Wednesday 23 December 2009

Shuffle the deck...

Money, money, money, must be funny, in the rich man's world... Three overtime shifts coming up, and we're looking to recoup some of the losses of the past year. Got to get the cash together to get the move happening. We've not planned much of an end of year celebration. I'm becoming quite the fan of the austere Christmas/New Year, so I'm off to the local temple to hear the bell rung 108 times (for the 108 desires that cause human misery, according to the Buddhist canon). To break up the work-on-work cycle, we're having a couple of days in the Hokrikyu region of Japan. Driving in the snow, so I'll be very careful. Let's just hope everyone else on the road is equally careful! Pictures and stories to follow.

News from the last month has mostly been of a musical nature. Tom has finalised the artwork, done the printing, cutting, folding, etc... for the promo mail out of the "Away from the Haunts of Men" album. We're about one or two songs off having finished the next album's song writing, and so we'll be ready to hit the studio again when we get back to Tassie. Exciting times!


We saw 21 bands at Socio for ¥2000. Worth every penny. A lot of awesome music, some surprises, some disappointments, by the end of it I was well yoporai, and quite jolly. Made friends with some punks from Australia, Debbie and Jane, who had been sleeping in parks and going to live-houses in Japan for the last 3 weeks. Nuts. Lovely girls.


On the sightseeing front, we saw a few nice leaves at Tenryu-ji and Tofuku-ji.


We saw Corrupted play at Unagi Dani Sunsui on the 13th of December. Chew was a little "horoyoi" for you guys in the know, and we had a good old chat, which was really nice. Rosie was there (the Masters student studying grindcore in Osaka and Melbourne) so we got to introduce her to Chew, which was kinda funny ("can I interview you for my thesis?" "no" x 3). The show was good, I got some good photos which I am totally not publishing (due to Corrupted's policy on photos and press), but if you would like to ask me to show them to you in person some time, I'd be more than happy to.

We also played our first live show as a two-piece. It was a successful experiment. I don't think the venue liked it so much, but the audience were pretty happy. We were asked for an encore! I think the venue owner liked talking with Rob, that's my guess. The sound engineer seemed to like us as a two-piece. So yeah, anyway, if we don't play again until we get back to Australia, I won't mind, but if we get a show with Riverge (another band that rocks hard over here) I'd be more than happy to do one more.

Just let the cards fall where they may.

No point in trying to make things happen if you can't really MAKE them happen, if you get my drift. Lovely to hear from those of you who have managed to put pen to paper (all three of you!) and the rest of you, you're a bunch of slackers! We will be giving you a good teasing in person when we return.


Friday 6 November 2009

Infamous Butcher


Ah, if true contentment can be wrapped in a morning, it might as well be this one. Woke today feeling rested before the jackhammers started, popped on some Slayer, and felt mighty inspired to go off and work on drumming (Dave Lombardo - one of my many drum heroes). Tom made me coffee in bed, next I'll have some toast. All to the sounds of:

"Infamous!
Butcher!
ANGEL OF DEAAATTTHHH!"

It's never too early for thrash metal.


What's been happening? Well, quite a lot. Not stuff that is fun to read about or take photos of, but stuff, indeed has been happening.

Let's start with the band. Thrall (Tom plays guitar and 'sings', I play drums, and Rob is/was our live bass player) has been really busy. First, we decided to get the album that has been "being finished" for over two years mastered. Once it's mastered it can not be "finished" any more. It is completed! Ready to send to labels and see if anyone will pick it up. Thank goodness, because I was really starting to get sick to the teeth of that album constantly hanging over us. It's not just being mastered, mind you. It's being mastered at one of the best mastering studios in Australia, Turtle Rock Studios, and it's costing us a truck load of money (even though we got a discount, it's a lot for a bunch of independent musicians to come at) and so Tom's finances have taken a major blow on that front.

A friend of ours from college, Jansen Herr, has been working on a bit of a film clip for us in his spare time. He's quite the film maker these days and is based in Sweden. So, when we send out our little package to labels with our mastered album, we might also be able to include a little DVD of Jansen's wonderful film clip. He's a real artist, that Jansen, and he's made something really haunting and amazing to accompany the song.

We also decided that after over two years of playing that our band needed some kind of merchandise. The last merch we had was some little button badges that said "Thy Plagues" back in 2006-2007! So we bit the bullet and forked out for some t-shirts to be printed in the hope that someone (nay, anyone) might buy one at the live shows that we had been doing. We've not sold enough to cover the cost of printing them yet. We know, we have to be patient, but being patient requires patience, and sometimes supplies of patience run low. You could help by ordering one... :)



Now, you might have noticed from my interesting verb tenses above that we've decided to stop playing live shows. Thrall played the gig on the 21st of October at Socio. And it was abysmal. Socio kept giving us gigs after that first one, and we were quite pleased to be invited back so quickly, until we realised what was happening. Socio was using us as spac-filler on amateur nights. First gigs - all your friends turn up to show support - because they're your friends. It was a Sunday night, everyone could make it. Then we are given a bunch of Wednesday night gigs. No one turns up for us except my mate Glenn. We play to hostile crowds for two gigs that look like they wish we would just die. So we decided that the experiment of playing live with me on drums was a success, that it would work if we did it back in Hob's, and so, there was no point in continuing live shows on amateur night bills. Time to go back to songwriting for the second album.

The deal that we had made with Rob (wherein I play in his pop band, and he plays in my black metal band) had begun to run us both ragged (particularly me, as I was finding it really hard to play soft, poncy drums in one band, and BM, power-striking drums in the other). I try to practice drums at least 3 times a week to keep my double kick training in check, and ultimately, I'd like to play BM drums every day. The feel of one band was polluting the other band, and the time commitments were meaning I was spending even less time with Tom (and I wasn't enjoying that!), so Rob and I have come to an agreement that we will finish up playing in each other's bands at the end of this year. Thrall will do one more live show with Rob on the 15th of December, I will do some session work on Sister Ray's recording, and then we will amicably part ways. It's a great relief for me, because I was feeling really stretched and thin, and as one polluted the other, I had Thrall demanding me to play louder and harder, and Sister Ray demanding I play quieter and more poppily. You try to please all the people, you end up pleasing no-one.

Now I can return to my single focus: to be the most slamming, thrashy, speed-blasting, evil, kvlt, BM drummer I can be. Dave Lombardo, Philthy Animal Taylor, Horgh, Frost, and Daniel from Craft will be back on high rotation as I return to black metal mania!

So, that's all the news about the band. Hopefully soon I will be able to let you all know about which label has picked us up. Wouldn't that be nice?

Either way, in other news, the weather has started to go cold. I'm keen to get out and take as many photos as possible of the changing seasons. Last weekend I caught up with Leila, who I know from Hobart, in Kyoto, and we took a couple of photos of the start of the autumnal leaves. They'll just get redder and more intense over the next couple of weeks, and by the start of December they'll have disappeared. Just like the cherry blossom, so beautiful when you can see them, so transitory, so ephemeral. Haiku like burblings spring to mind.



My teeth decided to stop working the other day, so I'm currently having some quite extensive dental work done. Finally this extortionate hell-th insurance is coming in handy. The excess for my last dental visit was ¥1490 (about $15 AU). I'm jogging and swimming occasionally at the moment, and my fitness level is still pretty good, even considering that I've not been able to do much exercise in the Japanese summer. So health wise, pretty good. Tom's well too.

Work, we had our Halloween lessons last week, which meant we were obliged to dress up. We both managed to spend less than ¥2000 on our costumes. Teaching is somewhere between fun and a drag. Work. What can I say? It's always depressingly work-esque.

For Christmas holidays we're coming up with a list of things we want to do that can be done as daytrips from Osaka. Tottori, Hikone, Nagoya, Ise, and Wakayama seem to be the front runners for our 5 days of Seishun Ju Hachi Kippu fun. Maybe we'll do one or two overnights, but nothing too drastic. Financially we're hoping to keep the spend quite low. Send back some cash for a car when we get back, and save some yen for our grand finale. Yakushima looks like a definite, Kyuushu, definitely, Okinawa, maaaybe... I'm really keen to get to the Japan Sea for a bit of a look at the Hokurikyu region, and to get back to Tokyo for one last, and very fond visit to that city. I will always wonder how different our lives would have been had we been able to station ourselves in Tokyo. It's just so much bigger. So different to Osaka. I feel like I'm visiting a different country whenever I am there. Who knows... maybe Tokyo would have chewed us up and spat us out far sooner, but maybe, maybe we wouldn't be heading home if we had been able to take the Tokyo route.

