Jen - can you share your pictures from Japan on this blog? I know you have them posted on Facebook, but not everyone goes there...
Steve / Dad
The Cammarn Blog
Sunday, August 15, 2010
We're empty-nesters again! Today, we moved Laura into her new apartment at BGSU. She is just off-campus, and shares the 2-BR apartment with her close friend Kristen. We rented a UHaul, loaded it yesterday, and unloaded it today. It was hot both days -- 95F -- and Laura's apartment is on the 3rd floor. We strung ropes and hauled most of it up to the balcony -- it saved trips up the steps.
Jen is getting settled in Habuka-mura, and we've shipped her some additional belongings.
Our next excitement is our vacation in September. We're headed to Glacier National Park in Montana for 8 days.
Steve
Jen is getting settled in Habuka-mura, and we've shipped her some additional belongings.
Our next excitement is our vacation in September. We're headed to Glacier National Park in Montana for 8 days.
Steve
Monday, August 9, 2010
From Japan
Hello! I still have yet to get internet in my house yet. I have to get my alien registration card before I can get interwebs, so I`m spending a lot of my downtime at school while the other teachers are taking their paid leave checking the interwebs and wondering what exactly I`m supposed to be doing. Here`s a breif rundown of how things have been going.
Thu. July 29
Peaced out of Cincinnati for Washington. Ended up spending 2 1/2 hours hanging out in the airport waiting for my plane to be cleared. There were storms in the Baltimore-Washington area, so everything was backed up. Spent most of the time frantically calling my friend Laura, who I stayed with, updating her about my flight. Finally left, and then arrived. Was picked up by Laura and then hung out at her place for the rest of the night
Fri. July 30
Pre-departure Orientation in the Japanese Embassy. I had to go a little early because I didn`t go to the information session in June because DC is very far from Cinti and I didn`t feel like paying for a plane ticket. Then the rest of the JETs showed up and we got told fun things like about our flight and about being arrested. The girl that sat next to be for the first half had perfume on that gave me a headache that slowly got worse as the day went on. Then nausea. By the time we were supposed to have dinner I was miserable. And the Japanese abassador was late, so we didn't get started until 45 min after we were supposed to
Thu. July 29
Peaced out of Cincinnati for Washington. Ended up spending 2 1/2 hours hanging out in the airport waiting for my plane to be cleared. There were storms in the Baltimore-Washington area, so everything was backed up. Spent most of the time frantically calling my friend Laura, who I stayed with, updating her about my flight. Finally left, and then arrived. Was picked up by Laura and then hung out at her place for the rest of the night
Fri. July 30
Pre-departure Orientation in the Japanese Embassy. I had to go a little early because I didn`t go to the information session in June because DC is very far from Cinti and I didn`t feel like paying for a plane ticket. Then the rest of the JETs showed up and we got told fun things like about our flight and about being arrested. The girl that sat next to be for the first half had perfume on that gave me a headache that slowly got worse as the day went on. Then nausea. By the time we were supposed to have dinner I was miserable. And the Japanese abassador was late, so we didn't get started until 45 min after we were supposed to
Saturday July 31
Woke up super early and left for Reagan National. We got in this huuuuuuuge line fo JETs and checked our baggage. Both of my bags ended up being 49 lbs (50 lb weight limit win!). Then we just kind of chilled in the airport. Flew to Chicago, changed planes, then off to Japan! Because we flew west, there was no night time. Some annoying guy kept opening the window while it was sleep time. I tried my best to sleep, but to no avail. I ended up watching a lot of stuff. Date Night, Shrek 4, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, TRICK: The Movie, two episodes of Monk, and half of an episode of CSI. The girl in front of me had her chair leaned back the whole flight so I couldn't get to my bag. My PSP and DS were very sad, as was I.
Sunday Aug. 1
Plane landed in Narita. We all felt gross and tired. I had only slept for about an hour on the plane, not the best idea I've every had. Went through customs and whatnot. Bag wasn't checked because Japan is cool. There were a bunch of people waiting with JET signs to confused and disorient those on little sleep. I took my Gburg bag out and had my suitcases shipped to Hakuba. Then we took a bus ride to the Keio Plaza Hotel in Shibuya, Tokyo. Once there I showered, and decided I didn't want to go out for food, and then collapsed on the bed.
