Narimasu Exit And Re-Entry

At the end of September I not only left Tokiwadai school but I also departed from Narimasu school having been there since January 2006. I didn’t really want to leave but changes in the school districts meant I had no choice even though I lived quite close. However, two months on and I am now back there albeit only for a couple of hours on Wednesday evenings as part of a split-shift with another nearby school. To be honest, its a pain in the ar*e really as I am now working the maximum hours while also having to travel between two schools.

Having said that, my first day back in Narimasu was fortunate as I, along with my girlfriend, had arranged to meet up with my former evening class for the usual mix of drinks and food which can be seen in the first photo below. The next photo is from my last lesson with Yoshihiko and Kenta (where we played Star Wars Top Trumps as part of a lesson on comparatives and superlatives) and the one under that is from the end of May when Mami left our group.

   
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BBC Four Japan Season

As part of the BBC4 Japan season earlier this year there were a series of documentary’s on the land of the rising sun. I finally got round to watching the last of these the other day, Great Railway Journeys: Tokyo to Kagoshima, and it was probably the least informative of the lot for me but still interesting and better than most of what Discovery Channel come up with on Japan.

The first one I saw many months ago was Fish! A Japanese Obsession nation which was much better than the title may suggest and was a load of fish related scenes which included the fishing restaurant where my girlfriend and I went a few years ago when I caught the most expensive fish by mistake!

The programme involved the presenter investigating the Japanese’ love of fish but also questioning their need to eat so much with particular reference to whale which is forever causing controversy around the world. They don’t have the emotional attachment to it which other countries have but instead seem intent to keep on hunting these huge specimens which may become extinct. In the western world people want to be as far removed from the idea that what they are eating was once alive but not so in Japan where they don’t see any conflict between the suffering of fish and eating it.

   

Next up, was perhaps my favourite and that was Japan: A Story Of Love And Hate which was about a part time postal worker called Naoki (aged 56) who had it all during the bubble era but then lost it all in the early 1990’s.

Now thrice-divorced and dating a girl nearly half his age he has long been an outsider in a country where the nail that sticks out gets hammered down. It was a pretty grim tale at times and showed them living in their shoebox room with no windows where he was the house-husband with only a part time job while his girlfriend had three jobs to support them both. It also focused on meeting the other half’s family which he didn’t want to do initially before finally coming round to the idea of it in order to save the relationship.

The other programme was on a topic I had never even heard of.  In Search Of Wabi-Sabi With Marcel Theroux was rated far more highly by my mate Richard who went wabi sabi mad using the video in many of his lessons over a couple of weeks including a class which I had to observe as part of my TESOL course.

Wabi-sabi is very difficult, if not impossible, to define but is basically the unique Japanese way of thinking or “aesthetic centred on the acceptance of transience” with regard to asymmetry, asperity, simplicity, modesty, intimacy, and the suggestion of natural processes. Still none the wiser?! No, neither am I really but the documentary was very enjoyable and offered something different which I certainly haven’t heard talked about at all.

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TF Film Review: This Is It (2009)

I think I was first really aware of Michael Jackson around the time of the release of ‘Bad‘ in 1987 and it was actually the family hairdresser who gave us copies of that album as well as Thriller and Off The Wall with the former being most impressive to me.

However, by the time Dangerous was realeased in the early 90’s I had lost interest in his music and then all the trouble started following him around. Of course there were a few songs of his which I really enjoyed after that time and then when he died I, like many many others, jumped back on the Jackson bandwagon and began to appreciate him for the dancing and music without any of the other stuff getting in the way.

For Halloween I used ‘Thriller‘ in my lessons with the adults which went down well and sensing the opportunity I decided to capitalise on the Japanese love for MJ by doing the new song This is itin a few lessons, particularly with those students who mentioned that they had seen the film. The song is much slower and easier to understand than ‘Thriller‘ and the words which I erased for the students to fill in all rhymed and/or had the same phonemic sounds which is something I learned on my TESOL course in the first half of this year.

I hadn’t planned to see the movie as I was fairly happy to just see the minute clip which aired in the days following his death. However, when a student strongly recommended it to me I decided to watch it later that night online as much as for research as anything as I wanted to be able to discuss the film with the students.

I had low expectations to be honest but was pleasantly surprised at how interesting it was. I would even go as far as saying it was more interesting than normal live shows (which I’m not really a fan of anyway unless I was actually there) as you get to see all the detail that goes into the rehearsals and the directions which MJ gave his team.

The amount of work that goes into such a show, including all the extra bits filmed for the concert big screen behind him, is quite incredible and it would have been interesting to see how MJ would have fared if he had been alive to go through the planned 50 date show. However, I can’t help feeling that the real true story of the filming of the tour lies in the hours and hours of footage not used.

