Japan

Name:
Location: Japan

Friday, November 30, 2007

Pictures

I told you that I bought a camera, right? It's taking me some time to become friends with it. It takes blurry pictures. Except when I took some pictures out of the window of the bus. So here is the first thing we see when we leave campus:
And you know when I tell you that we live on the top of a mountain, surrounded by forest? Well, here you go, douzo!:
Sorry about the fog, but I did tell you it's always foggy up here.

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Saturday, November 24, 2007

Japanese Food

Main characters:
They: everyone, Japanese and foreigners alike.

Curry à la japonaise

Step one: Boil rice (who would've guessed?)
Step two: have ready the curry sauce of your choice.
Step three: Take a plate, put the rice on one half, the sauce on the other.
Step four: Throw those chopsticks away and take a spoon.

Japanese food is tasty. Very delicious, like they say around here.
Japanese food is cheap. When I go for breakfast at the school dining hall, I have miso soup, gyouza dumplings, deep fried fish, some lettuce, a meat ball (yes 'a' meatball), some more vegies, fried or not, and one or two cups of water. They also serve chicken, rice, all kinds of bread (sweet stuff), pineapple, deep fried mashed potatoes, and all kinds of japanese stuff that I don't know the name of, but it's usually deep fried in tempura. But no matter what I pick for my breakfast, it never costs more than 280 yen (very top), and according to Kaupþing Bank,
that amounts to ISK 164.56. But like I said, 280 is the very top, I have only once had to pay that much. Usually I pay round 200 yen, or 117.54 krona.

'Kay, time for lunch. See you later.

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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

What do you want to know?

Napoleon Dynamite.
The first movie of the cinema club Bowling 4 Beppu was a fantastic one. Too bad the CD skipped over the time-machine part. I was looking forward to seeing it.
There will be a show every Tuesday night from now on, for anyone who feels like going to the movies and have a drink/cup of coffee (because coffee is not a drink)/a discussion and fun afterwards. Next one will be Little Miss Sunshine. Also a great movie, with a lot of unexpected things happening (I am so good with words). Then there will be Buffalo '66, and Rushmore, neither of which I have seen.

Oh yeah, some of you might (possibly, but I doubt it) be more interested in the fact that I bought a camera.
It sucks.
(I was going to put a sample picture here, but, as you will find out as you read further, that did not work out so well)
Or maybe I need to study the settings a bit more.
Or maybe it just sucks. Why do I have to install the thing again, only to transfer my photos to my computer?

I found my key and won't have to pay the 10,000 yen for a new one. Phew!

Hm... what's new, and interesting?
Tell me, dear devoted readers, what do you want to know about my overly exciting mountain life in the far East? I am blogging for you, but I need to know what you want to know, because for me, my life is not that interesting. I am on a week long break, but even then, I have homework to do.
...
Questions, anyone? Anyone?

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Thursday, November 15, 2007

Japanese High Technology

Hello there, dear devoted readers.

I lost my room key the other day, and because it is nowhere to be found, I now have to pay 10,000 Japanese Yen to get a new one. Meanwhile, I get to use the spare-key from the security office to get into my room, but I cannot leave the building with that key, and I have to sign in and out of the dorm. They're monitoring me.

Have I ever told you about the wonders of Japanese technology? All technology gets born here, in the Land of the Rising Sun, so we have all the newest, coolest, sweetest stuff here. But bear in mind that technology is like human babies, they need time to grow and develop. That's why we have a lot of used-to-be-cool-and-new stuff, that the West has developed more and made better. Things like ATM. What is the point of an ATM if it has opening hours?? Then there's computers and the internet. If I want to download the readings that I have to do for class, I have to sign in to the university home-page. Ok, that's normal. But then I have to sign in again to get to see the list of teachers. Then I have to sign in again to actually get to the downloading. And when I want to look at the syllabus, I also have to sign in about three times, and when I do, I cannot just press the Enter key, noooo, I have to move the mouse and click on the button that says ロギン (also on the English version of the page, that one button has to stay in Japanese).
And the internet here is SLOW. In our rooms, in the internet rooms, in the media rooms, in computer classrooms...
Maybe the Japanese don't care. Maybe they don't realize how slow it is. It is an actual problem here, in Technology Country that the young generation is computer-illiterate. Imagine that. Everything is upside-down here.

