2014年2月17日月曜日

Valentine's Day

I have not posted in a long time because I have been really busy.  Also, I lack interesting stories and did not feel like boring you with filler crap about how the local sushi chef blew me a kiss or what have you.

My main motivation for pumping out this post is because my mother told me she prints out my blogs to give to my grandpa.  She said he keeps rereading my old blogs and keeps asking about me.  Of course after hearing this my blog went up to top priority. 

Happy Valentine's Day!
Valentine`s Day passed this weekend so I decided I was going to be with my girlfriend for the first time on Valentine`s Day in years due to living in distant lands.  I packed my things and headed out to Tokyo with the essentials for any successful Valentine`s Day, a bottle of sake and flowers. 
It was a restful weekend that consisted of eating ramen, pizza and relaxing because the week ahead of me would be a long one.  Of course this lovely weekend had to end with me being late to work on Monday due to my inability to ride the Shinkansen the previous Sunday.
 


Apparently there was a huge snow storm in Nagano which cancelled all the trains back.  My only option was to take the earliest train in the morning. 

The Shinkansen was so packed people were standing in the isle.  This is very rare for the Shinkansen.  The good that came from this was I made my Japanese TV debut. When I got off the train, the local news station had a camera setup to film how crowded the train was.  Naturally I walked right in front of the camera and gave it the ol' “Big Foot head turn.” People who know Big Foot know what the hell I'm talking about.  

I will watch the news tonight to see if I made the cut.

Aside from that I taught my girlfriend how to snowboard.  She improved greatly since her first day.  However, I learned teaching a girlfriend something is like walking through a field of landmines.  Tread lightly…


That is all for now, enjoy Poppy, I love you and miss you.

2013年11月7日木曜日

My Life So Far (MLSF)

This will pretty much sum up how I have adapted to the Nakano, Japan culture as an english teacher thus far, which I will add is tremendously different from adjusting and living in Kyoto as a student.

I feel it is important to post this chapter now because I am currently in the transition stage from fall to winter.  You can get an idea of how I have been living from the summer through the fall in Nagano, but I am certain my lifestyle will be changing once the winter hits with full force and snowboarding encompasses my life.

Also a side not before I get started, congratulations to my older sister who is pregnant and her husband. Good job, if you were one of my students you would both definitely get sparkly stickers.

Azusa and I went to a temple and prayed for their baby. You get these charms, right a message on it and then hang it in the temple.  This was an outdoor mountain temple in Kamikochi.


So wow, yeah that's like holy shit. It hits me in waves.  I see little babies running around and I just think holy shit that is a baby.

Ok so back to the focus of this post. I really should have put that tribute at the end.  My life is going to look like a joke after that announcement.

Ok, transition, when I got to Japan I had so much ahead of me to look forward to and challenges I would face acclimating to my new way of life.  As Bruce Lee once said,

"Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water. If you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle and it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.”
This quote has inspired me through the start of this adventure.

Here is an image of my room after I had just unpacked my luggage.

After I had completely unpacked, I layed down, without internet or a phone, and thought about everything and everyone I had left behind.  I decided to go for a walk and explore my new habitat,  And just as I spoke as if I was an animal, I felt like an animal, the way I was stared at and observed by every passing person or vehicle.  I even remember walking by a house and hearing someone inside start chanting some kind of buddhist mantra and stopping after I had just passed his house, as if warding off a demon.  I had never felt more alone in my life.

These sad feeling and fear of this intense change instantly dissolved the moment I got a cellphone in my hand.  You can really tell what generation I am from.  It has pretty much been all sunshine and rainbows after that.

By the way that whole sad, depressing, internetless stage was for one day.  I got a phone the next day due to the great help of my advisor and another ALT (assistant language teacher).

So here is my room now!

I am very comfortable and cosy in my little room.  I have always had a small room since I was little, so this is my kingdom, step into this realm and prepare to get your ass kicked. And then I will offer you a drink and we will sit down and watch TV. Thats the initiation.

That table you see with a blanket coming down is call a "kotatsu".  It is quite a marvelous thing.  It has a little space heater attached to the under side of the table.  The blanket keeps in the heat and you sit with your legs stretched out under the table and blanket.  It keeps you nice and toasty.

I have two fish I take care of.  The orange fish's name is Henry.  Henry is very nice but the other fish is pretty mean to Henry.  Her name is Snippy because she chases Henry around the tank trying to bite him.  As you can see I have gone partially insane.









