Thursday, May 19, 2011

A Hard-hitter

Early in the year, I offered the students the chance to write me a letter whenever they wanted, and I would reply to them. I got quite a few those first few months, but it's been a while since I got my last letter, so I was surprised when to get one today. The letters have usually been along the lines of "what singers do you like?" or "how many brothers/sisters do you have?" or questions about studying English. So I was understandably surprised when I read this:

Dear Rebeca,
I have questions. I heard Osama bin Laden killed by American on TV. I can't understand why American did it. I think we can't lost demonstration and war even if they killed him. However, many Americans were pleased. Why?? How do you think about him?
I'm interested in international problem now. I'm thinking why are there war and demonstration in the world and what can I do to lost them.
From ~.

Wow. So I found myself writing a letter today explaining the events of 9/11 and our subsequent obsession with Osama bin Laden in as succinct a way as possible. My student is smart, so I didn't limit my English too much in order to give her a challenge. I'm going to include my response here, in part because it's the most critically I've thought about these events so far, and also because maybe some of you have some thoughts on how you would interpret/explain Americans' reactions to bin Laden's death if you were asked.

Dear ~, 
Those are some very interesting and difficult questions. I will do my best to answer them.
Osama bin Laden was America's #1 enemy. He was the leader of a terrorist group called "al Qaeda". On September 11, 2001, al Qaeda attacked the United States. They used two airplanes to destroy the World Trade Center Towers. These were two of the tallest buildings in New York City.
More than 2,500 people were killed that day. I remember where I was when it happened. I was 13 years old, in junior high school. I was in the library waiting to give a presentation. At 9:00 AM, the teacher stopped the class and turned on the TV. We all watched the two towers fall. It was a terrible event, similar to the March 11th earthquake and tsunami in Japan. But this wasn't nature. This was man-made.
After the attack, al Qaeda made a video. In it, Osama bin Laden said he was glad. He said he planned the attack. he said that he hated America. So America has been looking for Osama bin Laden for almost 10 years. When we killed him, Americans were pleased because we were angry with him. 
But you have a good point. It's not right to enjoy killing another person. I think Americans are worried and scared. Osama bin Laden's death is a symbol of hope. It makes us feel strong and in control. But really, we have a lot of problems. It's easier to focus on one evil man than it is to think about all our problems. 
I hope I answered some of your questions. I'm so glad you're asking these questions. It is important to learn about the world. I was your age when I became interested in international problems. 
If you have more questions, you can ask me anytime. You are an amazing student and I hope you will continue to challenge yourself. 
Your friend,
Rebeca

It hardly seems enough. I know I left out a lot of things, and I've probably misspelled something and my memory may be inaccurate on some points. Maybe the letter is too long, or the English too complicated and she will get discouraged. I sincerely hope this isn't the case, though, because this is a critical moment, where a student reaches out to a teacher to explain the world, and I want to provide an answer that is both adequate and accessible. An answer that is simple enough for her to understand, but complicated enough to make her want to ask more questions.

It's tough work, this teaching thing. One minute, it's all fun and games, the next it's asking me to evaluate and explain my world views. One minute I feel unnecessary, and the next, people want me to be in 3 places at once. One minute I'm playing tag and the next I'm on the phone giving someone my t-shirt size. I just re-read my Statement of Purpose that I wrote for my JET application. Not my best work, but still surprisingly relevant. Maybe sometime I'll put that up here. Until then, consider the letters above. I'd love to hear your thoughts, and maybe even your version of the letter. Think about it.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

A Day in the Life

We'll start with the one bad thing that happened today, and work our way up to the good things. This also happens to be chronological. First period, the schedule had a mystery block for the 2nd and 3rd graders at the junior high school. I only understood the word "guidance" in the label, so I asked what was going on. I was told that various subjects were offering  a special, or "select" course offering, which 2nd and 3rd grade students could take to learn a bit more about that subject. The subjects offered this year were music, Japanese, industrial arts, and I think home-making. The two English teachers had discussed the option of a "select" English class, maybe showing some movies, doing some fun activities, but neither one had the time for it. And of course, no one bothered to ask me.
This really burns me. I WASN'T EVEN APPROACHED ABOUT THIS CLASS. NO ONE EVEN CONSIDERED MENTIONING IT TO ME, AND I WOULD HAVE LOVED TO DO IT!!!!!! Man. So I had a very indirect, passive aggressive talk with Ms. Nakamura, basically pleading to be told about everything English-related, stressing my language barrier and desire to help. The thing about Ms. Nakamura: she's a great teacher and works very hard, but she's not a team player. And I need her to recognize that I'm part of the team, especially if I'm to do my job well.

