supernutjapan: (Default)
Hi! Everyone alive? Happy New Year to you!

COVID did me in for Christmas and New Years was spent taking care of family so I was totally AWOL for at least three weeks, but I'm back to reconnect.

I spent most of my holiday watching TV and reading - once I was feeling better. 2 eps of Alchemy of Souls a week - still loving it. I think this week is the season finale and I really want the story to continue - there is so much potential.

After watching The Crimes of Grindelwald, I had the urge to rewatch the Harry Potter series and did a binge watch. I'm not quite sure if I even had watched the later films before, my memories of the story is so mixed up with the books. So, while I was watching Harry Potter, I recognized one of the characters, Dean, one of the Gryffindors that continues to appear throughout the series but doesn't have much of a role except for making Harry Jealous by going out with Ginny for a brief moment. I realized I'd seen the grown up actor in a show I'd watched recently - How to Get Away with Murder. Here's him there -

and here's him in The Chamber of Secrets -


I obviously recognised him because he has not changed at all LOL

I unfortunately was unable to attain my goal of 70 books last year but I did finish two Haruki Murakami books: The Norwegian Wood and IQ84 during the holiday. The former was a rather dark love story. I enjoyed it solely as a period piece and the Japanese style. The second was a sort of fantasy horror and much more interesting. The setting reminded me of Spirited Away (Ghibli) - I could totally imagine some of the scenes in the anime form. It's totally an adult book with lots of sex scenes.

Today is my first day of work. It is a national holiday though - Coming-of-Age day.  20 year olds - or those who would turn 20 before April - all dress up in suits or kimonos and many trapes off to a City Hall to listen to some boring speeches by government officials, mostly just to reconnect with theiir buddies from JH or High school. I saw a mom taking pictures with her son in the park this morning when I took Hana for her walk.

Audrey will take her high school entrance exams in February. This will be her last semester of JH. If she doesn't pass the exam for the public school, the private school we applied to will accept her, so at least she has a place to go and that is a relief. I think she really wants to get into the public school and that would be easier for us, since the cost is quite a bit less. But the private school is the one Alex went to and is a very good school too so either would be good for her I think.

That's about it I guess. Hope I can take a peek at your posts soon.
supernutjapan: (Default)
I have many interesting conversations with my ladies in my adult class on Wednesday mornings.
Today, we talked about some social/environmental issues and opinions on these to practice passive voice. We were talking of animals in zoos and whether they/we thought that was good or bad. One woman was saying how she appreciated the zoo when her sons were young, but now she thought that animals should not be kept in cages and that they should be in the wild.

I was reminded of how when my kids were young I also appreciated having a zoo to take the kids. The kids spent hours looking around the zoo. We spent a whole day there for a measly 50 cents - it was usually a dollar (or so) but it was half price when we went because it was Children's Day. I also remembered how we also went to a museum on the same day to see a dinosaur exhibit. The boys LOVED dinosaurs, but they went through that exhibit in like, five minutes. We spent at least 10 dollars a person to get in. Probably 20 for adults. I thought, What a waste of money! Of course, I naturally appreciated the zoo a lot more. Now that I don't have small kids, and I am a bit older, I don't feel the necessity of a zoo as much. I understand how people would feel it was just cruel to animals. And in this day and age, when museums provide digital tours, it seems that we could do without actual zoos and have 3D digital wilderness tours instead. Is there such a thing? Then I began to think of the cost-effectiveness of the zoos here and how much more expensive museums are and began to wonder why. Doesn't feeding the animals cost a ton of money? And yet, zoos are subsidized. While museums and other attractions are not. Why is that? Museums should be subsidized so that more people can go and enjoy the art or archeology or whatever.

** I also thought a bit about how zoos actually protect animals from extinction as well - how if we did do away with zoos for the sake of letting the wild animals roam free, they would be out of sight, out of mind, for those of us in populated areas, and be killed off for various reasons including poachers.

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I had a weird day today. I was in a crazy chipper mood with the kids in the afternoon, much less tired than I usually am. In my first class, my students were doing a test. At the beginning of the test was a dialogue for which the children had to fill in the blanks. The dialogue went like this:

Happy Birthday, Jenny! How old are you?
I'm seven years old.
This is for you! (giving present)
Thank you!

We had practiced this dialogue together so they knew it by ear, but can't really identify the written words much yet, and they couldn't remember how the dialogue went so I was trying to give them a hint by humming to them the rhythm of the conversation. Here, you can listen to me humming it. (You can share your version too if you like LOL) One of the students totally got what I was getting at. She is much more musical than the other, which may have helped. I was giggling away as I hummed it, I thought it was soooooo funny at the time.

Oh, I made pizza with cauliflower crust today. It needed a little more work for next time - more sauce, more cheese, but it turned out pretty good and the food made me happy even without anything weird in it (as far as I know...). OK, I just looked up cauliflower and it "is full of vitamin B6 and folate, which your body uses to make neurotransmitters like serotonin and dopamine." So, I guess maybe that was it???! Plus, I ate a ton of lentils yesterday. That could have done it too. LOL!

Anyway, I thought I'd share a bit of my interesting/weird day with you.

I am watching How to Get Away with Murder. I am in Season 2, I think, where Conner and Oliver break up... or rather, Oliver dumps Conner. I sat there going, "no. no. no...... no don't do that.... oh, no.... poor Conner awwwwwwww!!! *heartbroken*" OMG Conner was so adorable and kawaisooooooo :((((( booo. I'm still watching Shameless, but not continually because I can't watch it on TV. HTGAWM was so dark and depressing at first I wasn't intending to keep watching, but as the students gradually got to know each other and bonded, there were good friendship moments, there were more romantic moments and sometimes even comedic moments and it got much better.

The site where I was getting my free digital books was shut down. Boo. I know, I know, but it's the only way I can afford to read as many books as I want. I wish I could get a proofreading job or something so that I could read a gazillion books for free without feeling guilty about it.
supernutjapan: (Snow White)
1. What is your favorite candy/treat to hand out?
When I was in Canada, I made caramel popcorn balls. That was fun and yummy. In Japan, we don't have neighborhood kids coming around but, my kids friends used to come for a few years in their elementary years, and our school has a Halloween event where we make groups out of kids that want to participate and go to their homes... For the school event, I like to prepare little baggies of various treats - some chocolate, some candy, some biscuit, some cracker for variety and to make sure they all get something they like. For the kids' friends, usually they come after the school event so I gave them leftovers from the party where we give out handfuls of various treats.

