Saturday, August 30, 2008

Update!

I'm doing well here. I am starting to get over being so homesick now. :D

My host family is great. My little brothers are really cute and they like to play "trump" with me. It's matching using a deck of cards or the nice animal cards Dad got for them. They always get really excited when I say more than 2 words to them in Japanese. My host mom is very sweet. She is very helpful and kind. I can't wait to learn more Japanese so I can get to know her better. My host dad is a huge help. He acts as my translator when we are shopping for cell phones and at the Rotary dinners when people ask me more complicated questions than is the food delicious? Haha. It was nice to have an English speaker while I was settling in. I think he will stop speaking English to me in a few weeks though. That's good I guess.

At my welcome party I will get to see all my Rotary friends again. Since I am done with my class now, I won't see them very much. All that I really know about it is that I have to give my speech that we worked on in our class.

The class was really fun and I think I learned quite a bit. It gave me a good base to work off of so hopefully I'll be able to start making better sentences soon. I'm really glad I took it, but you've gotta tell AnnaMarie that she was wrong. I am definitely not the best one here at Japanese. Haha. I'm pretty sure that I was put in the dumb group. Our group wrote our speeches in romaji (english alphabet). The other group wrote theirs out in hiragana! They can all read and write hiragana and katakana really fast. Oh, well. Our group had a lot of fun with our lessons. :D And, yes, we bow to our sensei. Everyone bows to everyone here. Every time I meet someone we bow.

My house. It's really nice. I now have my own room. It is just a little smaller than Christy's room I'd say. Minus the closet. There are two other rooms about the same size, then another one with the sliding walls that I can't remember the name of. Then we have our toilet room, our bathroom (which are totally separate, by the way) the little changing room next to the bathroom. It has sinks, a mirror, a little closet, and the washer/dryer. We have a nice little kitchen, which is smaller than AnnaMarie's. The last room is the living room. It has a couch and the table that we eat at and the TV. Then, pretty much every room has a little balcony outside of it. The main balcony has a nice hammock I like to sit in sometimes. And our toilet is a western style one, with the bedet (how do you spell that?) built in. It took me like 3 min to figure out how to flush it my first night. Our bath is Japanese style. There is a little shower thing on the wall that you wash off with, then you can take a bath to relax if you want. The bath has a heater so it will stay at whatever temperature you set it at.

My room is nice. It has two little balconies off of it, and I have a bookshelf and computer in it. I also have a little set of drawers for my clothes and a part of the closet is for me to hang my stuff up in. We are still working on the bed. Right now I am sleeping on a futon, which is fine with me. They had ordered me like a 100 dollar bed and it broke when we were assembling it. So, they had it sent back and I guess they are going to get another one at some point. Until I get my bed, I'm not really sure what to do with my suitcases. They are just in the corner for now, but I want to store them under my bed once I get it. I'll work something out in the next few days.

Sometimes I help make dinner. I helped make curry the other day. It was pretty good. All the food here is good. The only thing I didn't really like was sashimi, but I’ll eat it. It tastes fine, but the texture is weird. I'll just have to get used to it I think. For dinner I have had everything from Beef stew to sashimi to curry to Udon My host mom is a really good cook. I do miss Italian food though. I eat rice at least twice a day. Usually for breakfast I make myself shokupan (toast).

There are very few foreigners here, so EVERYONE stares at me. Some try to be sneakier about it than others. My host dad keeps apologizing for it, but I was like, hey, if a 7 foot tall girl walked in to my school at home, everyone would stare at her too. Haha. I am taller than almost everyone. I haven't met or seen any girls taller than me yet. Once in a while I will see a foreigner on the street, and I have realized that I stare at them. Haha. Usually I am just trying to figure out why they are here. I think the majority of them are from the navy base, but sometimes you see one with a Japanese wife or something.

Yesterday I went to my school for the first time. I met the American teacher named Jonny and another teacher who speaks very good English. They are kind of assigned to me to help me get settled into school. I start on Monday. I'm pretty nervous, but everything will be fine. My building is really complicated though. Good thing I just have to follow my homeroom classmates. I'll take pictures with my uniform once I get it. It is going to come on Sunday. They just finished it. I am going to get sooo many more stares when I am wearing that. And, it's okay, you can laugh.