Well, we'll never know now.

Hoping you're all well, feel free to let us know how you've been and the like. 24th of April we'll be flying out, so it's not long now and we'll be back in Australia. Then the next question is where will we settle? I'm hoping the employment situation in Tassie will have loosened up a little by the time I get back, but if not, it's Melbourne or Sydney. Any of the above will be fine. We were also looking at the possibility of emigrating from Australia permanently, but that's another music in a different kitchen. More on that later.

Monday 5 October 2009

Change of plan

We thought about it, and thought about it, and looked at websites, checked the prices. Shirakawa is just going to be too expensive to do in December, so we`re going to focus on doing some local travel. Grab a seishun-juu-hachi kippu and do the local sights. Only 6 months of having a job left before we come back, so we`re focusing on getting as much stuff and cash home as is humanly possible for now.

This doesn`t mean we won`t have any marvellous adventures to share, or pictures to post. It just means they won`t be from Shirakawa-go.

In other news, we`re going to go to the Kobe Biennale with Rob and Jo tomorrow. Sister Ray has a FREE gig on the 11th of October at Socio, Amemura. Thrall is playing on the 21st of October, same venue. Taking the day off on the 22nd of November if all goes well, to try and capitalise on a big metal/punk fest.

Looking after myself better now in the light of my recent cold, and have gotten back on the wagon for a while. I don`t mind being sober almost as much as I don`t mind being drunk..!

Alright, signing off. Much love to you all. Don`t be shy about getting in touch, eh?

Tuesday 29 September 2009

Chirpy



I love late summer, early autumn. There's a lot of false starts with the Japanese autumn. Is it going to finally be comfortable yet? Cool breeze one day, back to hot annoying bluster the next. One of the signs of late summer is the change in the sounds of the insects. Suzumushi has moved into my drain on my balcony. Who is suzumushi? Well, it's the Japanese Bell Cricket. He makes a beautiful noise in the evening. "Ping, ping" goes his call, "ping, ping." He's really very soothing compared to the racket of cicadas ("semi" in Japanese) from early summer, and he doesn't wake me at dawn, unlike the cicadas! I've named him "Mr Chirpy" and I hope that he'll be calling in my drain for a few more days before the warm weather and his beautiful calls go away.

Zeni Geva! Oh, my goodness, what a gig. They were just outstanding. They played just as well as they did on their recordings. Just an amazing band. I'm hoping that next year I might be able to collaborate with the Brisbane Hotel to get KK Null down to Tassie for a show, as he's already going to be in Melbourne doing the Liquid Architecture festival in June. KK Null was very nice and said hi to Tom and I outside the gig. We told him we had seen his Tassie gigs, and he got rather excited about the proposition that we might be able to get him down for a third visit.

Tom and Rob and I all got to play our first show as Thrall. It was grand, and many people turned out to show their support. Mel, James, Glenn, Jo, Marcus, Leila, Jeremy, Jai, amongst others all came out of the woodwork and came to what was probably the most powerful and exciting show I've played yet. Thrall will be doing a few more gigs before we go now, because this gig went so well. We got offered another gig on the 26th of September and again on the 21st of October because the venue owner really liked us.

Hooray for music!

My mum was here from Monday the 14th to Thursday the 24th of September. It was so lovely to see her. I tried my best to show her around, but she was struck down by a cold half way through her stay, and was forced to spend 3 valuable days in bed. Now, it's my turn. Same cold, got me sitting in bed blogging, rather than out and about, doing my usual mad busy weekend flap.

My mum arrived the day before my birthday, and on the first night I took her and Ross for a quick bite at The Royal Road Izakaya (also known as the ¥290 Bar). Showed them around Minami Osaka a bit. I could see that it was quite exciting for them to see a city of this scale. The next day we went to Hong Kong Chong Long in Namba Parks for a bit of yum-cha lunch, and unfortunately I could not attend the aquarium in the afternoon with them, due to my bike being nabbed for being parked in a no bike zone so I had to go to Bentencho to go and retrieve it (well, it's a fair cop, I did park it in the no bikes zone, but it was bad timing considering it was my birthday!). The next day I went to Kyoto with mum and Ross, we went to Kiyomizu Dera, looked for some bits and bobs in the tourist stores in the surrounding area. Wandering around the cobble-stoned back streets of Higashiyama area was most pleasant. The next day we returned to Kyoto, to Heian Jingu and Nanzen-ji. We ate dinner at Luxious European buffet. I had to work the next couple of days, but then my Mum got sick, and we couldn't really get out of Osaka again during her visit. I had hoped to get them into Nara and over to Himeji, but alas, cruel fate, had other plans. We got to go to Ryokuchi-Koen to see the Osaka Open Air Museum of Traditional Farm Houses, and it was fantastic. We had a couple of nice spicy lunches in Nan-nan town, courtesy of the Vietnamese and Thai restaurants down there, a fantastic dinner on the 36th floor of the swissôtel, and finished it all up with a visit to Torikizoku. A perfect Osakan holiday - involving a lot of eating, and enjoying the crazy metropolis feeling. It was really lovely to see them both, and I think they had a lot of fun.

They left on the Thursday that Discharge, GBH and The Exploited played at King Cobra. Great gig, great fun. Only two members of the original line up of each band remained, but you could tell which ones were the ring ins and which ones have been at it since the early 1980's. Great powerful music. There's something quite community building about screaming your lungs out and getting sweaty all over with a bunch of other punk rockers. There's always a couple of boofy agro boys who bounce off everyone and try to beat people up, but mostly it's just a great surge of energy, toward the stage, in a musically inspired show of mutual passion. The nature of music and community building has been on my mind a fair bit recently, as most of the Japanese friends we have made over here have been music fans. We've been invited into the inner sanctum of the Osakan extreme-metal/d-beat scene, and made to feel very at home, despite our limited Japanese language ability. It's quite humbling, and I feel lucky that I have the ability to share in this amazing little microcosm.

So, we played our second Thrall gig on Saturday the 26th. I started to feel a bit off colour during the day, and by the time that we played, I was feeling downright sick. But we played well enough, and I got home promptly afterwards. I made it through a rocky shift on Sunday, but couldn't go on Monday. Just too sick. Hoping it lifts from the chest pretty quickly by itself without anti-biotics. I'm guessing I'll be OK for work on Thursday. I'm about to book our end of year travel in Shirakawa, based on the beautiful Gassho house at the Osaka Open Air Museum of Traditional Farmhouses.

I'm ready for the next part of our Japan adventure, the end of our Japan adventure, to begin. Here we go!

Suzumushi is chiming for me... chime me in, little friend.


Thursday 3 September 2009

Excited


My Mum's coming to visit. Ten more sleeps! I'm so thrilled. I might not have always seen eye to eye with my Mum (but then again, are there any mothers and daughters who do?), but I definitely love the heck out of her. She did an incredible job as a single parent for a few years there before finding her current (and lovely) husband, gave me a good education, straight teeth, a lot of support in my debating, basketball and athletics activities... really, looking back (in light of considering starting a family of my own at some point), I boggle at how awesome a job she did. She's about to come over and visit me as her first overseas vacation, and I'm just tickled pink.

I've been trying to come up with some excellent Mum friendly activities (no trips to Bar Konton, methinks), but I just have to remind myself that the competent, well-organised bones in my body are most likely inherited from my Mum, I can probably rest assured that she could look after herself pretty damn well if it comes to it.