But it gets better from here. There was a visiting student today, 15-year-old Joy from Portland, Oregon, whose parents were both born in Japan and whose mother is actually from Nishihara. She spent two days with the students, and I got to speak English with a native speaker (a rarity in Nishihara)! She was very sweet, and much more outgoing and confident than I was at 15, and she spoke Japanese, so she got along great at the school. We watched the students practice for Sports Day, which included practicing relay-races, choreographed dances, etc. I finally couldn't help myself, and asked if I could join in their dance, so I spent a good 30 minutes mimicking the dance moves as best I could, and fooling most people into thinking I knew what I was doing. These are the songs I'm going to get to participate in: Love Revolution 21, by Morning Musume, and Onara Hazukashikunai, (up to 3:20) (the second song translates into "Farts are not Shameful"). Both are fun, and the girls are pretty pumped about it, and certainly tickled that I'm joining them.

Then school ended, and I went home. As I got there, I noticed a small boy, my neighbor's 6-year-old grandson, standing in my back yard, picking some red berries from a bush/vine clump. I said hi and went to look at what he was picking.

 I didn't even realize there were pick-able berries in my yard until I saw him picking and eating them. Most of them he was pocketing. He's seen and picked these berries before around his house, so he seemed to know what he was doing. He also seemed to have no reservations about picking them from my yard. Of course, I could hardly hold a grudge, since I never would have known about them if he hadn't been picking them. They're good. Not as sweet as most berries, and strange at first, but good nonetheless. I love surprises like this!

On the left is the wall of the garden.
Then I went to walk Zuma. There is a magical garden that I walk past everyday. It's quite large, flanking a small driveway (more for show than for cars), and each side easily covers the same area as my house. There are flowers and fruits and vegetables scattered about in no discernible pattern, creating an overall wondrous effect. The front is edged by a wall that meets the street. The plants flower in stages, and I've been admiring them since March. A few days ago, the pink flower bushes lining the driveway burst into full bloom, then died off. This garden must be full of hidden gems!

It happened that this time, the obachan (old lady, lit. "grandmother") who tends this magical place was out working, right on the edge. She saw me and waved me in. She began speaking a lot of Japanese, and though her speech was very clear for someone her age, much of what she said went over my head. But I understood some:

    Come come you work at the junior high school oh yes yes here take some flowers (cuts flowers and hands them to me) all you want tie your dog up right here (emphatically patting a short tree) how about some pink ones here take these two come on but talk to Shoichiro he's lived in America for two years I'll get him stay right there (goes inside and comes out with her grandson) he speaks English you should take some strawberries Shoichiro go get some clean newspaper I'll get you some blue flowers here hold the newspaper like this (she made a makeshift strawberry-holder) take lots here here there are lots...

You get the idea.

The bundle.
So I got to pick strawberries for the first time! Meanwhile I chatted briefly with her grandson, who indeed spoke some English. He looked even more confused than I was at the whole situation, but we both made the best of it and he helped me pick strawberries. Meanwhile, the obachan cut more flowers and handed them to me. I wrapped them all up as best I could in the newspaper, and with one arm full of flowers and fruit, and the other holding Zuma's leash, I left the premises.


The flowers, after I arranged them.

The strawberries, before I ate them.
After all this, I spent a quiet Friday evening at home, cooking spinach and sweet potatoes (both gifts from another Japanese gardening friend), watching the Daily Show and reading fairy tales for potential material for my adult English conversation class.

Strange to say, but it felt like a normal day.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

A few random afterthoughts

Turns out my English is a lot faster now. A Japanese commented to say that my English is very fast, when she never seemed to think so before. Time to get used to speaking slowly again! Fortunately, the Japanese language feels deliciously familiar, even if I only understand it at a slower speed.

Also - I ate lunch at one of my elementary schools, where the kids all shouted "Rebeca Sensei" and made valiant efforts to high five, peak around corners, or convince me I should eat lunch with their table. I've become a sensation since I recognized a K-pop song and busted a move during lunch last time I was there. The 2nd graders nearly had a meltdown, they thought it was so funny and now they want nothing but to see my break into song and dance. They're welcome was considerably warmer than the one at my junior high school. There it was mostly the teachers I saw, and only a couple commented on seeing me again, and then it was routine silence as no one bothered to tell me anything about the upcoming sports day, today's schedule change (I spent all morning preparing for an afternoon lesson that was never going to happen), or anything really. It was a sad reminder that I am going to have to make my ignorance blatantly obvious and even pressing if I am going to get any information. No one seems to get it - I want to be informed and involved, not simply seen as an afterthought.

The wind is blowing fiercely outside. Some kinda storm's a-brewin'. The leaves are fiercely green, though, and the weather's been muggy and hot since I got back, meaning summer's basically here. And so are the mosquitoes. Poor JHS students, they still have to wear their winter uniform, even in this sticky heat. There's an official announcement during the school year that says they can switch to summer uniforms or to winter (a throw-back to old clothing-changing customs about which I know little), but until then they must follow protocol. They were dying in class on Monday, as was I, since I wasn't given much of a role my first day back, and the lessons turned out to be rather boring.

Lastly - I have a kindle! I've been taking it with me on plane rides, and it's fantastic! If I finish a book, I can either go on to one I already have on the kindle, or I can go online for a new book, buy it, receive it and start reading it, all within a minute using just the kindle. It's almost too easy! I've just started a page turner that I can't put down, so now I'm even carrying it to work, for days when there's little to do, like today. Hopefully I'll keep reading more - I've been away from it for awhile.

