Friday, October 21, 2011

Moving Apartments

This last week was outrageously busy as I tried to juggle classwork with prepping my resume/applications for the Boston Career Forum (flying back to the states for a week in November) AND simultaneously setting the gears in motion to move apartments.

Moving apartments... being an adult is hard.  But I think I got it right this time.

I never really bothered to share photos or descriptions of the current place because its not much to share.  From my 8th view window, I can see... car parts factories.  At night, the sounds of motorcycle gangs on the adjacent highway serenades me to sleep.  On my route to school, I have a lovely tour of used car dealers, and car part stores, and car repair shops.  It's a private, functional space, but that's about it.  I selected it without understanding much of the area, or even what I was looking for, only that it balanced far enough away from school to be cheap but still close enough to commute by bike.

I also hardly ever encountered the neighbors.  It's a monthly apartment, pre-furnished and with an easily adjustable contract, so it caters to working adults whose companies transfer them to work in Tokyo for a few months.  Most neighborhoods are meticulously guarded by the local neighborhood watch organization--most of my friends have been scolded by the vigilant grannies for taking out their trash too early.  This might be obnoxious, but the presence of trash-guard-grannies evidences the strong bonds of community, which is something my neighborhood/apartment just doesn't have.


I have a weird guilty complex about hanging out with foreigners outside of class and speaking English.  But my current situation allowed me hardly any opportunity to meet Japanese people my age.  So then I would retreat to my apartment and be bored, and feel guilty that I wasn't better utilizing my time.

But, with the magical powers of the internet, I found a company "Social Apartment" that's basically college dorms but for big people.  I'm moving to Shinkawasaki, which is still only a 12 minute train ride (1 transfer) to my school in Minatomirai.  Individual bedrooms, but actually really nice shared facilities.  There's a lounge with a PS3 and Wii, nearly the largest kitchen I've ever seen in a Japanese house, outdoor wood deck, and a rooftop deck with a pretty view looking towards Tokyo and Shinjuku.

The bedroom is small, but the difference in rent and all means I'll be saving close to $300 a month.  And honestly I think the lifestyle change of having Japanese friends to hang out with at night will be a major change in my happiness, in addition to being an invaluable language/cultural learning tool.

I was kinda anxious about the possibility of moving in with creepers / otherwise unpleasant roommates, but having met the landlord I feel way better now.  I had been exchanging emails with the landlord for a couple days (incredibly relevant timing because we're working on formal correspondence in class, particularly emails chock full of keigo) before I came to visit and from the business-like tone of the emails I assumed he would be 50 or so.  Turns out he's actually my age, and a super-chill bro, and we're gonna play soccer tomorrow.  Nevermind that I don't like soccer very much and will probably embarrass myself because I haven't actually played since I was 6.

He vouched very strongly for the other residents being interesting people (I think there will be a total of 18 once I move in, 3 foreigners and otherwise mainly Japanese) and swore by the warm and welcoming environment of the apartment set-up.  He insists that partly because it's a more narrow space, everyone gets more cuddly.  I like cuddly. :p

Unrelated: went to a Japanese baseball game last week, sitting on the side of the diehard Hanshin Tigers fans.  American fans are downright pathetic when compared to the vigor that Japanese fans pour into their constant organized cheering.  I was also creepin' hardcore on the trumpeters.


Also unrelated: met some girls from Meiji Gakuin College last week on an event to tour some temples of Kamakura.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Overdue Updates

I have been super delinquent on the blog, partially because I'm constantly pretty busy with the workload and all, and partly because the first month wasn't quite as "action-packed" as my previous experiences in Japan.  Whereas summer programs for undergrads hold your hand as they inundate you with cultural activities, IUC is much more hands off.  Its class, and a lot of it, and then students are otherwise on their own for the remaining 10% of daylight hours.

I've been here now just about 5 weeks, and the concept of "I live in Japan" is starting to sink in.  A little.

I spend a lot of time thinking about / finding / preparing / cleaning food.  My fridge is less of a "living fridge" and more of a "beer fridge", so the size of it (plus the size of the kitchen) makes it hard to prepare and store food in bulk.   But I make a lot of tofu dishes, and for the first time in my life I'm cooking fish by myself.  Breakfast is usually a rice bowl with kimchi, natto, fried eggs, and wasabi furikake, plus a banana.  Lunch is whatever I can buy for cheap at a cafeteria or conbini near school, and dinner is whatever recipe I look up, which is often based around what weird stuff is on sale at the supermarket.

My food budget on the scholarship would be around $20 / day, but with the current exchange rates thats more like ¥1600.  Actual parity means it feels like $16 (if we establish the amount of noms I get on a US $1 menu as equivalent to a ¥105 rice ball).  I eat a lot in general, but on judo days I'm guessing I take in anywhere from 3000-4000 calories, so I have the mental rule that I'm only allowed to buy things that have a 2 Kcal : ¥1 value.  Cost of living around Yokohama/Tokyo is very very high.  If I have time to cook properly, that's fine, but busy days are a lot harder.  Even a cheap restaurant uses a majority of my daily food budget, and a round trip to Tokyo often ends up around $12 in transportation.

Speaking of Judo, I did join a new dojo last week, although not the Kodokan.  This one is also pretty far, but there's a lot of adults (including a couple very prestigious ones... the head instructor is a 7th dan blackbelt, and another one won the National Championships of the Police Judo League).  In randori I'm finally to the point where I've been able to get in a few throws on the blackbelts, although the net total of throws is still very much me being thrown.  But apparently 小内刈 (ko-uchi-gari) is my best move now, which is surprising because it seemed like one of my worst before. 

Adventures:
We had a day off from class to go on field trips sponsored by the center: I went to the Cup Noodle Museum (where I had noodles) and Kirin Beer Factory (where I had beer).


 The "My Cup Noodle" attraction: I drew Nyan Cat and Noodle Cat

 A visual timeline of all cup noodle products and labels
Magical art noodles flying through the air
 Met up with Elizabeth (Carbone) Igarishi two weekends ago, and we went out to the beach at Kamakura and the Daibutsu statue.

Went on a single day retreat to a Buddhist Temple, also near Kamakura.  Turns out I'm really bad at meditating.

More to come later.  I'll be less bad at updating.