In Perpetual Motion: The Prorok Files

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Location: Tokigawa-machi, Saitama, Japan

21 June 2010

Flower Festival

The first weekend of every June, my town has an Iris Flower Festival. Maybe some of you remember reading about this before. I’ve participated in the festival twice before as a “Flower Festival Daughter,” for which dressing up in a Japanese summer kimono is mandatory, as is being as photogenic as possible for the day. Because the festival organizers are now friends of mine, because they seem to enjoy the “international component” that having foreigners work as flower girl festival greeters brings to the event, and because this was to be my last Flower Festival, I asked if I could have a few other foreigner friends join me this year (in past years I was always the only non-Japanese flower girl). All in all, there were 9 flower daughters this year, including 3 foreigners, and a good thing too. The cold, rainy spring we had kept a goodly portion of the flowers un-bloomed by the festival weekend this year. As more than a few people mentioned, instead of the flowers this year, they had us!


The 9 "Flower Daughters."


Happy run-in with some of my elementary school kids!


My aerobics class teacher and her family!


Our job for the day? Hand out brochures and pose for photos!

Of course there was plenty of time to goof off too. :-)

The town's "Obon" Dance Group.

Joy and Sadaf enjoying all that is good about Tokigawa Town.



Invasion of the hikers! This is how almost all hiking groups in Japan dress, and we get a kick out of the hiking appropriate gear seen on almost all Japanese hikers, regardless of the hike difficulty (or lack thereof).

And then the day was done and we were left to our own devices in the flower fields, still armed with cameras.









School Sports Festival

It’s School Sports Festival season again! Every late-spring, schools all across Japan are divided into teams and pitted against each other in a display of athletic prowess…manifested in anything from “fastest of the fastest” sprints to large-group jump-roping. It’s a great event, but it cracks me up every year just how much practice and preparation (starting minimum 2 weeks prior) they put into this event. The closest thing I remember to a school sports festival growing up was at the end of the school year when the teachers can’t be bothered with being in school any more than the students and decide to have a “sports day” in a day or two instead of having regular classes. When I talk about advanced preparation for Japanese school sports festivals, I’m not just talking about creating artistic decorations. I’m talking about all-team, ALL event practices, cheering practices, athlete oath practices, the whole 9-yards.

Tokigawa’s schools are small enough that only 2 teams are created for sports festivals. The JHS I’m at this term, Tokigawa JHS, has a Red Team and a Blue Team. This year I was assigned to the Red Team. That’s all well and good, but in attempt to be as supportive-appearing of your team as possible, all the teachers and staff try to wear as much clothing of their team’s color as possible. The last Tokigawa JHS sports festival I attended, I was on the Blue Team, which was all well and good since I have a seemingly endless array of blue clothes. Red clothes, however, are a completely different story. I improvised an outfit with a pair of Indonesian “wind-pants” (as I’ve dubbed them, because in a stiff breeze, anyone within viewing range gets to see a lot of leg!) and a red handkerchief whose origin I don’t recall. Ever since my first school sports festival here in Japan, since I’m not asked to participate in events, nor am I given a job for the day, I made it personal crusade to be as goofy of a “cheer-girl” as possible, which in Japanese “professional goofiness” standards, doesn’t take much to pull off. When you’re the only one who doesn’t show up in a classically matching track suit, it’s instantly radical.

I’ll let the photos speak for the day with just this final comment on the results. The kids, especially the 3rd graders, for whom “this year’s” sport festival is always the last before graduation, take the day very seriously. So when our team lost by just 10 points, there were lots of tears. On the other hand, considering how our team looked during practices, I was so thrilled we lost by only 10 points, you would have thought I was on the winning team.

Opening cheers, and "warm-up" run across the sports ground to the opening ceremony area.

Oh, boy! Here they come! ;-)

Politely watching the other team do the same.

Opening ceremony; team leaders student oath to the Principal.

The morning is filled with running races.


My 'support outfit' this year. They put me on the Red Team, which is all well and good, but the only red clothing I own are sarong-esque pants from Indonesia, a red handkerchief, and red tennis shoes. They were just asking for me to look ridiculous (take note in these photos how all the other teachers are wearing some sort of pleasantly matching track suit). ;-) To cap it off, I put pom-pom streamers in my hair.

Me last year as a member of the blue team. Little do they know that it could be worse.

The lizard did not originally come with the outfit, but hey, I'm open to impromptu accessorizing.

Immediately after the lunch break, there is what amounts to a very serious cheer-off. ;-)



(^_^)\/


And then the afternoon is packed with "fun" events like mass tug-of-war!



Changing ends.

Another "fun" event they call 'The Typhoon."

And bean bag basket toss.\

End of festival team recap and words from the 3rd grade team leaders, for whom this is the final sports festival. There are always lots of tears from the losing team. This year unfortunately that was my team! But on the up side, we lost by MUCH less than I thought we would! We didn't have a very strong showing in the practices.... ;-D

Actually, this year there were a lot of tears from the winning team too. Go figure!

2010 Sports Festival winners!

Ice Cream as a Science experiment

On a recent Friday, I made ice cream with liquid nitrogen with the 1st years at my junior high school. It never crossed my mind that this was even possible. Now, why is it that I remember only burning sugar and electrocuting pickles in Science class during my school days?! This would have been so much cooler, and tastier!

Pre-mixing wash-up.

Just a teacher's personal canister of liquid nitrogen sitting around the classroom, you know, the usual.


The ice cream is underway...well, the cream part at least!


Measuring the sugar.


Adding the vanilla.


Here we go with the ice part!


Ooooo....childhood Halloween memories flooding back now!


Again, so random to me, a science teacher walking around the classroom pouring liquid nitrogen into mixing bowls. Because liquid nitrogen is just the most obvious ingredient to add to a cooking project after eggs, sugar and vanilla. ;-)







Alrighty! We have a finished product!


Oishii! (Yum yum!)



I had absolutely no shame wandering around the classroom stealing spoonfuls of ice cream the students unwisely left in the mixing bowls...of course, under the pretext of checking to make sure everyone's ice cream had turned out alright. ;-)