Monday, May 9, 2011

America

Now that I'm back, it's almost hard to believe that I went home at all. 10 short days was all I had to spend at home. I spent the better part of 48 hours traveling there and back. So I've been away from English teaching and Japanese living for about 2 weeks. Coming back, as familiar as it all is, I can tell it will take a few more days for me to readjust to Japan.

I spent a few Glorious Days back on the Harvard campus with my undergrad friends. My time in Cambridge was divided rather perfectly between spending the earlier part of the day with my Aunt Lisa and the latter part of the day (often well into the next morning) with members of the Noteables, my college Broadway singing group. When I graduated, I was the only senior in the group, which allowed me to grow rather close to the underclassmen. It apparently also meant that I became something of a legend over this past year of my absence, so when I arrived, I was afforded the status perhaps of a deity. And I enjoyed every minute of it! Despite looming exams and papers, every night was spent in the company of some combination of my beloved Note-a-children, and from the moment I got my first hug, it felt like I'd never left. It felt so natural and wonderful to be seeing them all again!

With Lisa, I ate lunch at regular times, walked the streets of Cambridge, pondered the mysteries of life, and picnicked by the river. With Lisa and Rebecca, Lisa's Japan-savvy friend and Boston resident, I discussed the oddities of Japan, got lost navigating campus, and enjoyed several Arts First performances (a festival of undergrad arts performances was going on around campus while I was there). Lisa and I also managed a trip to Boston's MFA to see an AMAZING Dale Chihuly blown glass exhibit. That one gave me shivers - it was titled "Through the Looking Glass" and it really felt like walking into a world created by Lewis Carroll, Roald Dahl, and Tim Burton. It was stunning! 

My time in Cambridge passed quickly, and before I knew it, I was on a plane to Texas. The density of people I saw in Texas was certainly less, but the time spent with people was splendid. I spent time in Houston, Corpus Christi, and San Antonio, and only saw a few wonderful people in each place. I spent a couple of great dinners with my mom and brother, since the latter can now drink. The three of us have developed an odd relationship: close, yes, but definitely odd. And it makes me happy.

So besides reveling in joy and love and happiness, how did my trip to America affect me? Well, the first unexpected side-effect I noticed was my constant thirst. After my first 24 hours back, I had spoken more English than I probably had in the prior two months. I talked myself dry, day after day after day. I joked and I laughed and I sang and I made snarky comments and I shouted familiar names and I said "bless you" to people when they sneezed. No one does that last one in Japan. 

I had also intended to eat A LOT of food during my short stay. But I seem to have adopted a Japanese appetite, and perhaps American food really is that much heavier, and I found myself increasingly unable to eat American-sized portions. I didn't eat nearly as much as I intended, in nearly enough places. The food was delightfully familiar and far from Japanese, but by far my favorite meal of the whole trip was at the Guatemalan bakery and restaurant in Houston, called El Quetzal. My mom and I shared a couple of platters of traditional, cheap, and yummy Guatemalan food, some of which Mama didn't even recognize. Soooo good! And so simple! And so cheap! And so far from Japan...

There were other small differences I noticed as well. Back in America, I immediately felt much smaller. Not only were the people much bigger in all dimensions, but airport officials are noticeably ruder, especially if you're coming from Japan. Things in general were just cheaper, and it felt strange using a debit or credit card at the store since in Japan, cash is king. Driving on the right side of the road felt strange for the most part - I'll admit I was somewhat relieved to be back here driving on the left. Everything was bigger - people, cars, roads, stores, my dog. I got to see Parker, who was much bigger than I had remembered! A little slower, too, but then maybe I've grown a little too used to Zuma's running circles every morning. 

I ate a mango while I was home. It was juicy and big and perfect. It stands out in my mind even more since I spotted a $13 mango in the grocery store yesterday. I've definitely found them for a $1.50 before, but they've never turned out right. 

And limes. I made sure to put lime juice on things whenever I could, even had a couple of glasses of fresh limeade. Which is making me thirsty. Apparently I'm still not over this dehydration from the trip, although I'm talking considerably less. 

Readjusting to life here is taking some time. I feel that I'm quieter than before I left, and a bit more peeved than usual at things that I should come to expect. Things like sudden schedule changes that no one informs me about (which happened today). Or the onset of extreme shyness because I'm back to needing a language I don't know very well. Admittedly, I was better adjusted before I went home, and now that I'm back and the memory of home is still fresh, I'm holding bigger grudges. I think I just need time to settle back to where I was, get back to my routine of studying the language and re-discovering the Crazy that makes me laugh, while learning to pass over the Crazy that actually drives me crazy. 

And I know it's a few days late, but I want to make a shout-out to Mama. You do so much and make it look so easy. Especially during this trip. It's like everything you do naturally and powerfully says "I love you, so it's no problem at all." No puedo expresar la admiracion que tengo para usted. Le quiero con todo mi corazon, y me alegre que tenga usted para madre. Cada dia usted me da fuerza e inspiracion! Gracias por todo!