20 September 2009 @ 08:06 am
[Japan]: No time, translating, cooking, green tea? SMILE! :D ... (o_O)>?!  
Hello everybody,

First of all thank you very much for your comments to my last entry
I've been so freaking busy this whole week. I guess I'm still not used to work that lasts from Mo-Fr without a break C= (-。- ) フゥー
I know I shouldn't complain, that's your normal work schedule plus it's only every other week anyway, but I feel that I don't really have enough time for ANYTHING!
Yesterday I finally managed to finish another step in my Japanese studies, doing almost (see later) nothing but studying.
Today I won't have so much time to study as I have to clean my apartment, wash my laundry, answer e-mails, write entries etc.
It's amazing how fast time runs and you never have enough, huh? (And here it's September again! )
I was invited for lunch today by one of my Japanese coworkers, but I had to turn her down as I was way too busy. Such a shame :/

My usual day looks roughly like this: (~ means until in this case)
  • ~8:00am: getting up (I usually set my alarm clock around 7.50am, but in the end I can't get out of my bed before 8am, sometimes I even sleep until 9am *sigh*)

  • ~10:00/10:30am: after finally getting up I get ready for the day (brushing my teeth etc.), prepare my breakfast, eat my breakfast while browsing the internet (lj, news, japanese sites, e-mail etc.)

  • ~12:30pm: what happens now depends on what I need to do (laundry, shopping, cleaning, run errands of some other kind etc. and/OR study Japanese)

  • ~13.30pm: prepare and eat lunch while usually watching something on my laptop

  • ~14pm: getting ready for work which starts at 2pm

  • ~22:00pm: I come home from work, but I often can't leave at 22:00 and have to stay a little bit longer

  • ~0:30/1:00am: I browse the internet one more time (sometimes I have to wash my dishes at night, so I watch something on my laptop while doing so) / I watch a drama/anime and around 0:00am I go to bed to read some Japanese material (just started another novel last night)


As you can see that leaves me with a MAXIMUM of 2 hours to study Japanese per day, usually it's way less.
I also want to do some light exercises / jogging / some kind of sport ... and cook from time to time.
I just have no idea WHEN TO DO ALL THESE THINGS!!! Luckily I don't have any other MAJOR hobbies, but it's REALLY difficult to finish everything I actually had planned each day and it's kind of frustrating. I wouldn't say I feel stressed, but really rather frustrated. Especially (and that's the old story again) concerning my Japanese studies. It definitely helps that I have days off on Thursday, Friday and Sunday every other week, but acutally it's 2 weeks that way and the following 2 weeks it's a "normal" working week and those weeks are quite busy! I'm not complaining about the fact that I have to work from Mo-Fr in general, but that I don't have enough time to study Japanese that way (and that's one of the main reasons I came here - as you might remember).
I'm not yet sure if I should recontract or not. I'd love to stay another year at that school, I hope I can reduce my working time even more (byebye salary), but I'm not sure if it's possible as we got quite busy lately (more students again). We'll see.
Recontracting time is soon as we have to give a 4 months notice if we leave/quit.

So anyway ..is it only me who feels that there's almost nothing but work from Mo-Fr? What about the other people on my f-list who also live in Japan? I sometimes have the feeling that you guys have more free-time, but that's probably just my impression.
Of course it also has to do with my work time which is until 10pm every night.

Work itself has been superbusy that week as well. While one of my coworker is complaining that he's bored I'm just running from one class to the next. It's a little bit unfair, but oh well. And stupid me is making things for me even busier: I'm helping to translate the self-written speeches of our students (Jap->Eng). It's really tough. Although I can basically understand their essays it's another story if you have to translate them (plus it has to be EASY English!). Understanding something or also translating it are really two different things. It took me forever to just translate one short speech properly (x___X)> It's good practice, though. (esp. considering that none of these languages is my native language anyway)

One more thing concerning work: One of our students (well, actually more than one, but that's the newest story) is being bullied by her classmates in her elementary school (she's in 6th grade). She's such a nice and smart girl, I swear!!! I can't understand why anybody would bully her AT ALL!!!!! We have two other girls that have stopped going to school because of that (yet they come to our eikaiwa, because we're all nice to each other ;P)
I really don't see why Japanese students bully their classmates so often. I know that bullying is no Japanese thing, but I have the feeling that it's nowhere as extreme as here?!
I feel so sorry for that girl and wanna beat up whoever is bullying her :/ GRRRR!!!! フザケルナ!凸( ̄ヘ ̄)





Friday night I wanted to go to bed early so that I could get up early on Saturday to study, but then I got caught by the last few episodes of "Smile". I never write about the jdramas I watch anymore, huh?
Smile was horrible to watch and I almost wanted to stop watching it at some point, because it was so hard to watch and bear it. At least "1 litre of tears" warns you with its title, but you don't expect THAT from a drama with the title "Smile", right?
I'm not going to give you any major spoilers, so don't worry. I think the drama has at least ONE good thing, though. It's very self-critical about the Japanese society in general, but prejudices (against foreigners) in particular. I also hate the fact that Japan still has the death penalty!! I'm completely against it! And I heard prisoners often won't know their execution date until the morning of the actual day!!! (SPOILER FOR SMILE LAST EPISODE: and it was the same in Smile .... SPOILER END)

What about your country? Do you have death penalty and what do you think about it?
Jesus, I really should update my "watched jdramas" page (x_X) ....... *headdesk*



Regarding my last entry: I was not very lucky!
It seems it was on TV after all! On Thursday one of my Jr. high students told me. She didn't say much about it, just that she saw me, so I'm not sure if it was horrible or not. Good thing I didn't see it.
Ever since then I haven't heard anything about it anymore, so I just hope that the people who saw it will forget about it soon again.

