Author Archives: DELively

Mothers Day, With Eggs and Steak

A couple very rare things happened this week:

1. I remembered Mother’s Day occurs every year.
2. I remembered Mother’s Day before Mother’s Day–rather than the morning of–which allowed me to figure out what day it was on.
3. Figuring out what day it was on allowed me to make some plans.

Granted, the plans weren’t that complicated. I bought wine on Saturday and made breakfast today (Omelet with spinach, cheese and ham; side of bacon; rye toast) and had our youngest do dishes after.

I was then able to cocoon with a bunch of small projects that got pushed aside by other things whilst She Who Must Be Obeyed attended a PTA meeting, because Mother’s Day is totally when you schedule meetings (something like that).

During the meeting I also took our youngest to the store to buy chocolate and decorations. (Note: She decorated the chocolate bar with a ribbon and other decorations.)

Then, in the afternoon, She Who Must Be Obeyed, completely misunderstanding the purpose of Mother’s Day (sit, do nothing, enjoy being pampered) made chocolate chip cookies. Granted, if you’re going to do something when you could be doing nothing, making chocolate chip cookies is an awesome thing to do.)

In the evening I cooked steaks for all of us–three medium rare and one well done for our youngest because she’s a communist. Something like that. She Who Must Be Obeyed bought the salad and I pan fried the steaks. (Note: we are not allowed to use any kind of open flame grill in our apartment because our landlord and neighbors are also communists. More on that in a future post.)

The steaks turned out reasonably well (for cheap steaks) and we all managed to eat too much. She Who Must Be Obeyed and I couldn’t choose between wine and beer so we ended up drinking both.

Later, after some “severe promises” were made, our oldest washed the supper dishes.

Now, all I have to do is remember all this again next year. I could set a reminder on my phone, but I’m sure I’ll forget to do that.

Counting Paper Before Breakfast

I should have gone out to eat, but it’s not much fun by yourself. It also didn’t take that long to do.

Today was inventory day at my odd little ink reselling business. I have a bunch of product to move and I needed to list the inventory so that I could offer it to people with the ultimate goals being 1) making a little money and 2) getting it all off my floor.

All this reminded me of inventory day at Taco Tico. (Note: I am not responsible for their bankruptcy/failure to pay taxes although my management skills, quite frankly, did not help the situation.)

One of my jobs as shift manager was to control the outflow of napkins (servilletes to those in Europe) and paper products. The main rule, if I remember correctly, was that, although Taco Tico had a more “family” style, with food served on regular plates rather than in cartons, napkins were only available on request. This is because when we handed them one or two napkins, customers would accept that. When facing a napkin dispenser or a stack of napkins, however, customers would take half the available supply.

This seems like a minor thing, however, once a month the store manager and the area manager would take over the restaurant after closing and count everything in it The napkin rules came about after they decide that napkins were disappearing too quickly. They then presented a complicated mathematical formula that was supposed to prove this but I just said “Sure, yeah, control napkins. I get it”).

After the inventory, which took a few hours, they always went to a truck stop for a middle of the night breakfast. At one point the area manager implied that I would one day be involved in the counting. I assured him, in so many words, that wasn’t my style.

Instead I ended up counting ink bottles and trying to figure out how to get them off my floor. And there was no breakfast after.

Days Back After Days Out

All things considered, he wasn’t too bad. But he did try to play games.

Today was our first day back after the three days of Golden Week holidays. Students, although most of them have been attending club practice, had easily gotten used to the idea of coming to school without going to school. This meant that classes were a bit rowdier than usual and a few students, at least in my class, tired to get away with things they hadn’t tried to get away with before.

In my first class, during the warm up (which involves students standing to answer questions, getting to sit when they answer, and the last man standing starting the new row) one particularly rowdy student decided he could blurt out the answer without raising his hand or phrasing his answer in the form of a sentence.

When I ignored his answer and chose someone else he got pouty and refused to answer the next several questions. Eventually he seemed to realize I’d keep him standing all class until he answered and he quickly raised his hand and answered in a sentence.

