Arrival in Kanazawa
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Tokyo Orientation finished in a blur (sort of literally) with a fantastic night out in Tokyo with the other JETs (Japan Exchange and Teaching (that's the program I'm in)) going to my prefecture, Ishikawa.
We went out to a restaurant where we got a full course of a ton of food and all we could drink for 2,500 yen per person. That's about $25, and that's one of the most fantastic deals I've ever heard of. Japan does this very frequently, apparently, as we found when some of us tried to go to another bar afterwards. We couldn't find a place that would let us just buy one drink, they all were offering package deals. We wandered around the Shinjuku district for a while, which was sort of like bouncing around in a pinball machine. I took a few pictures, but they're woefully inadequate in terms of communicating what an overwhelming experience downtown Tokyo is.
The people in my prefecture are all fantastic, and I'm really looking forward to hanging out with them for the next year. However, as you will soon read, my experience went from the collective to the lone rather quickly.
With Wednesday morning came a 6:30 wakeup call so we could leave the hotel by 7:30. The flight to Ishikawa was only an hour, but it took a fair amount of time to marshall us and get to the airport, where we boarded a 777. If that doesn't mean anything to you, a 777 is an enormous plane, and in my experience is for long international flights. However, someone pointed out that this was probably a commuter flight, and they just needed the seating room, not the range...sure enough, every one of the 500 seats was filled at 10 AM on a Wednesday. If you haven't heard, there are a lot of people in Japan.
The way the program works is you are under a local supervisor and work closely with at least one Japanese teacher of English. The first day is crazy because you have to meet your supervisor, apply for an Alien Registration Card, set up a bank account, theoretically pay for your apartment, and shop for supplies. My day was unique, though, because they messed up something with my apartment and I have to stay in a hotel for a week. So all the first steps were the same for me, except no apartment.
But check out my "hanko"!
Instead of signatures, they use personal seals in Japan. This is my name, translated into Katakana, one of the Japanese alphabets (there are three). In Katakana it actually reads "Koo-raie-ton" because it was made for me before I introduced myself with the proper pronunciation of my name. Still pretty awesome.
Also, my official contract notice:
There are three other JETs in my department at the Kanazawa Board of Education, and 20 JETs in the city total, so I should have plenty of company. The other three left with their teachers, while I was driven to a hotel and left on my own until 1:30 Friday, when I will be taken to get my "keitai" (cell phone). It's a pretty small room, and my head is 5 inches from the ceiling when I'm in the shower, but it works just fine. Everything is very gadget-y, including the fact that you have to leave the end of your room key into a little slot to make the power work. That means you can't be a wasteful American and leave everything on when you leave. I'm pretty sure that I am actually in The Future, not just in Japan.
It also took me forever to figure out how to work the remote-controlled air conditioner, which was imperative because it's SO HOT HERE. Muggy, too. If you've spent more than five minutes with me in even moderately warm weather you know how much I sweat, so there's been some adjusting...
I promptly fell asleep for 11 hours, 7 PM to 6 AM.
Today I wandered around the city and got lost a bit, explored what I could, then worked on my Japanese. I'll stop blathering and just post some pictures of my new home. Cell phone tomorrow, which apparently takes literally three hours. Unreal.
This I will take a moment to blather about. That little blue sign is the first thing I have ever been able to read and understand in Japanese. I know some spoken Japanese, but I have only just started to learn Hiragana, one of the alphabets. I'm not exactly sure of the protocol of when to use each alphabet yet, but this says "oishii mizu", or "delicious water". I just happened to look over while studying in this cafe and saw that, and it was one of the most exciting moments I've had yet in Japan...
4 comments:
That is a very cool looking and typically Japanese sort of park, I guess. Also, what is delicious water? Water isn't supposed to have much of a flavor?
Who is the statue of? This blog is going to be an educational experience, I hope. I'm sorry we were cut off earlier--my computer died in studio and I did not have the charger.
Also, the phonetics seem right but it reads kuraiton.
Creighton this looks amazing! I'm loving reading the blog. What kind of camera are you using? Looks like a DSLR maybe? (Sorry, I'm a tech geek.) Glad to hear the other folks in your program are fun.
Can you get me my own personal seal? I need one. I feel this will make my life complete. Glad to see you're adjusting and enjoying yourself!
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