Archive for January, 2006

Winter in Tokyo

Friday, January 20th, 2006

From Our Tokyo Balcony in Snow

I’ve just posted in the gallery pictures of our first snowfall this winter in Tokyo. The one above is a stiched photo of the scene behind our apartment from the balcony. It is the same view as the stiched photo from October (see below). The first six photos in the January 2006 gallery are the stiched photo and the five photos that were used to make the stiched photo. Also in the gallery are pictures of our visit to Maebashi and Akagi Mountain. Karen wrote about this in her blog entry so I won’t.

The URL for the gallery is: http://www.nerdylorrin.net/gallery2/v/kd_2005/kd_2005_Japan/Jan2006/

Happenings in Tokyo for the Gourds

Friday, January 20th, 2006

The last blog entry was philosophical in nature (my natural tendency), but there is a lot of information, details I can share as well. Over winter break, my colleague and friend, Michiyo, invited David and me to go to the mountain home of her husband to spend two days with her, her husband, and their two daughters. Their mountain home is only a couple of hours from Tokyo, but it is deep in snow at this time of the year. We had a lovely time with them in their mountain home. We went to an onsen, and I had my first experience of being outside in the hot spring water while it snowed. The snow was very light (only a snow flake now and then!), but it was cold and the occasional snowflake served as a reminder of the cold because, although naked, the spring water so heated the body, that I felt hot. I will always remember that after sitting in the hot, outdoor spring for more than a half hour, when I got out and walked into the building, I did not feel any need to hurry! I was too relaxed to rush and was not in the least bit cold! In fact, we had stayed so long in the hot spring that when I entered the building, I felt the need to drink water and got a bit dizzy. I love onsens! I hope everyone who has the chance to onsen, will take it! David does not like hot baths and consequently does not appreciate the onsen experience. He stayed at the mountain home while the rest of us relaxed in the cold mountain air and the hot spring water.

The following morning, Susumu, Michiyo’s husband, drove us further into the mountains! The road was slippery, and Susumu-san had forgotten to put the four-wheel drive. He stopped to change from two-wheel to four-wheel drive, but then we did not have enough traction on the slope to get started. David, Michiyo, Ayano, and I got out to push, and we made some progress, but it was too slippery for us to get good traction. We then pulled grass from the side of the road that was not too buried in snow. We put the grass on the road, climbed in, and sure enough we were happily on our way. Memories of trying to back our large blue van down a slippery hill because I hadn’t made it up came flooding back for me! Tina and I came so very close to ending up at the bottom of the very deep gully in Northern New York on a New Year’s Eve. The NY experience was more life-threatening than this one as Tina and I teetered over the gully with more of the van over the edge than not, and we had to figure out how to get out of the van without causing it to lose its precarious balance. To this day, I cannot remember how we got out of that van. All I can say is it just was not our time to part from this world. Being stopped on this slippery road on a slope was not exactly safe, however. Cars coming up behind us had to pass us and cars coming from the other direction had to cautiously pass by. Going down the hill backwards was not an option, and at times going up it did not seem like much of an option either. It was one of those experiences that once it was over, there was a sense of group collaboration generated by having the shared experience.

We continued our drive into the mountains. We went to a shrine and spent time there to warm up but also took advantage of our bilingual friends, who could explain a lot of the charms and traditions attached to the shrine. Going to a shrine is something that many Japanese do during the first week of the New Year. We were there on January 4, 2006. We drove around a huge lake that is in the middle of three mountain peaks. Because it has been a cold winter, and the ice was solid, there were many people ice fishing. It was interesting to see some of their ice-fishing cultural icons. They have see-through plastic tents where they gather to stay warm and to eat. It was a great trip for David and me because we got to experience some New Year traditions in Japan, and because we got to spend time with Japanese friends in their home.

Returning to school after the two-week break was not easy. The two weeks was enough time to lose momentum, but not enough time to completely refurbish the engines! We started back on Jan 10th, and had three and a half weeks of the semester to complete. The stress levels have been high as SILS students have a lot to do in the final weeks.

The research interviews I have been doing for a project with Professor Iino continue to be interesting and positive experiences. I am learning so much by talking to individual students. I am finding them even more exciting now since Professor Iino and I were awarded 300,000 yen for our research for transcription costs. I am elated and relieved! Interviews are great for learning, but transcribing them is a lot of work!

This past week, one of the deans at SILS invited me to join a group of faculty and administrators for a monthly gathering at a Korean restaurant for food and drinking. Since I am vegan and do not drink, my purpose for going was completely to meet people at SILS. It was a very nice evening as I did get to connect some faces to some names I knew. Also, I sat next to a woman who has many students from China in her course. Since that is our largest group of students seeking a four-year degree from outside of Japan, I really want to interview some Chinese students. I had not had any volunteers from that group. When I mentioned that I would like to interview some of her students, she invited me to attend her class to recruit volunteers the next day. I did and have already scheduled some interviews with some of her students. This was such great timing!