The rest of the class went well and that student tended to finish his work quickly. After that he took advantage of his “free” time to put his head down and take a nap. (Since he was finished I let him rest, especially as he would disrupt the class if awake.)

The rest of my classes went well, although every class had someone try to cause trouble. A JHS 1 decided he didn’t need to do any work at all and another JHS 3 decided he could sleep before finishing, This act earned him the first of his classes “yellow cards” (more on that in another post).

Now it’s time to settle into the weekend and very briefly ponder what the students have in store next week. Then I’ll quickly forget what I pondered and enjoy the weekend.

In the Belly of the Buddha

I got swallowed by a Buddha today, although I did enter by the side entrance.

Because today was the last day of my Golden Week holiday, I met up with an old friend (and former photography teacher) in Kamakura to take some pictures of the big Buddha stature at Kotoku-in.

The Buddha statue at Kotoku-in.

The Buddha statue at Kotoku-in.

The Big Buddha is made of bronze and stands 13.35 meters (43.8 feet) and weigh 121 tonnes (267,000 pounds). It is one of those places I’d always intended to visit but had always decided “there’s always next week”.

The big concern today was crowds, especially on the small coastal train line. We were lucky that neither train we took was that crowded (i.e. there was actually room for people AND air, rather than just people).

The entry fee of 200 yen ($2ish) makes it one of the best deals in Japan (not counting, of course, the money and time spent getting to it.

Despite the crowds around the statue, I managed to score a photo with no people in front of it and was able to get inside without too much of a wait. (Although it did cost another 20 yen). The inside would be more interesting to architects and engineers than it was to me, especially as it was too dark to take good pictures.

Looking up through the neck of the Buddha. It literally has "No Mind". There's a lesson there, I suppose.

Looking up through the neck of the Buddha. It literally has “No Mind”. There’s a meditation lesson there, I suppose.

I like the Buddha and could be persuaded to go back. I like that it seems to have a slightly different expression from different angles.

Contemplating the power of having "No Mind".

Contemplating the power of having “No Mind”.

After seeing the Big Buddha, we went to Enoshima, a picturesque rock/island just off the coast in Tokyo Bay.

Unfortunately it was even more crowded and we opted to avoid the main stairs and wander off toward the Marina which turned out to be rather boring.

People on the main path up the hill at  Enoshima.

People on the main path up the hill at Enoshima.

It was a good day, even though we chose the wrong path on Enoshima.

Now it’s back to work, for a day, then there’s the weekend.

 

Updating and Swearing and Pondering

I spent more of today going “what the hell is going on” than I’d expected, although I had expected to spend some time saying that.

For various complicated reasons, I have three laptop computers that as of right now are not being used much. I used to use the oldest at the school where I work until they suddenly cancelled all access to the network by computers that weren’t owned by the school. The second I got on a whim because it was cheap. The third is a netbook that was given to me by a friend when he no longer needed it (as he’d joined the Cult of Mac). All it cost me was a curry lunch.

I’ve used the oldest to test out various Linux distros. I mostly keep it because it has a great keyboard (at least it down NOW after I fixed it). The second and third as work computers when I have classes in Tokyo.

However, for the past few months all the computers have done little more than sit on the floor collecting mold and dust. As today was the middle of the Golden Week holiday, I decided I’d better turn to them on to see if they still work and, as necessary, update them.

I also needed to charge their slowly dying batteries.

I had no problems with the newer computers, but when I got to the older one, I had some troubles. I couldn’t update the Linux distro (which led to minor swearing) so I downloaded a couple others. I used to use Linux as my main operating system on this computer  (because English and FREE) until the school where I work changed printer models and I couldn’t get proper drivers. (Everything works well in Linux until it doesn’t and then you need a degree in computer programming to make it work.)

Eventually, after a couple ruined discs filled with distros that didn’t work, I got the old laptop working and then pondered getting rid of it. The newer computers have nice keyboards, too, and there’s no reason to keep the older one around.

