Monday 30 November 2009

November happenings (3) - Minji visits

I met Minji when she came to St. Helen's in Year 9, she was originally a boarder at Gwyer, then she left boarding and became a day girl, but she left Britain a year later. I hadn't seen her for a few years until she came to visit us at school when I was in Year 12. And then I saw her again when I travelled to South Korea on New Year's Eve (2008/09), and again in Hong Kong this summer.

She came to Japan a couple of months ago to attend a language school in Tokyo, and we decided to meet again - this time in Japan. She hadn't been to Kansai so she decided to come and visit me.

After the 2-day Wakayama trip, I (without knowing how) played an intensive 3-hour badminton session that same evening I got back from Wakayama (when I had enough of badminton, Tommy replied "it's about time"), and got up the next morning at 0530 to go to Osaka station to meet Minji, who travelled from Tokyo by the all-night highway bus. We spent the morning around Umeda, Shinsabashi and Namba, and had okonomiyaki for lunch at the very popular きじ restaurant in Umeda. We had planned to go to Minoh park that afternoon but we were so exhausted that we gave up that idea, and just chilled out in my room and cooked dinner together.



The next day we joined the little trip to Arashiyama (organised by Shinya and Tomoko) to see the momiji there. Adam, Jan, Felix, Ivan and Andrew also went, and I was glad to see that they liked Minji.



There were soooo many tourists in Arashiyama, which kinda ruined the beautiful autumn scenaries...we had a great time anyway, especially short boat cruise on the river :)



November happenings (2) - 和歌山



One of the highlights of this month was the 2-day "study" trip to 白浜 (Shirahama) in 和歌山県 (Wakayama prefecture). The university organised and subsidised it so we only had to pay 4,000yen per person for the transportation, accommodation, dinner and breakfast. The trip wasn't compulsory but most people signed up for it so off we went in 3 coaches.

Coach journeys and school trips always lead to party bus scenarios, but that didn't happen this time. Maybe because we've grown up? or perhaps we were just saving the energy to party at night (and too tired to talk the next day)...



We went to visit a few museums which were (predictably) very uninteresting. 千畳敷(せんじょうじき)was pretty amazing though - it's a sea-side cliff looking out to the Pacific Ocean. It was quite windy when we got there but still we had a great time posing for photos.




We spent the night at 三楽荘 - a hotel with Japanese-style rooms and baths! Basically as soon as we got to our rooms, we changed into the yukata provided by the hotel and quickly went down to the bath, stripped and submerged ourselves into the huge bath. The men and women swap baths at 0130 in the middle of the night so we stayed up till then to try the other bath. The original women's bath (until 0130) was huge and had baths of different temperatures, whilst the men's was pretty unimpressive with just two baths (we were kinda disappointed). Anyway the rooms were very comfy. I shared a room with Naomi, Luciana and Larisa, and we were joined by Morgan 'cause there was some coupling (hence making out) on her futon... yes we slept on thick comfy futon. It was rather pleasing :) And oh I forgot to mention the wonderful dinner, we assembled in a huge room where there were tiny tables lined up, (almost) everyone was in their yukata and we sat down and had dinner served to the table. There was a great range of vegetables and sashimi, and we had unlimited supply of beer and karaoke! Some of us weren't embarrassed at all to the extent that the guys volunteered to go on stage first to sing Backstreet Boys!

 
 


P.S. Wakayama is famous for its ume-boshi (picked sour plum) and mikan (satsuma/mandarin), thus we ate a lot of those stuff.

Morgan with a mikan-flavoured ソフトクリーム

November happenings (1)

Since tomorrow is 1st December, (and I still haven't written about things I should have written here ages ago) I will briefly summarise the events of this month... (I apologise for such a badly written/organised post - I just haven't had the time to blog properly - excuses excuses)

At the beginning of the month there was the 3-day まちかね祭 (the 学園祭 of Osaka University), which Jan and I went together. Basically the afternoon was spent with Jan whispering in my ears "Oh my God look at that guy, he's sooo hot" every 10 seconds. (I have queries about his standards of hotness/cuteness in guys.) There were all kinds of performances, including bellydancing, magician/illusionist, street dance, music groups, Mr. & Miss 阪大コンテスト (the girls were pretty but the guys were not hot at all) and loads of food stalls.