Here is what I currently look like. As my friend Joey once said," you can tell they have gone crazy when you see that twinkle in their eye."  I haven't heard from Joe in a while.  I wonder if he will even read this.

The robe you see me wearing is called a hanten (半天).  It is worn inside your house in the winter and is filled with down.  It is very warm and I feel like a ninja while wearing it.







So, let's talk about work and my extra curricular activities.  

Working a full time salary job stinks.  I have money now to buy the things I want, such as video games, but no time to play them.  

The work itself however is rewarding and very fun.  The days really go by fast, especially when I have a lot of classes scheduled that day.

Here is the teacher's room.  See if you can spot my desk.

You never realize how much smack the teachers talk about the students until you become one.  I was shocked.  All I could think about was how much of a disruptive pain in the ass I was in school and how the teachers probably sipped their coffees in the teachers lounge and said,"mmmm yes that Frank is a complete doodoo face."


This is my night class during our halloween part carving pumpkins.  It is a class I teach every Tuesday night for two hours at the local community center.  

Sharing my favorite holiday and seeing how much my students got into it and enjoyed it was amazing. 





So, on a less professional note, I bet you are wondering how I spend my precious free time. On the weekends, much of my time is spent with this one...

She is partially insane too.  I am from the west and she is from the east so when we come together our insanity creates a kind of hurricane and we feed off each others madness.  I'll have to be more careful.



We have been adventuring around Nagano in my white lazer beam visiting temples, shrines, hotsprings, or the Japan Sea.  I decked out my car with a sick roof rack for our snowboards.  We r ready to tear up the Japanese Alps.

I would also like to take this time to comment on Japanese drivers.  They are absolutely horrible.  I will be driving and old women on scooters will be dive bombing into the street with a death wish.  I picture them saying," I'm too old for this shit, as they dive bomb into the street."

The tailgating  is horrible and the traffic lights are soooooooo poorly timed.  It is designed to have you stop at every friggin light.

Back to my free time...Here is a temple on a cliff we visited which had a great view.  We were also the only ones there so the temple was really creepy, and I loved that about it.

On the weekdays or during free time I enjoy playing an MMO called Dragonquest X which just released on the PC.  It is not available in America which is too bad but guess what. I can speak Japanese, bwaa haaahaha

I consider it studying

When I was in Kyoto I joined the Men's Ritsumeikan Lacrosse team and it will always remain one of my most treasured experiences, but I always had an interest in martial arts.  I regretted not practicing a martial art while I was in one of the native countries.  

This time I decided to try a new sport. 

This is Seidokaikan full contact karate.  My goal was to make friends and continue a healthy lifestyle, so mission accomplished.  I am having a blast and I can not believe how complex a punch and kick actually is.  There is a a lot of (secret techniques I can not disclose) that goes into it.






All is well in Japan.  I am having a blast and I will continue to cruise through life in this fashion.  As long as I do not get mixed up in a bad crowd, like these guys on the right, I think I will be ok.

2013年10月17日木曜日

A Fall Weekend / 秋の週末

I had a lovely, long weekend a few days ago.  I was lucky enough to have my girlfriend, Ms. Azusa (AKA あっちゃん), come to visit me in Nagano.  After I picked Ms. Azusa up from Nagano Station after her long Shinkansen ride, we stopped to get ramen.  It was a place I have been to and recommend so obviously it was a delicious and irrefutable establishment.

We went to bed early because we had big plans to go hiking and followed by a relaxing evening at an Onsen (hot spring) with a couple of friends on Saturday.

Saturday morning came and we had the usual thoughts of, “forget our plans, let`s go back to sleep and say we don`t feel well.” After indulging in these thoughts of possibly sleeping in, Azusa and I forced ourselves out of the futon and into our hiking gear and away we went to meet Yamato, a fellow ALT (assistant language teacher), his wife Aya, and Blair, another ALT.



We hiked for about 5 hours at a local mountain called Shigakogen, which is famous for hosting the Winter Olympics in 1998.  The fall colors have barely started but there was still plenty of beautiful nature to observe.