Tom got tonsillitis not but last week, which was accompanied with a roaring fever that I though might have been H1N1. Went to the hospital, was masked, isolated, tested, and negative. Tonsils were the size of golfballs, mind you. However, he's shrugged it off pretty well this time and is back at work, and singing with his dulcet tones. It's had him pretty down, the continuous sickness, and I feel like I've run out of ideas as to what to do. My bedside manner has pretty much been reduced to an incredulous "again?" Which is just terrible. Anyway, we've resolved to shove vitamins down his neck each morning, keep away from mad partying, rest, eat well, exercise, that kind of malarky... if that doesn't help, I don't know what will.

Also in the next couple of weeks I have a date with destiny: Zeni Geva are playing in Kyoto and I have reserved tickets. Very pumped!

Lastly but not leastly, our gig is on the 13th of September (the day before my Mum arrives) so we're training like mad up to our deadline... which brings me to what I'm gonna do now: drum practice waits for no woman! And double kicks require daily maintenance or they slip away.

Love to you all, thank you to Colin for the comment about the TB. I had heard similar stuff from my students about the Shin-Sekai area. I don't know exactly what kind of proximity to homeless dudes is required to be put at risk, but there's no denying there's a few of them about. About those emails, cards, postcards and letters that you all haven't sent - the phone calls you haven't made: we'd love to hear from you. No really.

Friday 14 August 2009

Trips




Well, here we are once more, returned from another adventure. We've had two journeys in the last month, and it has left me very, very broke. I have done a lot of things that I thought I would never get the chance to do, and I've had some really good experiences, but at the end of it all, I don't feel like we got to do much resting or relaxing in these holidays, so I'm looking forward to devoting myself to a bit of doing nothing for the next couple of days.

So, when did this flurry of activity start...

Let's see, Monday, 20th of July was Marine Day holiday, which we traded in for some overtime, and then on our usual weekend we went to Koya-san Mountain in Wakayama Prefecture. Koya-san was founded by the monk Kukai, known posthumously as Kobo-Daishi (774-835), who is the founder of the Shingon school of Buddhism. Kukai went to China to study Buddhism, and was the first to import the esoteric or tantric style of Buddhist worship to Japan. Koya-san is not just one mountain, but is actually 8 mountains in a ring, selected to resemble the shape of a lotus, with Koya-san village nestled between these mountains. Kukai intended Koya-san to be like a Japanese equivalent to Mount Wu Dang in China. The town is home to approximately 2000 people, 120 temples, many of which offer temple lodgings. The most impressive of these temples is the Okunoin. It is believed by the Shingon school that Kobo-Daishi is in "eternal meditation" in the Okunoin rather than being dead, and that he will re-awaken on the arrival of "The Future Buddha." Now, I think Kobo-Daishi did a marvelous job of selecting a home for his Buddhist school. The forests are misty, mysterious, evocative, spiritual places, and Tom and I really enjoyed wandering around the enormous cemetery that surrounds the Okunoin, and enjoying the fresh air, and cooler temperatures.

The first day that we were there it was so lovely. We arrived at the shukubo (temple that offers lodgings) and one of the monks gave us simple directions to the Okunoin. It was drizzling, which seemed to add to the magical feeling. At the centre of this enormous grave yard, full of vines, moss, cedars, and sculptures, there was a beautiful temple (the one where Kobo-Daishi is meditating still) and an accompanying lantern hall that was possibly one of the most beautiful sights I have seen yet. We enjoyed beautiful sounds of the forest in the evening, the light of the disappearing sun, the sparkle of stars and the moon, and the wonderful Shojin-ryori (Koya-san's local vegetarian cuisine) prepared by our hosts. The Japanese style garden was full of frogs and dragonflies, and we spent quite a while sitting there listening to it all, watching the light fade. Soon we were tired, so we bedded down. We were awoken bright and early for our Buddhist morning service, where we were shown the "Goma" fire meditation. Upon leaving the sukubo, we began looking around at the town for our second day. The weather was less rainy, but no less grey, and it really didn't seem half as magical... it was funny to think that the rain was what made it all seem so etherial. Either way, we made it around most of the sights, unwound and made it back. I took some nice photos. Tom did too.


After Koya-san, we got to have two more weeks of work, I went off and got my Japanese drivers licence on the weekend in the middle there, followed by the Obon holiday period. Obon is the longest break for us in our line of work, so we used this opportunity to go to the far end of Japan - Hokkaido.


As we flew in, the mountains seemed to melt through the clouds toward us. Navy blues, greys, and whites, separating into green pastures that looked so similar to the descent into Hobart, I kept pinching myself to see if I was dreaming. Nope. Hokkaido looks a lot like Tassie - I mean, sure, it's not exactly the same, but it has a lot in common with Tasmania. It's famous for lavender farms, potatoes, onions, agriculture, mountains, cooler temperatures in Summer, lakes, seafood... does any of this sound familiar?

We had booked the tickets to Hokkaido under the impression that it would be noticeably cooler. After our weekend at Koya-san, I was filled with hope - there are parts of Japan that aren't completely sweltering. Alas, Hokkaido's cities are not one of these non-sweltering parts, and we had inadvertently spent a hell of a lot of money on coming to somewhere that wasn't actually noticeably cooler than Osaka - it was still above 30ºC and 90% humidity! We were, to put it mildly, annoyed.

We flew into Chitose, and took the train straight down to Hakodate (pop. 290,000), the Southern-most city of Hokkaido. Hakodate is a gorgeous little fishing city, famous for it's delicious squid, nighttime views, and a laid back environment. We found it to be rather similar to Hobart. We stayed in a nice hotel, went to the Ainu Museum, ate some delicious Italian food and a lot of squid, and plenty of local brews. We drank a beer at the top of Mount Hakodate, watched the sunset... just beautiful. Had a great day in Hakodate. I don't think you'd need much more time there... it's a pretty sleepy little town.

From Hakodate we jumped on the train to Toya-ko (Lake Toya). Toya-ko is surrounded by active volcanoes, which give it a myriad of onsens around the rim of the lake. The only problem is, occasionally the mountain likes to erupt, or just excavate the roads a bit haphazardly, or cause mudslides, so there are eerie segments of the town that are half-buried in mud, and filled with wildflowers and insects that have reclaimed the disused buildings. I really liked Toya-ko Onsen, the major town on the lakeside. Next to the lake there is a wide boulevard, where there is a little public onsen for your feet. Every night in summer they put on a little festival, some old ladies in yukatas come out and do a little dance for about half an hour, and then there's a 20 minute fireworks display that would put Hobart's New Years Eve to shame. The town itself is so sleepy it may well be in a coma, but that said, it's a very pleasant place to spend a few days. We found a really good little cheap place in Toya-ko Onsen called The Green Hotel, and it put on a massive feast for breakfast and dinner of local seafoods and vegetables. I got a bit excited and hired a row boat and rowed to the island in the middle of the lake. It took 45 minutes to get there and about 50 to get back because the wind got up and we were a little tired. It was so wonderful being at the island, we jumped in the water. There were lots of little fish and iridescent shrimp in the water who were not afraid of us at all. They walked all over our feet and legs and tickled like mad! The local tourists don't seem to go in for swimming in the lake, so we were the only bodies in the water. It was wonderful.

We left Toya-ko Onsen for Sapporo, the capital of Hokkaido, via bus. As we went around the hills toward Sapporo we saw many crops, almost every bit of flat land was being farmed quite intensively. We arrived in Sapporo - the town is also the name sake of one of my favourite Japanese beers. I was hoping to get myself a Sapporo Beer poster at the beer museum, so we dumped our bags at the hotel and went to the Sapporo Beer-en (Beer Garden). They specialise in "Jingis Khan" (Mongolian Lamb barbecue) which we indulged in. And boy, we over indulged. It was 100 minutes of all you can eat, all you can drink MADNESS. After that we went back to the hotel. We were really tired, and kinda crabby. I've decided I'm not too keen on being close to cooking lamb. The lamb fat just gets into all your clothes and makes everything smell awful. Yetch! The next day we decided to go to Moerenuma Park. Moerenuma park was designed by Isamu Noguchi as an architectural sculpture. It's massive. It's also two trains and a bus away from where we were staying in Sapporo. It was annoying to get to, but nice once we were there - very inspiring spaces. We then went to Sapporo Art Garden to see their exhibition of paintings and prints from the Wein Museum (including works by Klimt, Scheille, and Kokoshka), which was also really good, but it took the rest of the day for us to get there because it was on the complete opposite end of the city, two train rides and a long bus ride away. Sapporo is a car town. What an annoyance - I could have driven, had we enough money to hire a car, but hire car prices in Hokkaido are almost 50% more expensive than they are in Osaka. Ridiculous. And all the while it was so hot, we were just sweating and sweating, just like we had been in Osaka. We were really hoping to come North and be comfortable for a while, but it just didn't work out. We were a little disappointed with Hokkaido, even though it was lovely. We so wanted it to be colder... oh well, you live and learn. This was a particularly expensive lesson, but I think I've actually figured a few things out about traveling just generally - we got really tired of moving around so much. I think it's better to just find one good place and stay there until you unwind than to try and travel around too much on your holiday.

