Wednesday, 14 October 2009
The Speech
みんなさん、おはようございます。
今日は私が順天ではたらくさいごの日です。
一年間東京に住みました。そして来週イギリスに帰ります。
去年の9月から私はいろいろなことをしました。
はじめてのところにたくさん行きました。
新しいしゅみはじめました。
日本語をべんきょうしました。
でも、一番楽しかったことは英語を教えることでした。
あなたたちはとてもいいせいとでした。ありがとうございます。
りじ長先生と校長先生も、本当にありがとうございます。
先生たちもみんなしんせつでした。ありがとうございます。
私は帰国しますが、日本語をべんきょうして
二年後にまた日本に来ます。
あなたたちは英語のべんきょうをつづけてください。
あなたたちといしょに英語で話したいです。
がんばってください!
本当にありがとうございました!
さよなら
Tuesday, 14 July 2009
Grass... and Trees... in Tokyo!
So, last week I finished work and now I'm officially unemployed! Wooo! And Awww! at the same time. I'm going to miss the students, and working in general really. Apart from the really long hours, working was so much fun - I really loved teaching English, but sadly I'm not sure if teaching is in my future. Couldn't hack teaching in England.
During these past few weeks I gave plenty of goodbye speeches, I even gave a few in Japanese (but I was reading from a prewritten one on my phone =P). I gave a speech to most classes in Junten, and I gave some to the PTA, the ex-PTA and also to my evening classes, but they were nothing compared to what's to come. My final speech, and my final day of 'work' to do for Junten, is on the 24th when I will give a speech to every student, every teacher and every passerby... in Japanese. That means well over a thousand people in total, all standing before me and watching me speak my awful (at best) Japanese, while I shake in total fear. It'll be interesting... not fun, but certainly interesting.
Saturday, 20 June 2009
Taikusai - The amazingness which is...
Friday, 19 June 2009
Martial Arts, Musical Instruments and Taikusai
Part two of the June catchup. Just a little (a little... haha) on how its going over here in rainy Tokyo. Rainy season's started recently and we have the Junten Taikusai (sports festival) tomorrow. Why they couldn't have planned it, say, last month when it wasn't rainy season I will never know, but it should be good fun. We've been setting it up and rehearsing at Shinden campus today and yesterday, which for me consisted of doing nothing but chat to students (and some fun fights involving bandanas and me getting lashed in the eye might have taken place). Sadly the teams seem a little unfair - the entire school gets put onto either the red team or the white team. All of the english orientated classes (my favourite students by far), most of the english teachers and Erling have been put on the white team while, as you might have guessed from the build up, I'm on the red team. Should be good fun anyway, I'll just have to destroy Erling and Barney in the tug of war and the other teacher events.
I've finally got into gear and sorted out a martial art, although it isn't quite a traditional Japanese art. I've started Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, so if you go back 100 years ago it has its roots in Japan but as the name pretty much tells it isn't a Japanese martial art at all. Its quite expensive so I might be living on rice until pay day next month but it'll definitely keep me busy (and hopefully be worth the cash, although since I just got £100 from the Japanese government due to the recession its not so bad) since they have atleast 2 hours of classes I can attend a day - even more when I'm on holiday next month. After 4 training sessions my blue gi finally arrived today so I'll get to try it out on Sunday - I wanted the black one but decided that beginners in black gi's will just look like wannabe ninjas. Atleast now one of the three gi's I own isn't white! I'm really enjoying doing it but hopefully in a few more training sessions I'll be used to being choked every few minutes - I certainly wasn't the other night, and the armbars weren't so easy going either! Definitely alot of fun though, and the members are so welcoming, trying their hearts out to speak English and show me the ropes - even if the 'ropes' do involve being unable to move with someones legs in a triangle choke hold around my neck squeezing every last breath out of me. It's not dangerous, honest!
Well that's what's going on in the life of me at the moment - I'll try to blog more before I leave, I'll have to see.
Sayonara
Wow I'm getting lazy with this...