After going to the school, I went to a Rotary dinner. They are at this really nice hotel called Camelot Japan or something. The food was really good Japanese food. The Rotarians are all very nice (and rich). One named "Sammy" own a whole bunch of restaurants. I went around introducing myself to each table, and at his there was a lady wearing a kimono. He asked me how I liked it and I said it was beautiful. Then he said that he is going to have one made for me! That is so nice of him! My host dad said that he will probably get a really nice one made (like 3,000 to 5,000 USD) Yikes! And there was another lady in a kimono who gave me this beautiful Japanese fan. It is purple silk and bamboo. Probably expensive. The other Rotarians like to come around to my table and watch me use the chopsticks and ask me how I liked the food. I'll be going to these dinners about once a month I think.

I’ll be getting pictures up soon. Probably tomorrow. Today we are going to go shopping for my rice bowl and chopsticks. :D This is pretty exciting.

Monday, August 25, 2008

First Few Days in Japan, and I Only Got Lost Once!

From my first few days here in Yokohama:

August 22:
The flight went well. Sorry about the typing. this keyboard is confusing. I`m having a really good time here. My host family is very nice and the boys are so cute. I am learning the most from them.

Yokohama is beautiful! The city is really really big and busy, but I am slowly starting to understand the train system. It feels like I have been here a lot longer than I have been. Tomorrow I am going to go to my Japanese class all by myself. I really hope I don`t get lost! The other exchange students are cool and funny, especially this kid from Brazil and the girl from Mexico.

Today I got tailored for my school uniform.. haha. They are custom making it, and it will be shipped to me next week. I also got shoes. My feet are so big here! Mie (my host mom) was like “ookii” (big) when she saw my shoes. Then the lady at the store`s eyes got all big when they were telling her my size. +D

I also went to the Rotary lunch and gave my little speech. One thing about the Rotarians here is that their cars are soo nice! I saw a few Mercedes, Porches and even a Rolls Royce! And they all seem so willing to help me. They said to just let them know if there was anything I wanted to do or see.

Hmmm.. oh, parking here! The parking place for us is in this really cool car elevator thing. It actually moves the cars down so you can drive in, then moves it back up. Cars are parked 2 or 3 cars high! I`ll take a pic at some point. My house here is really nice too. I love you all and I miss you all. I am having a lot of fun though. Don`t worry about me.

Love, Abbey--
USA ---> Yokohama, Japan
Rotary Youth Exchange
08-09



August 22:
So guess what? Today I am going to ride the trains all by myself. I really hope I don`t get lost. Today I will be going to my Japanese Class, then touring Yokohama with my friends there and some Rotex students.

Right now I am waiting for breakfast, which is going to be Udon noodles and rice I think. I tried to help, but Mie gave me the computer. I think I just get in the way... oh, well.

I miss you lots, but it is really awesome here. I have this train pass card, like a plastic credit card ish type card, and there is this scanner and you just put your wallet over the scanner and it detects the card and will charge you whatever the ride costs. Crazy! You dont have to atually get out the card. And the key to my house has an electric sensor in it too, so you don`t actually use the key part at the front door of the complex building. My whole complex, by the way, houses 6,000 people! and they have an eye scanner that you can use too, but Im not registered in it, obviously.



August 24:
Hey_Everyone!

Guess what? I really did get lost yesterday. haha.

Yeah, so I got to my bus okay. I got to the correct trains okay. After the trains is what turned out to be the tricky part. I had to find the Washington Hotel and then from there I would take a right, down that street to my japanese class. The Washington Hotel is just straight from the station, right? Well, these roads are not grid system, and I took the wrong road to go strait on. After a while, I started asking people for help....

Me: Sumimasen, Eigo ga wakarimasu ka? (Excuse me. Do you speak English?)

Them: iie (No)

Me: umm, Washington Hotel?

Them: Washintonu Hoteru? blah blah jdklj jklejwkafdskfjfj djifjkdsl.

Me: kinda blank stare.. this way? (pointing)

Them: hai. (Yes)

Me: Arigato Gozaimasu. (Thank you)

I was lead through a subway a little ways (not on a train) then back up, because it was too dangerous to go on the street. yeah, that was definatley not the way I went the day before. Finally I get to this building they are leading me to. It was a DIFFERENT Washington Hotel. At this point I am 30 min. late for my class and trying really hard not to cry. I go into this hotel and find a phone to call my host dad, who calls rotary and sends someone to pick me up at the front desk.

Everything worked out eventually. I was 40 min late and all the other kids had a good laugh, but Rotary took care of me. Today I got there all by myself with no mistakes. and home, too. That was my big adventure.

I love you all!!!


-Abbey

August 24:
Tonight i am going to go to one of those Sushi restaurants with the rotating belt things... mmm. I`ll tell you about that when I get back. I should get going now though. I will post pictures when I get my room set up.