Finally, I did get to have an excellent scallop ramen from the Sapporo ramen alley on the last night, and I've been fantasising about it ever since it was so good. Hokkaido was really nice, and the food was great!




We then flew into Tokyo for a bit of madness. We stayed in Shinjuku, went to the Mori Art Muesum in Roppongi, we went to Tokyo Opera Building to see Tomoko Konoike's first solo exhibition, we went to Iron Chef Chen Kenichi's restaurant for lunch, I did a little reckless shopping in Ginza (new shoes, new wallet, new neck scarf), we saw the giant Gandam in Odaiba, we went to meet up with Luke Ray in Shinjuku and had yakitori in the famous "Memory Lane" (but all the locals call it "Piss Alley" - how stylish!) and the heavy metal bar in Kabuki-cho (that I may never find again - it was very well hidden!). At the end of it all, we were quite exhausted from our holiday!


Either way, now we're back in Osaka, and we've been trying to make reparations for the over-indulging and over-exertion holiday we just survived. I'll be tight with the cash again this month (what's new?) but I really do feel like this time I got to have a bit more of my fill of Tokyo. I think this will change our next move as to what we will do when we finish up here in Japan.

Either way, my lovelies, this was a very long post, and now I'm very tired, so I'm going to watch some Iron Chef and then go to sleep. Hope you're all keeping well.

Wednesday 15 July 2009

The problem with blogging



The problem with blogging - the problem with all these little updates on the internet - it's like an autobiography. But unlike a good autobiography, there's no flow to the story. It's all just little atoms in the void - people making little noises, wondering if anyone hears them. Like a mad bugger talking to themselves. Little fragments of the story. No quality control. Many people have told me that my blog reads like too much of a big whinge - but that's partly due to the fact that when I'm busy and happy, I have no time to blog. It's only when I've had life kick me in the teeth and I'm having a little rest in bed that the urge to update the blog falls upon me. So rest assured, for every monthly update that reads like I'm having a bad time, there's 4 unwritten ones that would have told you about me having a good time.

That's the problem with blogging.

I find facebook status updates to be a lot more cheerful. I enjoy reading well thought-out little quips, or wildly enthusiastic updates with too many exclamation points. I particularly find the "I'm angry with a specific person, so I'll make some kind of interior monologue I'm composing to them my status update" approach pretty funny. It comes across as seriously sad, mad... and bad. Blogging isn't as bad as facebook. The status update approach lends itself to the off-the-cuff, one liner, Groucho Marx approach to personal cowardice. Facebook is totally trite.

Facebook may well be the devil, but I think Twitter sounds even worse. I am still refusing to get a Twitter account. Anything that has Twit in the title is already consigning itself to the land of the foolish. It sounds like nothing but status updates on Facebook. Vacuous to the max.

I've been watching the commentary surrounding the "white flight" from myspace to facebook - a cyberspace mirror image of the move of whitey to suburbia, leaving people of ethnic origin in the inner city. The internet, the web that was supposed to bring us all together has now been divided into similar real estate divisions as we have created in the real world. How true it is that our exterior and our interior landscapes reflect each other.

That's part of the, dare I say it, fun of being in the current generation - watching as all of these information technology developments are played out. From our little Atari playing fingers in our youths, to our Palm Pilots, iPhones, Blackberries, Nintendo DS, PSPs. I don't know many people who don't have a laptop computer, or some kind of computing installation in their home. Paul Virillio talked about the information age being all about speed. It's about being first, being new, being in the right place at the right time - myspace is dead - everyone go to facebook! Why? If you ask why then you're not 'getting it.' When all information is power, we begin to lose quality control. We start to have tweets in the void, mad fragments of interior monologues. Virillio observed that we begin to be unable to cope with the sheer volume of information. Information becomes white noise, static, and we start to have trouble picking out voices in the roar of the crowd. Everything is reduced to one virtue. Everything is traveling somewhere, regardless of direction. Everything is speed.

Is blogging like just being a voice in the crowd? Or is it like having an extended conversation with yourself? I think I tend to veer toward the latter, and end up composing these extremely introspective little pieces. Quite strange, really. Sometimes I wonder why I do this. I wonder who reads it, who enjoys it, who dis's it. I wonder if it's really worth the time.

So, to actually blog a bit rather than just muse, things in Camp Osaka have been difficult, but I think we're starting to get through the worst of it, so to speak. The hottest time of the year is upon us, our air conditioner is failing to cool our room effectively, and Tom's been sick. It's like he never got better from a chest infection we had in October last year. I shook mine off and have been pretty well ever since (food poisoning aside), but Tom's unwellness has developed into a persistent cough, with accompanying catarrh of varying shades. The cough flares up when he gets a cold (which seems to be that he gets every little bug that comes past - in our line of work, you are exposed to germs on a daily basis), and it also flares up whenever he exerts himself, which has meant that he has been unable to exercise or sing. As we have now got a date for our first gig, this has brought the coughing crisis come to a head, and we are now seeing a doctor to try and get his lungs sorted out. The doctor gave him a chest x-ray - looking for tuberculosis, it seemed. Ridiculous doctors! Would they have suspected tuberculosis if he were Japanese, I don't know. It's that constant irony of never knowing if you're being singled out for being a foreigner or not. Tom was quite upset by his first visit to the ward office/doctor, because the doctor gave him a really hard time about his health insurance card not being updated with his new address, and then the ward office seemed totally unable to explain anything to him about his health insurance in English or even simple Japanese, so he was left feeling that he had no insurance, and no way of getting medical treatment. We finally managed to find someone (still with no English) but competant enough to help us at the ward office, and so now we are both sorted out. So, on our second visit the doctor seems to have given up on the tuberculosis angle and now thinks it's allergies (which I think is highly unlikely, considering that I have so many allergies I am a bit of an expert in the field - allergies give you runny clear snot out the nose, not technicolor snot off the lungs). The doctor has given Tom some anti-histamines, anti-biotics, and some kind of anti-sputum drug. If this doesn't work, then we're going to take him to another doctor. One of our students is a doctor - he's a high level English speaker and an expert in internal medicine. We'll see if we can't track him down at his workplace. I mean, I'm not a doctor, but I'm an experienced patient, and I'm pretty sure he's got bronchitis. If only we can get a doctor to treat him for bronchitis, maybe we can get on with having a good time rather than feeling like Tom's firing on 3 cylinders all the time.

Either way, last couple of weeks, with Tom being ill and since I decided to have a rest from all the drinking (my bottom is on the improve - thank you for your enquiries of bottom related health), I've been occupying myself quite well with some other pursuits. My new camera has been having a bit of a work out, trying to get the hang of the new compact format. It's so tiny I find that I don't hold it entirely upright, resulting in slightly off-kilter photos. I was used to the heft of the old camera, the new one seems so light as to be a bit plasticy. But it's got lots more pixels and more zoom - generally it's a more modern camera - and it cost half as much as the old one! Oh, modern life, you move so fast.