Dancing show - Kiyoka, one of my 2-7 students that I've taught since my first week at Junten was in a hip hop/house dancing show. Went along with some other students and despite the fact that I'm not into hip hop at all it was really spectacular, amazing show - and if she ever reads this, thanks for inviting me! It was really good!
Laters.
Wednesday, 29 April 2009
Sakura
A cherry blossom is the name for the flower of cherry trees, also known as Sakura (Japanese kanji : 桜 or 櫻; hiragana: さくら) in Japanese. In English, the word "sakura" is equivalent to the Japanese flowering cherry.[1] Cherry fruit (known in Japanese as sakuranbo) comes from another species of tree.
Long Time No Post
Wednesday, 1 April 2009
Concering Mountains
This time it wasn't so hard to decide on pictures, the one above is one of my favourite pictures of this gap year. Project Trust photo competition winner, anyone? Anyway, last week, the day after Hakone, I climbed Mount Takao. Takao-san is another popular visit for people looking for a day escape from the big city, and I was up for conquering a mountain in the name of Britain. I climbed from the very bottom to the very top, and felt only slightly idiotic because of it - there was a cablecar to about a third of the way up but I decided the entire climb would ensure better photos. Not only was the first third the most painful climb ever, so steep, but there was also nothing at all to see. Never mind, I guess it added to the sense of achievement.
As you can see from the pictures the weather wasn't so great. But this wasn't a bad thing because it made for some great misty pictures in the temples at the top. It was a really cool temple aswell, and I managed to arrive when a Buddhist ceremony was starting. I heard drums as I entered the temple complex and ran up some stairs but just missed them - I could still hear the ceremony going on inside but didn't want to intrude. A little while later I managed to see a procession of monks chanting, but I didn't want to take a photo - I'm sure they wouldn't have minded, but it just didn't quite feel right. So instead I bought a Buddhist wallhanging from the temple to commemorate the climb. The way back down was so much better than the way up, aswell. I took a less walked route (theres 7 routes up and down) that went alongside a river, from where it more or less first forms up the mountain. It was a really picturesque and scenic walk, and well worth the long time it took to walk back down. It's sometimes nice to steer clear of the beaten path, even if it was blatantly a used route I didn't see a single person all the way down which added so much to the journey.
This is one of those "what you can see in the distance" view points. I tell you now, I saw nothing of the sort in the distance. Being able to see Tokyo from here my eye. Damn mist.
Concerning Volcanoes
Choosing pictures from my facebook albums to use on here is always a tough choice - mostly because I take so many and try not to put more than 4 on. Anyway, heres my favourite pics from my trip to Hakone last week. Hakone is a hugely popular retreat for Japanese and tourists alike wanting a few days out of Tokyo. It's nearly 2 hours from Tokyo, if I remember correctly anyhow, and its in the thick of Japanese nature. Lake Ashi, Mount Hakone (a volcano) and the historical Tokaido road are just a few of the tourist destinations in the area. Naturally I was there for the active volcano. And the pirate ship, of course.
After a long train journey and a decent length bus ride, I was ready for some good old sightseeing. Little did I know that Hakone Shrine was currently being invaded by a good three busloads of noisy Chinese tourists who set out to ruin every picture of the shrine I took - but I soldiered on and visited the old Tokaido road Hakone Checkpoint. The Tokaido road was one of the old paths between Kyoto and Tokyo, but not much of it is left - a few stone pavements here and there - but the Tokaido train line travels more or less the same route as the old road (I think).
Thursday, 26 March 2009
Laziness...
Recently I've been to FujiQ Theme Park, Hakone and Mount Takao, which all need to be blogged over. I would've wrote some tonight, but I was shattered after a lot of walking today. I'll see if I have time tomorrow, if not it'll be Friday morning. I promise. Maybe.
Monday, 9 March 2009
6 months today...
The only way I can really put my feelings into words is: Christ, I cannit believe it. I've been here 6 months! 6 months without my family and friends, without sunday dinners, greggs pasties and chavs. Not all bad then, I guess. Infact, if I'm honest, it was painfully difficult to come up with many things I missed other than my friends and family (sunday dinners was an easy one, don't really miss chavs though, for obvious reasons).
