Last night I was soo tired, so I went to bed at 8 and Yuko
thought I was crazy lol. I didn’t see Ken at all because he didn’t get home
from work until late and then when I got up at 5:50 to shower, he had already
left for work! Geez, these Japanese people. Smh.
I was still tired this morning. I’m not used to not getting
my 10 hours of sleep in. :(
Yuko made miso soup and onigiri and bunny apples for
breakfast. She also had whole umeboshi out. She let me try a piece of one and
it was SOOO sour! Needless to say, I didn’t eat the rest of it. I only ate the
umeboshi onigiri (I like the umeboshi when it’s cut in the strips like what’s
in the onigiri because it’s not as sour), so I took the salmon onigiri for
lunch. Then Yuko gave me the salmon onigiri Miyabi didn’t eat to take too!
I finally mastered the trains! I didn’t have to ask anyone
for help today. :)
When I got to school, no one was there yet so I went outside to the balcony.
The mountains looked really pretty, so I took a picture of them.
Then I walked down
the stairs to the tennis courts and around the building.
There was this weird
house thing that I decided to check out. I unlocked and opened the door to find
it was just a storage shed. But it looked so cool!
There were bamboo plants! |
When I went back in, I saw Emma and Taylor. We all compared
street pass tags. I got someone from Okinawa on the train that morning and now
have 18 regions in Japan! Then I headed up to class. The quiz was
easy, as I figured. Then we practiced freaking numbers. At least it was good
practice because I never really knew when to say “pun” and when to say “fun”
when talking about the number of minutes. We also did jikoshokai (self introductions) which I’m a
beast at thanks to Japanese Conversation Group at Tech. :)
Also, we were doing telling time and Matsuda sensei asked me what time it was in America.
And I was like "doko de?" because I don't think he realized America, unlike Japan, isn't just one timezone lol.
So he asked for the time where I was from. I did Texas time, which I converted quickly in my head, and correctly, to my surprise. I guess constantly converting between timezones has allowed me to do it automatically!
Because today’s Wednesday, Japanese classes are only half as
long as they normally are because we only have communication, not reading and
writing. Yay! I was dying of boredom. And I was starving.
It was snowing when we got let out for lunch, so I got to
walk through the flurries!
Entrance to the gym |
I found my friends at Lawson’s and then we went to the
cafeteria by the gym to eat. I like that cafeteria because it has big windows
and a really good view of Nagoya and the mountains. I’ll have to take a picture
someday.
Because we got out early, we got to have lunch before the
Japanese students so the lines weren’t as horrendous as they were yesterday.
But I was just eating my onigiri anyway. Oh, and I wrapped them all by myself
this morning. :)
Such skills. |
I also got this momo tea from the vending machine because
everyone’s been raving about it.
Happy Up? |
HOLY CRAP it was good! I could seriously drink
this every single day, but I’d lose all my money. :(
After lunch, we all met back up outside the CJS office for
our field trip! We had to get into groups. I was in group A with Rana, Emma,
and Pearl. Our group leader, Natsumi, was a Japanese student. We all followed
one of the CJS faculty who carried a flag that said Nanzan. It was so cute!
The back of Ryuskei |
We all rode the train together.
Such gaijin |
The entrance |
Natsumi told us this meant that when you died you'd be born again. |
The castle was AWESOME. I really enjoyed it. We learned
stuff I already knew about how it burned down in WWII and then was rebuilt
later.
Super cute omiyage (souvenir) shop |
This dude was the strongest man at the time. He was able to move the boulders to build the castle. |
Even the castle had cute drain covers! |
This is the corner tower. There were 11, but only 3 remain
now.
We got to walk through this gold building. We had to take
our shoes off and leave them and our backpacks in lockers. But we got these
awesome slippers to wear! Then we got to go around and take pictures of all the
rooms.
Entrance to the castle grounds |
Gold building |
My slippers |
Natsumi told us this was a list of all the names of people who donated to the castle. I found the kanji for "Ichinomiya" and Natsumi told me they were from Ichinomiya! |
When we came out, we regrouped with our tour guide. He
showed us these markings on the stones. They’re old family crests because
families would fight over the boulders, so they marked them to claim them as
theirs.