So, yesterday I went for a good old trudge around Kyoto by myself. It got me thinking about the strange role that religion plays in Japanese society. Most of my students go to their hometown to clean their family grave in Obon, or go to the shrine or temple for New Years Eve, but are generally unfussed by religious fervor. Buddhism and Shintoism co-exist, but it hasn't always been a peaceful co-existence. In my experience, Shintoism is a strange, animist, and somewhat mercantilist religion. Buddhism seems like quite a relaxed religion (at least in it's Japanese interpretation). Buddhist priests are often rather cheeky, good-humoured. Shinto priests tend to be pushed into their line of work by their family, and tend to be a bit more pained in their profession. The style of the architecture also seems to be quite divergent, with the Buddhist buildings often focusing on dark wooden forms, and the Shinto shrines having lots of red and white, with colourful eves. I sometimes toy with the idea of becoming a Buddhist. My major problem seems to be desire - desiring more, desiring otherness - if I could start to let go of my worldly desire, perhaps I would be a more contented person...?

But it would probably make for less interesting blog entries.

Here is a photo album from Chion In, from my trudge around Kyoto:

Chion-in

I've also been taking myself off to the local ridiculous spa - about 5 minutes walk from door to door. It's quite fun.

Spaworld

It's all been good, clean fun. A little anti-social, I know, but I'm happy enough with the state of affairs as they are. In other news, my Mum's made some murmurings about visiting in September, and I will be catching up with Aunt Mary rather soon too. More news when there is some.

Wednesday 8 July 2009

Ain't no cure for the summertime blues...

Coming from Tasmania, summer is my favourite time of year. The days are long, dry and sunny, the nights are short and cool, but not cold. The ever present Tasmanian rain lets up for a moment, and you can bandy about with your friends outside having barbecues and whatnot. The usually chilly beaches are actually able to be swam at, you can open the windows and have a nice breeze through the house in the afternoon, it's a good time for frisbee, a good time for salads and fresh ingredients, a good time all round. I ♥ Tasmanian summer.

Suffice to say, it's a little different in Osaka.

It's humid. Steamy. Like you'd expect in Singapore on a really steamy day. There's only the slightest breeze (if you're fortunate enough to be in it's path - which luckily with the new house, we are - the old house was in an area of totally stagnant air) and if you open the window, all you manage to do is let in more steam. The food turns rancid in two seconds, the garbage stinks even if you put it out twice a week. You end up hiding in your air conditioned room and going slightly stir crazy...

... similar to Tasmanian winter ...

...or you can go out and watch movies in air conditioned cinemas, or window shop in air conditioned department stores, or go to the air conditioned museum/aquarium/gallery - but you're seeing the pattern here. For a Tasmanian to feel comfortable, it is imperative to be under the influence of some air conditioning. No air con = hot crabby Tasmanian.

Our power bill doubled last month.

Now, what most ex-pats seem to do during summer is drink their way through it. In the cooler months, I am barely interested in drinking, but as the temperature climbs, so too does my will to drink. However, my judgement has never been very good when figuring out when to stop drinking, so a few hangovers have ensued, and last week I fell down when I was drunk, broke my camera, broke my arse, and landed on Tom's laptop - which appears to have come out unscathed - unlike my camera and my arse. I fell on my tailbone. There's no bruise but it's not stopped hurting since. I've decided that it's time for me to stop drinking again, at least until such time as my bum stops hurting.

I tried to keep on doing cultural things on the weekends in June, but the hangovers were definitely interfering. However, we still made it to Heian Jingu last month:

Heian Jingu

I regret to report that I probably won't be getting out and about much until July 20th long weekend. We've booked a night at a Ryokan in Koyasan, and we've got 7 days in Hokkaido coming up in Obon, followed by a few days in Tokyo, and a day in Iga Ueno with our mate Glenn, so it looks like we'll be posting more photos soon.

And, bless my lovely husband, Tom helped me pay for a new camera, so I'll still be snapping happy for you all over the coming months. I would like to get a D-SLR camera... but I doubt I'll be able to put aside enough cash at this rate.

In other news, my first gig with Sister Ray is fast approaching on Thursday, 30th July - and Thrall has just had the first gig confirmed at Socio on Sunday the 13th of September - so soon we'll be firing on all cylinders with the bands. Probably a good time to be sobering up for a while, considering the amount of stuff I have to do!

Oh well, love to you all, I wish we could get some of your cool weather up here, and we could send some of our hot weather to you, and then we'd all have comfortable, warm weather...

Friday 5 June 2009

Japaniversary

5 June 2008 - touchdown!

5 June 2009 - Japaniversary.

As you get older, birthdays become less of an egotistical festival of "give me things!" and become more of strange nostalgic time. The ever increasing blur of years freezes for a second, and you look around in the life that you have made for yourself.

You may say to yourself: "How did I get here?"
You may say to yourself: "How do I work this?"
You may say to yourself: "My God! What have I done?"

All of the above sometimes...

Tom and I are currently working on some plans for some fire fly viewing. I am also booking some lodgings for a stay at Koya-san in July. I can't believe we lived on the train line to Koya-san for almost 6 months and never made it up the mountain! Well, time to make amends. We are also looking at Hokkaido and Fuji-san in Obon - I had been looking at Western Japan for opportunities in Obon to do some traveling, but Tom has said that he would like to go North to escape from the heat. I am happy to do that, as I would love to go to Hokkaido. I want to do as many things as I can while I'm here. For winter, I'm hoping to go into Gifu and spend some time in some of the traditional alpine villages up there. No stupid skiing this year. Just enjoying the snow for what it is: snow. Throw a hot spring or two into the mix there, and you have something totally magical. The last thing I want to do is leave Japan with a sense of regret - or as Tom often quips - it is better to regret doing something than to regret not doing something.

In other news, we have had some startling news from Tom's mother - Tom's cousin Kimbra passed away very unexpectedly a few weeks ago. She was only 36 years old. Also, there have been murmurings of some serious health problems for someone from my side of the family, but I haven't heard anything official. Either way, it has not all been smooth sailing, and unsettling news from home makes me thankful for all the times that there is nothing to report.

Happy Japaniversary everyone. Don't be shy about getting in contact. We love hearing from you all!

Tuesday 26 May 2009

More happy happy




Kerry and Dave coming to visit was an awesome opportunity for us to get out and do a bit of sightseeing and shopping - they're a fun pair, and everyone enjoyed our little outings - particularly the Korean barbecue outing!

Kerry and Dave's visit - Em's photos

We are continuing to be busy. Not that I mind - I much prefer being busy and a little tired than being well rested but frustrated by how little I am achieving. At the moment we are practicing with the band up to three times a week (Monday, Wednesday, Friday) - and both of us are sitting in on drums in our new friend Rob's band. The band is called Sister Ray, and Rob works pretty much as a band autocrat, which is fine, because I find it equally rewarding and challenging working to someone else's aesthetic as I do forging my own. Tom is playing the slower, quieter, more syncopated songs, where as I am playing the more straight ahead rock songs. It works well, and makes sure that we are not stamping the sound with a signature drummer. Rob's a total unit, unnervingly honest, really clever and kind - he and his beautiful partner Jo have really opened the door to us, and I'm really happy to have made some more friends over here. With Krista leaving I was a bit sad, but vacuums always manage to fill themselves somehow. The other band members are also great fun to hang out with, and Sister Ray practice is great because it means that we get some regimented socialising into our routine (good for people who tend to get a little isolated due to being too independent). Rob and Jo are good friends with our mate John from webschool, so we also get to see him more often (which is good because our schedules clash this year). It's a nice little enclave of music enthusiasts, musicians, and others.

Tonight I'm going to go down to Tezukayama and meet up with the people who moved into our apartment when we moved out. Apparently Rosie, who I'm going to be meeting with first, is writing her Masters on grindcore and extreme music - doing a compariative study between Australia and Japan. She knows about The Pink Palace, and possibly will know a lot of the same people I know. It's good, because I can probably introduce her to a few people that might be good for her thesis, and she might be able to introduce us to some people that would be good for us to know for touring or shows or split releases or what not.

The upshot of all this is that we are pretty bloody happy.

With the wedding out of the way, the honeymoon done, I've been feeling really content. Going to Phuket was really nice. Those first few days of relaxing and floating around the pool were great. It really allowed me an opportunity to contrast our life in Japan to other ways of life, and I've definitely been having fewer attacks of the "Crapans!" than I had been previously. I can drink the tap water, I don't have to worry about malaria, I can understand at least every 5th word that is said to me in most situations, my shoes don't get muddy when I walk down the street.