2. What was your favorite thing to receive as a treat when you were a kid?
I never went trick-or-treating as a kid here in Japan, but I would have loved snickers, peanut butter cups, caramels and cupcakes. My kids went with the kids from our school etc. It was nice to be able to have snacks to give them for snack time for days (or weeks!) afterwards XD

3. What was one of your unspoken rules on Halloween?
I don't know what this question means, but when I was little, kids here were really truly scared of ghosts. I think their parents used them to scare their children into doing what they were told. My mom told me how she decided not to celebrate it in her English classes (yes, she used to teach English in our home) at that time because of that. I sometimes get kids in my classes that are scared of the cutest pictures of ghosts and witches etc. I try to make the songs more jovial, explain how the jack-o'lantern is like an amulet to protect them from the evil instead of being evil itself, etc. to help them enjoy the season. I also never dress up as anything remotely scary at the party because I don't want them screaming or running away from me LOL

I don't think there was any other "unspoken" rule.

4. Did you ever win a Halloween costume contest?
No, I've hosted them, and it is really hard to judge such things and keep everyone happy. This year and last, a little preschool girl won. Last year she was Cookie Monster. This year she was some character from an Anime I didn't know. The costume itself was meh for me. I doubt everyone chose her for it. It was more the fact that she herself was adorable LOL

5. Does your neighborhood decorate?
A few autumn wreaths here and there. The families we visit for our trick-or-treat event sometimes decorate the door area for the kids enjoyment. We did see some other houses decorating this year, but not many.

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Sorry for being away for so long. I just couldn't find the energy to even press the update button recently - probably due to stressing out about the Halloween event.

I haven't been able to find canned pumpkin this year. I've been making pumpkin desserts using kabocha (squash) and they've turned out really well. Kabocha has a deeper flavor than pumpkin and less moisture, but can be used instead of canned pumpkin. I steam it and squash it! Ha!! I made some pumpkin bars, and yesterday, I tried (paleo) pumpkin pie. I am looking forward to getting some Granny Smith apples that I ordered and should be getting in early November. 10 kilos! Will share some with a friend though.

I read two books in a series by Brandon Sanderson -the first being The Way of Kings. I really enjoyed Mistborn and the Well of Ascension so I thought I could expect something similar in quality at least. Unfortunately, I felt he wrote in too many side stories that were unnecessary. I finished the first and second books in the series but I skimmed through a major portion of the second in particular. Skimmed, as in - glanced at the middle of the page on my smartphone, and didn't stop turning pages until I found the name of a person I wanted to read about. I got some good skimming practice at least. I started several books that were supposed to be good witch related books but they were also just not in my alley. I read How to be a Good American Housewife, about a Japanese woman who married an American marine right after WWII. She would have been around the same age as MIL.
It was really good. Fiction but based on fact and gave me all sorts of ideas for a book of my own.

Our Halloween Party was Sunday and I didn't have any energy to do anything but procrastinate (read books) and prepare games etc. before that. Monday I had a day off and although I was tired and my back ached from standing all day the day before, I was able to clean up and organize all the Halloween stuff for next year. Here on out, my Sundays are going to be fully booked again until the end of the school year with cookie making, Christmas Presentation practice etc. I had choir this morning, and Sunday, I think I may have choir until night.

I'm still watching Shameless, now on a free site on my computer because our Netflix doesn't get the later seasons. I am sort of glad Fiona is finally leaving, although she is stupid for doing so - always running away from her problems - but it is better for the others that she does leave. She is definitely an alcoholic.

I like to watch tv while doing my morning exercises, but there is nothing good to watch recently. I am practicing my choir pieces instead by listening to a practice recording. Our concert is on the 20th.

Hope to come back again soon!
supernutjapan: (Default)
1. Do you tend to remember book titles or authors the most?

Book titles, definitely. But I forget those too, if they aren't particularly noteworthy. I don't really note the characters' names either, unless I have to tell someone about them. That is one of the biggest reasons why I started my Supernatural blog back at LJ, writing about specific episodes. I wanted to remember as much as I could. I included quotes, songs etc so that I could.

2. Do you play any memory games to try and improve your memory.
No, not regularly, but I will tell you that since I have started eating kale everyday, my memory has definitely improved. I can remember Japanese kanji characters that would not have popped into my mind otherwise. I looked it up and found that there was actually a correlation so, definitely recommend it!

3. What is the very first movie you remember seeing in a movie theatre?
I didn't really watch movies at the theater when I was small. My parents may have taken me to see some Christian movie, but it doesn't come to mind. The first that comes to mind at the moment is Neverending Story. Next is Back to the Future. I stood for that one - the theater was packed.

4. What sense do you tend to rely upon the most?

Sound, I think. I also use a lot of music and rhythm to teach English.

5. When was the last time you felt lonely and what made you feel better?
Writing here, of course :) Also, cuddling with my daugher. We are hug buddies. She will just randomly come to the living room for a hug and is always there when I need her. My two boys are affectionate and there as well but hugging them for long periods of time like I do my daughter would be inappropriate :P

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Our barbecue planned for yesterday was cancelled due to a huge typhoon passing by. We will hopefully be able to have it on the Second of October.

Alex plans to go on a trip to Hachijojima, an island off the coast of Tokyo, on Thursday. Audrey is going on a school trip from Tue to Thur to Kyoto and Nara. Hope the weather clears soon.

I'm stressed from various work issues. Two teachers are quitting; one at the end of September, one at the end of October, and I have to find appropriate teachers to replace them or do the classes myself. I'm reading a mystery called Troubled Blood (Robert Galbraith) which is surprisingly engaging considering none of the characters are remarkable in themselves, and I'm still watching GRIMM - skipping through it for the best parts. This week we have two national holidays - today is Elderly Day, when we are supposed to say thanks to our elderly, and Friday is the Fall Solstice. I don't often have national holidays off, but I do this time so this week is only three working days. That doesn't mean I'm not working: writing mails to students and teachers and trying to salvage the teacher situation, but I don't have to teach, so yay.

That's about it I guess. Hope to get to some of your posts later.
supernutjapan: (Default)
1) What's the most cluttered spot in your home?
Oh man, that's hard, but I'd say the dining room table. For some reason, it is never tidy. One side of the table has my computer on it and behind the computer tends to be a place where things just accumulate. Mostly stuff that can't be put away because they are important and need to be dealt with, or are needed constantly.

2) What's your method for decluttering?
Making piles and putting things in their right places one by one. I try to do it every time I stand up or have a reason to go to another room. Having some music on helps with motivation when I have to do major cleaning. Having something to watch on TV is nice when I have a pile of clothes to fold.

