, so the two guys are deliberating between each other how to say "extension cord" in English to tell me. So the one guy is like "Long electric? Not long?" and I finally broke down and just said in Japanese, "英語が上手だなぁ!" (You're really good at English!) They laughed and said "これが届かないから," (This doesn't reach) and I said "ああ、そうか。。延長が要るんじゃないの?" (Oh, I see... we need an extension cord, don't we?) and from then on in they just talked to me in Japanese. I asked if the power outlet was dangerous and they said no, but we should get it replaced.

When my landlady came back upstairs she talked to them some more about how the stuff works (I told them I can't read the manual), and then the installation guys left, and then I showed her some of the other stuff that's wrong with the apartment -- the laundry pole outside, the fan that doesn't work in the bathroom, and the way a weird smell comes up from the sink sometimes when you run water. She says we should be able to get it all fixed eventually... maybe... "man, this is an old building!" she remarked.

You know, the only reason why I know the word for "extension cord" is because it's the same starting word as for "extra innings" in baseball.

Anyway, today wasn't too bad. I started off the afternoon with a ton of sushi at Heiroku, which is always a good start. It's neat that I'm there enough that I know all the specials going on, including that right now they have kanburi (a super-tasty kind of yellowtail that only gets caught in winter or something like that) instead of normal hamachi. I gotta admit, so far it's definitely my favorite of the seasonal fishes here -- I wasn't that big a fan of sanma, the fall season fish. The toro-katsuo they have now is also fantastic.

Best moment today: around 3:30pm I'm sitting at the office computer making up a sheet for one of my classes, and Hannah-the-Sub comes in for some reason, I forget, and we're talking, and the phone rings, and Eri's still in class, so I pick it up and answer my normal お電話ありがとうございます、英会話ジオス赤羽校、教師ディアナでございます in a slightly higher voice. It was the grandmother of one of my kid students, so I talk to her for a few minutes... in Japanese... and after I hang up, Hannah's like "Wow. You have TOTAL PHONE VOICE. Your Japanese is really good though!" I can't tell if she was impressed or scared. I told her I basically imitate Eri's phone mannerisms, even the part where I smile and nod while speaking.

Second best moment today: one of my Headways guys, who's an engineer for Softbank, said, "Did you hear about what happened with Jeremy Powell?" I'm like "Dude I heard but omfg I have no clue PLEASE explain it to me." The other guy's like "What the hell are you baseball geeks talking about now?" And then I made the first guy explain it all. The funny part is, it's my job to make the students talk as much as possible and for me to talk as little as possible -- but in reality, I actually can't read the Japanese articles on this well enough to figure out what the fuck is going on! So I *wanted* him to explain it to me in English! Orix signed Jeremy Powell a few weeks ago, or so we thought, but apparently something weird happened and Softbank signed him out from under them! TOO WEIRD! Anyway, I said "This is all YOUR fault!" to the Softbank guy and he was like "Yeah, it is. I will go fix it."

Oh, yeah, the Headways guys walked me to the station after class. That was nice of them, even though it is not particularly far. The one guy was trying to explain to me about 発泡酒, happoshu. "It's like beer... only it isn't beer, it's not beery enough? I mean it tastes like beer and it has same alcohol as beer, but the level of the, the nandake, the mugi..." ("Barley? Hops?" I suggested.) "...the hops is low. So it's cheaper because it isn't beer. It's non-beer beer." "Do you drink it a lot?" "Oh yah, all the time." "Does it taste good?" "Well... no..."

Wheee, more popping of music happened. I really wish I knew how to get better at these games, but I guess I'm doing what I can -- playing a few gmes a week and all.
I just finished making the introduction poster I have to make for GEOS, which will get sent to my school in Japan and hung on the wall for a while before I arrive, supposedly so that I will not be a "stranger" when they meet me in person...

Cut for pictures )

Naoko called me today and we worked out some stuff about my flight there. She didn't mention CP1, but in theory it was due on Sunday, so I really should finish it and send it in. I feel pretty terrible but I thought finishing the poster was more important since it needs to be sent in real mail, as opposed to CP1 and 2 which can be emailed.

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