Everybody Needs Good Neighbours!

One of the units in the intermediate level course i teach talks about neighbours and involves a load of questions about how students’ get on with them. The perfect opportunity for me to use the ‘Neighbours‘ TV theme to manipulate the target language and do a gap-fill listening exercise.

I have to say that I did feel a little embarassed sitting there while it played a couple of times but no more embarassing than visiting the TV show’s outdoor filming location in Melbourne three times or going to the ‘Meet the Neighbours Night’ or the many other Australian soap related things I have done which can be seen in a photo slideshow here.

I did the listening with two groups with one faring slightly better than the other but given that yours truly didn’t know some of the lyrics from 20 years of watching it I have to say that they shouldn’t be too worried about not catching certain words! Always nice to bring something different to the classroom and I was quite surprised how well it did actually link in to the lesson objective.

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Adapting To The Art Of Bowing

Some may see it in the western world as a sign of looking weak but the Japanese custom of bowing is seen through my eyes as being quite a nice tradition. Its always a bit embarassing when you meet someone (whether they be known by you or not) and don’t know whether to greet them with a handshake, a hug, a kiss, a kiss on each cheek, a backslap or whatever.

That uncertainty never happens in Japan as its bowing only when between two Japanese people and of course this method is also more hygenic. Of course bowing can be quite comical sometimes when drunken salarymen (business men) are maybe too close at the end of the night and inadvertantly headbutt one another.

I’ve always been a bit of a nodder especially when it comes to saying hi to someone in passing. Not sure how I was last Christmas when I was back home but I’m told that when I returned to the UK a few years ago I kept on nodding and bowing to everyone out of habit. A sure case that you can take the man out of Japan but you can’t take Japan out of the man!

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Look Shrew Was Back In Tokyo!!

Just like the old red London buses you wait ages for one and then two come at once and similarly when Vinod visited Tokyo so did me old mocker Richard who I met just over two years ago when I transferred to a new school where he too was teaching.

Sparks instantly flew even though we were not doing any welding!! Sadly he was only around for a few months before buggering off back to Shrewsbury via the Tranz-Siberian route which he just loves to namedrop! We kept in touch though and when he moved to Vietnam I jumped at the opportunity to visit him (free accommodation and all that!) at Christmas in 2006 where we travelled from Ho Chi Minh up to Cambodia and back.

Anyway, the plonker himself returned to Tokyo for ten days recently along with his girlfriend Mizuki who I finally got to meet having heard about her over the years and read her blog. Very nice she was too. It was great to hang out with them and we met up a few times over the course of their stay and boy did we have a laugh!! Not so surprising as when Richard and I get together we’re like Morecambe & Wise though some would say we’re maybe more remnant of Cannon & Ball or Hale & Pace?!

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Tokyo Fox Makes It To Two Years!!

Cast your mind back excatly two years ago and its fairly likely you won’t remember what happened. If you do its almost certain that you won’t be aware that today is the 2nd Anniversary of this blog. When I told people back then that I had started recording my life on a website they laughed but a couple of years on and they’re not laughing now are they?!!

I didn’t think I would make it beyond a few stories and some random photo albums but somehow I have scraped the barrel to churn out entry after entry and rather proud of it I am too. Whether anyone else is I don’t know! With the continued growth of sites like Facebook, Myspace and Bebo I am not sure whether there’s such a demand for following friends fortunes via blogs. The hits on this blog have been very consistent all this time which I guess are reasonable but nothing special but if you are reading this then thank you very much and please continue to check out the site.

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To Be Or Not To Be Prepared!

Now I know every traveller is different and open to do whatever they want to do but having said that I was a little shocked when my mate Vinod (a Wolves fan so please do hold that against him!!) came to visit a couple of weeks back from Korea where he too is teaching. The reason was that he hadn’t done a single bit of research on Japan and seemed to be the only person in the world who didn’t know how expensive things are over here.

We met when we were living and working in Germany in 2003 and it has to be said he was one of the most laidback men then so it should have been no surprise that he was one of the most under-prepared travellers I’ve ever known having not researched anything on the internet or in a guidebook so he had no idea what there was to do in Tokyo.