3) What are your favorite cleaning products?
Wet wipes! I hate using cloths - just how they get dirty and stinky. Especially since COVID, seems like disinfecting wet wipes are the best choice. I try to have some on the table and in the kitchen so I can wipe the counters regularly.

4) What helps get you motivated to clean up?

Ummm, when it gets really bad? LOL My threshold is really high. Also, someone coming over will always do the trick.

5) What's the most organized spot in your home?
I think the stuff in our home is pretty evenly distributed. I can't really think of a place more organized except maybe the shoes and winter coats closet? LOL And maybe my video and kids games storage shelves, since we never use them :D If I use stuff a lot, it's going to get messy. I also am rather comfortable in it, up to a point of course. Right now, at the classroom, there is a tablet and a hand fan in the penstand on the left (to keep it upright) and on my right a bunch of pens and pencils, stickers, batteries, magnets, pins etc scattered around as well as a bunch of sightword cards and my coffee thermos. It's comforting :D

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Biggest news - Alex got the travel agency job!!!

He has a final meeting online where he will be officially accepting the offer and they will explain what will happen from here. It is a hire for next April so he will be at his part time job and staying home for a while yet. He is super excited and gungho on beginning his studies for certification in the highest level of the English language test here, and also the translation/tour guide certification. I'm crossing my fingers that COVID and other World Happennings don't ruin things for his new career. It would have been surer with the furnature firm but this is what he wants to do so YAY!

Otherwise, I will be working on my personal writing projects during the summer. Today is my last day of work! I was super busy because I have an additional class - one of the teachers is ditching it for a summer camp job. She is quitting as soon as we can find a replacement so she has no motivation to be a responsible adult till the end :( But YAY!

Sunday, we have our choir performance. We will be leaving home at 7 to get downtown by 9 for some practice before our performance at around 11. We will be wearing our dresses for the first time. Hubby wants to invite MIL over for dinner on Sunday to celebrate the end of classes, Alex's job etc. We may eat Eel (Unagi). YUM. Plus, they will be cleaning the house while I'm gone at choir so double YAY. LOL

Monday I am going to REST! I think. Wednesday I have a makeup for one class in the morning, no biggie. Thursday is our 3 person conference with Audrey's teacher. gulps. Sometime there I will be meeting with a potential new teacher. Other than that, I will be FREE. I can't wait.

Still waiting for Julian to finish his drawings for my readers... I know he is busy with other stuff at school but I wish he would hurry it up.

I finished watching to the end of Season 3 of Manifest. Still enjoying it! I watched Persuasion. That was really good. I am now watching Virgin River. I was not really interested in it before but I'm ready for it now. Enjoying it, but it's not my favorite genre, obviously. Hope my favorites come back with new seasons soon.

Oh yeah, I am also reading The Martian, after finishing The Cradle series. I think I watched the movie of this up to a point then decided it was not for me. Maybe I thought I'd enjoy the book better and put it in my list then. It's ok, but again not super engaging.

That's about it for now.
supernutjapan: (Default)
1. What is the sweetest thing you've ever done for someone else?
I really don't know. This would be my opinion naturally, and often what you think is the sweetest/kindest thing is not noticed or appreciated as such. I like doing things for people I love, but it often takes me a while to think of so it usually doesn't make it in time for a birthday or other special occaision. I tend to do them when they come to me regardless.

OK, here's one. I don't think it is the sweetest thing, but it is something I consider to be sweet. A few Christmas' ago, I made little stollen buns for every member of my choir as well as the pianist that played for our concert and of course the teacher/conductor. That was around 17 members at the time. I made a double batch of stollen to do so, and it took a lot of time and effort. I kneaded in a lot of good will, with their delight in mind. I think they enjoyed them.

2. What do you wish people would do for you?
I don't expect anyone to do for me what I am unable to do for them, so every little kindness is really special. I think it is important to feel needed but also to receive acknowledgement for one's efforts.

3. What are your simplest pleasures?
I'm listening to some relaxing piano music now while I type, which is quite pleasurable. My breakfast time and snack time are as well.

4. What makes you feel all warm & fuzzy?
Doing something nice for someone, and seeing my kids being kind to others.

5. How do you define love?

There are various kinds of love. For example,
There is love for a child, which is a giving love and unconditional.
There is love for a friend, which is a sharing sort of love.
There is love for a spouse, which is a commitment.
There is love for a lover, which is physical.

Here is a definition that covers them all - Affection, benevolence, good-will and concern for the welfare of the one loved.
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It looks like we won't be able to go on a trip as a family this summer. Julian has school until the second week of August, and Audrey has cram school in the second week. I start work on the third week. There are a few days between Julian's school and Audrey's cram school but not enough to go far. I suggested a night at a hotel we used to go to, but the problem is Hana. We'd have to put her in a hotel of her own and that would cost extra. I'm still kind of hoping we can do that though.

Alex had his second interview with the furnature store and got an offer. He had his first interview with the travel agency and passed that so will be having another interview there. He will have to ask for an extention on the offer of the first in order to be able to consider both jobs. I hope he can get the extension. I am excited for him, and also dreading his leaving home.

We are getting a steady trickle of trial students but our financial situation is still strained. We got a new loan from a government financial institution to try to tide things over. Hubby keeps telling me to not spend so much on the credit card, but I think he needs to consider his spending before he worries about the petty food costs. We have three grown kids and I am only buying what we need to eat, and being as thrifty as I can. I think the biggest strain is the schooling. I hope our student numbers go only up from here. It's been really hard since COVID. So, even if we could go for a trip, we'd have to wait until the loan comes through. *sighs*

I suppose everyone has heard about former Prime Minister Abe being shot and killed. This was a shock to all of us here in Japan. According to the news, the 41 year old man shot him with a handmade pistol (Firearms are illegal in Japan except for hunting rifles). He seems to have served in the Self-defense Force for a while. I really can't believe it. If this was the States, I would assume such a leader would have had bodyguards. But this is Japan. No one expected such violence. It's like a scene from a scifi novel. Hubby is of course ranting about it being a conspiracy.

Books - I'm reading a fantasy series by Will Wight, called the Cradle. I think someone mentioned it - if you were the one, thank you <3 I am enjoying it and going through it like wildfire. I thought for sure there must be a game based on the series, but I haven't found anything. I'm not particularly into games, but my son is making a sword fighting game atm at school and I could totally see the series as a similar game.

