Friday, 6 February 2015

Keep Moving Forward

It's been a funny old week, this week. It has certainly felt like the end of an era.

First I said goodbye to an old family pet. This was expected. Sylvie was old and the last time I saw him, he was almost blind and could barely hold himself up. We all agreed that putting him down was for the best and the kindest thing for him. I'm just glad I got to have a cuddle with him when I went home for Christmas. Sylvie was a huge part of my childhood and it won't feel right going home and not seeing him there.

Then a few days later, something totally unexpected happened. Some of my friends know how much I love Rooster Teeth. I've been watching Red Vs Blue since I was at uni. I also really like Monty Oum, having first seen his work 'Dead Fantasy', again, while I was surfing the net during my procrastination periods at uni. I watched it, spellbound, and thought 'the guy who made this was an absolute genius! How does a guy working on his own, posting videos on social media have the time, the resources, the sheer imagination to make this?' So when I learned he had started working at Rooster Teeth, I was really excited. Monty made Red Vs Blue into something absolutely astounding and when RWBY started, I was just as excited and it also became part of my weekly viewing habits. Every RT podcast seemed to feature a story about him and often we'd see the man himself offering a bit of dry wit and bad-ass martial arts and dance skills! His tweets were part lol, part sagely wisdom. But what I admired about him the most was his determination to enjoy his work; anyone who has seen his work knows that he loved it. He was just one of those things you expect will go on forever, so it was a shock to learn that he died this week.

Even though I've heard all about his strange quirks over the years, it's only now that I'm beginning to realise what an extraordinary life he led. He was always busy doing something and when he wasn't, he was thinking about what he was going to do next. He never wasted a single second. And for a man that brilliant to die so young is just tragic, but he achieved so much in such a short time. It's made me wonder.... What the hell am I doing with my life?

I'm living my dream: I'm in the country I've been dying to go to for years, and yet my Japanese is barely passable, my writing has fallen behind, my blogs have been neglected and my love life is at the very back of the closet being devoured by moths!

So I'm making a promise right here, to not waste another second. I will work every second so that one day I might reach my goal: to make a living doing what I love, to push the limits, to put passion into everything that I do. I WILL become the person that I want to be.

"There is no futility even in death." - Monty Oum

Sunday, 24 February 2013

Lent again!

So this will be my second Lent since arriving in Japan. Last year I kick started it with a pancake party at my house and this year I was keen to keep up the tradition. We had great fun, but I just wish more of my Japanese friends had been able to come. I'm sure they would have loved the tradition of eating lots of delicious pancakes, even if the concept of Lent confused them.

I've had to explain it a few times to the one of my older JTEs and breathed a genuine sigh of relief when he seemed to get it. Then the other day.....

"Toni, would you like a candy?"
"No thank you. I gave sweets up for lent (remember!?)"
"But you had one last week..."
"Yes, but it's lent now and I can't have sweets."
"Oh...." And with that he wondered away looking more confused than ever, while I banged my head against the desk.

This year, I've decided to use lent to further my health goals. I've taken up running again, as well as cutting sugar from my diet. I'd like to say that this year I succeeded in giving up Facebook, but as this is my main method of communication withy friends back home, this seemed counter-productive.

Wish me luck and have a successful lent!

Monday, 29 October 2012

Toni's 10 Day Challenge

So I am painfully aware of how much I have been neglecting this blog since I came to Japan, but I plan to change all that starting from today! For the next ten days I will be posting lengthy blog posts about my first year in Japan. I have already begun to write my first post and hopefully will have it up when I get back from school today (9 hours time).
Comments welcome :)

Halloween Lesson in Tamba


So recently, I was asked to do a Halloween themed lesson at one of my elementary schools. It was only a couple of days in advance, but thanks to the local ¥100 store, I managed to find a few props, including a couple of costumes (capes, hats, masks). There was some kind of school outing that day, so only a couple of the classes were around. I ended up teaching fifth and sixth grades jointly. This is definitely the smallest school I teach at. But we had fun. After I gave my presentation, we had a Halloween costume race. This is a great idea for a cultural class given to ten-year-olds. Two kids, one from each grade, raced to see who could put on their costumes the fastest and when they were finished, the homeroom teacher was there, armed with a camera. So when they had finished, with maybe a minute left until the end of class, I turned to the kids and said. "I think one more." I then turned to the camera toting homeroom teachers, eager for the next snapshot and said "I think that sensei should have a go!" The cheering this got was epic. The teachers took their places at the starting line and I handed the camera to one of the students. To be fair on the teachers, they were great sports, posing for the camera in their undersized capes and masks. That's what I like about my elementary schools; you can just let loose and have fun!
By contrast, when it came to do my junior-high school lessons, it was decidedly more serious. The second-year students are a little less lively, though I knew they responded well to games. I tried to get a mix of different things in the lesson; history, culture, new vocab and games. The games were at the front of the class plan and I came up with the idea of making a Feely Box, like the ones my parents used to make for Halloween parties. The idea was, I would teach the class the words for Heart, Hand, Eyeballs and Brain and then get them to guess what was in the box. Thinking that that's what I really had in the box was enough to freak them out. I spoke to my parents about it the night before and they suggested lychees for the eyeballs, but being unsure where to obtain them, how to ask for them in Japanese or even how to spell it properly, I opted for grapes instead. The heart was easy: a hastily peeled tomato that I accidently took great chunks out of, but still felt gross, and then a washing-up glove filled with water and frozen for (duh) a hand. The brain was a bit trickier. How was I supposed to recreate the texture and general ickiness of the real thing? A damp sponge soaked in cooking oil later, I still wasn't convinced. But it turns out I needn't have worried. The class found it creepier than any of the others. So creepy in fact that when one lad recoiled his hand in shock, he accidentally pulled the sponge out of the hole. The magic disappeared fairly quickly after that when it became obvious that I didn't have real blood and guts in the box but some weird kitchen ingredients I had bought the day before. Still, it was fun while it lasted and there were a few flinches and screams that will keep me grinning all the way 'til Halloween!
And the best part: I'm doing it again tomorrow with the first-years!