And then we saw the castle! The two, I call them fish, but
they’re actually dolphins apparently (even though they really look like dragons), are made
of 18 karat gold. They’re called kinshachi in Japanese, which means "golden dolphin". They’re bronze and
lacquer on the inside, with .15 mm of gold on the outside. The one on the left is male
and the one on the right is female.
Natsumi, Rashaa, Pearl, Rana, Me, Emma |
Then we went into a small museum near the castle where we
learned about how the wooden blocks were put together. They didn’t use nails.
Instead the blocks were cut in such a way that they fit together like a puzzle,
and could only be pulled apart in a certain way. They had a hands on demo where
we had to figure out how to pull various blocks apart. It was fun!
Picture in the museum. Birdseye view of the castle. |
The castle at night. I want to see this someday! |
The four kanji in the middle say "Nagoya-Jo" = Nagoya Castle |
Then we finally got to go inside the castle! We all went to
the bathroom first. The girls bathroom was so cute! I’m so used to the heated
seats that I went in all excited to sit on a warm seat and it was FREEZING
cold! Everyone else had the same expectation and reaction haha.
See? It has that cute doily hanging thing in the doorway |
The first thing in the castle was this giant life-size fish
dragon (dolphin?) statue. I asked the tour guide (in Japanese) why one scale was black and
he freaked out telling everyone I asked a really good question, the question of
the day, haha. It turns out it was because when the economy was bad, they took
the fish down to redo it with less expensive gold and someone stole one of the scales!
Then we rode the elevator to the top of the castle. There
was windows all around (like at the top of the Space Needle of the Empire State
Building), so we got an amazing view of Nagoya. The tour guide showed us the Nagoya
gym where you can see live Sumo tournaments in July. I asked him about this
twisty building I always see in pictures and have been wanting to go to and he
told me it’s a mode school (idk) where students study arts, computers, and
sewing. Wow. I mean, I guess I could fit in with the computer kids. He said I
can go there to shop too.
The twisty building! |
Next we went back down through the castle, taking the stairs
and stopping at each floor. On the 5th floor was a demo where you
could try to pull a stone made of plaster that we didn’t have enough time to
try. There was also this huge kinsetsu you could sit on! However, to sit on it
you had to spread your legs more than was comfortable.
The rest of the floors were less interesting. I liked one
that had a traditional Japanese village with a honya (book store) and
restaurant and stuff. The hangings on one of the shops had this symbol, which
is the old symbol for Nagoya (it’s the kanji for 8, because Nagoya had 8
prefectures).
Symbol for Nagoya |
When we left the castle, it was the end of our tour. Our
tour guide thanked us for improving his English and bowed a bunch of times.
Then we took a huge Nanzan group photo with these two guys, one dressed as a
samurai, and one as some other type of Japanese person.
I got a picture with the non-samurai guy, because he was
cuter. :)
Then some people went in the gift shop or ate ice cream and
the rest of us left to go home.
The station entrance |
I went home the same way as one of the CJS
faculty, so she rode with me for the first two stops. I got to practice my
Japanese with her!
When I got to Kanayama, the local train was at the station.
That’s the one that stops at every freaking station and takes half an hour. The
one I took into school this morning and yesterday. I decided I’d had enough of
that train and waited another four minutes for the super rapid train.
It’s funny how little decisions like that can sometimes mean
so much.
On the super rapid train, I was sitting (on a non-heated
seat) looking over the words for the quiz we have tomorrow, when a lady
standing next to me asked me (in Japanese) if I was studying Japanese. I told
her I was, at Nanzan Daigaku. She asked something else and then said something
in English and then turned away. I studied a little more and then thought to
tell her that her English was really good (because most Japanese people who
know some English are too afraid to speak it because they think it’s bad). She
was so excited! She told me she never gets to use her English, though.
So I told her I’d practice with her. She loved that. She
wanted to know where I lived and when I could meet. She lives in Ogaki, but she
said she’d come to Ichinomiya and she’d help me with Japanese if I helped her
with English! I suggested we swap emails. She agreed, but told me we should
meet in person, too, to work on pronunciation. So yeah, I have a new friend
now.