Well, there is one reason, the DVD/RW drive on my desktop isn’t working so the old Linux machine is the only one I have that’s capable of burning CDs or DVDS which I occasionally need to do as part of my job. The trouble is, I now need to find a place to store all of these that’s not the floor.  But that may involve making other decisions. (More on that in another post.)

Another News Cycle of the Same Cycle

I was pretty sure I’d seen what was happening on TV before. She Who Must Be Obeyed said I had but not with that family. This proved that the only things certain in Japanese are death, taxes and maps verses navi’s.

As we are in the middle of Golden Week here in Japan, there are certain TV traditions that must be upheld: there will be endless reports of the endless traffic jams at the beginning and end of the holiday, reports on the number of people taking a couple days of to enjoy a full 10 days of holiday and a dad with a map will compete against a dad using a navigation system in a race to the same location.

This race usually involves a car full of mom, dad and at least one kid with patience of, well, a kid. Dad A puts his faith in himself and his driving instincts and Dad B buts his faith in technology.

Dad A chooses byways and sideways that often seem to lead in the wrong direction which Mom A is more than happy to point out. Dad B does similar things but uses the navigation systems on-the-fly traffic reports to help choose the correct path.

Along the way each tends to take a pit stop to allow family member to buy souvenirs and “evacuate”. I don’t remember if this is a requirement or not. I also don’t remember if there’s a prize other than pride.

I watched this race a few years ago and I vaguely remember Dad A winning, but not by a significant amount (maybe 15 minute or so) as most famous places can only be approached by a few routes. Today, when I saw the same events happening in similar types of cars I was convinced it was a rerun.

She Who Must Be Obeyed told me it wasn’t, although it was exactly like things we’d seen before so it kind of was. It was a rerun with different players.

That actually made sense. I don’t know who won. Because I’d seen it before, more or less, I didn’t bother watching the ending.

One Student Enters, Another Student Leaves

There was an accident in what’s emerging as my worst class today and that gave one of my worst students a chance to be bad.

The funny part is, the sleeper in that class stayed awake. (More on that in a minute.)

Early on in the class (which happens to be first period) I noticed a puddle on the floor. That puddle led to a bag which happened to belong to a bad student who used the opportunity to check his bag and clean up the mess as a chance to disrupt. He laid a chair down and used the back as a seat so that he didn’t have to sit on the floor. He made a couple trips to the restroom to rinse out the towel he was using to sop up the mess. He talked with the guy in his usual desk. (Note: I always move them to different chairs.)

I proceeded with the class without him and only lost a couple students to his distraction. He eventually got bored, finished and went back to his seat where he acted bored and annoyed at any requests that he actually speak/do work.

As for the sleeper, he surprised me by being a relatively decent student today. He not only didn’t try to sleep, but he actually did work and didn’t try to disrupt the class. Usually when sleepers are forced to stay awake they respond by being belligerent and doing nothing and doing to their best to make sure other students in the class do nothing.

The rest of the day went well, which is unusual for the day before a three day holiday. I had a few rowdy students and realized my planned schedule wasn’t going to work out exactly right (at least in one class).

Then it was home to enjoy doing very little for a few days.

 

What Day Through Yonder Window Breaks

It’s the time of year when I’m not sure what day it is. Even worse, I don’t actually trust myself to know where I’m supposed to be.

This week, starting with this past Friday, is Golden Week which four Japanese national holidays all occur in the same seven days. The 29th was Showa Day, which is named after the era of the Emperor the world new as Hirohito. The 3rd is Constitution Day, celebrating the 1947 constitution. The 4th is Green Day, which used to be on the 29th, while the 4th used to be a “bridge” holiday between the 3rd and 5th but that was all changed in 2007. (Confused? Now you’re beginning to understand my world). The 5th is Children’s Day which is actually in honor boys but, well, yeah.

The problem is that this big holiday season comes just a couple weeks after the start of the school year. Right about the time we get in a teaching rhythm, we have four days off (sometimes, unless the 4th is on a Saturday, then we don’t. Long story.)