Wednesday, 17 October 2012

It's all about FOOD!

I love my weekends in Japan. They are times when I can hang out in some of the most fantastic cities in the world. Sightseeing in Kyoto on Friday, shopping in Osaka on Saturday, party in Kobe on Saturday night. And if I'm feeling adventurous, I may stray further afield to Nara, Gifu, Tokyo and even all the way up in the Tohoku region (not an easy thing to do in one weekend!)

But whenever I come back from these places and tell my Japanese coworkers about it, I guarantee that this conversation will ensue:

Me: "Hi! I went to (insert Japanese city here) this weekend."
JapCo: Oh really? Did you eat (food these cities are famous for)?

From black beans to okonomiyaki, it seems that every single town and city in Japan boasts a famous food that you absolutely MUST eat when you visit. In fact sometimes when I've been out with Japanese friends, finding and eating this famous food is often first on their list of priorities. Which is probably why when I admit that I didn't try them when I went off sightseeing, they look disappointed and the conversation dies there before I can tell them about the other things I saw.

For a nation that boasts the lowest obesity rate in the world, it is astonishing how preoccupied they all are with food. When the Olympics ended this summer, British gold medalists appeared on daytime TV programmes to give interviews or hand out prizes on kids shows. What did the Japanese medalists do? They appeared on late night shows and were asked to eat increasingly bizarre foods while the panel of hosts "oohed" and "aahed" impressively. And when current celebrities aren't stuffing themselves, it's the regular hosts who regularly wolf down various foods while the audience and misc make the appropriate noises, as though food is an entirely new concept to them.

Whenever I turn on the TV, I can guarantee there's a cooking show on one of the main channels. One of the first questions I am always asked is "what Japanese food do you like?" And everyone is always impressed that I can cook for myself.

Now don't get me wrong, I like food and Japanese food is delicious, but I'd rather talk about the beautiful temples and buildings I visited. So please don't stop talking to me just because I wasn't hungry!

Saturday, 5 May 2012

My First Enkai and Karaoke

I started school at the beginning of September, but for the first couple of weeks we had the Sports Festival. So I didn't really do any work. I just lounged around, helped to build tents, broke a tent, learned a new dance from the students and got sunburn.

As soon as it was finished, the teachers whisked me off for an enkai. I'd been told what to expect during this and what etiquette and behaviour was expected of me and I think I did pretty well. I don't know if I got lucky and was placed in a generally relaxed school, but a lot of things happened that night that I certainly wasn't expecting....

First off, one of the teachers brought with him a video of the highlights of the festival that day and, as there was a TV in the room, we hooked it up and I listened to them laughing and taking the mickey out of the students that messed up or looked silly (which I thought was quite mean).

Then it got weird.

While we were watching the students on the video making human pyramids, some of the teachers began to wonder if they could still do it too. Before I knew it, in the middle of this elegant party room was a human pyramid comprising some of the older teachers and the (female) principal on the very top!

After these rather astonishing acrobatics were over (seriously! One or two of those guys had to be my grandmother's age!) we headed off to a little karaoke bar on the other side of town. It was a nice little place, kind of like a lounge bar and there was already a group of tipsy middle-aged men there howling into a mike. The teachers took it in turns to sing slow love-songs (from what I could gather, still not having much Japanese under my belt, but the videos looked pretty sappy) and persuaded me to pick something from the English section. I was torn. I was actually quite a good singer, but I'd never done Karaoke before, so I was torn between following the trend and picking a slow song like they had done and hope I sounded okay, or do something totally different and possibly make an idiot of myself. It was basically a choice between showing off my voice or throwing myself in and enjoying the party for what it was.

I went for the latter and did something that, had I been in Western company, would have meant committing social suicide. I sang 'Wannabe' by the Spice Girls. And I brought down the house!