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Shocking Pic of the Week – The Story

So that, ladies and gentlemen, is a taxidermied Chinese raccoon that the wearer’s father accidentally killed and then decided to turn into a scarf which she happily parades. How sweet. NOT!

Can you believe that? Oh my god. I’ve never seen more disturbing fashion in my life!

The only reason I got close enough to photograph this awful subject was because I heard all this loud commotion in my school lobby this particular day – instead of ooh’s and aah’s Japanese say eeehh’s (accurately likened, by my hilarious Scottish friend complete with contorted facials and matching full body jerks, to the accelerating sound of a race car’s engine when said in quick succession) – and I eventually had to pop my head out of the office to see what all the fuss was about. As suddenly as I appeared around the corner I disappeared back into the office in utter shock and disgust. My own curiosity was quite satisfied with the disturbing glance I regretfully copped yet my head teacher came in to coax me back out to ‘Lobby Talk’ with this student, as she doesn’t get the chance to chat with foreigners often. This is a big part of my job description so I begrudgingly obliged and turned my honestly repulsed reaction into one of enthusiastic inquiry.

The eyes are made of glass, the metal clip in place of its jaw is biting its own leg to form a clasp, people do stare at her in public and freak out when she tells them it is (was?) real, and yes I touched it and its fur was really soft. So soft it should be cute and may well have been when it was alive and breathing and not draped around someone’s fucking neck!

Having just been to Harajuku – one of my newest favourite places in Japan – and seen adorable puppies in Louis Vuitton bags on the arms of even more adorable young women in uber cool, awesomely over-accessorised outfits, I had to see this wretched thing propped in her handbag like a Hollywood pet. As I had already braved touching it and was doing well pretending I didn’t have vomit threatening to come out of my throat, I reached to pick it up but my true feelings got the better of me and I literally shivered and audibly gagged with rejection of the whole idea. Blurgh. She did it for me and then, as expected, I felt ashamed and guilty about my sick imagination.

Wait, I didn’t make road kill into a neck warmer! No, I’m good.

This just wouldn’t be ok in Australia. People just wouldn’t pretend they found it funny, it would bring such harsh criticism and judgement and moral out casting by family, friends, peers and onlookers that you wouldn’t even do it to get a short lived laugh. But here it flies. I’m not shocked that often here but this I just could not believe. Hence the need for the photo evidence.

And on the subject, a shy, timid business man casually mentioning that on the weekend he is going on a road trip with friends to see a dog fight apparently also flies and doesn’t get so much of a raised eyebrow or batted eyelid. Really? I mean, really? I’m sorry but what is wrong with you?! That time, months ago now, it was my last lesson of the day and being totally depleted of energy and patience, I just couldn’t muster the professionalism to conceal my true feelings, I just flat out told him and my staff that it was disgusting and should be illegal – yes that’s right… IT’S ACTUALLY NOT HERE!

I was appalled and outraged that night and my female colleagues (I mention their gender because I thought women were the more caring and sensitive sex) found my comments highly amusing. One even had the audacity, or ignorance, to laugh and say “That’s right, you really love animals in Australia, don’t you? You even have a service that helps them when they’re injured.” Even? Even? I thought every country did that? Nope, I was wrong. Wrong and horrified that they considered our wonderful WIRES a comical, needless overreaction.

The apathy towards domestic pets fighting to kill for paid entertainment and helpless animals injured by human interference was truly sickening. As much as I knew I should have got off my little soap-box and stopped repeating my dramatically high-pitched single word adjectives every 30 seconds, even if only to end the embarrassing mockery, I felt very proud to be a wildlife loving Australian that night. As I do writing about it now.

Some things are so similar and normal and great here and some so, so, so not.

Categories: Customs, Feelings, Home, Lessons, People, Places, Uncategorized, Work

What I’ve learnt so far.

I’m feeling reflective so this is going to be a list of new things I’ve learnt that I didn’t know before, things that I now just understand better, and things I knew but wasn’t consciously aware of. Not just living here, as an Australian in Japan, but living as a human on Earth too.

For me, living abroad has been like going from living in a house that had the windows and doors locked shut, pleasant and comfortable as it was, to finally busting open a window and jimmying open a door. Suddenly the most refreshing breeze gushes through the window, tickling your face, stirring up excitement and wonder in the depths of your belly, causing you to deeply inhale the cool air, filling your lungs and giving you a spectacular burst of energy. Then you whip your head around to catch your first sight of the bare threshold, that once formed the boundary between your familiar cosy home and the awesome mysterious ‘out there’, but is now a mere step to the endless opportunities you’ve dreamed of for… well forever. Walking across it, anxiety and fear invade you but once on the other side, it is the most liberating, adventurous and satisfying thing you’ve ever done.