Tokyo Fox Rating 7/10

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LBH T-Shirt – A Design For A Lifer!

Before I came to Japan all those years ago I was well aware that certain washed-up actors, singers and so on from back home were big in Japan. However, I wasn’t aware that the same applied to your typical average guy teaching English here. Within a few weeks of being in the staff room in my first job here I had heard the words ‘Loser back home’ (LBH) a few times which I found very funny and it struck a chord with me.

Of course I never really truly believed that any of the guys I saw with beautiful Japanese girls were like the Charisma Man character (a Canadian burger flipping loser back home who was transformed into a muscle-bound hunk, attractive to Japanese women and admired by Japanese men) but there’s certainly an element of truth to it all and I admit that myself.

Well over a year ago my mate Ethan and I came up with the idea of making our own LBH t-shirts and subsequently bought the iron-on printing paper with which to make said item. The idea never got put into practice though until Ethan left Japan recently and gave me the necessary stuff to complete the design. I finally got round to finishing the job the other Sunday and here are the results. You might have to look closely to see the back of the t-shirt. No offence is intended!

  
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Giant Rugby Ball

To promote the 2011 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand as well as the country itself there has been a giant rugby ball at the base of Tokyo Tower for the last few days. The inside featured a virtual tour of the country but given that there was a queue when I was there last Friday I couldn’t be bothered to wait to enter so gave up. Besides, I spent a few months in the country back in 2002 so am practically an expert on the country!

I don’t know if any of those people waiting in line were rugby fans.  I somehow doubt it given the popularity of the game here and it will be very interesting to see how things fare over the next decade before Japan hosts the Rugby World Cup in 2019 which is the first time the tournament will have been held outside one of the major playing nations. On Saturday the National Stadium in Tokyo played host to the Bledisloe Cup game between Australia and New Zealand which was a match I wouldn’t have minded going to but I was put off by the sky-high ticket pricing which was between 7000 and 70,000 yen! However, given that 45,000 people did cough up the cash maybe there is a chance that Japan can pull it off as hosts in 10 years time.

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A Spook-tacular Halloween (2009)

Last year was the first time I introduced my Star Wars lightsaber and Darth Vader mask into lessons by way of a tedious link to Halloween and all things evil. For Halloween this year I dusted off my self-made flashcards, which I have used for a few years now, and couldn’t bare the thought of just repeating the same crap as last year.

Consequently I decided to make a new batch of alternative Halloween flashcards featuring characters like a goblin, a vampire, Frankenstein, Batman, Godzilla and inevitably I couldn’t resist introducing a few Star Wars characters in the form of Jabba, Yoda, Darth Vader and Leia although I only referred to her as a princess.

On top of that were such culinary delights as batcake, frog juice, tiger ice-cream and I even treated a few classes to my own Vampire’s Blood drink which was a throwback to the days of the SodaStream (anyone remember that?) and drinks like Witches Brew and Vampires Blood itself. That was a blue drink but this was a red one and was either Pepsi Azuki or some cheap grape soda. Most of the kids were not fooled!

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In terms of games I did the following:

* pin the tail on the witches cat which should need no explaining.

* fruit salad which is where the students stand on mats and the teacher (or student posing as teacher) calls out a halloween related lexical item. The student holding that card stays put while the others have to change mats which could also be taken up by the teacher of that time.

* hot-pumpkin which is a cheap inferior version of pass the parcel with my pumpkin hat used as a substitute for the parcel and students losing a life when the music stopped with them in possession of the 100 yen hat which I bought a year ago.

Furthermore, I was finally able to incorporate the Simpsons Halloween top trump cards into one of the lessons which I have been waiting to do patiently since buying them at the start of the year. This was done with my kikokusei class on a Saturday which is a group of kids who have lived abroad and are thus a cut above your typical Japanese English-learning student.

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Posted in English Teaching, Films, Star Wars, TV Shows | 6 Comments

Thriller Halloween Lessons

I don’t have to do any Halloween stuff in my lessons (and I don’t think many other teachers bother with it) but in order to raise my motivation I decided to do something this year for the adults as well as the kids.

Despite growing in popularity in Japan over the last decade or two, the events of October 31st are still not that interesting to talk about for students (or indeed me) so I decided to use a very famous song to add a bit of Halloween flavour to the lessons.

As the title suggests I used ‘Thriller‘ by Michael Jackson which everyone is aware of but knowing a few words from the chorus was about all I knew despite having heard the song for 25 years! With that in mind I knew it would be difficult for the students but given the limited choice of vaguely Halloween-themed songs available I thought it best to stick with it. That and the fact that I saw it as an opportunity to jump on the bandwagon that has rolled on ever since his death this Summer.

