月別アーカイブ: 2012年3月

Cheap Eats at Ameyayokocho

Ameyayokocho is a narrow shopping street between Okachimachi and Ueno Stations. Takeshita is famous for trendy clothes, Asakusa’s little streets are famous for temple tchotchkes and Japanese touristy goods, and Ameyayokocho apparently is famous for being cheap. The shops that line the street sell nuts and dried fruit, fish, produce, and hot food, and all at awfully affordable prices for the notoriously expensive Tokyo.

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My friend told me that on weekends it’s packed, and that week before New Year’s, when everyone is trying to cook up days worth of food for the long holiday? Forget about it.

We went on a weekday in the middle of the day, so it was positively pleasant. Vendors also sold shoes, sunglasses, umbrellas, bags, and American-style t-shirts and other clothes. I left with a new umbrella and bags upon bags of dried fruit and nuts.

…but I’ve already eaten everything, so I’ll be back, Ameyayokocho. Just you wait.

Plum Blossoms and Study Prayers at Yushima Temple

Sakura season is almost on us, but the plum blossoms are already here. Last weekend a friend and I went to Yushima Temple, near Okachimachi Station and Ueno, to see the blooming plum trees. When we arrived, I also noticed those walls where one hangs little wood placards with wishes for the gods to fulfill was almost overflowing. My friend told me that not only is Yushima temple famous for plum blossoms, it’s the temple of a “Study God.” We read some of the placards, and it looked like grateful students were thanking the god for their successful school admissions.

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My finals for the last term are already done, but I’ll have to pay a visit to Yushima next term…

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Japanese Language Study with Anki

I’m not that good about studying Japanese. Studying for school, sure: there are short-term, immediate consequences to not doing my work, not to mention public ridicule from professors and classmates if I clearly don’t know what I’m talking about or what’s going on. But with no (immediate) consequences and no (guaranteed) public ridicule if I don’t learn my five kanji for the day, Japanese always seems to fall to the bottom of my to-do.

Then I try to read a website, or an advertisement, or I have to ask my friend for the umpteenth time what a word means, or I know what I want to say in English but argh how do I say it in Japanese… and motivation returns. Life is hard living in a foreign country and only sort of knowing what’s going on, or what’s written on something, or what someone just said (and what to say back). There’s a lot of being confused and looking dumb.

Still, it needs to be easy for me to study: not easy in the subject matter, but easy in the method. If I have to read worksheet instructions or fumble around trying to find the right flashcards I lose my motivation in about half a second. Not to mention there’s no immediacy to gathering all these physical study materials: I have some already, but if I decide I need to learn something else I have to go to amazon.co.jp or the bookstore and poke around and obsessively read reviews to make sure what I’m looking at is a good product and on and on. Being a poor and mildly OCD is not a good combo.

And lo, in that void of a quick, convenient, well-priced (and isn’t free the best price of all) study tool comes: Anki. Anki is actually a generic flashcard application, but it allows for shared flashcard decks. So after downloading and installing the program, I can search through Anki’s massive database of flashcards and find that many people before me have created Japanese-language flashcards. No need to laboriously input data myself. There are flashcards for all the kanji for JLPT 1, 2, 3, and 4 (these designations are outdated now that the JLPT is organized by N1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, but it’s not as if the kanji I need to be fluent have changed), flashcard packs of 6000+ Japanese sentences, hiragana and katakana for beginners, grammar, and many more. Better still, Anki has an iPhone app. At $25 it’s more than a little pricey, but if you consider that the desktop client and all the flashcards that come with it are free, it more than evens out.

And finally, if you’re a particular studier who wants things just so like I do, you can edit the flash card packs you download. I didn’t like how the kanji flashcards gave me the kanji and the reading then asked for the meaning; I wanted them to give me the kanji and ask for the reading and meaning. With a quick template edit, I changed all 1000+ flashcards so I could have just that.

Studying has been a lot easier – or at least a lot easier to guilt myself into doing – since I started using Anki. With the iPhone app I can do my reviews on the train, syncing my progress so the desktop app knows I did my work when I get home. I can’t say I’m as diligent as I need to be, but I’m headed in the right direction.

So all that said… anyone want a box of White Rabbit kanji flashcards for JLPT 3-4? They’re starting to gather dust.

No pictures for this one, but let me know if you’d like me to break it up by adding a screenshot or something.

next week

next week, 久し振り i do not have to do the lessons, maybe i can have more fun with the people around.
i really thought about doing something that is more creative, but mostly, i just end up hanging around with the people around me, cause they are entertaining to a certain level. just like my roommate, i never imagine she can be so 自然に似合う with me.
but i do miss him every single day.
she also hear sooo much about him from me.

i love SMS … なんか繋がってる感じ

ever since not being with you, there is no one i want to take photos of …
sometimes i even think, there is no need to take cameras with me anymore. but i still take it with me most of the time, afraid there be some “emergency” situation.
friday night, i was soooo tired of the situation at work and got to drink with someone, lucky when i went to the lounge i already see someone i know. so i ended up drinking with them.
saturday night, i was preparing the pancake for roommate and i saw craig and he invited me, but i did not say anything. then later, when i had the mood to drink, because of some non-welcomed person, the party separated into 2 groups. i would like to stay with my good male friend, and he was showing me the SIRI app, it was so cute ^^. he told me to talk on the iphone and the iphone really respond!