Inside my old ‘house’, it was like I was a child always watching and listening to the kids play on the swings but not being able to get out and join them. I could see and hear enough of what was happening out there to be curios, envious and restless but never so much that I could feel part of it. Now I am getting to run and jump all over the playground, and it’s even bigger than it looked from inside!

My mind, and consequently my world, is growing exponentially bigger and I love it. Apart from studying and immersing myself in a fascinating foreign culture, being away from your home, your family, your friends and your native country is like taking a highlighter to your social and physical identity, opinions, habits, interests and experiences. I just feel more…myself. And better yet, more and more ok with whom and what that is.

So, the list of my lessons (and confirmations) at 4.5 months in:

  • Time really does fly when you’re having fun!
  • Hiragana (50 character Japanese syllabary for native words)
  • Some Katakana – it’s a work in progress! (48 character Japanese syllabary for foreign words)
  • A syllabary is like an alphabet but is “A set of written characters for a language, each character representing a syllable.”
  • Kanji – Ok I only know like 5! (The complex pictures that stand for whole words or concepts in Japanese writing)
  • Japanese vocabulary that I remember easily (in the order I’m recalling them): hello/ good afternoon, goodbye, good morning, good evening, thank you/ thanks/ thank you very much, excuse me, sorry, beautiful, cute, scary, wonderful, amazing, me, mine, I, you, yours, too, to, and, so, um, yes, no, mountain, hill, river, road, egg, bread, rice, grilled, water, tea, coffee, different/ wrong, foreigner, train, station, please, book, this, that, here there, maybe, funny/ interesting, but, yet, nothing, cold, hot, weather, nice, really, right, ok, one of, two of, festival, juice, skilled, speak, a little, one moment, thanks for your hard work, teacher, company employee, bank, chair, meat, fish, cherry blossom, month, week, today, tomorrow, next week, 1-100 (kind of!), understand, have, don’t have, am/ is, am not/ is not, come from, person, English, American, Japanese, japan, bullet train, ticket, English language school, student, same, plum wine, chicken, tuna, take care, go ahead, month, let’s go, where, who, why, eat, drink, cat, dog, because, well, sweet, soy sauce, meal, hand…um is that all I know? Ahhh first time I’ve recorded these! Now I need to write them all in Japanese for homework, methinks.
  • The people in your life really are the sun, the moon and the stars
  • I have an exceptional support network of family, friends and associates
  • I am patriotic (never thought of myself as this)
  • I am a feminist (nor this)
  • Australia really is the lucky country
  • I don’t know enough about it
  • I am actually interested in politics
  • British people don’t say specifically the country they are from e.g. “I’m from the UK”, not England/ Scotland etc.
  • Japan is roughly the same size as Victoria but its population is over 6 times Australia’s
  • Australia is 350 times the size of Shikoku Island
  • I have a serious addiction to sugar
  • My boyfriend is remarkably accepting and encouraging
  • I am stronger than I thought and braver than I believed
  • Optimism is a decision
  • I do not want to raise my children in a mostly homogenous community
  • I am embarrassed by the racism I’ve grown up with
  • My technical knowledge of English grammar leaves a lot to be desired
  • Japanese people are amazingly kind, helpful and generous
  • I enjoy my own company
  • I love Japanese food, especially soba (buckwheat noodles), tempura and anko mochi (sugary red bean paste sticky rice dumpling thing)
  • Japanese food is not just weird gross stuff like raw fish – prawn and tuna really are gross. But salmon is good
  • Spaghetti Bolognese is my go to dinner
  • Mediterranean cuisine is my favourite
  • I love cleaning, especially my floors
  • Acne is my biggest hate
  • I’m not a fearful person
  • My family is very difficult to draw as a linear tree
  • I like hiking
  • Hiking is just bushwalking
  • I’m more outdoorsy than I thought; when I go back to Australia I want to take advantage of all the nature-based activities around me
  • I have a small face, according to Japanese people
  • I love being naked
  • I love onsens (public bath houses using natural spring water)
  • Japanese customer service shits all over Australia’s. All customer service trainers should study their models.
  • I love being on, near or in the water
  • I want to travel, I want to travel, I want to live overseas in other countries, I want to travel
  • I want to continue studying Japanese even when I leave Japan
  • I want to revise and further my Spanish studies
  • And I definitely still want to live and teach English in Spain
  • I can’t function without lists and schedules
  • I am a natural mediator
  • Waxing is one of my necessary evils and Japan is sadly not on board
  • The best thing about driving a car is being able to transport large or heavy things. And temperature control
  • Asian men can be hot
  • Exercise is extremely important to me and I want to train as long as my body can handle it
  • I get excited over vegetables
  • Grocery shopping makes me happy
  • I can’t push a trolley without wanting to put my whole body weight on the handlebars and glide along the floor
  • Soybeans are one of my favourite snacks and sides
  • Evening Primrose Oil is a permanent fixture in my life, I’m sure it prevents me from moody dives and dips
  • Japan is very good at problem-solving; spare glasses next to the spare pens at the post office, head nets for preventing makeup marks when trying on clothes, automatic parking machines – as in human less, baby seats in women’s’ toilet cubicles,
  • Japan is shockingly far behind in ‘saving the environment one plastic bag at a time’ – you get plastic on and for everything here! I mean every bag of cookies has each one individually wrapped. And there is no question at the checkout, you have 5 bags on your person but if you buy a drink you will get it in a plastic bag, plus a plastic wrapped straw and a plastic wrapped towelette.
  • I love, love, love watching TV series, movies and listening to music – can’t imagine life without them
  • I am an excellent networker
  • I will not settle for mediocrity
  • I want big professional, material, monetary success and I believe I will get it
  • I really do want my big, beautiful Northern Beaches house by the ocean, this dream has become a goal
  • I also want to be seriously and actively philanthropic
  • I kind of want to change the world, a little bit (mostly in terms of educating people, and children most importantly, about good mental health and happiness as a choice)
  • My mind is chaotic sometimes
  • Excitability is a good characteristic
  • Absence makes the heart grow fonder
  • I really, really love animals
  • I still baulk at and hate conflict
  • All clouds have a silver lining.