The next day was a national holiday and I spent the afternoon with my host family. The Nagano family consists of the father (who is a neurologist at the Osaka University hospital), the mother (housewife) and a 11-year-old daughter. We made たこ焼き and ate homemade cheesecake and played Wii - it was my first time playing Wii and I sucked at it (surprise surprise - considering my limited talent and ability on video games), lost every game against everyone. They are very やさしい and we're meeting again next month to see the Christmas illuminations in Kobe.


Thursday 26 November 2009

ある経験

読解授業中でこの短い文章を読んだ:
日本の駅はどこへ行っても安全で綺麗で、電車も時間通りにくるので驚く。これは外国では考えられないことだ。しかし、とても困ることがひとつある。それはとにかく階段が多いことだ。私のような大荷物を持って歩く外国人旅行者にはこの階段の昇り降りは大仕事だ。エスカレーターやエレベーターがついているところもあるが、それは新幹線乗り場などほんお一部の場所で、普通は急な階段が目の前に立ちはだかっている。
そんな階段を目にするたびし、私はお年寄りや体の不自由な人たちはどうするのだろうと思ってしまう。私が階段で荷物を必死に運んでいるときに手を貸してくれるはまずいない。私は日本人はとても優しい人たちだと思っているので、これは不思議だといつも思う。たぶん知らない人間ー特に私は外国人だからーに話しかけるのは恥ずかしいのだろう。お年寄りや体の不自由な人たちは気軽に助けてもらっているのだろうか。
日本は土地が狭いから、階段の多い建物がたくさんあるのはしかたがないが、もう少し使う人たちの立場にたった工夫がされてもいいと思う。
この文書を読むと、去年の夏休み東京で経験したことを思い出した。地下鉄の上野駅に到着して電車を降りた。30キロのスーツケースを持って、エレベーターもエスカレーターもないで階段の前に困った。誰も助けてくれなかったから、自分でゆっくりのろのろと重いスーツケースを運んでいて階段を上がった。

Monday 23 November 2009

こうよう・もみじ



I already have quite a number of posts in my mind - posts that I should have already written here! It's been quite hectic here, with I don't really know what. All I know is that I'm exhausted and would like to go straight to bed right now.

My film SLR (Nikon F50) is still not working. So far I've taken 18 shots on the current roll of film, I need to figure out a way to rewind the film before getting it fixed... I did manage to shoot a few photos on my digital compact (Panasonic Lumix LX-2) which I consider to be some of my best so far :)

Tuesday 3 November 2009

More GIF animations

I remembered that I took many photos on Piotr's DSLR last summer in Kobe, which would be perfect for .gif animations. We had photos of John, Piotr and James jumping off the steps outside KISC, and Sean doing a cartwheel.


Photobucket Photobucket

Photobucket Photobucket

Sunday 1 November 2009

Hola! Happy Halloweeeeen

The opening to this Ugly Betty episode (105) always cracks me up (click blog entry title for the video on Youtube).

Last week I decided that I should dress up for Halloween. The last time I dressed up for Halloween I was 9 years old. I was a white ghost and my brother was a masked devil. Anyway, I thought since I'm Japan now I should do something different this year.

So on Thursday I journeyed to Umeda with Morgan, Dan, Sebastian and Jan to search for our costumes for the party on Friday night. We didn't have ideas about specific costumes to buy since we didn't know what kind of costumes would be sold at Loft (it seemed to be the best place to get Halloween costumes).




At Loft there was a little corner on 5/F where all the costumes are kept. There were the typical witches, characters (panda, egg plant or radish?), OL (Office Ladies), flight attendant, schoolgirl uniform, devils, celebrities (Arnold Schwazenegger "the Governator", or - quite unsurprisingly - Michael Jackson, in either dark or fair skin), and Prime Minister Hatoyama.

Jan was desperate to do some shopping since it was the day we got our first scholarship payment, so we were semi-forced to go to Hep Five where we waited for half an hour outside Beams whilst Jan did his shopping. Andrew came to join us for dinner at a しゃぶしゃぶ restaurant above ヨドバシカメラ, where we ate for 2 hours on a ¥2000 食べ放題.