but later the other party invited so i had to go to the other one cause i know that group a little longer. but the whole time i was SMS back and forth with him it was interesting.
i love SMS … なんか繋がってる感じ
and there are history i can always look back and think about the sweet words …
but i guess those history means nothing when someone just does not love you anymore …

i want to be someone that would return my SMS right away every time i message him.
no matter how many years have passed.
because most of the time, when a person said, he could not mail because he was busy, because he was blah blah blah, it was all just excuse …

still missing you

are we just wasting the time that we actually could have been very happy and enjoying each others’ company … but instead, we are doubting about each others’ feeling … afraid of losing face … afraid of getting hurt.

i still think we are 似合う。

because we are completely different. and we can communicate. not like how i am with other people.

i miss you …

why i did what i did

recently, it is true that i have made more new male friends, but the more i am with other people, the more i miss him … he is so cute …

外表上、one may wonder, if you care, why not message?

the thing is, because it hurts.

if i initiate, and if he not responds, then i will get hurt just like before, right? going crazy and wonder why he ignores me.

at least now, when he last time mailed me, i immediately responded, that is good of me, right?

hope i can prove to him that i actually WILL RESPOND, as long as he initiate …

the reason why i did not pick up the phone the first time, was because i was afraid i might hear things i not want to hear. i was not ready.

not that i am ready now, but at that time, i was definitely very shocked and もっと not ready!

BUT, just because i not pick up, just because i was still angry with him, does not mean that i not miss him …

maybe in his case, it is different, but in my case, it is not …

Working at Starbucks

私にはスターバックスで働く夢があります。大学生の時にスターバックスに興味を持ち始めました。飲み物がおいしいし、雰囲気が穏やかだし、おしゃれな店だと思いました。

大学を卒業してから10ヶ月後大学院に入学しました。専門は社会福祉でした。大学院を卒業してから2年後に、社会福祉者にとして働き始めました。そのときロスに住んでいて普通の生活をしていました。週に2,3回スターバックスに行ってくつろぎました。2007年に仕事を変えてストレスがどんどんたまってきました。安全じゃないところで働いていて働き続けることが個人的な事情で難しくなりました。仕事をやめることにしましたが、新しい仕事は前の仕事よりストレスが多かったです。2年でがまんできなくなりました。そして、去年の9月末に日本に来ました。

簡単に説明しましたが、もちろん、実際はもっと複雑です。

この話についてどうして書いていると思いますか。スターバックスの関係は何だと思いますか。

それはスターバックスでずっと働きたいと思っている理由は静かなところだからです。仕事内容も難しくないことと関連しています。単純な理由です。

ストレスがたまったら健康にわるいです。お金が少なくても健康に仕事ができるほうが、お金持ちになっても健康に悪い仕事よりがいいと思います。健康が大事です。スターバックスで働くのは楽しくて健康にいいと思います。仕事自体は難しくないでしょうが、面白そうです。

今日はお気に入りのスターバックスの店長に会いました!もうすぐスターバックスで働けるといいな!

Bunkyo City Culture Festival

My friend Reiko, who works for the Bunkyo City government here in Tokyo, invited me to a culture festival they were holding around mid-February. It was, overall, a blast: “free” is very much the right price for me and my fellow students; Bunkyo is a super swank city where Tokyo University (Todai) is located, lots of Todai graduates live, and where I can only guess their taxes help pay for the very impressive government building the festival was hosted in. The entire festival was very well thought out and accommodating to foreigners, sharing different parts of traditional Japanese culture via displays and knowledgeable on-hand experts.

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At Reiko’s recommendation, we arrived before noon to beat the crowds and went first to the Ikebana (flower arrangement) station. There an ikebana teacher showed us how to place the flowers following some basics of the craft’s aesthetics. This amounted to making a sort of triangle shape with the height/placement of the flowers. We were then given our flowers to wrap up and take home. Mine were tragically crushed by the end of the day, and I had to toss them – but don’t they look lovely?

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During our visit we also learned calligraphy, and after practicing under the teacher’s instruction a few times, we painted our characters of choice on paper fans. At yet another area we made our very own artificial bonsai trees – probably the best plant option for me, since everything else seems to die on my watch. My fake bonsai, however, is still green and flowering after many weeks!

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All in all it was a fantastic day courtesy of the Bunkyo City office. Thanks Reiko and thanks Bunkyo!

Japanese Study Resources

Here’s a list of the resources I use to study Japanese

  • Lang 8 – It’s an online journal/social networking site where people write journal entries in a language they are studying. Then their journal entries are corrected by native speakers or others who are also studying the same language. This site is excellent for improving grammar and vocabulary.
  • Japanese Pod 101 – This a series of 1-3 minute podcast conversations. After the conversation, the vocabulary is explained and then the main grammar points are discussed. This site is excellent for improving listening and speaking skills.
  • Tumblr – Tumblr is a blogging site that many people use to share their study habits, tips and tricks to learning Japanese. You don’t have to be a member to read someone’s blog, but you have to a member if you want to follow their blog.
  • Anki – Anki is a program that allows you to create flashcards. It uses the spaced repetition method (a learning technique that incorporates increasing intervals of time between subsequent review of previously learned material in order to exploit the psychological spacing effect. -according to Wikipedia).
  • Labochi – I meet with a private teacher once a week at my home and she is great! I found her on Labochi.
  • I just discovered Tae Kim’s Guide and Study Stream.
  • I have the textbook Japanese for Busy People.
  • I also use the iPhone application- Kotoba!

There are so many resources on the Internet that are free. With some time and practice, anyone can speak Japanese in no time!