Also I have noticed that the less I am exposed to the company HQ, the more content I feel. I don't mind my job. I actually like my job. Hanging out with kids and adults being playful and teaching conversation, it's a really nice way to make a crust. I went to HQ the other day for some training, and just being at HQ made me pissed off for two days. I will do my upmost to avoid that place and see how if my theory of HQ giving me the irrits stands up.

Earning a Japanese wage allows us to be able to live very comfortably. We haven't had to fork out for any major expenses recently, so we've both been sending money home for our eventual return. I will have reached my minimum savings target next month if I send some more money home.

In other news:

- Tom has discovered and I have re-discovered Yakiniku, and we have been to two Korean barbecue places in the space of two weeks. Plans for constructing a barbecue table in the Yakiniku style have already begun to be discussed. If we made it right, we could use it for nabe too..! Table cooking rocks.
- I have been swimming at the local pool on Thursdays and I've lost a bit of the midriff pork. Combined with my double kick drum practice routine, I'm actually slimming down - and growing a whole new variety of wirey little muscles that I never knew I had.
- One of my favourite students, Yai, will be finishing up his contract with the company soon. I feel that I have actually engendered a real affection for this person's character, and I will miss seeing him in my webschool schedule.
- The weather hasn't been too hot to face going outside yet. However, the evenings have gotten too warm to sleep with our heavy doona, and we are slowly stripping the futon of extra bedding.
- My aunt Mary will be visiting the Kansai district in late July - a hot humid time of year to come to town, but I will do my best to come up with some good ideas of ways for her to beat the heat.
- I am learning to tie a kimono so that I can wear a yukata to the summer festival this year.
- I am currently cooking up some plans for some outings in the mountains for us this summer. Koya-san is a definite, Nachi falls would be awesome, Ise in Mie prefecture is definitely on my shortlist, Takayama could be good, and Biwa-ko and Hikone are also high on the list of things to do during our weekends. At the moment we are having a good resting weekend.

Friday 22 May 2009

Busy busy busy...

It has been commented on more than one occasion that my blog contributions are tantamount to one enormous whinge. Well, just to buck the trend, things have been awesome for the last few weeks. We've been super busy with band stuff, we've made some new friends who have asked us to play session drums on their recordings for their band, our mates Kerry and Dave came over to visit and that was great fun, and I'm really starting to enjoy teaching some of my classes this year.

Non-whinge, over and out!

Tuesday 5 May 2009

April, the month for new beginnings in Japan

Greetings from me! A married lady! Sacre bleu!

How time flies... April was a very busy, very stressful month. Our new contracts commenced at ECC, and with it, a new bunch of children, with a new bunch of, shall we say... idiosyncrasies... some are cheeky little monkies (hello Masaaki, hello Daiki, hello Marin, hello Shuki), some are timid little flowers (hello Kuruma, hello Miwa, hello Mami), some are total geniuses (hello Tomoaki, hello Chi), some are mutes in conversation classes (hello Haruka... I wonder, why do your parents send you here?).

Either way, I'm not too phased. The naughty ones, well, they're not so naughty. The well behaved ones, well, they're just like the naughty ones only less spirited. I mean, they're kids. I let them be kids, to an extent, and just hope that they speak a little bit of English in the interim.

However, this years group class is nothing compared to last years. They've already complained to the staff that I speak to quickly. Why they think this is a better idea than approaching me about speaking quickly, I do not know, but it has gotten me a bit offside.

The change in locations and classes was stressful, but all in all, I think we'll be ok with it. Either way, as much as teaching sometimes feels like it fills up your life, it isn't everything. We're a busy little pair, and we've been up to a lot since my last weblog entry.

Cherry blossom season was just beautiful. I took lots of photos. I would gladly do cherry blossom season in Japan again if I have the chance. It was spectacular. Seas of white and pink blossoms everywhere, and people serenely wandering amongst the trees. There were many street markets around the cherry blossom sites, and I had some great takoyaki, yakitori, and beers with Tom, Glenn, Hanae, Eishi and Krista in more than a couple of locations. I really think I'm beginning to understand the Japanese obsession with seasons. It's because the character of Japan is so different in each season, you can really enjoy a great variety of sensations, even within one place because the surroundings change so much depending on what time of year it is.

Here are some photos of spring in Japan:

Blossoms
Osaka-jo hanami

We went with Krista to Shikoku - it was a strange time, cooped up in the car, with Japanese speed limits saying 80kmp/h, and Japanese drivers doing 100kmp/h. The driving wasn't too bad, the music was good. We drove through Kobe to the toll road for the Awaji-Kaikyo Bridge, across Awaji Island (which looked very pleasant in itself), to the Onaruto Bridge. When we came off the toll road, my hair turned white at the cost... ¥5500! That's like $75AU, just to go on the expressway for less than an hour!

Tom jumped in the water at Naruto, and we had a beautiful little lunch of fresh bread, tomato and pesto sandwiches by the big whirlpool (that's quite famous) before beginning a little drive around the sea front toward Takamatsu. I tried to stick to the non-toll roads as much as possible, but the non-toll roads have incredibly stifling speed limits, stacks of traffic lights, and are incredibly frustrating for long distance travel. At first, the road was a winding, but very picturesque expedition through the hills, but as we got closer to Takamatsu, it became an endless sea of low-density light-industrial zones and grey shopping strips that just seem to go from one end of Japan to the other. I started to get quite frustrated with it all. This was not the Shikoku I was hoping for.

We made it to Takamatsu, and I was quite pleased with the city. It was quite pretty for a Japanese city, with wide, tree-lined roads and green surrounding hills. We went to Ritsurin Koen, a stunning park, full of traditional style gardens and lawns (which are rare in parks in Japan, if you are wondering why I am bothering to mention something as seemingly unremarkable as a lawn in a park). After a stroll around the park in the afternoon light, we realised we would not make it back to Tokushima in time to bed down at the Youth Hostel I had arranged for us, so we cancelled that one, and stayed at another budget accommodation place in Takamatsu. The accommodation was surprisingly good, and after filling our bellies with sanuki udon (the Shikoku specialty) we slept comfortably.

Shikoku, day 1

The next day we headed off bright and early to Kotahira to go to a famous, mountain-side shrine called Kompira-san. The walk was not too exhausting and the views were quite spectacular. I felt quite serene when I was there, and Krista was interviewed for Japanese TV when she bought a sweet potato flavoured soft-serve icecream at the bottom of the mountain!

We then headed back to the mainland via the Seto Ohashi bridge. Again, the expressway fees were frightening, but it was the only way to get back to the mainland via car. We arrived in Okayama soon after, and I hoped we would be able to go to the famous Korakoen garden for lunch, but we unfortunately missed the turn off. So, instead we parked a couple of hours later near Himeji Castle to enjoy our lunch. After lunch, I hit the expressways once more in our mad dash to get the car back on time. The non-bridge expressways were not so poorly priced, and we made it back with time to spare, very tired, but looking back at the experience, it was merely my expectations not being met that put a downer on the trip, rather than the trip itself.

Shikoku, day 2

I have decided since this trip to not bother getting a Japanese drivers licence, as driving in Japan is just too expensive and trains are just more convenient in the end.

After our Shikoku trip, we had the next weekend off in preparation for our wedding. I bought a dress, but on the night before the wedding, I decided not to wear it. I went to the ward office in my favourite Motörhead t-shirt. Tom wore a Satyricon t-shirt. We went out for yum cha whilst the paperwork was being processed. We came home, said some words, put rings on the fingers, drank some wine and went to karaoke for a bit of a yodel. A perfectly unconventional wedding for a perfectly unconventional couple.

The Wedding

I have been feeling much more at ease with the world since getting the wedding out of the way. And now, as husband and wife, we can start planning the next phase of our existance... whatever that might be... me and my plans... I think I lov planning almost as much as I love doing things, you know...

