Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Cramming Your Already Sensorily-Overloaded Brain with Tons of Info, or... Orientation Week, Day One

Here is a very loose recap of my first couple of days in Japan... My memory's kind of fuzzy on the details, but let's see how much I can remember.

Day One
Incoming CSU IP students! When you stay at the Hotel Sunroute Takadanobaba, make sure to partake in the breakfast buffet because you get free vouchers and the food is hardcore yummy. The first morning I spent too long getting ready so I was only able to run in the last five minutes and grab something really quickly. T_T

It was raining and I didn't bring any proper shoes for the rain so my feet got absolutely soaked through! (My hair has also frizzed like CRAZY, which sucks because it takes forever to iron it.) Because it was raining, we took a bus to Waseda, which Kazaoka-sensei paid for and toured the campus just a little bit. We stopped by her office on the 3F of 6号館 (Bldg 6) and picked up our orientation materials. She passed out some plastic portfolios, and it was funny because there were only two colors: pink and black... and not nearly enough black ones for the people who wanted to receive them. So I got stuck with a pink one, as did a bunch of guys, haha.

Bora and I 
Erek 

We then headed over to 19号館 (Bldg 19), which is the building for 国際教養学部 (kokusai kyouyou gakubu) the School of International Liberal Arts or SILS, where we will be taking most of our classes. I sat next to a random person so that my new friend Bora could sit behind me. Turns out his name is Erek, he's been in Japan for a while already, and his cell phone is the awesomest shade of blue ever!

For lunch, a bunch of people came over from the International Circle 虹の会 (Niji no Kai) and took us out to lunch. I met the nicest girl ever named Kiki★ and a few other really nice people; we all went to 松屋 Matsuya together, which is a fast-food gyuudon place. [For the record, I should just say that most of the fast-food gyuudon/donburi chains are all pretty terrible... Matsuya, Yoshinoya, Sukiya; you can get way better gyuudon at most any mom-and-pop gyuudon restaurant in Japan and for fairly affordable prices.] The rest of the day was spent walking around the Baba (short for 高田馬場 Takadanobaba) and Waseda area, and checked out a hyakkin, or ¥100 shop. The nickname comes from 100円均一 (hyakuen kin'itsu), which means "everything for ¥100."

When evening rolled around, we headed to an izakaya by our hotel called 天の天 (Ten no Ten). While Bora and I waited for everyone else, an oyaji walked by and totally ogled my chest because I was wearing a tank top... and I decided to never wear that camisole in Japan again. Which brings me to my next point: Girls in Japan expose very little of the upper body. If they do wear a camisole, it's layered over a light long-sleeve! I've seen plenty of J-girls wearing long-sleeve shirts, even in the ulta humid summertime.

At the izakaya, I tried beer for the first time and couldn't handle the bitterness, haha... ^^; I headed back to my hotel room early since my first attempt at drinking was a failure and watched some "A Clockwork Orange" with Kelsey before she had to head back to her room... And then someone knocked at my door. I opened it to find a large crowd of people and my roommie Chelsy who'd had too much to drink and had to be carried back. Everyone was really glad that I was her roommate (have they already suspected that I'm responsible?!) Erek sat in the corner making funny comments the whole time. Then everyone finally left, and I got to take care of Chelsy which wasn't actually that bad since she's super sweet-★