And her name’s Akiko!
I have no idea if this will even work out or if I’ll have
time to meet. And I already have such limited access to wifi (none at Nanzan
and at my host family’s house, it only works in the central living room area),
so I’m not sure how well we’ll be able to keep in touch. But I’m willing to
try!
I got home before dark, yay! It got warm today, in the high
40s I think. I rode my bike home with the sunset and saw an amazing ginormous full
moon, so look out for that tomorrow night, America!
Cute shrine on my way home |
Something hilarious happened at dinner! Dinner was good btw. We had karage, which I think is fried chicken? But it tastes WAY better than American fried chicken! It was so unhealthy I bet, though.
Anyway, after dinner we were just sitting around the table eating the peanuts I brought from America when I decided to tell Miyabi about how people in America look for Santa Claus in peanuts.
If you're not familiar with this, my sister taught me about it some years back. Basically, you break open a peanut and one half will have a raised part that sort of looks like Santa Claus (with the beard and stuff) and the other side will have an indent that the Santa fits into.
Anyway, Yuko and Ken thought this was hilarious because they told me in Japan, Japanese people get drunk and open peanuts and instead of looking for Santa, they look for onna no ko (girl) and otoko no ko (boy). I was like, waiiiittt am I being perverted or are they talking about how one peanut half has the raised part and the other has the hole where the raised part fits in...? And then Yuko was like, "It's kind of embarrassing to explain."
And I was like, "Ah, I gotcha. I see it now." And they laughed. Hahahaha. It was so funny!
But I don't think I can ever look at peanuts in the same way again...
After dinner, I watched TV with Ken and Miyabi. There was this special on about Studi Ghibli and it had a bit of an interview with Hayao Miyazaki! I love him! It was so cool to see it on tv in Japanese instead of like on the Internet or whatever.
It also had an interview (in English with Japanese subtitles) with the guy who wrote Little Miss Sunshine and how My Neighbors the Yamadas was what inspired him! I had no idea!
So yeah, today was a much better day than yesterday! Here's to a good rest of the week as well, hopefully! :)
fantastic pix!
ReplyDeletekeep em coming!
Thanks! I will!
Deletealso forgot to mention that the paragraph about telling time and Matsuda sesei asking you time in Texas came across as hieroglyphics on my computer but I could read it on the iphone...strange (on the iphone it was a different font than the rest of the blog, if that helps)
ReplyDeleteAh yeah I see it in a different font... weird idk how to fix it
DeleteI'm hungry. Think I'll get some peanuts.
ReplyDeleteLOL!!
DeleteWhaat? So the things that look like wingdings are actually supposed to be Japanese?! I thought they were for decoration! xD
ReplyDeleteAlso, Cate, it's me! From Japanese conversation class? :D
Haha yeah I knew it was you, Sheila!! Thanks for reading and commenting so much! I love reading your comment
DeleteSorry that was supposed to say comments! My phone is crapping out.
DeleteAnd I still don't see the wingding a everyone's talking about! Weird
DeleteYou should get me a momo tea!!!!
ReplyDeleteI went in that gold building when I visited! It's like a replica of the inside that they're building
Haha ok I will if you want!
DeleteOh really? That's cool! Yeah they were still working on the gold building when we went
I'm surprised you got as many photos of the golden reception hall as you did considering flash photography is forbidden.
ReplyDeleteThe rest of the museum showcases Nagoya as it was during the medieval Japan. In addition to the replica street that you can walk through (as pictured) there is also a large diorama model of medieval Nagoya with Nagoya castle and other info and models such as a cut-away section of a medieval Japanese house. The very top of the castle also has a souvenir store.
The majority of Japan's medieval castles are retrofitted to now serve as museums and are usually themed towards a particular vein in history. The Nagoya castle showcases medieval Nagoya, while the castle in Hiroshima showcases the samurai clans and related history that existed in the area.
Also the guy you took a photo with is a Bushi. Which is pretty much a typical foot soldier warrior that you see running around holding spears while the samurai strut around on horseback.