Mind you, over the course of his five night stay at mine he did end up doing a fair few things but I just felt that with some planning he could have made much better use of his time in terms of a trip or two out of Tokyo to see Mount Fuji, Nikko, Kamakura or whatever.

In defence of Vinod I have to say that I did pretty much bugger all research before I went to Australia, New Zealand, Germany and Japan but I always knew that I had time on my side as I wasn’t on a short holiday. Thats what I’m used to now so I tend to be very Japanese and cram as much into a few days as possible as typified by some of last years trips.

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Anyway, among all the drinking and eating we also inevitably visited a Maid Cafe in Akihabara followed by Asukusa and a boat cruise down to Odaiba and all the other usual touristy places such as Shibuya, Harajuku and Shinjuku where we went up the Metropolitan Government Building on the snowy Sunday which made our view of Tokyo’s concrete jungle impossible to view as it was all fogged up.

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Not Sweet On ‘Giri Choco’

“There were many girls banging on my door this Valentines morning…….and then I let them out!!”

I did promise the same usual jokes last year and Tokyo Fox is certainly not one to disappoint its readers so here’s the other one!

“I couldn’t open my door this Valentines morning……..because I’d lost my key!!”

It’s fair to say that I’m not a fan of Valentines Day though I do see it as good for secret admirers. If you thought the day was a load of commercialised nonsense created by card manufacturers or whatever then that’s nothing compared to Japan! They spend billions and billions of yen each year on chocolates which are given out by women on February 14th and returned a month later by the men on the farce that is White Day. In my opinion ‘Giri choco‘ (obligation chocolate) is a daft Japanese idea (as is White Day) where chocolates are given out willy-nilly to family, friends and colleagues rather than just to lovers or people you fancy (without them knowing).

Anyway, I did get a few chocolates this last week including some lovely home-made chocolates from my girlfriend which now means I have to return the favour on 14th March which kind of grates with me as I hate being told when I have to show love or whatever for I am a romantic each and every day!!

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To Give Or Not Give Up Your Train Seat

Last Thursday I was on the Yamanote line (the main green line which circles Tokyo’s main spots) going to work when a girl on crutches got in but did anyone in the priority seats give up their seat for her? Of course not! Well not at first anyway. She nearly had to collapse before someone offered her their seat which I found disgusting especially in a city famed for its kind and polite mannerisms.

While I think that that politeness is sometimes only reserved for certain customs (visiting a house or doing business) there seems to be less courtesy in these designated parts of the trains. The priority seats are reserved for pregnant, elderly or less-able people but it seems that the common way to avoid any guilt when sitting in such an area is just to close ones eyes thereby shutting out the guilt as the Japanese approach to such situations is to just grin and bare it and thus avoid confrontation.

People often give up or offer their friends the seat on such an occasion when one is free but its still often the lady who lets her husband or boyfriend have the final remaining seat which is certainly not a gentlemanly thing to do and thats coming from someone who is anything but the James Bond/David Beckham stereotypical British gentleman envisaged by the Japanese.

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Baby, It’s Cold Outside

This last month has certainly been the coldest I’ve ever felt during my years in Japan and by some distance too. Snow has appeared several times in the last couple of weeks so I have basically continued from where I left off in Iceland over the New Year.

Despite these freezing temperatures it may surprise you that I am now going to moan about how hot it is inside public places like shops and stations. My ar*e was almost burning on the train seat the other week which may sound nice to some but honestly some of these places are ridiculously over-heated that one can sweat needlessly, particularly during rush hour. This country has implemented ‘coolbiz’ (dressing down at work in the Summer) to save energy costs so why not further promote their ‘warmbiz’ campaign for the same reason.

I sometimes feel that the Japanese have been over-pampered in terms of what are excessive indoor temperatures in my opinion (but completely normal for them) for when one goes outdoors the fluctuations in body temperature are greater than elsewhere which may explain why they don’t seem to fight the common cold so well.

Of course there may be other reasons for catching this in a city so packed but it can’t help and (without starting to sound like my mother) there is less benefit to be felt when you go from the cosy warmth indoors to that outside. Therefore the lower the difference the easier it is for you to adapt or am i just talking out of what was burning on that train seat?!!