Did I mention that I had watched the first episodes of the new Dune series?  I enjoyed it and hope to see more. I am watching Manifest at the moment.
supernutjapan: (Default)
I finished watching the final season of Peaky Blinders.Honestly, I would have been happy with Tommy actually being sick and killing himself (not killing himself despite not actually being sick - that would have been awful). It fits the feel of the show, I think - him choosing how to die. After he put his affairs in order and said farewell to everyone, the fact that he was not actually sick was very anticlimactic. If they were going to have that turn of events, (because they want to make a movie, they can't kill him, I get it) they should have done it sooner - before he finished what he wanted to do. Then he could make a comeback in style and the series could end with him retiring (including a lead to what the movie could be about, whatever). I finally got why he couldn't kill himself with a gun several hours after I finished watching - Polly prophesied that he would not die by a bullet right? LOL I loved having that revelation while mulling over the show, still enjoying the afterglow.


Also, I finished rewatching the previous seasons of The Umbrella Academy, since we get a new season on the 22nd. It was awesome. I had forgotten alot - even the ending of the last season LOL I am so looking forward to the next season! The guys of the group are all hilarious, the situations were so crazy(like Peaky Blinders), I laughed a lot. I also cried several times - the phone call by Allison and Luther to Claire was super touching. I think the show is a very realistic portrayal of damaged "heroes" too - like the Boys in a way but I like this so much better. The Boys is just too crazy for me. All those people getting blown upgets very tiresome and disgusting in The Boys, while the same in TUA has much more of a tragic humor feel to it.

That reminds me that my daughter asked me while I was watching TUA if I was watching some Harry Potter 'verse show. I thought it was interesting that she would say that because it does have a similar vibe to it despite it being much more adult oriented.

Book-wise, I've been reading a self-help book which is rare for me. It came up as a suggestion at a digital library. It's called How to Talk to Anyone (Leil Lowndes) and it gives pointers on how to get along with people, how to make conversation with people even if they do not have the same interests etc. It is something I am terrible at, and also proud I don't care in a sense. The reading is slow but it is not boring and there are good insights so I thought even if I don't put them in practice in my own life, I can still use them in future writing - if I ever write anything of note. Since I started reading it I've watched two movies Almost Like Heaven and Perfect Pairing, in which I recognized the same tricks in action so that was pretty cool.

The rainy season has officially begun. Rainy season in Japan is not like other Asian countries. We don't suddenly get a shower, we get drizzle. It's like winter in Vancouver, except the weather is warm and muggy. The worst combo. The only thing I like about this season is the hydrangeas. They look beautiful, especially in the rain. I've been taking a lot of pictures of flowers and Hana (Hana actually means flower in Japanese so LOL) on my walks recently.
Read more... )
supernutjapan: (Default)
1. What kind of bugs do you see outside this time of year?
I've seen some ladybugs and been bitten already by some mosquitos. It is still cool enough that they are not out in force though. That reminds me of a conversation about blood types I had with my daughter. She is yet to find out what blood type she is and we are always guessing. She thinks she is B and I think she is AB according to her personality. I'm B, hubby is AB, so another possibility is for her to be A... but if she is, she doesn't fit the profile.

2. What's your favorite food to eat outside?
Rice balls! Although I am not eating very much rice at the moment, they are the quickest easiest lunch.

3. How much rain is too much rain?
A week straight. It happened one fall due to typhoons, and I was quite depressed by the end of it.

4. What are you celebrating this month?
It's our wedding anniversary, so I suppose we will do something for that. It's also Father's Day this weekend! I need to remind my kids so they can get something for him.

5. What's your favorite color combination?
For the clothes I wear, I like the blue and white combo the best, I think. My favorite color is magenta so I like to combine it with black or white as well, but I don't have many clothes in magenta. My daughter's randosel (elementary school bag) was brown with pink embroidery. I liked that combination too.

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1. What is the last book you read and what book(s), if any, are you currently reading?
I read Sitting Pretty by Rebekah Taussig and Firekeeper's Daughter by Angeline Boulley.

I am now reading Poor Miss Finch By Wilkie Collins. It is a story about a young blind woman, twin brothers who come in contact with her, as well as a woman - the narrator - who was hired to be her companion. I started reading this book because the author of Sitting Pretty recommended it as writing in the true manner of a disabled person rather than the romantic view, plus I had read the Moonstone by the same author and remember having liked it. I am enjoying his writing style immensely and have been grinning and laughing through it. The characters are so interesting and well described.

The other book I mentioned above - The Firekeeper's Daughter - I finished the day before. It was a murder mystery story about a (half) Native American girl and her community. I thought it was very unique but also that more people in such unique positions should write stories based in their unique community or situation. The story was very well written and I enjoyed her viewpoint - the author is also Native American so it is real and I felt safe believing her and finding interest in the culture etc., y'know?

2. How about moving pictures? Are you a fan of any TV show or movie right now?
I'm just doing rewatches at the moment - which is why I've turned to books.

3. What's your favorite genre, and why?
Fiction about someone(s) with some sort of super power or ability and/or is different, unique. I need humor and prefer a bit of romance as well.

4. If we were all evacuating the planet, and you could only bring 3 unique works of entertainment for posterity, which would you pick? Let's just assume that we've coordinated it so there are no repeats.
OK, this question is a bit difficult to decypher but if "works" means one single game/song/book etc., and that we could share them with others and read/use theirs as well, and as [profile] notte0 mentioned there is a possibility of no extra electricity...
1) Score for Sound of Music - musical entertainment, theatre entertainment... I am assuming others will bring other good musicals along.
2) Game - trump cards -so many games can be played!
3) Books - Diana Gabaldon's Outlander series
Ultimately, these are not important, though. As long as we have imaginations, we will have stories. As long as we have instruments (including voice) we will have music. As long as there is any kind of extra tools, wood or paper like substance, there can be new games and even instruments. I think a lot of writers of apocalyptic stories forget that - or at least place less importance on it.
5. Do you make new works as well (fannish or original both count)? Or is that not your skillset/interest?
I have written fanfiction for Supernatural and Lucifer: I enjoy writing and would like to write a series about my life. I've started but am still unsure of whether to make it fictional or not. I have also written some readers for kids - still waiting on my son to finish the drawings. I've made a couple of songs for my own enjoyment. I've made a couple of card and board games for class.


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Yesterday, I went to immigration to renew my residence card. I am a permanent resident, thanks to my dad, who applied for all of us before we left Japan when I went to college. I thought it would take the whole day so I took the day off from classes and asked another teacher to sub. I left home at around 9:20 after taking Hana for her walk. The first thing I did was get into a picture booth near the station and get my picture for the card. I then went straight to the office via train. It took around an hour in all because I had to ride a bus from the station. The bus was filled with people all going to the immigration office. There were a couple of women in front of me talking in English. One who was talking so I could hear her voice sounded French or Spanish. The other was Asian. Maybe a Japanese woman helping her friend. We all piled off at the stop.

