Hello again everyone! Hope you all had a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! I was thinking about all you guys during Christmas, that was my first Christmas away from home, it really made me homesick. I miss you all! However, I've got some good friends here to be with, so it's not terrible by any means. ^_^
I had Christmas dinner with a friend and her family, and it was phenomenal. For the Japanese, Christmas eve is more important than Christmas day - I never had that explained to me so that I could really understand it, but all the big dinners happen on Christmas eve. On actual Christmas, the price of Christmas cakes and all drops sharply, because everyone's already eaten all the treats they want the night before. Slightly strange, but whatever. Here are some photos from the dinner party:
The general spread. Note the tree and flowers in the background - They gave me the flowers as a Christmas present, and they're almost as big as their tree. Ye gods. Anyway, the spread was great. Not what I was used to, but great. Roast chicken, Nabe (Japanese soup with a lot of stuff in it), french fries, and sushi. Hey, when in Rome.
The chicken - presentation is so important in Japan, they even made the chicken wear a bow. They even put lettuce, lemon, and strawberry borders around the platters of french fries. Yeesh.
The Christmas cake we ate. These things are maybe 6 inches in diameter, and they're pretty pricey (a decent one runs around 30 dollars), but they are made with the highest quality ingredients, and the strawberries on top alone probably cost 6 dollars. Strawberries are hard to produce this time of year, and the demand for perfect strawberries for Christmas cakes and whatnot drives the price way up. They made the setting look and taste great, though. The cake was delicious.
On actual Christmas day, I didn't really do much, it was kind of quiet. My folks had sent me a butt-kicking care package with some books, DVD's, newspaper clippings, and mixes for Jambalaya and Gumbo (a bit hard to come by in Japan), so I spent the day taking advantage of all of those. My folks and I tried to get a webcam system up and running, but it wasn't to be on that day - you know how those things are, when you're trying to install them. Well, imagine that, but with all the documentation in Japanese. I did eventually get it working, though - I'm on skype now with the webcam and everything - name is Jefferson Thomas Caffery - jeff.caffery@gmail.com. Video phones... The future is NOW, man!
Oh, by the way, one more MAD important thing that happened, a little before Christmas (although I kind of consider it a cosmic Christmas present, and among the best presents I've ever gotten, at that): I GOT A CAR!! um. For some reason, blogger is being uncooperative about uploading images right now, I'll try to post one a bit later. But anyway, having a car is KEY. I can now trek it to Maebashi and Takasaki pretty easily, and mount Haruna is within easy reach for camping in the Summertime, and you know, it makes grocery shopping and going to onsen and pretty much everything a whole heck of a lot easier. Good times, all in all. It's a Suzuki Alto, I'd never heard of the brand before (I've never heard of a LOT of the models of cars they have here in Japan), it's a small little K-car, but it does the job nicely. The steering wheel is on the right, which still kind of throws me.
I got a heck of a lot of vacation time over the holiday - something like 17 days. That's definitely one of the perks of being an ALT working for my company - we get the same holidays as the students. The rest of the teachers (the REAL teachers ^_^) don't get nearly as much vacation time. Being a teacher is a serious responsibility in Japan, and they are expected to come in a lot to prepare lesson plans for the next session, and grade exams from the last session, and plan and prepare and improve... but there's not a heck of a lot of that that I can do. Oh, darn.
Just something at random: over here, they have started selling a pita with three pieces of chicken and weird vegetables in it at McDonalds. They call it Pita Mac. PITA here standing for Pain In The Ass. This is a poorly-conceived creation, be glad it hasn't made it to the states, or if it has, avoid it. However, I can't complain about the fries, they are always, always perfect. Can't beat the customer service and attention to detail by the fast food guys around here. However, they can only work with what they're given, and you can't turn a Pita Mac into a silk purse.
Another post coming extremely soon. Like, in the next 2 hours.