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Iceland 2007/2008: Pt II – Blue Lagoon & Golden Circle Tour

After only a few hours sleep 2008 kicked off with a 45 minute morning bus journey to Blue Lagoon which wasn’t so agreeable with our new years hangovers. I didn’t feel too good but Sherwood even went as far as saying it was the worst 45 minutes of his life!

Obviously it was bl*ody freezing outside and the short walk from the door to the lagoon was far from comfortable to say the least. As warm as the water was it was still difficult being in the nations number one tourist attraction as the wind and occasional hail seemed to be forever in our faces. An interesting experience for sure.

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On January the 2nd we were up early doors to do a ‘Golden Circle’ bus tour of some of the country’s top natural sights which started with us arriving at Skalholt church in the foreground of some mountains in what seemed like the middle of nowhere. Lunchtime saw us arrive at Gullfoss waterfalls; Iceland’s most spectacular falls flowing down in three different levels.

After that I paid nearly a tenner just for some lamb soup which is supposed to be some kind of Icelandic speciality. Admittedly it was nice though no soup could ever be worth that kind of price!

Next up was the nearby geyser which erupted every few minutes and waiting for this natural phenomenon to occur was absolutely freezing while i was poised with my camera hoping to capture the perfect image. As the photos show I didn’t quite get the reward I deserved for freezing my butt off!

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Our final port of calls were Kerio volcano crater lake (which was frozen) and Pingvellir National Park where there was a rift valley caused by two of the earths plates being separated…apparently! The water was so clear that you could see right down to the bed of the river thing with ease.

More expensive food (Icelandic lobster pasta for about 30 quid!), half a dozen beers and a few hours sleep rounded off an eventful few days in Europe’s most remote country and though things certainly never went to plan we experienced what we were kind of after in terms of a place not flooded by tourists.

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Iceland 2007/2008: Pt I – Around Reykjavik

Heavy rain in Reykjavik meant the plane for myself, Sherwood and Mark was 4.5 hours late in leaving Heathrow on December 30th and it was still p*ssing it down as we took the airport shuttle bus to Hotel Bjork. We got straight to work on the gin and tonics before walking into the city in the freezing cold which Sherwood the chav did without a coat. A mistake that he certainly didn’t make again after that!

Unfortunately very few places were open and those that were weren’t serving food at that late time of night so we had to settle for blue cheese pizza before coughing up about seven pounds fifty for our first beer which was a very fizzy one at that.

The following morning we headed out to see the city views from Hallgrimskirkja. Sunrise is not till 11am in the worlds most northern capital with sunset coming round only four hours later and as we reached the church (for kirkja is church) just before sunrise the heavens really opened up pelting it down with hail stones as well as increase in the wind speed. To add insult to injury the church was closed!

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Icelandic fish and chips was served up for lunch at a quite reasonable price (by their standards anyway!) and after that we walked along the old harbour front in the snow for about 4km to get to the thermal baths at Laugardalslaug but that was typically closed so we headed back to the hotel as the conditions deteriorated further.

A few early evening shots in our room got our New Years Eve under way but things were to slow down big time after that. We got a taxi to ‘Vox’ inside the Hilton Hotel but thought it not to be our thing so another taxi took us to the city centre where absolutely everywhere was closed till after midnight.

We returned to ‘Vox’ but that had closed. However, they said we could have a table in the Hilton but when we sat down and saw the 8-course menu and the 120,000 ISK (about 95 quid!) price we came to our senses and left. Even the petrol station was closed so in the end we had three bags of crisps each back at the hotel while working our way through the G&T’s in bed with the iPod speakers pumping out the tunes and a relentless amount of fireworks going off outside our window. It sounds sad but it was very funny to us and will certainly live long in the memory!

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After seeing in 2008 from our hotel room we went out as ‘Bar Oliver’ was opening at 12.30am where we joined the queue and stumped up 2,500 ISK (about £20) entrance fee. Before we knew it it was 5:30 am and time to get some sleep as we had an early start a few hours later.

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