Monday Aug. 2
French fries for breakfast? No, seriously. After breakfast was opening ceremony for orientation, because Japan likes their opening ceremonies. We listened to some people speak, and then lunch time. After lunch we had our choice of what workshops we went to. Went to the "JET as a Springboard for a Career in Education" which apparently only worked if you were planning on teaching in Japan forever... Then the Cooking in Japan which was really helpful. After that I went to the "Making the Most of Your Time as a JET" but by that time I was crashing pretty hardcore. After that one I went back upstairs and crashed, as did one of my other roomates. The third one came back and thought it amusing that we were both passed out, but then joined us. After that we had the reception. I didn't stay very long because I was still crashing. Sleep time ensued
Tuesday Aug. 3
No french fries?!?!?! What is the world coming to? After breakfast was the ALT discussion panel, from which I have an extremely amusing video about unwanted personal touching. Once I get internet in my house I'll upload it. We then broke down based on what kind of school one would be teaching in, then we had prefectural meetings. The Nagano people were pretty cool. Then I went to the "Managing the Expectations of Your Contracting Organization" seminar. It wasn't really too informative. Just more of the same of what we had heard before. There was another group of seminars to choose from afterwards, but I had crashed by that time so I went to sleep for a little bit. Then my roommates and Laura wandered around Shibuya in search of food. We found an udon place, I got zaru udon (of course) and then we went to the top of the government building. There were a lot of foreigners up there, mostly Koreans but some Chinese. After that we went back to our rooms (except one of my roommates, she went in search of host clubs....)>Wednesday Aug. 4
Last breakfast in Tokyo! After that I packed up my stuff and checked out of the hotel. Nagano JETs met up and we took a long bus ride (well, not terribly long). We stopped at a couple places, I had soba for lunch. We stopped at Matsumoto to drop half of the people off and I met my block leader, who gave me a heart attack. Despite me being super close to Nagano, I'm technically in the Matsumoto block (JET divided Nagano into blocks since it's such a large prefecture). I thought I was supposed to get off the bus then, but it's ok. Crisis averted. Then we drove up to Nagano City, where I was picked up by my supervisor. He was dressed super casually, but that's ok. We then drove to Hakuba, where the mountains are GORGEOUS. I swear I take at least 5 pictures of them every day. We went to school, but I can't really remember what happened. I think I met the principle and I saw my desk. After that we peace out to see where I would be living. To my surprise, I'm not living in an apartment, but a house! It has three rooms and a dining kitchen! All the rooms are tatami. I think two of them are 6 tatami and one is 5. I don't know what that means in American, though... My predecessor met us at my house and he showed me a bit of ins and outs of how the house works. He also took me to the grocery store and the department store, which was really nice of him. After that we went to an organic Italian restaurant, where I tried my best to eat what was put in front of me. I met the other English teachers and my supervisor's wife and daughter, who is so adorable! After we all went home, I couldn't find my cell phone! So, exhausted as I was, I walked all the way back to the restaurant, crawled around on the ground, but to no avail. Once I got back, I saw it sitting on the shelf.... >
Thursday Aug. 5th
Woke up at like 4:30AM because of sun and jetlag. Bleh. I then went into school. One of the teachers took me to get my alien regiestration, but the lady gave us the wrong sheet, so I got to fill out my address and the school's address twice in kanji. After that we went back to school and my supervisor took me to Omachi, where my visiting school is. I met the principle there, and then we went to get my hanko (personal seal, neccessary for official documents). We then went to a department store thing where I got a towel (since I forgot to buy one the night before) and some shoes for school. I had lunch at home afterwards, and then back to school! We went to the bank to try and open an account, but I needed a special paper saying that my alien registration was processing. Back to city hall! Paid 300 yen and went back to the bank. Finally got the account open. I think I went home after that, but I'm not sure...
And that's that! Essentially the rest is "Jen tries to live life in Japan" More posts to come!
Monday, July 26, 2010
Jen's adventure
Well, it's getting really hard to believe that Jen will be leaving to start her new job/adventure starting Thursday afternoon. We are very proud of her acceptance in this program because it is not easy to be accepted. She must have really wowed them because she ended up being late for the interview because she couldn't find parking.