Once I got to the office, I filled out the form and then picked a number - should have picked the number first. And, waited an hour and a half or so to be called. Once I was called, I gave in my form, passport and present residence card, and waited another 30 min or so. The worker had a question about my address, since we have our own condo address and also the address we live at. I explained, and I waited a few more minutes. Voila. My card was ready.

While I waited on the uncomfortable government office bench, I mostly read my book Poor Miss Finch mentioned above. There was a cute little girl with her dad that I watched for a little bit and imagined why her dad would be bringing her to an office, what sort of job he might have etc. They spoke English, and the girl didn't look half Japanese either, so he must be here on business. And there was a big screen TV that I watched for a few minutes as well. There is a long continuing show about boxed lunches made by various people all over Japan. They showed one young guy who works for a fish processing(?) company and has his own Youtube channel introducing interesting/rare fish. I laughed when the show commented he only had 34 subscribers :D but kudos to him for trying to increase interest in fish. Recent trend is straying away from traditional foods using fish. Young people often don't like fish at all, especially those where they have to pick the bones. Alex, my son, loves fish and often watches shows on Youtube - fishing and fish carving and the like. When he goes fishing, he always carves and cleans and cooks his own fish.

My business was finished at around 12:30, and I was starving, but I had no plans for what to do for lunch. I really hate going to a restaurant by myself for some reason and had a feeling that if I let myself, I would give up the challenge and go home directly. But thinking about my hunger and how it would increase as I put off eating, I stopped at Tachikawa station - the station closest to the immigration office, to find a restaurant that would hopefully have something I would be happy with eating. Remember, I am off rice and bread, mainly and get most of my nutrition from veges and meat/protein. So I needed a place that had a meat platter, or a big salad. There was one store that had meat platters, but they had an all-you-can-eat bread bar, which I thought might be too tempting. Then there was an Okinawa/Hawaiian style bar with taco rice bowls. I didn't know they were rice bowls at first. The salad and avocado on top looked perfect. I went in and found that the bar didn't have paper menues. They had QR codes to access the menue on your phone. A first time for me. As I checked the menue, I found that there was no salad and no meat platter either of course. I decided to ask if they could just give me the top of the taco rice bowl. They were very accomodating. The salad amount was not enough to satisfy me, though, and by this time it was 2 o'clock. Time for my after-lunch snack in my usual schedule. I had my snack with me so, as soon as I finished the "salad," I ate the pecan bars that I had brought, along with the coffee in my set menue.

Tachikawa is full of fashionable clothing stores and if I had the energy, I would have done some shopping. As it was, I was really tired and decided to go home. I did some grocery shopping at my own station before trudging home. When I got there, it was around 3 and I could have taught my classes myself, but I decided to have a rest instead. I lay down in my daughter's bed since hubby was listening to Youtube in our room, and slept. I taught one double class at 6:30 and then ate way too much dinner because of the unsatisfactory/stressful lunch. Also, my eyes had been bothering me since the day before. Something happened when I put my contacts in at that time, and my right eye had been smarting all day. I forced my contacts in that day as well, and by the end of the day it really pained me to take them out. I went to bed early because I was still tired and out of sorts.

Today, I came to work without my contacts in and am now huddled over my computer trying to see what I have written LOL I don't know how the classes are going to be. I have my contacts just in case and would put one or two in if I can't do it well enough without. Yeah, thinking about it, I will probably have to because I won't be able to see the numbers on my CD player. I really need to buy some glasses. I need someone to be my fashion advisor, but hubby can't find the time.

Anyway, gotta go and rest my eyes before class.
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I started this on Saturday, May 28th and rewrote it to include two weekends ~

Saturdays, as I have mentioned before, have been our special family dinner day for many years. With my schedule, Saturday night is the only night that I feel my freedom of having a day off the next day. It is also my busiest day of the week so I am exhausted and ready for a reward for my hard work. Recently, various things have made Saturday inconvenient. My daughter has cram school from 7:00 - 9:00 for one. Then recently I had to add another class at the end of the day, making my finishing time 6:30 instead of 5:30, so it is harder to prepare a special dinner afterwards. But last Saturday, when I asked Audrey if she still wanted something special for Saturday even though she couldn't be there for dinner, she said she did. So last weekend, I got Julian to buy some steaks and beef for taco salad, and I made a nice dinner. Hubby joined the boys and me for dinner and I had some wine but hubby didn't drink because he had gone out to drink the day before. He asked me on the day if he could bring his mom for dinner, but since we hadn't really cleaned house and I had no time on Saturday, I asked him for a rain check. He asked me again later that night if we could ask her for dinner the next day. This made my already busy Sunday even busier and it meant I wouldn't have much time to take a break. But, hubby also offered to go to COSTCO for some chicken and pizza so (other than clean)I only had to prepare a salad, and we hadn't seen MIL in a while so I grudgingly said yes.

Last Sunday, I had choir practice, so I cleaned up the living room in the morning, and hubby got the boys to vacuum while I was out. After dinner, we spent some time playing Old Maid. It is a simple game but it was quite lively and fun. Julian won the game once without even playing by getting sets on all of his cards. It is interesting to watch everyone as we play. Hubby always blabs about how he thinks I (whom he has to pick from) have the joker. Alex and Julian both have good poker faces but I could tell Alex had the joker for 4 out of the 5 games by how Audrey and MIL reacted when they got it LOL

This weekend, Audrey had her Sports Day. It was her last Sports Day before JH graduation but attendance by family members was restricted to one per family and I had classes during her events so Hubby went. I was hoping he'd watch her 100m sprint but he didn't get there in time and just watched the relay. It was a very hot day. The kids were allowed to take off their masks as they ran but hubby said many did not. Several kids also had to leave early from heat stroke.

On Sunday, I had a school admin meeting to attend in the morning as well as choir. That was again rather stressful for me, especially since I have to take Hana for her walk too. But, the admin staff could all come only on a Sunday so it couldn't be helped. I asked Julian if he could take Hana for the walk and he said sure, but I felt better about it on the day and took her myself. We met a couple of friends and I took some hydrangea pictures. At the office meeting, my husband lowered his mask when he was talking and it made me a bit uncomfortable. He then went on to tell everyone at the meeting that he hated the way the mask chaffed at his mouth as he talked so please excuse him for lowering it. I noticed he scooted back a bit so that he was not "in range" of the workers in front of us. We talked a bit about the possibility of removing masks in classes, but decided that we would do so when public schools did, since parents were probably still worried. Teaching a language with a mask on is very counter productive, and I am considering using a plastic mask instead so the kids can see my mouth at least, but ... I really hate those things and for my comfort, I'd rather have a mask. It is a difficult issue. We also talked about how we have gotten to know people during these three years only with their masks on and it will be a shock to see their whole face. The jaw line is a game changer in the way a face looks, you know?! Has anyone experienced this shock? I've experienced it once with some new students I got during the epidemic.

