Friday, December 19, 2008

Last Full Day

I can't believe the semester is almost over.
I'm so sad about it... I had the most amazing classes this semester with the best teachers and I learned so much... Both about Japan and myself. I'm also really sad to be leaving my friends behind. Though some people will be returning next semester, the majority of my friends will be going home. And a lot of them aren't American, so I'm not even sure if/when I will ever see them again. It's all very depressing.

But I also feel like it's time for me to go home for a while.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Xmas Party

Tonight was the Christmas Party at Seminar House 4! Unfortunately, I left my camera at home...it was charging and I completely forgot about it. Since I was a guest, the dorm policy was that I couldn't actually go into the kitchen/dining room area to eat (which was incredibly lame), but that didn't stop friends from stealing food for me. The theme was, of course, international food, since we have students from all over the world living in Sem4. I ended up having okonomiyaki, Thai spring rolls, and risotto for dinner. I suspect that there were other delicious tidbits available, but since I couldn't actually check it out myself... Sem4's Otousan and Okaasan were particularly vigilant.

I came home to discover that one of my Host Family's old exchange students, Michelle, had come to visit. She's in her mid-20's, I think, and is in the process of traveling around Japan to visit her friends. We had a long talk about studying Japanese and dealing with graduation. Michelle, like me, was unsure of what she wanted to do after college, so she became a teacher with the JET program. She taught English to high-schoolers in Japan's least-populated prefecture, about 4 hours west of Osaka.
I've always been on the fence about JET, since I've heard that volunteers have little-to-no say about their placement and work schedule. Talking to Michelle, however, made me feel like maybe this is something that I really want to do.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Finally

DONE WITH EXAMS. YES.

After a good week and a half of feeling constantly pressed for time and forcing myself to be anti-social, my seven finals are over with. Yes, seven finals. For four classes. Go figure. The work load has been pretty manageable all year, so this must be our professors' last hurrah or something.

Things were really getting down to the wire last night, when I had to type up a 7-10 page paper/final project. I didn't mean to leave it until the last moment (I figured that written tests took precedent), but I felt safe-ish, since I already had a solid four pages written. Because of some last-minute formatting issues in the campus computer lab, I ended up handing it in about 10 minutes late. But that did not dull the triumph of being done.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Exam Count

Speaking Japanese: Oral interview (12/11), Written Final (12/16)
Reading&Writing Japanese: Oral interview (12/11), Composition (12/12), Written Final (12/15)
Popular Culture as Social Practice: 5-6 page paper (12/17)
Issues in Contemporary Japan: 7-10 page research paper/final project (12/17)

oh no

Friday, December 5, 2008

This post is dedicated to my dad:


I just thought he would like this car.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

A Note on Fluency

No matter how hard I practice, I seem to have a mental block about numbers. My brain can translate simple sentences into Japanese pretty easily, but if someone asks me about time or price, it takes me a lot longer to translate.
If my Okaasan asks me what time I went to bed last night, I always stare at my watch before I realize the answer isn't there. And then I stumble around for a bit before I manage to spit out 十一時 (11:00) or 十二時 (12:00).
Maybe it has something to do with right brain / left brain. But this really shouldn't be as difficult as it is.