I am also excited because one of my duties as the RD of JS is to visit all the sites where are students will being doing month-long practicums. The academic year begins in April, so we are completing one academic year with the end of this semester. The next break is comparable to a summer break in the US. Our JS students will do practicums, and still have one month of break. Michiyo and I will be going to Niigata this coming week in order to visit the new site for our program; then on Feb 9th, we will take two students to the site. Ben and Lisa introduced me to this site (which is in Niigata prefecture, not Niigata city), and Michiyo and I have worked together to arrange for two students to do their practicum there. We both are excited about this new opportunity, and Niigata will always have a special place in my heart. We spent nearly two weeks there in June 2003 with Lisa and Ben and their friends, especially the Sakura family. We returned there for a long weekend while Lisa, Ben, and Sophia were here in October. It is familiar to me, and I have a sense of going home (to my Japanese home) when I think of going to Niigata.

In addition to Niigata, I will be visiting many other parts of Japan. David is making the trip with the nine JS students, Michiyo, and me as we take the overnight train to Shimane Prefecture the second weekend of February. This is a very rural part of Japan. We will stay there two days so we will have time to get to know the area a little. David will then return to Tokyo, and Michiyo and I will head to Osaka to meet two students who will spend a month in that area. We will spend the day in the Osaka area and return to Tokyo late that same day. My spring break will be very busy, but it will be exciting.

I have finished my last lecture class at SILS. On Tuesday, my students will take their final. (And I have it almost written. I only need to do editing and final revising before copying it!) The next three class periods will be their student group policy research projects that should be very interesting. I have such nice students. I will hate to see the semester end! At the end of our winter break, we had the students over to our apartment for dinner. David got to meet them and now better understands how nice they are. We really enjoyed our evening with them! I could also continue teaching this course for another entire semester. It is such an interesting topic and there is just so much that we can do with it and not feel bored or tired of it!

Life in Tokyo continues to be exciting and rewarding! My one complaint is that we have not seen our granddaughter in a very long time! We were very used to seeing her on video camera every few days, but since they moved to their new home a couple of weeks ago, they do not have a phone! We’re suffering from Sophia withdrawal!

Learning in Tokyo

Friday, January 20th, 2006

We have been in Japan for more than five months, we have met the New Year here, and I am close to the end of the first semester. So much has happened in the past five months. Despite our continued struggles to learn Japanese, we have learned so very much in general. I have been interviewing SILS students, have my own students in my course, and have much contact with the Japan Study students, who have come to Japan from US Midwest private colleges. In addition, I work closely with a Japanese colleague, Michiyo, and have had some conversations with other SILS faculty members and with Resident Directors from other US colleges/Waseda partnerships. All of these people have helped me learn a great deal about Japan and Japanese. Essentializing notions such as “Japanese are conformists,” have been severely challenged. As my understanding of Japanese education, both in policies and practice, has grown, so has my understanding of why being a professor in Japan is such a comfortable experience, especially when teaching a course on social justice and education. Japanese society is complex, and the educational policies and practices are exceptionally interesting and complex. I have learned so much from students and colleagues here, and this type of learning is what makes life so very interesting and worthwhile.

Learning the Japanese language is a different story. I can tell that my Japanese has improved (and David’s has improved even more than mine), but the improvement has been slow and taken so much work. We both study Japanese several hours a week, but for me, I can summarize my experience that I seem to spend many more hours “forgetting” Japanese than I spend learning it. I am resigned to the fact that I am not going to be close to fluent in even basic Japanese at the end of our year here, but at least I will know a lot more than I knew previously.

Another great aspect of life in Tokyo for me has been my increasing desire to act on my interests in Japanese designs, handiwork, and fabrics. Although my Japanese is limited, I can read pictures and have experience sewing, so I have convinced myself that I will be able to create or be inspired to create similar designs for clothing, quilts, and art based on pictures I am gathering while here. I am also planning to acquire fabrics that will be difficult to find in the US that I can use to create some unique items. Since I was very young, I have been drawn to fabrics and amazing handiwork designs in patterns. Many aspects of the Japanese sense of beauty resonate with my soul. This has supported an ever-increasing sense of inner peace for me even while I live in one of the most populated cities in the world. It has also been a source of confidence in my own creative abilities. Perhaps I am fooling myself as I am immersed in this “foreign” experience, and it will be a temporary confidence in creativity. However, I presently am finding it immensely satisfying.