We both went and saw SUNNO))) - be it on different nights - they are a drone/noise band from the States that we quite like. Here's some pictures for those of you who are interested:

Tom's SUNNO))) pictures
My SUNNO))) pictures

After our wedding, we went on our honeymoon to Phuket. We booked our accommodation online and I must say, for the price, I was stunned at what a wonderful place we managed to get for about ¥6000 ($80AU) a night. This was no shonky dive! We were in a resort! We stayed at Hat Kata and the resort was about 20 minutes walk (or 5 minutes on the free shuttle bus) from the white sands and shady deck chairs of Kata beach. There were more Europeans in the area than Aussies, which was a great relief. The Aussies, wherever I laid eyes on them, were behaving like embarrassing fools. From the group having an AFL kick-about in Bangkok airport, to the countless sleaze-bags with Thai girls on their arms in Phuket, Australians were doing their best to remind me why I left the country!

I was surprised at the level of poverty among the people of Phuket. I had imagined a sleek, white beached, jungle getaway, but a lot of Phuket looked surprisingly like a third-world country compared to the affluence of Japan. The homeless dudes in my neighbourhood in Nihonbashi looked like your average Thai in regards to health and personal hygiene. Due to their poverty, the Thais seemed to view us more as walking money-bags rather than people, and they pestered us at every turn to buy sarongs, taxi-rides, massages, wood-carvings, bed-spreads, sun-beds, shells, knock-off designer wares, but worst of all were the Indian tailors, who pursued Tom down the road with such aggression that on numerous occasions we had to physically pry them from our arms, as they grabbed and clawed at us trying to make a sale. I despised it. I had read that I should be prepared to haggle for good prices, and indeed, I haggled for most things that didn't have a list price (haggling makes me very uncomforable), but nothing could have prepared me for the assault of street hawkers at every turn. We ended up speaking Japanese to each other a lot in public to try and confuse the street sellers, and keep our nationality secret. It appeared that they viewed the European and Asian travelers far less dimly than they viewed Australians, and again, I felt saddened by a stereotype of our national character that appeared to be based on the behaviour of awful, bogan, tourists.

Aside from the negative aspects, the accommodation was quite lovely, and I was quite happy with the Alpina Resort. Their breakfasts were delicious, and I really enjoyed their spread of fruit salad and yoghurt, fried rice and green salad for breakfast every day. The pool was very refreshing and clean, the general environment (aside from the insipid music pumped through the poolside PA) was more than conducive to relaxation. The weather was fair for the majority of our stay - hot, and a little humid as the monsoon season approached - but we managed to get away without any severe sunburn (due to almost constant vigilance with the sunscreen bottle). The beach at Kata truly looked like it was lifted from a postcard. The powdery sand was as white as snow, and the water was as warm as a bath. If anything, I thought the water was too warm, as I am used to swimming in the ocean in Tasmania, where the experience is invigorating, and bracing, not tepid and relaxing. I found it a bit too close to body temprature, and perhaps this made me think of warm patches of pee in the pool. Either way, it looked very clean on the most part, but as we ventured toward the end of the beach, we saw huge piles of trash - mostly plastic, swirling around in the currents at the end of the beach. There was a man whose job was to sweep up the trash heaps, but he didn't seem to be able to keep up with the volume of rubbish that endlessly surfaced from the Andaman Sea. We bought some snorkels and snorkeled around the rocks, and saw a huge, dazzling variety of fish. The fish were quite unphased by our presence, and we saw angelfish, puffer fish, butterfly fish, bat fish, crabs, a tropical trevalley species, and Pacific saury all about us, in quite staggering numbers.

From this experience, we decided to go on a snorkeling tour of either Phi Phi Island, or the Similans. We eventually settled on the Similans, as they are partly National Park, and I thought the likelihood of having to swim through oceans of plastic trash was lower if we went further away from "civilisation." I practiced diving under the water with a snorkel on first in the resorts' pool, and became more comfortable with snorkeling. I had only ever been snorkeling once before with Emma and Adrian in Moreton Bay, and although that experience was more than wonderful, I found it a little scary and difficult to regulate my breathing - ending up with a breath full of water on more than one occasion. This time, I was more well prepared for an open ocean dive.

We started the day at 6am, and were on our way by 6:15. The courtesy bus to the dive company boat was most hair-raising! He drove like Mad Max with a wasp up his bottom. An awful, unsettling journey, indeed. From there, we were settled onboard a speedboat, and slept soundly for most of the way to Similan Island number 9. Our first snorkeling dive site was absolutely magical. As I first put my face into the water, I realised I was surrounded by a huge school of darting, electric blue fusiliers. They swirled about me so beautifully, I was already entranced by the beauty of the area. Raised mountains of coral scattered the sea floor, and amongst the corals, huge numbers of diverse fish, ducked in and out from cavities, and grazed on the algae like the herds of the savanna. One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish, yellow fish, green fish, rainbow fish, and we saw a sea turtle, very close, I could almost touch his shell. Absolutely stunning. I dove under the water with my new found skills on several occasions, to inspect my beautiful foreign surroundings a little closer up. At the surface, a group of domestic tourists bobbed about with life jackets on, screaming almost continuously with fun and fright. I'm surprised they didn't scare all of the fish away. They were, however, quite unpleasant to be around. After 45 minutes, we headed for Similan 8. There we went ashore, and we climbed up to Sail Rock, where we were afforded an enviable arial view of our tropical paradise. We ate the most awful food in all of Thailand for lunch and then went back to the boat on our way to the next dive site. Similan 5 was again, stunning. The coral here seemed more brightly coloured than at Similan 9, and the underwater visibility seemed a little better. I would have loved to be there longer, maybe with less noisy and intrusive dive companions, but despite it all, it was staggeringly beautiful. Soon after we went ashore, where we saw a couple of lovely little beaches, but I found myself longing for more snorkeling, and less beaches. That's the drawback of doing a tour, I suppose. You don't get to do what you want to do for the entire time. You have to compromise. At the end of the day, we returned to the port for another rollercoaster like ride in the courtesy bus back to Kata where we had a quick shower and then headed to Patong to see a Muay Thai fight.

The Muay Thai stadium was quite an eyesore, but it looked totally at home in Patong. Patong is possibly the worst, most garish, awful, tourist hole I have ever had the misfortune of seeing - but more on that later. The Muay Thai fight was somewhere between a beautiful demonstration of an ancient ritual, and an evening in a nightclub. We were seated ringside, near the band, the sound of which was somewhere between an Indian snake charmer and a beatnik bongo beat poem. We watched the first few fights with more than a little concern. The fighters appeared to be about 11 years old for the first two bouts. They fought long and hard, and with steely determination in their eyes. Tom told me about how a lot of these kids come from very poor families, and are sold to Muay Thai camps - where they live out their days, fighting, until they are old enough to look after themselves. Many of these young, young, boys, looked old in their eyes. They were no older than a lot of my kids in my ECC classes, and I felt myself being a bit distressed as to their plight. As the evening went on, the fighters got older. The bouts got a lot faster as the levels of strength, and ensuing violence, quickly went up. There was one bout between an Australian woman and a Thai woman that was over within about three punches, the Aussie clearly scaring the living daylights out of the Thai. It was really exciting and fun to watch on many levels, but I couldn't help but be a little disturbed by it all.

The next day we went into Patong to see if Tom could find a tailor to make him a suit. As we walked down the street, following our map to where we had decided to go, and were truly bombarded by street hustlers, tuk-tuk drivers, tailors, and sarong weilding maniacs at every turn. Tom found the tailor, was measured, chose his fabrics, and we went back into the Patong wilderness for 7 hours until his first fitting. The streets were lined with open air bars filled with single white males, some chatting to Thai girls, some just flexing their muscles at each other with testosterone filled bravado. We scurried away from the beach to the mall next to the Muay Thai stadium that we had spotted on the way to the fight the night before. We ended up hiding in the air-conditioned comfort of the mall, called Jung Canton, much like we did in Brisbane, just to hide from the craziness of the streets of Patong. Whilst we were there we took in the Wolverine movie, which was a fine movie when judged against other Hollywood action blockbuster type things. We did the same thing the next day when we returned to pick up the suit. My general advice for anyone considering going to Phuket would be - do so, but avoid Patong if you can, it is just a heinous pit of vipers.

