Well, my last week of Japanese classes were kind of a breeze without tests (although there was a debate and a presentation). I am satisfied with my last week here.
Nevertheless, it's kind of a blur to me right now, so I'll work backwards since the most interesting parts happened most recently.
So yesterday (Saturday) one of my friends from Chiba who was raised in Osaka came to Kyoto to visit! I invited to other friends, but it ended up with just my tutor and my friend and I. We had a good time visiting Fushimi Inari, although I was 20 minutes late to the station, not for lack of foresight because I generally allow time to travel if I get misguided. I just realized that I got misguided a little too late on the train heading the wrong direction. The worst part is that I turned my cell phone in the night before, so there was no way to reach them and let them know I was late. The 20th century must have been a scary time.
We visited Fushimi Inari and hiked a little bit up the mountain, but it was hot and we had other plans for the day so we began our descent a little early. Fushimi Inari is a special place and I think a lot of people feel the same. It is the spot where all of those red torii were filmed in Memoirs of a Geisha..Incidentally, all of those torii are donated my various companies. Ah, I wish I took more pictures~namely ones without me in them!
If it's lighter than you think it looks, then your wish comes true..
Just a little more background information, since I didn't take nearly enough pictures to truly demonstrate the majesty of this place.. Fushimi Inari is a shrine with fox god messengers, so there are a lot of statues of foxes with bibs on them. Foxes (like tanuki) have magic abilities to transform into various things and deceive people. Tricksey tricksey. Usually there are an inordinate number of cats at this shrine, but today it was too hot so they didn't come out. Apparently people just drop their cats off in the woods when they don't want them anymore. Somehow that seems like it would be the ideal circumstance for a cat... especially since people feed them all the time.
Moving on to an afternoon, and an attempt to eat at a well-known ramen restaurant in Kyoto station only to be rather turned off by long lines and getting yaki soba instead. Anything is fine with me, especially since I got to sit in front of a nice window looking over the long staircase in the station. Unfortunately, I didn't take a picture of it, so I can't really tell you an interesting story about it either. My bad.
Afterwards we headed to Toji, a nearby temple that I can see from my room actually! It's very tall and has a large rod sticking out of the top, so you better believe that it got struck by lightning, burned down and reconstructed at least 4 times.
I would like to cop out and say that my camera wasn't working at this time so I just lost interest in taking pictures, although I could have tried harder to get some life into it >_<. Sorry! There was a really nice pond full of turtles too, appropriately named "Turtle Pond." (or so I think)
And after that we headed to a bookstore in Shijo, said sayonara to my tutor, took a stroll around the Imperial Palace and one last stroll through Doshisha campus, headed back to Shijo, ate dinner at a ramen restaurant, did karaoke for an hour, strolled back around Kamogawa and parted ways. Until 11 PM. Woo, talk about a marathon! And then I got back and worked on my packing while watching a delightful musical called "Mitsuko." I've got to use the T.V. programming that I paid for while I still can!
Okay, so we got yesterday out of the way and now my memory is beginning to rewind a little. Now we're in Friday, the final day of class and the day of the farewell party. All in all an okay day. I had to give my presentation about tanuki, which I felt was kind of short but at least well received (since when is Japanese graded on timing?). I enjoyed a short rakugo skit (similar to stand-up) in which this Korean guy who speaks Japanese talked on and on about eating udon in Tokyo and Kansai in my final class. Then I returned to school for the farewell party and to see my host family one last time. Fun but a little stressful somehow. It was strange to have a party held for us, in which your teachers, family and tutors are all there just for you. Needless to say, I did not perform, although some people sang songs in English.
The rest of the week was not terribly exciting as it was just me scrambling to take care of last minute things. On Wednesday there was no class in the afternoon so some CLS students and I went to an izayaka for an evening of all-you-can-eating, all-you-can drinking. This trip really necessitates some kind of diet reform, or a more attuned extra-satiated perception because I think there were a lot of complaints about food comas, food babies, etc. But real Japanese food has little in the way of calories to begin with... it's just borrowed fried items and meats are really the source of the "pregnancy" (oh awkward sense of humor, what would I do without you).
Monday I surprise met with my tutor in the convenience store and we went over her English essay, the final assessment of the year for her. The campus is really creepy once all of the regular students leave. All that are left are the invisible but definitely audible cicadas, whose deafening roar may have slightly contributed to my hearing loss. One day I want to film a horror movie about cicadas, but if I try to explain this to my tutor, she only laughs at me and tells me the things I say don't make sense.
Japanese people just love cicada sounds that much.. even if the sound of cicadas was the backtrack for a horror film, I don't know if Japanese would get scared if they found themselves alone amidst an ominous hiss during any summer day.
I still think that it could compete with "White Noise." Maybe I'll have to find a different audience.
Anyways, this is a really strange note to end a blog on. If I get the chance, I may make one more blog entry about the earthquake and its aftermath and effects on the people, since I think that many people may find this topic interesting given the timing of this trip relative to the event itself.
However, I still really love Japan and was glad I could make it back to Kyoto a second-time around, making this my 3rd trip total. The more I come here, the more I feel like my second-home is growing and the more I feel like I'll end up coming back. I may not actually have a choice either. But I am satisfied nevertheless to have created more memories here and build even more friendships with people around the world. Given the duration of 2 months, not much can be expected in terms of language elevation, although I somehow feel like I gained a lot of insights in the language, and of course, culture and personal experience, which cannot be trumped by any textbook. For that I am grateful for this program, and hope that the connections and friendships I made will continually resurface throughout my life.
「さようなら」じゃなくて、「行ってきます」よね? :)






