Tuesday, September 9, 2008

i'm alive!

Yeah, I know it's been centuries since my last post, but i've been very disenchanted with the idea of posting picture-less blogs.
(My camera is still in the repair shop.)
So I've started school! I have different hours every day of the week here, but they are all fun! Most of my classes I have with my homeroom girls: (2L1), but my shodo class, (Japanese Calligraphy), I have with boys, and my tea ceremony class I have with the 1L1 girls.
I love my homeroom. My teacher is Ebihara-sensei, lovingly referred to as Ebi-chan by all of her colleagues. Then there are my classmates; crazy, hyper, giggly, and tons of fun. They all got together and made me this special little pink book. It has all of their names, phone numbers, pictures, hobbies, and other little details in it. There were also little messages:

"I LOVE JAREMIE!"
"Hello. Were you used to school? I am like making better friends with you. Love, Yumi"
"I like cat."
"I play trumpet sax piano."

You get the idea. It was so adorable!
Yesterday was such a busy day for me! I've been wanting to get the Japanese version of Harry Potter ever since I met John at the Rotary Orientation last week and he told me all about his copy. So after school yesterday; I got on my bike, asked a random stranger where the library was, couldn't understand their answer, guessed, biked wildly around Kuzuu for an hour, asked 5 more people where the library was, FINALLY FOUND IT, went in, registered for free, and borrowed Harry Potter. ALL BY MYSELF!

It's due back in 2 weeks.
Their are no limits to my awesomeness. LOL

But the excitement doesn't stop there. I had to be home from the library at 5:00 to go to the "Welcome To Japan, Jaremie!" party that the Rotary was throwing me. I walked in the door at 4:55, pretty punctual, if I do say so myself.
Then we all got ready and drove to the building. IT WAS INCREDIBLE!
There was this giant ballroom looking thing, and we got in, sat at a table especially for us, and the festivities began!
There was this giant banner that said, "WELCOME, JAREMIE!". I gave a little speech filled with a whole bunch of subarashi!'s, arigatou gozaimasu's, and tanoshii's!
(subarashii = wonderful)
(arigatou gozaimasu = thank you very much )
(tanoshii = fun)
The food was delicious. A gigantic silver platter loaded with sashimi (sushi without the rice and seaweed, aka just the raw fish), rows and rows of cake, heaping platters of fresh fruit, a section dedicated to just fried things, rice, and a huge variety of drinks. Also at every table was a dish with these little cookie sticks dipped in chocolate.
I stood up on the podium while all the Rotarians, (at this point most were quite drunk), came up and in their best english, (they had a competition going), greeted me and introduced themselves.
Also, I was presented with an ENORMOUS bouquet of flowers!!! And when I say enormous, I mean it was so heavy it required two hands and if held, it impeded your view because their was no way to hold it where it wouldnt cover your face. There were lilies, roses, sunflowers, little white things, (baby's breath, they might be called?), and so many other ones I couldn't name.
It made me feel so special!!!
I've never been presented with a huge bouquet of flowers like that. I was so overwhelmed by how amazing these people are.
Also, I recieved my 10,000 Yen Check.
So Im rich!

Everyone there had so much fun! One Rotarian stumbled on stage, grabbed the mic, and told everyone that he thought that it would be a good idea to throw a Welcome to Japan party next week. And the week after. And the week after. Every week!
Oh it was so fun.

Also, the only think Aki-kun ate were the chocolate cookie sticks. They were really thin, so about 60 of them fit in each dish, and he would grab them 6 at a time and eat them. He polished of 3 dishes before anyone but me noticed!
LOL.
Oh yeah, in Japan, they don't eat the skin on fruit. Even grapes. You are supposed to suck the grape out of the skin and then throw the skin away. Isn't that interesting?

OMG CALPIS!
I have to write something about Calpis.
It's pronounced Cah-do-piece-u, and its this chilled, vanilla-ey, yogurt drink sort of, except its not the texture of yogurt drinks. Its super super thin. Like ice water. And occasionaly bubbly. Ive never tasted anything like it in my life.
Do they have it in America? Ive never seen it. I hope they do!

Oh I love it here so so so much.
But if you're reading this, I probably really really miss you.

My camera should be fixed soon! That means more video blogs! And more pictures!

My next blog will be: "A day in the life!"

:)

3 comments:

Unknown said...

theres Calpis in america :) In fact, you can find it in almost any japanese store here. Very popular

MomLovesJare said...

Hey, BabyDoll!!! I just love your blog! It sounds like you are doing so very well! I can't wait to talk to you again! We miss you so very much! But, we know you are learning a lot, and having a tremendous experience! Please take very good care, honey! I love you more than you will ever know!!! P.S. : Is it July yet????? Please e-mail me when you can; I LIVE for them!!! Keep up the blogs - they are SOOO fun to read! Talk to you soon, sweetie! Love, Mom xoxoxoxoxoxoxoxo

Unknown said...

Hey, Im a random that found you of cultured shocked, buron.

I went to japan last year jan - jan, loved every minute. I went to Matsuyama on Shikoku, where abouts are you? Your photos look similar, landscape wise, so im quessing you are in the inaka too?

its so exciting seeing you here and it looks like you are already having a great time which is awesome.

I too love calpis, i think its like sprite and milk together.

Hope you camera gets fixed all gooded like and you can take some more AMAZING, photos cuz wow so far really good!

Have fun and I'll probably see you around on cs some time.

Bai!