We got back to the airport, and checked in early. We wandered around the airport looking for anything to do and finding very little. When we arrived in Bangkok, the miles of duty free was wasted on us, as we had changed our Baht back into Yen, figuring that we would be better served on our return if we didn't bother with the duty free stuff. The new Bangkok airport is amazing. Huge. Really big. Worth seeing just in and of itself... looks a lot like Kyoto station at some angles. The flight back to Japan departed at 10pm, and was packed. We tried to sleep, but it was impossible. I arrived, stiff, sore, and nauseous at Kansai airport to discover that our locked baggage was broken into by baggage handlers at either Phuket or Bangkok airport. Luckily neither of us packed anything worth stealing, but I still felt violated. Tom's toiletries bag was outside of his suitcase, and my luggage was severely dented. This left me with a very sour taste in my mouth about it all, and after getting home, I wrote a very cross email to Thai Airways voicing my contempt for them before falling, exhausted, into a very deep sleep... until now, when I woke up and wrote this.

Some photos were taken, of course.

The Honeymoon

So, there you have it, April, in a nutshell. Most of it was fantastic, and I would do most of it again - maybe a little differently, given the wisdom of hindsight, but that said, wisdom is only gained by experience, and until you have done something once, it is very hard to know how to do it right. April was a month of firsts: we had our first classes of the new contract with ECC, we had our first road trip with a friend with Krista, we had our first (and hopefully last!) wedding, we had our first tropical, resort holiday in Thailand, and our first hanami (cherry blossom viewing) together.

Now, all that remains for us to do is sort out what else we want to achieve before we leave Japan. And no doubt, I will be writing another blog entry in the not too distant future, telling you all about the next wave of plans we are hatching, and how we are going to realise them.

Until then, stay happy and healthy, don't be shy about getting in contact with us, we'd love to hear from you... all of you... you're all terrible correspondents, you know... sometimes I wonder if I'm the only person who writes letters at all.

Wednesday 25 March 2009

Keeping spirits up...

Since receiving the new schedule, I don`t feel quite right. I`ve been a skittish bag of nerves rather than my usual self. I am really starting to feel jealous of people who have a normal life and don`t have these constant upheavals to deal with all the time. Tom and I have been doing our best not to let it get to us too badly. This has involved avoiding the topic of schedules (or ECC generally) in conversation, and indulging in healthy diversions whenever possible.

Tomorrow we are planning to go to the sumo:
Sumo Tournament Homepage (English)

Last Thursday we went for a walk over a mountain in Nara:
Kasuga Yama

On Friday, our neighbourhood got a bit kookier than usual, which is saying something, because kooky is our neighourhood`s bag:
Den-Den Town Street Festival

In other news, we have booked our honeymoon. Phuket in Golden Week! I`m so excited. I will have to purchase swimwear... I have nothing suitable to wear for a beach/lounging affair like this! I may also need to do a few sit ups to tone up prior to attempting such stomach revealing activities.

The marriage paperwork will be done on the 21st or 22nd of April (depending on the availability of our translator, the lovely, gracious, June Iwatsuki Tanaka) and Krista will be helping out as our Best Man/witness. I`m really looking forward to having everything sorted, formalised... all marriage-ified.

The road trip with Krista before she goes back to The States... we still haven`t decided where we are going... we might be off to Hiroshima, or Wakayama/Mie, or perhaps even Kamakura... we`re going to decide when we`re at the sumo.

Lots of diversions, lots of keeping busy, lots of working on the music projects, and hopefully we will have lots of wonderful news and lots to show for our troubles.

Friday 20 March 2009

New photos...

Here are some recent photos I have taken:

My Neighbourhood (a very nerdy affair indeed)




Nara & Kasugayama Primeval Forest (Deer, trees, fungi and more...)



(Please see links in the above post)

Thursday 12 March 2009

More spanners, less works...



Another unhappy update.

Suffice to say that I didn't get the trainers or the assistant trainers job. The official reason was "you haven't been with the company for long enough" - to which I wonder why they even bothered interviewing me. I mean, that reason was there before the interview.

Reading between the lines, I have come to my own conclusions about that one.

Whatever.

Soon after receiving the bad news about the job, I then received the first draft of my schedule for next year.

The good news:
I got Tuesday and Wednesday off, which means that I will be able to have the occasional long weekend, given the smattering of Monday public holidays in Japan.
The shifts I had been given weren't too late.

The bad news:
My draft schedule had precisely zero of the schools that I had requested on it.
AND
I had two substitute teaching days on my schedule in my second contract - unfixed hours, unfixed locations, unknown classes.

We were back to where we started with the company. Subbing indefinitely. I don't sleep well the night before a sub-shift. I don't enjoy any element of it what-so-ever. I find it demeaning, particularly considering that I work very hard to be a good teacher, and then the company chooses to use me as spac filler, junk mail distributor, paper folder, envelope stamper, monkey extraordinaire. It takes a toll on the spirit when you work as hard as you can, get "Outstanding" teacher evaluations, get requested by schools to return, request the schools yourself, and then have someone in HQ just whisk it all out from under your feet. And just when I was beginning to feel settled in the new house and my job.

The schedule they had proposed to me only had one kids class when I had asked for little kiddies but "not too many" (I figured they'd give me about 4-6 classes if I asked for "not too many," not one!)- I had only one group class when I had asked for "as many as possible" - I had no private kids when I had asked for "as many as possible." I was absolutely dumb founded. I got none of the locations I asked for. I was devastated. I cried flat out for every moment I wasn't teaching for two days. I was losing my Komyoike shift, which if I haven't mentioned before, is where I teach the Mini Kids (18 month to 3 year olds) and BW's (7 year olds). I have rapport with the kids, the school, the students, I do all my shopping out there. I knew I would be losing Tennoji Station Plaza, I knew that I probably wouldn't get Kuzuha on Sundays, but to lose Komyoike - I was gutted.

Tom's schedule was painfully similar, and he was similarly disappointed. We've contacted HQ, and they've said that they'll "do their best" to fill our schedules - which at this point in time could mean anything. I've been told that they'd "do their best" before, and I have peers who are subbing 10 months after starting teaching (nay, Tom is one of these peers who is still subbing), when everyone has been "doing their best." So, maybe I am becoming tad cynical.

Now, we are just trying to wait and see. I have been tearful, Tom has been rattled and angry... it feels like a death or a break up, constantly questioning, why, why, why... why me? Why now? So many questions, so many compromises... we suffered Brisbane, and suffered temping for 2 years to get here... are we destined to suffer Osaka, and suffer sub-teaching now that we are here?

Please tell me no.



In other news, I have survived the salmonella. I had to go to hospital on day 4 of the diarrhea and vomiting, and be re-hydrated (intravenous drip, no less). I had no sick leave left, and so I had to work when I was sick - the students were very kind in letting me run off occasionally for a quick toilet break when necessary. I am back to eating normal food now after almost two weeks of bananas, rice, apples (stewed) and toast (the BRAT diet, no less). I have been cooking at home again far more, and being very picky about what I will eat when I eat out now. I never want to feel that sick again.

We've done most of the paperwork for our marriage - and we'll be formalising the arrangement fairly soon. We haven't set a date. It's not going to be one of those kind of affairs. Probably in the next three months, with a honeymoon fairly soon afterward.

I found driving in Japan to be quite easy, and so I will be having another drive soon for a road trip with Krista before she leaves to return to Indiana. We were thinking of heading down to Hiroshima/Miwa Jima... I am really excited by the prospect of getting into Chugoku area. If it turns out that Miwa Jima is too far, maybe we could go to Tottori - I'll have to ask Krista a bit more about what she'd like to do before we come up with our final plan.



Now, it comes time once more to study our options... suffice to say, it would be nice to have a few less spanners in the works every time we start trying to formulate a plan.

Either way, we haven't been idle. We're continuing to get out and about from time to time:

Sanjusangen-do

Chishaku In

Iga Ueno Ninja Town

Hopefully the photos will keep you entertained until I have some good news to post.