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On Friday morning Fiona, Sebastian and I decided to go to the local recycling centre ("Green Centre") to see if we can get free bikes. We took a bus from 粟生団地 bus terminal and the bus took us into the wild mountains of Minoh... we had no idea where we were when we got off the bus. It turns out the old bikes were all free - we only had to repair them ourselves. Do we look like we had any bike repair experience? We didn't know what to do with the bikes, by looking as innocent and confused gaijin we managed to get some help from the local technicians.

It took us almost 3 hours to repair the bikes (thus missing the 中級文法 class at 1300), and that was not the end. Since we couldn't get the bikes onto the bus, we had to cycle down the hill. That already poses as a danger, and then there was the traffic. The journey was horrifying, we had to cycle on steep, meandering slopes alongside huge lorries. I was praying to God the whole time and thought I was about to have a heart attack anytime.

When we got to the bottom of the hill it was a pleasant journey, until we got to the university's neighbourhood. The university campus is situated on (yet another) hill, so we had to cycle (or push the bike) uphill...

I was exhausted when I got back to my room; freshened up myself, lied on my bed for about half an hour before getting up again to get dressed for the welcoming party the University organised for all the international students who arrived last month. It was a bit odd as it had already been a month since we arrived at Osaka, but there was plenty of food and drinks (and alcohol) so we didn't really care. There was a nice range of food: sushi, yaki-soba, canapes, oden, cheese and salami... when we saw the cheese we almost screamed "CHEESE! there's cheese!", it was very exciting indeed.

It was one party after another. The student-organised Halloween Party at our dormitory started at around 2100 the same evening. It was more fun than other parties we had had in the past few weeks 'cause many people were in costumes, including the Japanese students.

(I must thank Jana for doing my hair. She did some pretty and neat plaids for me to become a "cutie high school girl" - as the costume is called.)

Very exciting it was, to watch everyone's reactions when someone arrives in their costume, and one could hear screeches, whistling, cheers and applause all around. There was Batman (Dan), Dragonball-Z (Sebastian), a clown (Mark), a ninja (Ivan), Sailor Moon (Dorota), a crab (Reinout), Pikachu (Jan), a pumpkin (Felix), Little Red Riding Hood (Sayaka) and a number of schoolgirls (including Larisa and myself), but the hottest schoolgirl had to be Adam, who wore a brunette wig, make-up and the Escada perfume. (I guess he just needed some fake boobs to complete the image!) When Adam got here everyone was screaming with excitement. It was like a celebrity on the red carpet; he loved the attention and was posing for photos as the flashlights sparked continuously at his sailor uniform and perfectly shiny brunette wig.

Andrius had planned to go to Umeda and buy a costume on Friday afternoon but didn't have the time since we had to go to the welcoming party. At the beginning of the Halloween party he was still wearing his checked jumper and jeans, and then half-way through he reappeared as a Roman! If Adam was hot-sexy, then Andrius was revealing-sexy 'cause he only had a bed sheet covering himself. A bloody ingenious idea though.

At around midnight Tanaka-san came down with the security guard to shut the party down. We were furious but didn't dare to say anything. We just moved the party to K-dorm (国際学生宿舎) and continued the party there in the tiny lounge on the ground floor. Not long after that the security guard came in again and told us to go back to our rooms. So we moved to the roof of my dorm, where there were only about 30 of us hanging around there in pitch darkness. We weren't even noisy, just chattering among ourselves, but Tanaka came up again. It was all very frustrating for us - we are university students for f*** sake. And what we didn't understand was that it wasn't the first party we had at the dormitory. There was one the night Rachel and Cayley came - that was the biggest and noisiest party so far, and yet we didn't get shut down that night. Plus we were accused of disturbing the people who lived nearby. Who live near us? We're surrounded by trees and mountains. The only people who lived on campus were the students (both international and local), but everyone was at the party!

Anyway, that was just too surreal - we just couldn't believe what happened. I hadn't had that kind of experience since Mrs. Wooldridge came into Room 23 and told Yan and I that we were singing too loudly in our room, and that was when I was 14 (Year 9).

The party itself was pretty cool though, just a lot of laughter and drinking and chatting. Here are two of my favourite pics of the night (the rest are on facebook) -