An interesting view of Kyoto Tower from inside Kyoto Station
Rent is nicely cheap here--cheaper than room is at the home university or an apartment, only about $170 a month for a shared room. And the rooms aren't that small either: not at all like the little box rooms in our I-House. I suppose the whole room, including the closets, kitchenette, and bathroom at the front, is probably about the size of my studio apartment last semester, but I don't have nearly as many things to crowd my space here, and there's enough storage space that my desk isn't always a complete mess and/or makeshift shelf. We have pretty enormous closets at the front, where I store the extra futon covers I don't need, my bookbag, my suitcase, and my 1 coat and 4 scarves.
The bathroom is quite spacious compared to my last bathroom, where you could practically shower, go to the bathroom, and brush your teeth at the same time. It's also very easy to clean, and you can use the showerhead to wash clean the rest of the bathroom if you wanted--there's a drain in the floor. It's kind of like a European shower in that sense, except our bathroom does have an actual bathtub built in, instead of just the shower. The showerhead has 2 places to hang: above-head-level and waist-level. There's also a small, rather ineffective fan which is constantly running, so when we do shower, it gets very humid in the room very quickly. Don't mind shower humidity so much, but it makes it much easier for mildew to grow on the walls or the shower curtain if you forget to hang it flat to dry.
In addition to the closet by the hallway door--which for me is almost completely occupado by my suitcase--we have wardrobes. Mostly closet space, but with two smallish dresser drawers at the bottom. I manage to hang most of my clothes, except for pants, socks, and unmentionables, which I keep in the top drawer. (The bottom is where I keep my yukata and tae kwon do uniform. I also keep all of my shoes, except my slippers and sneakers on the floor of the wardrobe, along with 1.5 L bottles and some food items.
My slippers and sneakers I keep in my shoe box on the bottom floor of I-House. Everyone's shoe boxes are right by the two entrances, so we can change from out outdoor to our indoor shoes without putting the outside shoes on the inside-floor. Since I was going to have to get slippers anyway (and I didn't want to have to keep borrowing the visitors' slippers), I bought a cute pair from Vivre. I thought I might as well make a souvenir out of them. At the university, you don't have to worry about changing your shoes when you go to your classes indoors, but at places like the training room or running track inside the gym building, you need to have a pair of indoor sneakers.
We have western-style beds in our rooms, but with a futon mattress on top of the regular mattress. Most Japanese typically fold up their futons, sheets, and futon comforters to make up their beds I think--Wendy does it sometimes--but I usually end up just straightening out my sheets and comforter on my bed before going out. The sheets and comforter aren't really big enough to tuck under either of the mattresses, so by the time I wake up in the morning, it's pretty much a complete messy nest of blankets and sheets.
Traditional pillows here are actually filled with buckwheat, which makes them feel kind of like small bean bags. I didn't mind the one at the guesthouse so much--it was actually comfortably firm--but the ones we had here were a little too small and stiff, so I ended up buying a slightly bigger, looser one. It was still cheaper than the western-style feather or foam pillows, which I think is what most of the exchange students here bought in the end.
Each room also has a small balcony, good for hanging laundry, and possibly sunning. I feel much more comfortable hanging my laundry to dry outside on my balcony than on the roof--although it supposedly doesn't matter when it comes to the issue of bra-stealing monkeys. Also still trying to work out the issue of a good sunning spot: we're not supposed to go out on the roof, the balcony's kind of small--and you might get ogled by the boy's dormitory across the way. Ganguro girls aside, it's not at all normal to sunbathe or have a tan in Japan; getting a sunburn appears to be slightly devastating in the eyes of most Japanese girls. Having pale, milky skin is still the epitome of epidermal beauty; many of the soaps, lotions, and creams you find here have various kinds of "whiteners."
On a more scholastic note, the class schedule here is quite a bit less terrifying than back home. But this probably has more to do with the fact that in America, I'm usually taking 16-18 semester hours (usually 5 or so 3 or 4-credit-hour courses and a couple of 1-credit-hour dance or martial art classes) and here I'm taking the minimum 8-course requirement. (It's actually equivalent to the 12-semester-hour minimum class requirement back home.) The school day is set up similarly to block scheduling: there are four 1 1/2-hour blocks in a day, with 15 minutes between blocks, and an hour lunch break between 2nd and 3rd period. Classes meet once a week. My Japanese class is actually split into four classes, meeting Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday mornings, focusing on reading, writing, listening comprehension, and speaking practice.
I'm taking the required 4 Global Japan Program courses, which tend towards cultural subjects and are taught in English. Monday 3rd period I have Business and Management in Japanese Systems, which I honestly took because people said it was an easy workload, it wasn't 4th period, and the subject/issues explored in class weren't completely restricted to business. The rest of my classes I am earnestly interested in--and need as General Education requirements for my degree back home. Tuesday is my busiest day: after lunch, I have Introduction to Japanese Culture, and then a seminar in Outlaws in Japanese Film/Cinema. I nearly fell over when my professor in my Outlaws seminar said we were required to go see a live performance involving an outlaw story, and that there were very few going on this season, so our choices were pretty much limited to a Noh theatre production or the Takarazuka Revue's production of The Scarlet Pimpernel.