Friday was a day off, but even She Who Must Be Obeyed said it felt like Saturday. Then we had Saturday which felt like Sunday, and today I woke up as if it were Monday (then went back to sleep when I remembered it wasn’t.

Even more confusing, we work tomorrow, but then we have three days off, and have to work Friday. It’s common at this time of year to wake up in a panic and check your calendar several times to make sure you are where you’re supposed to be. Luckily, because it’s a national holiday and not a random day off the schools tend to have, you quickly calm back down and go back to sleep, laziness, sloth, etc. On the random days, you no longer trust your calendar or any other ways of tracking time.

The trouble is, I actually have to be some place tomorrow. At least I think I do.

Variety Days in the Variety Room

I cheated, but it was worth a try. It worked reasonably well but it was still cheating.

Today was a day for random tasks as it turned out that our oldest had school (normal for some schools) and that She Who Must Be Obeyed was going to an open house at the school. That meant I was watching our youngest.

Because there was no way to make other plans I did a few things I’d been putting off. First, I finished cleaning pens and chose a couple that will be put up for sale. After the cleaning, of course, comes the reinking and that led to some rethinking and I thought about putting a couple more up for sale. Of course, I’ll have to clean them first, which adds complications. (In a future post I’ll talk about the criteria I’m using for keeping or selling.)

That process, of course, took a lot of time. I had to pull the pens apart, rinse them out and soak the nibs and feeds to flush out all the old ink. While the nibs were soaking, I took on a different task: sharpening knives. This is where I cheated.

I recently acquired a diamond sharpening stone and, just as an experiment, a guide for helping the lazy/unskilled keep a knife at a consistent angle for sharpening. I spent some time playing with that and the main problem was it was sharpening the knife at a much different angle than I usually use. This meant I had to spend a lot of time removing a lot of steel before I could actually form the apex and sharpen the knife. This meant I spent a lot longer sharpening the knife than I’d planned.

The guide worked well, but it doesn’t solve the problem of curved edges and a lack of skill. It also probably won’t solve the problem of the way we abuse our knives and manage to dull them rather quickly.

After the cheating, er, sharpening, I managed to get some writing done, but the sense that I’d cheated at sharpening distracted me. Tomorrow I’ll have to freehand sharpen something just to prove I can still do it.

I’ll also think about cleaning and selling those pens.

Thin Bits of Ruination

I bought a pen because I knew I wouldn’t be afraid to ruin it. Today I tried to ruin it.

The rabbit hole that is pen addiction consists of several steps that lead the addict from “Who the hell would ever use a fountain pen” to “why would anyone ever use anything but a handcrafted fountain pen made of gold harvested from asteroids”? (Something like that.)

One of the steps involves taking control of your pens by learning to do basic maintenance on them. This step usually comes after the step where you start using bottled ink and well after you learn what a good pen feels like. At this point you learn to straighten nibs and widen the gap between the tines and maybe even change nibs. You also remove the nib for cleaning.

In my case I’ve been interested in learning some basic nib care and to do so I bought a cheap fountain pen that I’m not afraid to ruin. My plan was to use a few tools I’ve acquired over time to tweak the pen and make it better and then change inks. That said, if it had been perfect I wouldn’t have messed with it, but it was kind of dry and didn’t like working on smooth paper.

I tried soaking it in pen flush but that didn’t work so I finally decided to try some brass sheets I acquired a while ago to clean out the tines and, hopefully, make the ink flow smoothly.

The problem is that poking around on your pen, even a cheap one, with bits of metal is not a natural act. (It’s kind of like a dentist scraping a metal hook around your teeth and gums in the name of “hygiene”: even though you know it’s supposed to be helpful, you’re kind of worried about long term damage because “metal hook”.)

I cleaned and flushed the pen and was surprised to see how easily it cleaned. I then had to poke around at it with the sheet of metal.

Whatever I did, it seems to have worked. The cheap pen is working well. Now I need to know if it was the cleaning or the ink change that made it work.