There is so much more I have learnt and realised, I really should be documenting more of it. I am going to make more of an effort with this blog. Maybe If I wrote more often it wouldn’t be such a long, random, rambling! I guess I usually go to Facebook or Instagram to share my thoughts, feelings, moments and findings. I do want to have something more in depth to look back on, and practise my writing though so I am going to attempt to write once a week for the remaining 38 weeks or so. (Wow that’s like a full term pregnancy!).

I am already in my 19th or 20th week and I only have 5 Funny Pics of the Week up! I guess it’s not always funny, or fun, or worth writing about; sometimes it’s very serious, or mundane, or normal or difficult. So I will at least just upload a Pic of The Week, no set tone.

At the end of the day, I am working full time and looking after myself by myself so it’s business as usual a lot of the time. And then I remember I am in Japan making one of my dreams come true, and I am truly enjoying my life!

Anyway, this experience is proving to be extremely rewarding and it is building a strong foundation for me to continue learning and discovering. I never want to be stationary or complacent. Here’s to our collective human revolutions.

If it doesn’t challenge you, it doesn’t change you.

Categories: Arts, Customs, Feelings, Food, Health, Home, Language, Lessons, Love, People, Places, Play, Travel, Uncategorized, Work | Tags: , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Just quietly…

I’m pretty proud of myself for having made it to the two month mark. 🙂

Categories: Feelings, Home, Lessons, Places, Travel, Uncategorized, Work | Leave a comment

Yesterday was my man’s birthday.

Incorporated into the gift that I designed for him was this poem, my favourite love poem by E. E. Cummings:
i carry your heart with me (i carry it in my heart)

i carry your heart with me (i carry it in my heart)

i am never without it (anywhere i go you go, my dear;

and whatever is done by only me is your doing, my darling)

i fear no fate (for you are my fate, my sweet)

i want no world (for beautiful you are my world, my true)

and it’s you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you

here is the deepest secret nobody knows (here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life; which grows higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)

and this is the wonder that’s keeping the stars apart

i carry your heart (i carry it in my heart).

It is going to be so hard to live without him…

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Categories: Feelings, Home, Love, People | Leave a comment

I’m going to miss my Sammy.

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Nooo play with me! Throw my bear please.

Here he is trying to prevent me from preparing for my departure. Lol.

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Fear, you work for me now. Pt 1.

When people ask me if I am scared lately I tell them, with absolute truth & conviction, that I am not scared anymore, I have worked though the fear & anxiety of it all & I am just ready & excited for the journey ahead.

I am realistic though, I know I will get scared, again, but when I am confronted by it this time, my response will be…Fear, you work for me now.

There are so many brilliant quotes & pearls of wisdom on fear & courage; here are some that have inspired me & strengthened my conviction. The first one is by my favourite poet, E. E. Cummings:

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Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear. ~Ambrose

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Decide that you want it more than you are afraid of it. ~ Bill Cosby

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If you need to make a change and fear is holding you back, ask yourself these 3 questions:

1. What is the best outcome that can happen?

2. What is the worst outcome that can possibly happen?

3. What is the result of remaining the same?

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Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. The fearful are caught as often as the brave. ~ Helen Keller.

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Fear is only as deep as the mind allows ~ Japanese proverb.

So it is & so it will be.

Categories: Arts, Feelings, Home, Lessons, People, Travel | Leave a comment

Home Town To-Be

Okayama Home To Be

Home Town To-Be

So much to discover right at my doorstep.

Can’t wait to experience ‘onsen’ (hot spring)!

Categories: Home, Places, Travel, Work | Leave a comment

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