We are happy and sad at the same time. This is what she has wanted to do since entering college. Not many college students can say that they achieved what they intended when they started college. It will be sad to not have her closer to home but just think of the trip we get to take to see her!!
It was good to see family through the summer. We wish David & family didn't live so far away but are happy that things are going well for them.
Add a post some time. You just have to sign in before you can add or comment.
Tavane
We are happy and sad at the same time. This is what she has wanted to do since entering college. Not many college students can say that they achieved what they intended when they started college. It will be sad to not have her closer to home but just think of the trip we get to take to see her!!
It was good to see family through the summer. We wish David & family didn't live so far away but are happy that things are going well for them.
Add a post some time. You just have to sign in before you can add or comment.
Tavane
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
If you're wondering
I've removed my old account from the blogger. I use this email address a lot more, and I couldn't change the log-in information, so I just removed the old one, so all posts marked "X" in this blog are from my old account.
P.S. Here's an image out my back window that my predecessor sent me. Awesome, isn't it? I'm excited, except I've forgotten how to ski...
P.S. Here's an image out my back window that my predecessor sent me. Awesome, isn't it? I'm excited, except I've forgotten how to ski...
We should resurrect this, or something...
So, it's been a while, like a year a while. Since all of my livejournal posts are private by default, and I don't want my more personal information getting out through public posts, I figured we should try and revive this blog thing. Since I'm going away to the wondrous land of Japan, keeping in touch might be a good idea.
As far as the summer is going, there has been pretty much a lot of nothing. Except shopping. And oh how I adore shopping /sarcasm. Now it's two weeks until I depart and I need to figure out how to coordinate a wardrobe that doesn't involve jeans and a blouse. blech professionalism. But I can't complain. My roommate Shaffy dove right into being a professional after graduation, the day after, to be more precise.
I'm a little nervous about going to Japan, but at the same time I'm excited. The most daunting thing is being in a new part of the country. I've never been to the Chubu region before, so I don't know what to expect. People in Osaka could either be really direct or really polite if you were in their store. Their mannerisms were most close to American culture in my opinion, but what do I know.
Well, that's it for now. I need to reorganize my closet, so I can pull it all out again and throw it in a suitcase. A purple suitcase.
As far as the summer is going, there has been pretty much a lot of nothing. Except shopping. And oh how I adore shopping /sarcasm. Now it's two weeks until I depart and I need to figure out how to coordinate a wardrobe that doesn't involve jeans and a blouse. blech professionalism. But I can't complain. My roommate Shaffy dove right into being a professional after graduation, the day after, to be more precise.
I'm a little nervous about going to Japan, but at the same time I'm excited. The most daunting thing is being in a new part of the country. I've never been to the Chubu region before, so I don't know what to expect. People in Osaka could either be really direct or really polite if you were in their store. Their mannerisms were most close to American culture in my opinion, but what do I know.
Well, that's it for now. I need to reorganize my closet, so I can pull it all out again and throw it in a suitcase. A purple suitcase.
Monday, August 3, 2009
COMMENTS
I tried to comment on both Jen's and Laura's blogs. but it didn't take. So much for that approach.
Jen it sounds like you had a mixed bag summer -- two bouts of mono, working (good? Bad?), and your PS-2 going south. But, you now have a brand new room of your own :-).
You'll soon be headed back to Gettysburg. Have a good senior year. I heard rumors that you might go to OSU grad school. Great -- Go Bucks!
Laura, I assume going to Norwich was bittersweet. Some good or bad. Good to see old friends. Bad to know you'll seldom go bad. Graduation from High School is a time of moving on and so have many of your old friends. Hope you have a great time at BG and we'll hope to see you there or may you'd like to come see us.
Love to all!
Pop
Jen it sounds like you had a mixed bag summer -- two bouts of mono, working (good? Bad?), and your PS-2 going south. But, you now have a brand new room of your own :-).
You'll soon be headed back to Gettysburg. Have a good senior year. I heard rumors that you might go to OSU grad school. Great -- Go Bucks!
Laura, I assume going to Norwich was bittersweet. Some good or bad. Good to see old friends. Bad to know you'll seldom go bad. Graduation from High School is a time of moving on and so have many of your old friends. Hope you have a great time at BG and we'll hope to see you there or may you'd like to come see us.
Love to all!
Pop
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