The sun rises at approximately 5:20, possibly a bit before. I know this because when I woke up to turn on the air conditioner this morning, it was just coming over the horizon, based upon the rays I could see coming from the other side of the giant gym next door. This noted, I promptly returned to sleep for about an hour.
Today was the semi-formal day, so I pulled out a pair of nicer pants, a nicer top and heels. Because heels make everything more classy. I walked over with Arianna and we found seats for the homestay orientation meeting, which basically covered everything we'd already gotten adequate information for via the Internet with the added bonus of three girls who had previously homestayed.
Then we all flooded downstairs to our mailboxes to pick up information on our families! Finally~
My family has three members: Otousan (Toshihiko, 58), Okaasan (Tsurue, 59) and Oneesan (Misa, 27). They have no pets, at least one member who speaks English, hosted foreign students before, are Christians and don't smoke. They'd like me to teach Misa English. I get my own room (6 tatami), though I don't know if it's traditional or Western style yet. The commute is approximately 30 minutes bus/walking. I meet them at 3 p.m. on Sunday.
After that, I picked up chapstick from the convenience store on campus because I'd forgotten mine when I frantically changed pants this morning and encouraged Daniel through the McDonald's line. I helped a student from Australia as well, as he knew no Japanese and was having trouble ordering.
Then on to Opening Ceremonies, where all the faculty and staff and students related to the international program were gathered to kick off the year. A few people gave speeches, including the president of the university (who has to be in his 30s), a woman from the Australian-Osaka consulate, one of the faculty, one of the staff, a current study-abroad student and the head of the student government. The staff who spoke was the only to give her speech entirely in Japanese (which I could mostly understand) and made many jokes, including one about her being part of the yazuka ("yakuza-sensei").
I hung out there for a couple hours before checking my mailbox... to find a notice that I needed to pay fees for the sumi-e class... which I hadn't signed up for, not even as alternates. So I went in to straighten that out and discovered something had gone wrong in the registration and the sumi-e had bumped me out of the shinto class, which was the only real elective I'd picked and was excited for. Of course it was already wait-listed, so I don't know if I'll have a full schedule or not.
I should get my classes tomorrow, right before the HUGE trip to Kyoto. I swear, the entire international group is going, all 423 of us.
You can actually smoke in a ton of Japanese bars/cafes/restaurants, Japan has some of the most lax public smoking laws in the developed world due to the tobacco industry paying politicians huge amounts of money.
ReplyDeleteHi Katie,
ReplyDeleteVery interesting and exciting. Your host family sounds nice. Your room is 6 tatami which is...?
why is the morning shower a no-no? Is evening OK?
interesting customs. Goodness to you, Frank
I know you can, but it's the first time I'd run into it. They don't smoke like Americans do.
ReplyDeleteRooms are measured in how many tatami mats it takes to cover the floor. I don't recall the exact dimensions of a typical mat, but the room should be approximately 9'x12', or the equivalent area. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatami#Size
Morning showers are a no-go, especially with families with younger children because it ties up the bathroom in the morning when everyone's trying to get ready. Evening showers are the norm, which are what I've taken most of my life.
That's pretty much the time the sun comes up around this time of year. The gods know I saw it coming often enough.
ReplyDeleteand...
TAIKO! I wonder what crazy Ikeda musical idea I'm missing out on at Pacific this year? *sigh*