Fell. Over. It was the perfect excuse to see a Takarazuka musical/opera, which I'd wanted to check out ever since I'd read Japan Ai: A Tall Girl's Adventures in Japan. The Takarazuka Revue is an all-female theatrical troupe who do Broadway musical (and operas, I believe) adaptions of both Western and traditional Japanese works. I wasn't sure until I looked it up, but the Takarazuka production of The Scarlet Pimpernel is the same musical which ran on Broadway from 1997-2000--and was not exceedingly popular--just translated into Japanese. Frankly, I'd forgotten that the musical even existed; probably no production of The Scarlet Pimpernel will ever, ever, ever top the 1982 made-for-TV movie with Anthony Andrews, Jane Seymour, and Ian McKellan in my mind. But that film was actually a pleasant amalgamation of The Scarlet Pimpernel and El Dorado, and I think the Scarlet Pimpernel musical is only based on the events which occur in the first novel.
Wednesdays are typically the day for clubs and circles to meet. Many students arrange their schedules so they don't have any classes on Wednesdays, so they get a nice break in the middle of the week. Besides being particularly interested in the subject, I needed the Japanese Religion as my ethical-religious General Ed credit. This is my only class on Wednesdays, just after the lunch period. A good amount of the material covered in Intro to Japanese Culture overlaps with and reinforces subjects covered in Japanese Religion, which is helpful. And now I can put names to all the structures and objects that I've seen in various shrines and temples. The reading for class thus far has proved very intriguing as well--I'm saving that commentary for another blog post though.
Japan: The Necessities of Life as a Ryuugakusei
1) Cash
No one ever bothers to tell you this--they're too busy talking about culture shock involving focus on group cooperation vs individualism in Japanese society, or the Confucianism-derived social structures, or how Japanese guys still don't know how to talk to girls when they get to college (it's true, they can be very shy)--but the Japanese monetary system is primarily cash-based. This is kind of important. You can use Visa sometimes, at chain-stores, certain restaurants, some konbinis, large department-stores, and stores which sell generally expensive things, but you really shouldn't count on it. Most restaurants and moderately-sized stores (especially ones selling traditional crafts) are cash only. The bookstore at my school is cash-only. My rent is cash-only. Some of the supermarkets are cash-only. And of course, public transportation is cash-only--well the bus systems and subways are anyway. Sometimes you can use credit/debit to pay for things like train tickets.
It's a little bit of a pain sometimes, coming from a society where it's much safer and more convenient to carry your money in credit or debit cards rather than cash. And I don't even need to begin to talk about how impossible it is to live in America if you don't have a credit score as an adult. I would never walk around in the States with the amount of cash I carry around in my wallet here in Japan. But I suppose here people don't face the danger of being mugged quite so often. Not in Kyoto in any case.
2) Keitai
It's very inconvenient to live in Japan without a cell phone. I find it inconvenient in the first place because I've always treated a cell phone as a security blanket--I feel safe knowing I can contact people in emergency situations, when I'm lost, or when my rubber tire unravels on the road. But the Japanese use cell phones not just for calling, but for texting (big surprise there), emailing (you receive an email address associated with your cell phone--which the Japanese use much more often than their gmails/etc on their computers), internet surfing, as cameras, personal agendas, dictionaries...
Ok, when I write it down, it doesn't sound that different from an iPhone.
In America I pretty much just use my cell phone as a watch, and for calling people. I don't text--I didn't really learn how to text until I came here and it was the primary means of communication with my tutor. (I still feel more comfortable texting her in Japanese than calling her and trying to understand what she's saying and respond in Japanese with a loud crowd buzzing in the background. Quite the opposite of when I was in America, where I still believe calling someone and talking to them directly would still be faster than sending a text.) And I still find it a scary sight in America when I come across little middle-schoolers texting away on their Blackberries or whatever. Guess I'm already getting old-fashioned in my early twenties. But everyone here has a cell phone, and uses it to text and send emails. People use them to organize/arrange meetings all the time. At tourist hot spots, people are always breaking out their keitai cameras. It's my emergency English-Japanese dictionary when I forget my denshi jisho.
And you have to admit, the ridiculous amount of cell-phone charms, called strappu (straps), are fun. I saw a woman on the subway once who must have had 15 strappu hanging off her cell phone. I wish I'd taken a picture. (As for the strappu and stickers people use to decorate their keitai here: there should be a TV show, like "Pimp my Keitai" or something.)
3) Denshi Jisho, the Amazing Electronic Dictionary
Not necessarily a must-have for all exchange students, especially beginners who can't benefit very much from the kanji-search function. Most actually have a number of English-Japanese and Japanese-English (or what-language-have-you) dictionaries on them, but the most nifty feature I think is definitely the kanji input. They come with a stylus so you can draw on a currently unidentified kanji and look it up, without having to know the phonetic reading. In the Japanese entries, you can also highlight unknown kanji with the stylus and look up the readings. Pretty handy if you've got a handle on the basic alphabets and at least some previous knowledge of kanji. I managed to get a second-hand denshi jisho from Kai, an exchange student from New Zealand who makes very interesting-smelling dishes in the kitchen sometimes. It's practically as good as new, the kanji-input is just finicky sometimes about using the correct stroke order.
Kokumin: More Beautiful, More Healthy and More Clean,
with all our Heart.
(きりさんは私のブログを読んでくれて、ありがとうございます!コメは少しだけ読まないでうれしいでした!)
And that's all for now, folks.
I also took the minimum amount of units when I was studying abroad in Spain so that I could take more time to see the sights, travel, and enjoy myself in a foreign country. I took Spanish, flamenco dance, an art history/practice class, and a culture class. Academically, the quarter was kind of a joke...but let's be honest with ourselves: I didn't really go to Spain for the academics, did I? :P
ReplyDeleteAlso, I would probably say that the biggest use I get out of my cell phone is texting people. >.> And my cell phone still has an antennae! Take -that-, all you fancy iPhoners!