We also talked about one of the students who was quitting, that I mentioned in my previous post. He was a real challenge, especially at 4 years old when he first started. He was unable to sit and listen and do drills with the other kids and it was disruptive. I suspect he is on the spectrum. He got better though, and the other kids also got better at "not being disrupted." His kindergarten told his mom he couldn't stay with them because they didn't have the resources to take care of him, but when his mom told me she was thinking of quitting a few months back when this happened, I told her that the other kids were able to sit in their chairs and listen while he might go off and start rearranging my CDs by color or the numbers on the felt calendar board, and that as long as he was in the room, he was learning something. He was welcome to stay. So she decided not to quit. Recently, he was also able to do some of the drills with them and I was really happy about the improvements. Unfortunately, he also seemed to have family issues. His dad kept using the money that they needed to pay us so the bank transaction never went through. Finally, his mom phoned recently and she told the staff she really appreciated what I had done for her son but she needed to start working so she couldn't bring him anymore (WHAT KIND OF FATHER WAS THIS?! A GAMBLER??). Anyway, we talked about how sorry we felt for this little boy - how it was a tragedy that he was kicked out of his kindergarten and of course his dad's issues which made it impossible for him to go to a proper kindergarten with care and also to continue studying English with me. I am including this story because it ties in with what I write about later.

At choir practice, the topic of conversation was again masks. Ko Matsushita, the composer, is now in Germany. He told our teacher about the mask situation on his trip - on the Japanese airline, the attendant announced that everyone had to wear their masks even when they were sleeping, and that they would wake anyone who happened to fall asleep without. This was regulation. Our teacher felt that was excessive. Then when he got to Germany, no one was wearing masks; even at the airport. We collectively despaired at Japanese society and our inability to take the first step. We also talked about how, children who have been raised for the past three years to always wear masks outside of the home now feel naked without them and that they will have a hard time letting go. I realized that when I went for a walk that morning I had seen people without masks but I myself had kept my mask - except when I pushed it down when no one was around. There I was despairing about Japanese people and I was the one who had kept my mask on. Next time, maybe I need to be more assurtive and act the foreigner so other people feel comfortable taking them off too.

Saturday night, Audrey joined me on the couch. She would not have appreciated The Shooter, so I suggested we watch Goonies together. I had wanted to watch an oldie with her for a while and it was the perfect opportunity. She resisted at first, but agreed to try it and she enjoyed it! Yay for mom/daughter movie night <3

I went on Goodreads to see what my friends were reading and picked up on a book called Sitting Pretty by Rebekah Taussig. It's non-fiction, written by a woman who uses a wheelchair. She writes about disability, her life with disability, how people view it and how it should be viewed to create a better society. It reminded me of several posts written and read here and on Dreamwidth: a Friday Five that made us think of eye glasses for example - how school children would cruelly tease others with glasses only a generation or so ago and how, now, it is nothing out of the ordinary since so many of us have this disability. I mean, unless I think carefully about it, I don't even consider my terribly short sighted eyes as a disability because I can live a normal sighted life with glasses or contact lenses. And just as importantly, I have no interest in even having surgery to regain eyesight, having been this way since I was 8 or 9. This was a key point written by the author - that non-disabled people think all disabled people want to "be cured." The book also reminds the reader that we are all disabled in one form or other. How much of a minority the perfectly functioning and highly productive body and mind is. I mean, it's probably not even "normal" LOL And if anyone has that sort of body and mind, this WILL eventually deteriorate as they grow older even if they are never in an accident, get sick or otherwise find themselves suddenly lacking. So, creating a society where disabled people can function more easily is for everyone's benefit.

In another post, I talked with a friend about how I felt that there was some similarity to my life as a foreigner in Japan to a life of a blind person in society of seeing people, and I felt this again when the author of Sitting Pretty talked about her life as she grew up in a family (whose other members did not have her disability), and as she entered society around her. When you are a child, and in your own family, whatever you are is normal to you. You figure out how to do things the easiest way you can in your situation and you are comfortable in the love of your family. When you enter school or otherwise start to interact with people around you, you see how they see you and you start seeing things differently as well. This was a big shock to the author and it reminded me of how similar I felt when I entered kindergarten here in Japan. All of the kids around me were Japanese. I was the only foreigner. The children were not mean to me that I recall. The teachers would not let them be. Some of the kids I am sure were enchanted by me as many were in the years to come. Total strangers would come up to me and ask to be my friend - I remember two older girls at a public pool in particular - while once in a while I'd get kids trying out their English by shouting "This is a pen!" at me on the street or more often calling me Gaijin (outsider). In both these situations I felt strongly like I did not belong. I wanted soooo much to have black hair and brown eyes like all the other kids and just blend in!

I grew up among Japanese children, but when I entered the missionary school, I found that many of the children there had not. They had been at the American missionary school since kindergarten and grown up among children mostly from the USA. They were again very different from me in that sense. I felt then that I (and a couple others like me) had a sort of advantage in understanding the culture and the language around me, while these children were sheltered by their parents and had missed out on so much. These kids went back to their home country as soon as they graduated, and I don't think any of them came back to Japan to live. Even my best friends who had similar experiences as me ended up living in the USA. It may have been difficult, but they integrated and became a part of the society there. I, on the other hand, went to Canada for university but never felt at home there and I came right back to Japan when I graduated. Culture-wise, I feel most at home here, and that is a fact. Because of my parents' decision to immerse me in Japanese culture, I acquired the language. And because of the timing of entrance into American school I was able to also acquire English - enough that it is my main language as it should as a Canadian. I am very grateful to them for this gift.

But, I will forever be alone in a sense. There is no one who really understands me here or even in my "home country" Canada. Of course, there ARE... but there are just so few with my background that I will probably never find a person near me. I will always be the outsider looking in. The Japanese people will always see me as an outsider. They treat me differently (most of the time they are super nice and helpful - as they are to all outsiders) and I will always be discriminated against when it comes to housing, getting a loan etc. I recently went to the bank to do some business. My husband had changed the CEO from him to me but we had not changed the name at the bank. I asked them how we would go about doing that, and the man started spouting things about how since I don't have Japanese citizenship, this might make it impossible for us to get a loan in the future. I asked him to forget I asked. Truly, I felt so vulnerable at that moment. I don't have any true friends here either - they are all superficial. Don't mistake me, my situation is not pitiful and the fact that I do not have close friends may not all have to do with my situation. I am blessed in many ways and I am usually completely happy. I have these platforms to vent, I have three awesome children and dog, I love my work, I enjoy my hobbies, which do not require any RL friends. It wasn't my intent to make you feel sorry for me, just to explain how I related in some ways with this person in a wheelchair in the society of mostly walking people who are taught to "be nice" to disabled people but whose efforts are superficial; and the difficulties she had finding affordable accessible housing etc.

