2007年6月28日木曜日

Saifu

On Saturday, I went to Ultimate practice. It was great. I haven't felt that strong and ready to play in a long time. It was hot, but it felt good. From there, I cleaned up in a restroom and then went on to Nara City, about another hour north. Saturday night was a pub quiz at the Wembley Crown pub, and I arrived a couple hours early. I had sushi at the kaitenzushiya -- the conveyor belt thing (but I ordered all my fish straight from the chef). They have one of my favorites, kobiko (flying fish roe), which is rare around here, as it comes from Hokkaido. After the fish, I shopped awhile and bought a shirt that says "SHIKA" in a parody of the Puma logo, and got some manga/anime presents for the exchange student at the school where I work. I went to a bookstore near the station that has English books and bought myself a copy of Lafcadio Hearn's Kwaidan stories and a present for a friend.

I left the bookstore and walked toward the station again. We're talking maybe 40 yards or so. I was headed to the ATM since I had spent most of my cash and needed some for the pub. And I noticed... my wallet was missing.

I emptied the bags I was carrying. I searched the ground around the bookstore and all along my (very short) path. I went into the bookstore and asked the counter clerks. I asked people in the shops around the area, even at the convenience store. Nothing.

So within 15 minutes of noticing the loss, I went to the very close Koban, or police box, and filed a report. That was an exercise in cross-cultural communication, for sure. Then I went back out and looked some more. Paddy and Cecilia showed up and helped me look, and then we went on to the pub, where they bought me a drink.

90% of wallets lost in Japan are returned, and usually with contents intact. It's insane. I was hoping against hope that this would happen for me. I'd left my number with the police and with the bookstore.

I didn't go home Saturday night, as Sunday I was teaching people to juggle at the International Arts Festival that we put on here in the prefecture. It was a great day, though pouring down rain most of the time. I also met with Mr. F. and we practiced English at the "Laugh Laugh" izakaya (and drank a lot of beer -- his treat).

On Monday, I still hadn't heard anything, so I knew I had to take action, since some important things were missing. First and foremost, I needed to replace my alien registration card. I went and got some passport pictures taken and then went to get the new card ordered. I will supposedly get this in about a month (!). Then I went to the bank to cancel my cash card and order a new one. Later that night, I emailed my bank in the States and reported my ATM/VisaCheck card stolen. They cancelled it quickly and issued a new card, to be sent to my mother. I think called my credit card and notified them about the loss (and at this point, I was thinking possible theft) of the card. Again, they'll send it to my mom.

I went to work on Tuesday, and around 10:15 AM, someone called the school -- my wallet had been found! So we called the guy who found it, who owns a tonkatsu (breaded, fried pork cutlet) shop in Nara City. After my last class of the day, I got on the train and headed back to Nara (2 hours one way, about 1500 yen round trip). I found the shop, got my wallet, and went to the police box to report that the problem was solved.

In my wallet -- all my cards. My gaijin card (alien registration). 1000 yen. It's amazing. Unfortunately... all the cards are useless now. I have to take the gaijin card to the town office and give it to them, as it's no longer any good. So probably 4000 yen in phone calls, trains, and passport pictures later...

I'm grateful to have the peace of mind of knowing that no one robbed me or destroyed my property. But what an annoying thing to happen during an otherwise excellent weekend.

2007年6月27日水曜日

Shika FUN

transliteration

"Kill you tell me how to get to together."

That's what my student heard and wrote when I asked her to listen and write "Can you tell me how to get to the river?"

2007年6月20日水曜日

More Ultimate

Last weekend was an Ultimate frenzy. Friday night I had Thai food in Osaka with Yumiko. That was great! Really good food. Then on Saturday I went to Nara City and met the team at the park next to Todaiji. There were some "shika fun" (deer shit) land mines, but it was ok overall. We played a couple of games, switching up teams a couple of times. It was really good and showed us some of our strengths.

Here's the pic:


Afterwards I went home and cleaned up and then met Eriko in Yagi for sushi. That was cool -- Tachibana is a really good restaurant. I had sea snail again... eh. Not my favorite, for sure. We had a great conversation.

The next day, I met Lucas on the train and we went to Osaka for a friendly game with the Osaka team. That was really great, but that showed us a lot of our weaknesses. Of course, they're probably in the top three in the region, and could potentially win the tournament.

At any rate, it was a great weekend. Unfortunately, I also plowed right into Danny, a guy on the Osaka team, and bruised my chest. I'm afraid it might be bone instead of muscle, which makes me a little worried. I haven't felt up to really working hard on the field since Sunday night. Hopefully it'll be better this weekend.

2007年6月12日火曜日

More Ultimate Practices

I missed this one:



but made it to this one and played hard, even though I was a bit hungover:

Immigration

Just in case:

http://www.immi-moj.go.jp/english/tetuduki/