The hike was suppose to last longer but luckily our slave driver of a guide Yamato, made a wrong turn at Albuquerque which brought as back to the beginning of our hike. We got to go to the Onsen a little bit earlier than scheduled but nobody was complaining.
Fall colors
On a mountain in a cloud

After refreshing at the hot spring and getting some ice cream, we all went our separate ways.  Azusa and I went back to my apartment and enjoyed some Breaking Bad episodes which at some point got changed to a Japanese fashion program…

Sunday was a bit more of a casual day.  We woke up a bit later and went straight to lunch as I get “crabby” when I am hungry. Most the stores would probably close when they see the hideous beast that is a hungry Frankie rolling up to their front with its eyes going in separate directions and drool spewing from its mouth.

Anyway, we had a lovely lunch a Nepali curry restaurant which is extremely authentic and serves all you can eat Nan (google it).

 After filling up and shopping, we went to the Fall Rose Festival in Nakano City`s Ippongi Park. Nakano is most famous for their spring rose festival, however, there is also a fall festival that was quite beautiful.  

There was an astonishingly wide variety of roses.  Also, there was live music being played.  Azusa and I relaxed and enjoyed the beautiful flowers and their sweet fragrance. 

















For dinner that evening I don`t remember what we had or even what we did…I sat thinking about it for 5 min. and nothing.

Monday was a holiday in Japan so everyone had off.  Azusa and I slept in and then headed toward Nagano City to get lunch.  We ate at a popular restaurant from the Kansai region that had just opened up in Nagano two days earlier!  It is called Baby Face Paradise or Baby Fei for short.  They are famous for massive portions


Ah! I remember what I did Sunday night.  Azusa and I went to a neighboring town called Obuse to a burger place called Tommy`s.  It was an amazing burger.  I was really surprised by the quality and size.  Probably the best burger place I have ever been too.  Of course, being at the best burger place in Japan, there were 3 other foreigners in the restaurant.  This is extremely rare for the area I am living in.  One of them happened to be an ALT named York.  The other two were training to grow Bonsai Trees.  One had been training for 8 years and was about ready to head back to America to start working as a professional Bonsai guy.









So, back to Monday at Baby Fei, they are famous for massive portions of a dish called omelet and rice.  They serve the dreaded “SUMO SIZE”.  I ordered one level below the sumo size and I could barely finish it.  Their pasta is also amazing.  The restaurant is famous for having insane decorations.  Every booth had a TV playing old Looney Toons.






















Azusa then hopped on the Shinkansen and headed home.  It was a very active and relaxing weekend.



2013年10月15日火曜日

Winter is coming / もうすぐ冬が来る

Today I started winter proofing my apartment.  This consists of me taking bubble wrap, a spray bottle full of water, and spraying down the windows which acts as an adhesive for the bubble wrap to stick to the windows.

To be honest, I really think everyone is over reacting to the winter.  Over the past couple weeks I have heard about 100 times how I am going to die when the winter comes.  I am pretty sure waking up at 3 in the morning to plow snow in New Jersey has made my blood thick enough that I will be drinking my coffee on my balcony in a thong.

Anyway, I am extremely excited for snowboarding.  I am currently figuring out which mountain I want to get a season pass for.  I have heard mixed reviews.  The most common piece of advice I have received is to get a pass for Nozawa Onsen.  I have also heard it is worth it to pony up the extra cash to pay for the Super pass which gives access to 3 olympic resorts.  The final piece of advice was to go to a smaller mountain that has an amazing terrain park.  I will have to investigate further on this.  Probably purchasing a pass to the resort most of my friends will be getting is going to take the cake.

So, over the past week I got a snowboard rack put on my car.



I will be following up this post with an update of my weekend and a hike I went on in Shigakogen



2013年9月12日木曜日

New Car, New Snowboard, and Elementary School

After about a month of tearing through Nakano City on a bicycle at top speeds, I decided to upgrade to an AWD, super charged, drifting machine. I have named it 白い刀, Shiroi Katana, because it cuts through the wind with the force and swiftness of a katana and shiroi is "white" in Japanese. Here is a picture of the beast.

Men, keep your women close, because when I come rollin' by in this earthshaking land cruiser, you may find yourselves a bit more lonely than you remember being.





The next new addition to my life came in the mail the other day.  I found myself purchasing my dream snowboard, which I have been thinking about since I was in high school.  I was able to purchase a new snowboard for when I am faced with intense powder and snow that is notorious here in Nagano. 

 The difficulty lied in dodging the ridiculous Japanese prices.  After searching for a while, I found a company that shipped to Japan and could be purchased with the US dollar.  Instead of paying the equivalent to 700 US dollars I only payed around $400.  Here is a picture of the board.