The book also talks about how people with disability might feel they have to make do with something other than what they really need or want - marry someone for the sake of health insurance for example, instead of love, because of the real fear that they cannot survive otherwise and/or even because they believe they are a charity case and don't deserve the perfect happy ending. This is not something only people with disabilities feel either, is it? How many people actually marry because they are truly in love? I'm thinking at least half of the people on this planet convince themselves they love the person enough but are really marrying for the security or because they don't believe there is that perfect person out there for them, or that they are just not pretty enough or smart enough or worthy enough to get that person. I (and she) will tell any of you who need to hear this - it's better to be single, I promise.

The book is packed full of stuff I was glad to learn specifically about people with a mobility disability, as well as feelings I could relate to in my own life, and she is a great writer so I enjoyed the read and it made me think, a lot! I recommend it highly.

Anyways - sorry for the very very long expose. Some pics of the hydrangeas under cut.
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I started this post on Wednesday but now it's Saturday. I am including the Friday Five and posting!

1. Do you buy and use canned food?
Yes. I buy a lot of canned tuna, salmon and sardines for salads and tuna melts; canned tomato sauce, diced tomatoes for chili/meat sauce and stew. Canned beans are too expensive here so I use the dried variety. I recently bought some Campbell soup, but I don't do that very often.

2. What is your favourite canned food?
British spelling - must be from the Commonwealth. I am not particularly crazy about canned food. Tuna is quite useful.

3. Do you like some canned food better than the fresh or dried version of it?
No. They just have different uses. I mean, how can you make tuna melts with fresh tuna? And canned tomatoes are much more mellow and flavorful than fresh tomatoes and better for meat sauces. But they are not better. Just used for different things. Raw tuna is yummy, as are tomatoes.

4. Do you have a can that just sits at the back of the cupboard? has anything weird happened to it? or do you still plan on using it in the future?
I use up the canned goods I buy pretty quickly, but the minestrone has been there for a while. Of course I plan on using it but maybe later in the year when it gets cold again. I just went to the cupboard and found a couple of cans of "yakitori" that my husband bought and I have no use for. It's canned skewered chicken with a sauce similar to teriyaki. I think he bought it to eat with his liquor and never felt like eating it. He also buys canned mackerel, which I don't like particularly but he likes to use instead of tuna sometimes. It is cheaper and is supposed to be very healthy with DHAs. It has a distinctive smell though and is not a very good substitute. OK, I take back my answer for number 3. I think I really prefer mackerel fresh or half dried like the Japanese do. Not that canned mackerel doesn't have it's uses. It's just better fresh.

5. What is the weirdest thing you have seen canned?
Bread! It is probably not the weirdest out there, but I just can't think of anything else now. And, I just remembered I have some canned bread stashed away that I got from our water guy. They are for emergency use so I have it stashed for such an occasion. That might have been a better choice for number 4 too, since I don't know if I will ever use it before the due date. I did taste one and it tasted fine, though.
DSC_0606.JPG


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The weather is perfect right now. I just wish it would stay this way all summer: hot and dry during the day, cool at night, like summer in Vancouver.

The grass at the park has been mowed like the shaved head of a Japanese high school baseball player. Unfortunate that the clovers, which were blooming all over, are mowed down as well but, at least we won't get bit by mysterious bugs. Hana roams around the park on her long lead while I can sit down for a while on the lawn and start this post.

Workwise, two kids are quitting: one with social issues whom I would have been relieved to see the back of last year but was doing so much better this year, it is unfortunate; and one girl who just doesn't want to continue any of her naraigoto (afterschool lessons) and her parents are leaving the decision up to her, which I cannot understand. It's just not the same as sports or music. I wish they would just keep her in class until JH, when she starts studying at school in earnest. She is in fourth grade and will most likely forget most of what we studied by the time she enters JH. Such a waste of many years of study.

Walking through the park with Hana, we came across some JH students whom Hana decided to say hello to. The boys were trying to pet her from above, and she wouldn't let them, as usual, so I told them to go from below and they got a few scratches in and exclaimed as to her cuteness. Then Hana continued down the stairs on the way out of the park when her lead got stuck and I needed to go back and pull it free. The end of the (30m) lead has a metal ring, which was hooked on a tiny bit of concrete stickigg up from the edge of the path! I looked down the stairs at Hana and saw a JH girl trying to avoid her by going around the stairs to the side. I felt apologetic - it was obvious this girl didn't like dogs - even though Hana wouldn't do anything to frighten her. As I went down toward Hana, the lead got stuck again! on the edge of the stairs! The girl, meanwhile, had made her way to the top of the stairs, and most probably hearing me exclaim, loosened the lead for me. Arigato gozaimasu! Sweet kids❤️

I made a new dessert today - lemon bars. I bought some ripe lemons on a discount and was waiting for an opportunity to use them. The bars turned out pretty well, except the tapioka flour was not evenly distributed so the curd was lumpy, and the whites were not completely mixed in so I had some white spots. I think the problem was that the curd was not made on the stove but baked directly onto the bars. I might try it on the stove next time, then bake it after it has hardened a bit if that works better, or at least sieve it to get the lumps out.

I am watching Mentalists. I had watched some of it long ago but never had the urge to watch it again, to the end. It's mostly hilarious with it's sarcastic humor, but also thrilling and scary in places when the serial killer almost gets to them. I love it. I am almost at the end, watching Season 6. Two fifth grade girls were on their way out the door after a class as I watched the last bit of an episode where finally two of the characters got together. It was an excellent scene and I was laughing at a remark when the girls came over to see what I was laughing about . I had my earphones on of course. I told them about the kiss and they said they wanted to see it - I was surprised but I guess they are on the mature side for their age. I showed them the scene and they told me the couple looked like they were eating eachother's lips LOL It reminded me that my daughter had said the same thing once. I was amused.

Well, I guess that's about it. Some pics under cut.
see pics )
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I'm writing this while I wait for the Friday Five to be posted. If they don't post today, I guess I will snag an older one from archives.