I hardly ever take the elevator. I prefer the stairs (as my friends will attest to). The elevators here talk to you. Some speak in English, others in Japanese. They say things like 'Doors are closing' (ドアは閉まります), and 'First floor' (1階でございます). I live on the third floor, but I have a feeling that Lady Elevator actually says 'Thirth floor'. Because she always makes me think that we're on fourth.
Other things that talk to you here include ATMs ('Please be careful of things left behind'), and toilets (ぺらぺら、ちょっとわかりません)。

We took a trip to Mt.Aso the other day. Me, Nika, Tonya, Annastína, Yuhei, and uh, a guy from Vietnam, I think :S I had never met him before, and only seen him once since (help me out here Nika-chan). Yuhei is Japanese and told us the funny story of how people would turn around when his dad called his name when they were in New York, because it sounds a bit like 'you hey!' Anyway, Mt.Aso is an active, smoking volcano that you can climb and look into the crater. It was cool. Couldn't really see anything because of all the vapor (yeah, it's not real smoke), but it was cool all the same. The landscape there is interesting, but I still haven't got any pictures from the people who took some, so I can't show you. I'll just tell you what it looked like. There was black sand, aaaand.... that was int. Rock. Ó, svo voru vörður þarna. It felt like home. It was even cold. It was the first time I wore my winter jacket since I came here. Yeah, that place really looked and felt like home.
More about volcanoes. I don't think I ever told you that one of the mountains here where I live is a volcano and if it erupts, it's bye bye Beppu. There was an earthquake the other day, less than 3 Richter and at 5 o'clock in the morning, so I didn't feel anything. Although some people woke up. As I have said before, The school and the dorm is planted on the top of a mountain, and that means that to get here, we have to cross several bridges, and that means that if there is a big earthquake, and the bridges break, we're stuck. So we were advised to stock up on safety-food, like cookies, and snack.
Why do they tell you these things after you get here? *sigh*

It is the end of the semester quarter now. Classes are over. Next week is Final exams, then free. Bart is going to Tokyo to have lunch with rich old Japanese salarymen in black suits. Rina and some people are going on a four-day bus-trip to see the country. Someone talked about a trip to Hokkaido. I wonder if they have snow already in Hokkaido. I'm not going anywhere, because when I ask around, no one has heard of any trip to Hokkaido, and I don't have money to go to places I've already been to. (does that make sense to you?)

Et si je continue comme ça, je ne ferai jamais mes devoirs de japonais... alors, chô!

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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

My New Purple Sweater Says:

MELTY YOUR DREAMS
SWEET ICECREAM MOON
A PINK DROP
DARLING
FLAVOR OF TEMPTATION
DON'T INTERRUPT
WITHOUT YOU
OUR EMPTY WORLD

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Saturday, November 03, 2007

Hostage Situation

I'm being held hostage. They're forcing me to write this. I do not write this on my own free will. The ones forcing me to type are Nika the Angel and Bart the devil. One tells me to write bad stuff (especially about the other). The other doesn't say anything as of yet. Maybe because angels usually do not hold people hostage or force them to do things. (They're talking about The Blues Brothers... mayhaps I can use that to my advantage...)
Oh, I just found out why the angel doesn't pay attention to the hostage situation... she's reading doujinshi... It has very colourful pages... in all meanings of the word.
I asked her what to write (because she wasn't doing her job) and she told me she was here to cheer me on. 'You can do it!' she says.
But do what?
Write, I think.
But about what?
The trip we took to Oita today maybe.
That was fun.
We kinda got lost you know.
But getting lost is fun.
Yes, in a foreign city in Japan, where you have never been before and where you can hardly speak the language. We can't even recognize what we have on our plate in restaurants!
Yes, that is fun.
I bought shoes.
Good for you. But outside the topic.
*we interrupt this programme with an important announcement from the devil. He is going to use his Chupa Chups stick as a straw and drink sake with it.*
...
They're both so quiet, both busy in their own little heaven of doujinshi and Chupa Chups sake hell. I think I'll use the opportunity to steal away and put an end to this ridiculous blog. L
L8er.