Posts Tagged ‘English Summer Seminar’

Thursday August 10, 1989

Accounts

¥484 photos: English summer seminar
¥1480 groceries
rice ¥1320,
bread ¥160
¥10000 Payment: English Summer Seminar
¥1964 Total expenses

Journal

We have been in Beppu almost a week but have spent only two days in our apartment. We got back about 15:30. It felt so good to be home and alone. I tried to organize the apartment again and to establish a routine. Little things take a long time.

Doing Laundry

Because the washing machine is so small, I have to do three loads when in America I’d do only one. But there is not enough space on the clothesline to hang out three loads. So I can do only one load at a time. Now I know why there is laundry hanging from every balcony every day. The small loads are better for our small family but it means I have to do laundry every day.

The clothesline itself is quite different. Not a “line” at all, it consists of two aqua plastic poles, the modern equivalent of bamboo poles, that run almost the length of the balcony. I guess that this system developed in response to the need for airing out futons. (Although, in this neighborhood, most futons are hung over the balcony rail). For small items, such as socks, one clips them to special hangers. The clothespins are plastic, and very, very small compared with American clothespins. The Japanese housewives slip the arms of shirts through the poles to hang them, but I just put the shirts on hangars and hang them as if they were in a closet.

If only the closets had clothes rods! But they don’t, as they are not designed for hanging clothes at all but for storing futons. I have no wardrobe and no dresser, so I’ve put a bookshelf in the closet to put folded clothes on. I have yet to discover a solution to my long dresses. Maybe that’s one reason so many women wear skirts and shirts sets instead of one piece dresses.

Grocery Shopping

I must shop for groceries every day. We walk about 10 blocks to Kamegawa’s market street.


Riding my bicycle down the shopping street in Kamegawa towards Marushoku.

I can buy only as much as I can carry. Also (even though we have a large refrigerator by Japanese standards), it is small compared to what I’m used to. There is not much storage area at all in the refrigerator or the kitchen (which is about 9′ x 9′). So it is better to shop daily and buy small portions that will stay fresh.

The supermarket where we shop, Marushoku, is comparatively new and modern next to the other stores on the main shopping street in Kamegawa. But it is half the size of the smallest grocery store in Austin, the Tom Thumb in Cassis Village. Some food items we readily recognize–like Ritz crackers. Others are quite mysterious. For me, used to the prices at Whole Foods Market, the prices here are not outrageous–certainly nothing as bad as I feared. For example, a package of chicken meat is about ¥300. Prepared meals of tempura and sushi are each under ¥300. Compared to restaurant prices or even to a ¥100 yen soft drink from a vending machine, supermarket prices seem very reasonable. I noticed that grapes are ¥300 yen in the supermarket but that the same package can be had at the green grocer for only ¥100. However, I find it easier to shop at the super than make a lot of little stops. Also, my presence flusters the shopkeepers which in turn makes us flustered.

Bathing

Bathing also takes time, planning, and instruction. The first night we were here Murakami-sensei called to say the housemother and next-door-neighbor, Negoro-san, would come over and show us how to take a “basu”. We got ready to go out, thinking she was going to tell us how to take a bus, but it turned out she came to show us how to take a bath.

First, I must fill the plastic, aqua bathtub with cold water (this apartment has no hot running water). Then I must turn on the recirculating heater. Then I sit naked on a stool in the bathroom, and dip water out of the bathtub and pour it over myself, soap down, wash, and rinse off. After I’m completely clean, I can get into the bathtub. This part is heavenly and I would give anything to have a bathtub like this in America.

The first time I pulled the plug, I was alarmed when the water went gushing out on the bathroom floor. Not to worry, though. This is the design as there is a drain in the middle of the bathroom floor. Not only does this simplify plumbing installation and maintenance, it simplifies cleaning the bathroom.

Like everything else, bathing in Japan takes much longer than jumping into a shower in America. If I’m just soaping myself down, it’s not too bad but if I have to shampoo my hair, the entire process takes almost half an hour. I think I’m going to cheat and shampoo my hair in the bath. I can’t see any reason why I can’t get soap in the bath if I’m the last one to use it and I don’t run the dirty water through the heater. I long for a shower.

Notes from 2009

I can’t believe now that I ever considered washing my hair in the bath. I do know that when it became winter our unheated bathroom with its unglazed window was freezing cold. So I would clean off and get into the bath. Then I’d lean over the side and wash my hair. But I never let the shampoo or conditioner get into the bathwater.

Like many things, I incorporated the Japanese-style “clothesline” into my life in Texas when I returned to Austin. I hung up a clothes rod from a closet outside on the edge of my porch and put my clothes on hangers to dry. I brought back a bag of those little clothespins, too–one of my many small purchases at the 100-yen shop.

 

Wednesday August 9, 1989

Accounts

¥1084 ice cream & cola
¥600 JQS allowance
¥1684 Total

  • English Summer Seminar
  • Oriana Tour

Notes from 2009

The Oriana

Still at the English Summer Seminar. This is probably the day that we take the field trip to the Oriana. I don’t have an expense entry for the admission (or a ticket). The seminar leaders must have organized it for the group.

Oriana Beppu Bay 1989

With access to the internet, I now can discover the history of the Oriana. Visiting it in 1989, it was just a duty associated with the summer seminar. I didn’t find it particularly interesting.

She arrived in Japan at 3.00 pm on Tuesday June 24 1986. She docked at the Hitachi Zosen Ship Repair Works at Sakai in Osaka. After renovations, she was towed to Beppu Bay. Oriana may have remained afloat, but became a sad sight, especially as the Japanese owners painted her funnels pink. The hotel venture generally failed and in 1995, the Oriana was sold, this time to Chinese interests. — SS Maritime

Postmark: Beppu August 26, 1989

The first week I was in Beppu, I taught at an English seminar for high school students. We were all staying at a hotel on Beppu Bay. As a field trip, we visit the Oriana, a cruise-ship-turned-tourist-attraction that’s anchored in Beppu harbor.

After two hours the heat, the sunlight, and speaking slowly in simple English phrases combined with caffeine withdrawal has given me a headache. So I decide to skip lunch and lie down in my room until afternoon classes began.

About ten minutes later, the phone rings. Why hadn’t I come down to lunch? I explain that I have a slight headache and I am going to rest instead. About five minutes later, the phone rings again. Someone else wants to know if I am sick and should she call the doctor. No. No. No. I am just a little tired and thought I’d skip lunch and take a nap. Just as I am about to fall asleep, the phone rings again. Someone barks something at me in Japanese and hangs up. By now I’m throwing pillows at the walls–goddammit! I just want to take a [expletive deleted] nap. I sit on the bed waiting for the phone to ring again. It does. It is Murakami-sensei. They’ve called her long distance and told her I was sick. She wants to drive to Beppu. She wants to call a doctor. She thinks that maybe my schedule has been too intense. She has talked with the other teachers and they think that maybe they should cancel my two-hour orientation. No. No. No. I feel fine, I lie. Listen, JQS and I are just on our way down to lunch now.

So I get dressed again and we go downstairs. Lunch is over and the dishes are being cleared away. We’ve come down for nothing. As we turn to leave, a man comes running up to us. He leads us to the staff room where two places are set with our lunch which we dutifully eat.

I have not had a headache since.

 

Tuesday August 8, 1989

JQS leads a group in the English Summer Seminar

Accounts

¥1000 JQS allowance
¥350 2 single scoop ice cream
¥1350 Total

  • English summer seminar