So this is from March 26, 2021 -

1) What spring holiday(s) do you celebrate?
On February 2, we have Setsubun, a "holiday" (not a national rest day, just a special day) to cleanse the home of bad luck/demons and bring good luck in by throwing dried beans. The designated food for this holiday is the long, uncut sushi roll - which you are supposed to eat without cutting... not like in this picture. We used to celebrate this day when the kids were smaller but now, not so much.
Setsubun
(Picture left to right of thick sushi roll (looks like raw salmon and tuna and egg rolls inside), a two horned demon mask worn by a grown-up to be the brunt of bean throwers or the perpetrator of screaming children, and little dried soy beans in a traditional box type snack bowl.)

On March 3, we have Girl's Day, celebrated by decorating the house with some special dolls, eating mixed sushi and Sakura-mochi. I bought some sakuramochi and made sushi for dinner this year for my daughter. Unfortunately, we don't have a doll set. I really want one though.
sakuramochi
(Picture of a four step array of the imperial household dolls, starting at the top with the prince and princes, three women attendants in the middle with two sets of round celebratory rice cakes between them, five men musicians below them with drum and lute, and at the bottom two guards with bow and arrows on each side and two sets of bowls for celebratory food for the prince and princes, and some more colorful diamond shaped rice cakes in the middle. And, a picture of Sakuramochi. There are two kinds, traditionally of Western and Eastern Japan, left to right respectively. The Western Japan type is pink sticky rice with bean paste inside, wrapped with a pickled cherry leaf. The Eastern Japan type is a pink rice pancake with bean paste inside, also wrapped with a cherry leaf. These leaves are edible. The saltiness compliments the sweet snack.)

On May 5 is Boy's Day, renamed Children's Day because for some reason if you have Girl's Day it's fine, but Boy's Day is sexist. March 3rd is not a national "rest" day, but Children's Day is. It is part of a three day holiday called Golden Week, which, combined with April 29th, can make a nice long holiday for company workers who can take time off.

We celebrate it by putting up carp flags on a pole outside of the house. Usually at least three carp. One big blue one as the father, One a little smaller red one as the mother, and another color for the child(ren). People often also have a warrior's helmet as a decoration inside the house if they have boy children (as opposed to the dolls for Girl's Day). I used to have one of those helmets when I was small. I think my parents got it as a gift for some unknown reason, me being a girl (an only child) and all.
Kodomonohi
(Pictures of the cylindrical cloth carp "flags" lifting horizontally in the spring breeze and a traditional warrior helmet decoration.)
The snack designated for this day is Kashiwamochi.

Kashiwamochi
(Picture of kashiwamochi - a white rice cake folded over bean paste, wrapped in a big leaf. This leaf is just so the rice cake can be transported without sticking or drying out.)

Also, as part of my own heritage, we celebrate Easter - more as a Spring celebration and business event than as the Christian holiday. It is used as an excuse to enjoy the cherry blossoms - also called Hanami. When I was a child, my mother would make Easter bread called Paska every year. This is a bread with lots of eggs in it, baked in a round tin. It is my dad's heritage, since his grandparents came to Canada through the Ukraine. They were Mennonite Brethren (sort of similar in beliefs to Amish), one of the founding fathers in Holland, who were forced to move to Germany and then to the Ukraine and finally to North America due to their believe in non-violence. The Mennonites took with them the Ukrainian Paska recipe with them and it became part of their Easter tradition.

Anyway, I carried on this tradition and actually made Paska for the event participants for many years until hubby told me it was too time consuming and costly. I sometimes still make it for my family.

2) How do you celebrate it?
Answered that above.

3) How was your celebration different in 2020 and/or 2021?
No difference since it is a private celebration without need of partying.  I think we cancelled the Easter Picnic in 2020 but resumed in 2021.

4) What special foods do you make or acquire for your spring holiday?
Also answered above.

5) Is there special music for your spring holiday?
There is a famous children's song for Setsubun, Girl's Day, and Children's Day

  ***********************


I had to write today, not only because it is Friday, but because everything is going well but I am not feeling it. I think it's because I am worried about the Easter Picnic. It's not like I have to prepare much for it, and I've done it for so many years it is not worth any worry but I just don't really enjoy the thought of "an event." Especially one I am leading. I have this nervous feeling in my stomach all the time. It will be fine once I get into it - it's just the waiting that's killing me.

What we usually do for our Easter picnic is hide Easter eggs around the park for the kids to find, go through some preposition and nature vocab like "under the tree" or "in the grass", then after they find the eggs and tell me where, we separate into families and eat the lunches we brought individually. Then, as the kids finish their lunches, we go on a nature search to recognize Spring, and do some activities on a checklist individually with their parents, like kite flying, playing with a ball, grass sledding etc. At the end we get together for some group games like egg racing and What time is it Mr. Wolf depending on the age of the kids. It is the same every time, and it would be nice to have something different to do... any ideas?!

Today went to a party wholesale warehouse to get some stuffings for the (plastic) Easter Eggs. I was going to just put little chocolate eggs inside, but realized that some of the smaller kids maybe are not allowed chocolate. I'm thinking maybe puzzle erasers might be something they'd enjoy.

Yesterday the weather was nice and the cherry trees at the park were full of blossoms so I got a lot of pictures. Hana usually doesn't sit and pose for me, but I had a few plastic bags I rustled which tricked her into thinking I had snacks and I got a few good pics :D

Unfortunately, it rained quite a bit last night and I am afraid many of the blossoms fell. I hope we have some left for Sunday!

On to books - I read the first Dune book. It was interesting enough that I finished it, but it was not as good as I remembered it to be. Specifically, the description was seriously lacking so that not only could I not see it in my mind, the situation was very hard to grasp. Also, the main character being a super human (smarter than a computer, the strongest fighter, having the power to read the future) with few relatable qualities - it is ok for the first book, but I don't know if I want to keep reading the second, the beginning of which has turned me off considerably. Reading about a revolution leader against tyranny is fun, but reading about a hero turned emperor being cruel, making errors and accumulating enemies, not so much. Not in my present frame of mind anyway.

I started reading Dune because I was getting tired of watching TV - more specifically rewatching shows I'd already watched like Agents of SHIELD. I did finish watching the second season of Bridgerton and enjoyed that. I like that they are setting the stage for other romances to give them more focus in future seasons. Yay the Bold Type is back! I've started watching that now and it's looking interesting :)

Also, I suddenly felt like going to my old diaries from high school and over and reading them over.  They are all quite interesting and reminding me of events I had totally forgotten.  I might introduce some anecdotes that could be entertaining.

Now to Hana and cherry blossom pictures from the park -

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