I managed to use it in lessons for all levels with the higher levels doing jigsaw listening (students work together and put the cut-up lyrical strips together) and the lower levels doing a gap-fill exercise of about a dozen words which were randomly boarded for some of the weaker ones to choose. Sounds easy but its not as his voice is not as clear as other singers.

All in all it was a good way to get a bit of Jacko into lessons which I had the idea for immediately after hearing news of his death and that plan was finally realised in the last week which the students seemed to enjoy even if most of them had no idea of the songs meaning.

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Cycling The Yamanote Line

A couple of years ago a colleague wrote an article in our company’s in-house magazine about walking round the Yamanote line which is the circular line connecting most of the main stations in the heart of Tokyo. From that moment on I had the idea of doing something similar and having dreamt up a few poor ideas (drinking a beer at each station?!) the most feasible idea was to do by bicycle what takes 58 minutes by train. The major problem with this idea was that I didn’t have a bike but once I’d aquired one last month the wheels were set in motion and fellow TESOL participant Michael and I started to make plans.

So last Friday we met in Takadanobaba (about half way between our houses) and the journey began at 9am or at least it would have done if Michael hadn’t been even later than myself!

There are 29 stations on the Yamanote line over a distance of 22 miles and going in a clockwise direction we were at our first stop Mejiro within a few minutes of uphill riding. I saw a bank and decided to get some money out while the opportunity was there and Michael said he needed to do something in there too. His bank transfer took ages and so with it approaching 10am we’d still only done one station!

 

Once we got going, we ticked off a few with the only problem being going down dead-ends about four times while trying to reach Tabata as we wanted to stick as close to the line as possible which aint half difficult at times. We went through Uguisudani, the least used station on the line, where I spotted a rather apt Engrish mistake on one of the love hotel signs.

At Ueno I wanted to get a shot with my bike in front of the giant furry panda but getting our bikes up to the Panda Bridge exit wasn’t an option for cyclists. A couple of stops further on was the electrical town of Akihabara station which disappointingly was under reconstruction and there were no maids giving out pamphlets outside the station which would have added something more interesting to the background of the photos.

Tokyo station was also under construction and finding a sign for the obligatory photo was actually hard work and we had to do a circuit of the huge station before settling on a rather basic small sign.

A quick visit to the Godzilla statue in Hibiya following Yurakucho station and it was finally time for lunch at a tiny local restaurant under the tracks. The rule of sticking close to the tracks went out of the window as the afternoon went on and we pelted it along the huge road between Tamachi and Shinagawa which is the longest distance between any two stations.

Having gone over time it started to get dark (and I was still in just a t-shirt) as we left Gotanda on a fairly steep (by Japanese standards) climb towards Meguro and Ebisu which were quite quick photo stops and then it was the potential nightmare of Shibuya and the chaos that goes with that place amid the worlds busiest crossing.

 

A bit of mild pain was finally felt as we took in the final few stations but we just wanted to complete the mission and that involved cycling on the busy roads without lights as we took the long long way round to do the short distance between Shinjuku and Shin Okubo. Once there I realised that my back wheel was very loose and the quick release nut needed tightning which was quite a worry as an afterthought but better to have noticed then rather than having the wheel come off on the final leg of the journey.

 

It was 5.45pm when we returned to where we started about 8 hours earlier. Balloons, fireworks, pretty girls with flower bouquets and champagne – of course there was none of that waiting for us but we did celebrate our (pointless?) achievement with a few beers and some food before heading home in opposite directions a few hours later.

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A Galaxy Not So Far Away (From Where I Live)

The week before my final day in Tokiwadai I did a special kids lesson about Momotaro (Peach boy) and afterwards I got talking to one of the fathers who wanted to see my Star Wars travel photos from Tunisia and Italy.

This was no coincidence though as the receptionist had informed me about him as they had somehow got onto the subject of the Sci-fi saga the week before. Anyway, he very kindly gave me a set of Star Wars stamps and offered to show me his collection. Now its certainly not like this one in Korea but nevertheless it was interesting to see his pride and joy which is inevitably hated by his wife!

He had some very expensive figures and other rarities which p*ss all over my Pepsi Nex freebie collection from last year! I may collect a fair few Star Wars related things but I have never really been too bothered about figures and don’t want to be as that can be an expensive hobby.

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Fancy A Cully?

Typical Japanese restaurant spelling error. Often its just a handwritten mistake but this one in Gotanda is a proper sign. Do the owners or whoever never give it a thought to look up the actual correct spelling? Given that there are books full of these types of errors with much more amusing double meanings it would appear not.

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