So what have I accomplished so far? What about work? Have I humiliated Tuscaloosa, yet? The job (teaching, translation, etc) has been enjoyable, and nearly all of my students are energetic and bright. The city recently held its annual speech contest. After a solid month of afterschool coaching and steady improvement, I was proud to see my students perform. The school (6th junior high/第六中) that I’m teaching at this semester placed well, and I was honored to give a guest speech at the event. It was an interesting challenge to adjust my language to the level appropriate level of complexity for EFL middle-school students, while trying to convey and extend a metaphor for the challenges of language learning. In addition to teaching, I also have a variety of interesting duties as both a Tuscaloosa ambassador and member of the Narashino Board of Education. I have judged a neighboring cities speech contest, attended conferences, collaborated on teaching demos, etc. Hopefully I will be presenting some corpus research to Narashino’s English teachers in the upcoming months. I am also helping to translate correspondence between the mayors of Tuscaloosa and Narashino, and I'm writing a series of articles about Tuscaloosa for the monthly newsletter put out by the Narashino BOE.
I have done only a little traveling:

a late attempt up Mt. Fuji during a September weekend, a day trip to Kamakura with the Narashino International Association,

night cruising around Ginza and the Bay Bridge,
an evening visit to the hermit bath house,
Chinese tea-buying trip to Yokohama, etc.
Portions tend to be smaller here, and the average meal out is a bit more nutritionally balanced when compared to what I’m used to back in the US. While going cheese-less is tough, the daily routine I’ve adopted is already having a positive effect on my body. I generally cook (I’m already making yogurt!), but my curiosity inevitably leads me out to try a new restaurant at least once a week. The food is good, but I already miss real American burgers, latin food, cheese, and the ability to purchase dried beans cheaply. Rumor has it there is a COSTCO in Narashino. My refrigerator is small, though, (like what you would find in a dorm room) so going there could be dangerous.
My Japanese has been up to snuff so far. Since I’ve arrived, I’ve been very pleased to discover just how much text I can now digest (quickly). Of course, I’m not sure what can be said about what comes out the other end…. Anyway, the input is good and the conversations I have vary enough in topic/content, so that my active vocabulary continues to grow everyday.
I’m happy to be here, and (as trite as it may sound) each day presents a new opportunity for discovery and evaluation.
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