If we could boat all of my friends and family out here permanently, I'd have no reason to go back to England. It's not that England doesn't have redeeming qualities - I love the place. The only problem is Japan is atleast 20,000 million times better. I love this place, it has so much England doesn't have - the coolest history of any nation (oh come on, a country which got invaded by the french can't match up to samurai, no matter how hard it tries), delicious food and so much more.
Maybe I'm just feeling mid-year blues (well, post-mid-year... I may be returning at the start of August) and panicking at the short amount of time I have left here, in the same way that when I was coming out here I spent the last few weeks of English life not really wanting to leave. Either way, I'm really setting out to make the most of these last 5 months, mostly in the form of martial arts. I've already been doing Shorinji Kempo (although, I've been hugely lazy since Christmas, but I will properly start again in April with the new school year), I joined a Shotokan Karate class a few days ago and I'm looking to start Kendo. 'How will you juggle all of this, Michael?' you ask. 'Do you really have that much free time?' Well, no. I don't, and I'm not quite sure how this will all fit in but I have my heart intent on trying. I also really want give Taiko drumming a try. How I'll manage all of this? No clue, but I really feel the drive to do more things that I can take away from the gap year, so that when I get back home I can get that "holy crap, I just spent a year training three different martial arts in Japan, the home of each of these fighting styles". The sense of achievement would easily outweigh the exhaustion that will come with it.
When I stop to think like this, I still have so much left to do before I leave. So many places to see (Kyoto, Nara, Iga ninja museum, Utsunomiya...), so many new things to experience (Taiko, Kendo, Hanami - wiki it, festivals...) and so much still that I need to do within Tokyo that I haven't got around to (seeing the Imperial Palace, visiting the war museum and the national history museum, seeing Sumo...).
Hopefully this post can be not so much a wake-up call, but a promise to myself, and to whoever reads this, that I'm going to really try to do everything I possibly can in my last few months before my journey back across the world.
This can also be a post to say "I'll be back home soon, get ready to party". I demand atleast 5 welcome back parties, including (but not limited to) some nights out, some house parties and a few trips to Japanese restaurants so I can criticise them on how un-Japanese their restaurants are.
The pictures in the post are just random ones I selected from my first few months here. The top one was taken at the Junten Bunkasai (school festival), which happened in my first few weeks here. Despite the fact that this will sound immensely cheesey, it does almost seems like an eternity ago, I'd kill to go to this year's Bunkasai just so I could relive it now that I'm really at home at Junten and now that I know so many students. Never mind, still sports day to come! The second picture is of my trip to Nikko, again that feels like so long ago - my first real trip in Japan. The third is a random picture at karaoke which must've been taken in my first few weeks when Paxman was still here.
Hopefully my next post can be about a trip somewhere - no trips planned as of yet, but I have another 3 weeks off. A small amount of travelling can and will happen!
Saturday, 7 March 2009
Oji - Part 3: Return of the... Museum?
Oji - Part 2: The Nature Strikes Back
Sorry about the quality of this picture, the camera, as great as it is, tends to screw up pictures now and again. Anyway, this was a really cool thing to experience when I arrived at Asukayama park (for the first time, I add, despite it being a major attraction in Oji, especially during Cherry Blossom season at the end of this month). A group of kids doing a drumming performance on a small stage in the park. They looked a bit rag tag since they couldnt quite stand still, but this didnt detract from the cracking performance they gave. Really good for a group of kids.
Asukayama park. On a really nice spring day, this was a great place to go for a while - the pictures don't seem to capture much of the nice day due to the leaf-less trees though. I'll be sure to come back when every single tree in this picture is glowing pink with the Sakura.
Random water feature in the park. Looked good. Nothing else to say.
Big stone I couldn't read. Looked cool. Anything else to say? 'fraid not.
View from Asukayama park. Really shows the mix of nature and metropolis, I think, with the green park and traditional looking clock-thing juxtaposed with the high rise buildings in the background.
A view of the small river... thing that runs through here and under the station. It's the same one that you saw in the last post in the pictures of my route to work. And heres some more pictures of the same place:
