Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Becoming fat and watching fat guys wrestle

Hello! It was a nice four-day weekend for Shawn and I. Coincidentally, last Thursday was also Thanksgiving in Japan, Labour Thanksgiving, that is. In any case it was a day off work and we took Friday off so it turned into a mini-vacation. Here's a run down of what we did.

Thursday: Ate an enormous amount of food as only Americans can on Thanksgiving Day. I think I gained at least 2 kilos. Our British friend, Tom, hosted a fabulous Thanksgiving Dinner complete with turkey, mashed potatoes, stuffing and gravy. All the essentials. Shawn and I were suprised that when we showed up at his place we were the ONLY Americans out of 8 people. More came later in fashionably-late American style, but I guess that goes to show that the little part in my job description that says "promote internationalization" really is true. We celebrated the Thanksgiving holiday with people from Mexico, Ireland, the UK, Portugal, Canada and Japan. Good times and good food, but don't worry family - I missed ya'll immensly. Thanksgiving is never the same without you.

Shawn and I at Thanksgiving:



Friday-Saturday: We headed to the largest city in Kyushu - Fukuoka. A city of about 2 million people, it was a major step up from Oita (half a million people).

Our mission in Fukuoka: eat the famous ramen by the river in booths, watch a sumo match, explore the extensive shopping district, purchase boots.

Ramen booths in Fukuoka. They are set up everynight and taken down every morning. Choose one and cozy on up to the bar:



~~We did everything we set out to do and even stumbled upon an amazing Christmas light display (which, by the way, are extremely expensive in Japan - we just bought some today, a string of 30 lights cost about $8.00! Needless to say we are rethinking putting lights in our windows...).




~~I bought some fabulous boots I am going to wear - my first step into the endless possibilities that make up Japanese Fashion.

~~We saw some very very large, yet very very strong, fat guys push each other around a ring. Ok, that's a crude description. It was actually very exciting and awe-inspiring.







~~Spent hours wandering through a maze of an undergound mall that spans the length of about 4 city blocks, and innumerable department stores with 7 floors each. Department stores in Japan are unlike anything you've ever seen.

~~Saw a famous Japanese singer give a free concert in the middle of a giant mall.

~~Saw a not-so-famous boy-band wannabe group perform on the sidewalk.

~~Spent lots of time in Canal City - a major mall/entertainment/dining/theatre complex. You could probably live there and never have to leave. Canal City from one angle (sorry for the crappy quality of this picture). You can see there is an actual 'canal' that runs through it:



~~Saw a water show inside Canal City (think Las Vegas)

~~Shawn made a new friend with the robot information system at Canal City.



~~Saw "War of the Worlds" in dubbed Japanese on the bus ride there. Looked pretty cheesy, I'm almost glad I didn't see it in English. On the way back we saw an anime also in Japanese.

All this in less than two days! Fabuloso. If anyone EVER comes to visit me I'm taking them to Fukuoka. It's amazin' fruit.

In other news. I FOUND AN ADULT SPANISH CONVERSATION CLASS! I am so lucky to have found it! At first, when I enter I have to sit there for a minute and mentally switch my brain from Japanese to Spanish. It's really weird being in a room with people where our common language is neither of our native languages. Our teacher is a doctor here on research from the Dominican Republic. Everyone has pretty much lived in a foreign country, so its right at my level. We do some grammar stuff which is always a nice review. I'm just happy to get the opportunity to speak Spanish, I have been afraid I'm losing it.

I finally read the Da Vinci Code! It took me all of two days. Crazy, huh. I can't remember the last time I read a book that fast. I chalk it up to the fact that lots of my classes at school have been canceled due to tests, vacations, etc. So I've had all day at work to read. It was fun.

Speaking of work - it's freezing! They don't turn on the heaters until December 1. A very strict rule. No matter if teachers are running around with down coats on (as I was all day today), Dec. 1 is the magic day. If I haven't said this before...buildings aren't centrally heated or air conditioned in Japan. The ACs have been installed and of course work well if you sit right next to them.... each classroom has them as does the teachers room. The halls, however, don't. The heaters are sort of like space heaters, but more powerful kerosene heaters. They drug them out yesterday as if to tease me. The possibility of heat is there...just can't use it yet! It's comical to walk through the teachers room and see what people are doing to cope - lots of women teachers have mini fleece blankets they keep at their desks and wrap around their legs while they are sitting there, some have gloves, jackets, and everyone has cup after cup of hot tea or coffee. It's hilarious. Yesterday I bought a pair of nylons and was actually EXCITED to wear them because I knew they would keep me warmer. That has never happened, that I enjoyed wearing nylons!

I'll leave you with some pictures of Shawn and I enjoying our complimentary pajamas at the hotel we stayed at this weekend.





5 comments:

Anonymous said...

You guys are an absolute hoot! Your dad read your entry 5 minutes ago and he is still walking around laughing.
The city with the canal through it is cool. Very pretty. The Christmas tree was prettier than most.
What a lovely outting.
Thank you for sharing!

Love you both!

the fam said...

Tori - did you get Shawn one of those darling sumo wrestler thingys???? I think he would be absolutely STUNNING in it. Anyway, looks like you had a much more exciting weekend than we did.
Love,
Mom

Anonymous said...

Wow, so I am seriously lame. I just figured out I can leave comments without getting a username! I am so all over it. Oooh ooh guess what recipe I found and am going to make soon? Inari!!

Collin said...

Hi Tori, yay for spanish! Oh I could use some ramen about now... Cya

Anonymous said...

you guys are dorks in your complimentary matching pajamas. only in our gene pool....:)