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Saturday, February 05, 2005

Good news!

I got good news to share! I took the Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 1 on 12/5 last year, and I got the results back today. Guess what? I PASSED it!!!!! Although I bombed the kanji section, I almost got perfect on listening and did well on reading/grammar as well. 70% (280 points) is the minimum for passing. Below is the detailed results.

文字・語彙 (Writing/Vocabulary) 66/100
聴解 (Listening) 97/100
読解・文法 (Reading/Grammar) 177/200
総合点 (Total Score) 340/400

9/10 homestay in Kagoshima Day 2

Wow, two posts in two days! I hope to wrap up the Kagoshima homestay series soon.

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Woke up around 5 a.m. because Kanako-san was making bento (lunchbox). Fell asleep again and woke up around 6:30 a.m. Kozue was getting ready for school. Ate breakfast (miso soup, egg rolls, rice, meatball, etc.) and had a quick shower without soap (I don't quite remember, but I probably couldn't find it). Went to Ichikichou Post Office and cleaned up the place with Mandy (Man-Yi's nickname) and Tabuchi-san, Mandy's host mom. I used the vacuum cleaner. After work, Fukuyama-san, the post office director, showed us books that covered 120 years of Japan Postal Service history and gave us omiyage (gift), a mailbox-shaped piggy bank. Mandy and I watched post office rules on video which is shown to new hires. Fukuyama-san bought us yogurt, and we participated in the radio taisou (morning exercise performed in schools and companies). We introduced ourselves in Chinese and English.

Left the post office and stopped by A-Coop, a supermarket, and bought some coffee. Went to Tabuchi-san's friend's house and watched a Korean drama called Autumn Fairy Tale. Seemed like a rich family because the house was pretty big and the living room was fairly large. Mandy taught me Chinese while Tabuchi-san and her friend were chatting. After the drama was over, all of us went to eat tonkotsu ramen and dumplings at a restaurant.


9/10 tonkotsu ramen Posted by Hello

Afterwards, we went to a dessert place and ate cakes and the famous shirokuma dessert. It's basically ice covered with ice cream and fruits. It's supposed to look like a white bear, hence the name shirokuma which means exactly that in Japanese. What do you think?


9/10 shirokuma dessert Posted by Hello

After taking Hinokuchi-san, Tabuchi-san's friend, back to her house, we visited Kawakami Elementary School and introduced ourselves. We were going to spend a day with elementary school kids on 9/16. Children were riding unicycles. Went to Tabuchi-san's place, and I played with Qoo, a dog, and Tatsu, a cat. Other dogs were barking at me, and there were two chickens walking around the garden. The cell phone reception was so bad near the house. After fooling around a bit more, we went to pick up Hiromi from middle school. Stopped by Daiwa supermarket to buy some food, and we saw an ALT (Assistant Language Teacher, basically an English teacher) there. I asked Hiromi about it, and apparently, they have an ALT in elementary, middle, and high schools.

Tabuchi-san dropped me off at Miura's on the way. Kozue was already back from school eating a Korean snack I had brought from Tokyo, onion rings. The black-white cat, Tama, was inside the house, and I played with him for a while. Grandmother Mie-san doesn't like cats, and she hit the poor cat on the head and tried to get him out of the house. I actually carried Tama outside. Studied for the Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 1 for a bit and ate dinner. I automatically got extra helping of food, and it was once again 1:3 sitting style, me sitting on one side while the others sat across from me.


9/10 yummy chahan and soup dinner Posted by Hello

Some guy from the Karaimo Homestay office came with a large shochu bottle. He talked with me for a bit, asking some questions, but he spent most of the time talking to the host mom. Supposedly, I was to go to his place and help fix some computer problem (ended up never going to his house). Miura-san's first daughter, her husband, and two children visited later. They left Riena-chan, the older child, to sleep at the house. Miura-san's second daughter, Tomomi, woke up from slumber and came down. I was seeing her for the first time, so I gave her my omiyage. She didn't open it right then, so I don't know what she did with it. Maybe it's still unopen. Who knows.

Did some Internet surfing, and watched the TV drama version of "Sekai no chushin de ai wo sakebu," which roughly means "Shouting out love, from the Center of the World," with Kozue in Mie-san's room. While watching the drama, Kozue found a BIG cockroach on the wall and freaked out. I had to put it to sleep with a flyswatter, and I threw it out the window. Anyway, the TV drama is based on a popular novel, and a movie came out last year as well. The movie's title song by Hirai Ken, Hitomi wo tojite, was the best-selling single of 2004. The drama's title song by Shibasaki Kou, Katachi aru mono, was really popular as well. Shibasaki also starred in the movie. Confused? Anyway, the story is pretty good. Good enough for me to buy the DVD. It has English subtitles, so if any of you wants to watch it when I'm in America, let me know. Kanako-san asked me if I wanted to go to the chorus practice and watch her sing, but I declined because I wanted to watch the drama.

Thursday, February 03, 2005

I've been a very BAD boy...

Hello, readers!

As you might/might not have noticed, I haven't been updating my blog for a long, LONG time. There are several reasons behind this outrageous deed.

First, I've lost the will to continue documenting my daily life. When I started blogging, I didn't think it was a big deal because I've read other people's blogs, and they are updated pretty regularly. Apparently, I thought wrong. Maintaining a blog is TOUGH work! I realized (again) that I will never be successful as a writer.

Second, I've been busy (kinda) for the past few months, studying for the Japanese Language Proficiency Test Level 1, applying for the JET Program (again), homestaying in Miyazaki, going to Aogashima (a small island 360km south of Tokyo) to teach kids about Korea, and what not. Yeah, I know this is the most used excuse, but it works every time. Right?

Finally, I'm the laziest person I know. People who know me well know this fact. But, I can't emphasize enough how lazy I am. There have been countless times I chose watching TV over updating my blog. I know this post will probably be followed by a long absence of posts, but I hope I will pick up my pace and be like Y.I. (I hope you recognize your initials!)

Now, if I can just bring myself to copy my Kagoshima diary that I started in October...