This is an Arbor Roundhouse RX mid-wide board.  This is an all mountain, rocker board.  It is made with bamboo and also recycled materials.  I can not wait for winter.



















I finally visited two of my elementary schools the previous week and I now know why kids have so much energy!  It is because they are latching on to all the adults and sucking it out of us. They are stealing our energy!  

Outside of being extremely tired after elementary schools, I have to say it is a lot of fun and the kids are extremely interested in you.  I had to sign autographs for about 15 minutes. I was signing kids sports towels, notebooks, and arms.  I'm kind of a big deal now with elementary school.  

I also had the privilege of being told by a six year old girl to go wash my hands before eating.  Everyone then proceeded to freak out when I told them I did not have a pocket towel.  I have since purchased one.

The first year students all take care of two sheep which is really cute and quite amazing that such young kids are given that responsibility.  The best part is that they take care of the sheep and they do it well.  

My ending piece of advice for dealing with children, and this is a well known fact, is bring an arsenal of stickers.  When you break those bad boys out, everyone's eyes grows two sizes and you will gain instant control.

This up coming weekend is a 3 day weekend and I plan on going to Tokyo so you can look forward to some pics of that.

2013年9月1日日曜日

Back in Japan 日本に戻った

It has been a while but I am back in Japan and finally connected to the internet after a month of suffering with only my cellphone connection...I realized, just as in America, towards the central part of the country things tend to move a bit slower.

I was foolish to think it would be easy to re-acclimate to the Japanese culture just because I have been here before.  Life in Kyoto as a student differs greatly from life in northern Nagano as a full time employee of the city.  I have a much greater concern for how I act and what the people around me think because it will seriously affect my reputation.  When in a more rural area, everyone seems to know each other and information tends to spread like wild fire.  I have students who know what kind of groceries I like to buy or who I hung out with the previous weekend.  My girlfriend visited Nagano this past weekend and I am sure I am going to hear all about it at school tomorrow.

When I first arrived to Nagano I had a lot of help from my supervisor and the other JET's in the area.  They helped me with some shopping and setting up my cellphone.  I ended up going on a very difficult, dangerous, but fun hike.  So you can understand the magnitude of this hike, someone had already died this year on it.  If you looked to your left or right it was a straight drop down.  Regardless, I kicked the poop(Mother edit) out of the hike.







I had the opportunity one weekend to visit my friend in Shiga.  I stayed with him a couple of days and we went to lake Biwako and played some ground golf.  Ground golf was like mini golf with clubs and bocce balls.  Hot but fun.  I also got to experience the Penny board which is an old school skateboard that rides so smooth it is as if you were gliding on ice with butter skates.  We went to Kyoto to watch the opening lacrosse game. I got to see all my old lacrosse friends.  They all were happy to see me.  I bet most of them expected to never see me again in their life.  I then went to Osaka and practiced lacrosse with the Gold Zealers with my friend from Shiga.  I thought I was going to die from a combination of my lack of stamina and the insane heat in southern Japan.  Afterwards I got to enjoy some amazing Yaki Niku and had a blast.


That is all for now and I will try to keep up with this Blog.  The next post you can expect to see my new car, new snowboard, and my apartment.  For now I am off to the super market to get discounted Bento! When reading my blog be aware you may run into spelling errors or grammatical errors, you would be insane if you think I am going to proof read a blog post so deal with it.



2011年11月17日木曜日

Brooklyn visit

I enjoyed this visit very much even though the person who was supposed to show us their studio did not show up.  He said that the L train had stopped running or something like that.  I am a bit more cynical to just except that excuse.  We spent sometime in a mall drinking coffee but it was fun because I got to talk to people I never have in the class.  This develops a stronger class relationship to have this social time which is important for learning.  We then went around to a couple of random studios such as 3rd ward.  They had a very nice building but seemed expensive.  I did not know such an option existed for artists after they graduate.  I find this option very helpful for getting the resources you need to work.  We then got to visit a gallery made to help unknown artists gain show experience.  This is a good gallery to keep the information for the future.  Finally we ended up at the studio of Bruce "something".  I can not remember the name, maybe Bruce technologies? Something with Bruce.  This Studio was huge and had a lot of resources to work with.  The speaker also had a lot of good advice to give.  I did not know studios where groups can work together like this existed.  I just figured after graduation it was time to hit the gallery submissions.  Ultimately I learned a lot about my options in the future and Brooklyn did not seem like that bad of a place.