Regarding the curtains I bought a while ago, I managed to send them back successfully.
Now it's time to look for another set of curtains. They should be thin and white or lightpink(?) to match the curtains I already have. The most important thing is that they are almost transparent so that I still can see what's going on outside.
Something like this, just cheaper. I'll let you know once I've decided what to buy in the end :D I hope this time I get the right ones ┐(-。ー;)┌ヤレヤレ



Regarding healthy food in Japan:
Some of you seem to have misunderstood me back then. I didn't complain so much about gaining weight, but about the fact that Japanese food might not be so healthy after all. If the entry gave you another impression than it was probably my fault, sorry.
Anyway, I've been trying to keep my eyes wide open and find healthy food whenever possible:



left: Pasta sauce without any food additives :) (無添加)
middle: Chowder wannabe soup (you have to buy and add the vegetables, though)
right: that's nothing new: Honey lemon drink (a long time ago [livejournal.com profile] leviosa8 let me know about this): vitamine love for winter ^-^
below: Rice Pasta!!! Have yet to try it, though :D

I'm thinking about buying brown rice as well, but the thing with brown rice is (that's what I read) that you have to put it into the rice cooker the NIGHT BEFORE YOU WANT TO EAT IT and that sounds quite bothersome. But it is way healthier than white rice.
A coworker also gave me the tip to use wheat/grain which you can buy and just add to the rice before you put it into the rice cooker. I'm definitely going to try that out :D



Lately I'm drinking soy milk more often (although I don't really like it with my muesli!)
Fresh cheese!! It's way too dry and doesn't taste like anything. Nothing compared to what you can get in Europe :/ ..... but better than nothing, I guess ^^; ....



I also found "dark" bread again (I'm not sure what exactly that greenish bread was, but it was quite dry). It's genmai bread again, but this was really awesome and I'll definitely buy it again ;o;

In other news I cooked yesterday, FOR REAL!!!!



Took quite a long time, but it was really nice :D
(Bacon, carrots, onions and potatoes)



Brocolli! I love brocolli! It was not sooooo~ expensive, so I might try to cook things with one of my fav vegetables again soon ^-^



The only problem with my kitchen is that it's too small. Only one cooking plate and NO SPACE where I could prepare / cut food!!! The plates and dishes were spread throughout my whole apartment (-___-') ... really annoying, but I have no other choice!



Tada~ the finished product :3 (yepp, it's the chowder soup thingie of the photo before ^^; ...)
Of course 750g are ment for 3-4 people, so I couldn't eat the whole pot in one day. It'll be dinner tonight again :3
It was super yummie!! Fresh vegetables / selfmade food DOES taste good after all :D (I just wish I had more time to do things like that more often .... and a bigger kitchen would definitely be helpful as well ...)


Concerning Japanese green tea:
Wow, I haven't written anything about it in a long time. It seems that ever since I came to Japan I didn't care so much about it anymore. Of course I still drink green tea every day, but I didn't care about the quality or the way of drinking at all although I cared so much about it when I was still back home in Germany. Strange, huh?
Lately I became interested in it again. What's the best way to drink Japanese tea? What's the healthiest way? (aka without destroying all the good stuff in it!)



Back home I used something like in this picture. I got rid of the filter because I heard the leaves should be able to spread in the water, but I kept my tea warm with the little tea light you can see which is right below the teapot.
I read now that this is not good for Japanese tea as the candle keeps boiling the tea. It might be okay for fruit tea etc. but not for the sensitive Japanese tea!
I asked my female coworkers about how they drink their green tea. Actually they use something like this:



It's a really small teapot and there's a filter in there as well. You put the tea leaves into that filter and than pour water in the teapot (of course the filter is already in there). Then you wait for about a minute (depends on the tea of course) and then you pour everything into a cup (so you have to make sure that there's no water left in the teapot). You can repeat that several times with the same tea leaves, but the problem with that is (that's what I've read) that the healthy stuff in the tea is gone after the first infusion.
That's why I prefer to do it like this: Use more tea leaves and let them swim freely in the teapot (I have a huge glass one), then add the water, wait a minute, get rid of the tea leaves inside with a filter (I just pour the tea into another pot using a filter).
That way all the tea I drink is healthy (because it's the first infusion).
The only problem with that method: the tea gets cold quite fast and I have no clue what to do about that. Like I said the method with the tea light I used in Germany is apparently not good for Japanese tea plus I've never seen any teapots with tea lights here in Japan anyway.
Anybody has any idea???
And a question for those of you who are quite advanced in Japanese: 有機 ,たとえば有機煎茶ってどういう意味でしょうか。(it just gives me organism as translation o_O ..... organic tea?)
Thanks :)


Jesus, what a long entry. Sorry! And so random, too!

Pikachu? Raichu? No, it's a bye☆⌒ヽ(*'、^*)chu (((((¬_¬) ....... ε=ε=ε=ε=ε=ε=┌(; ̄◇ ̄)┘
 
 
[mood]: busy
[music]: K - Girlfriend
 
 
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[identity profile] dgm-allenwalker.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 06:24 am (UTC)
We have outlawed death penalties in the US. HOWEVER, there are some states that accepts death penalties. But in reality, without death penalties leads to cramped up prison. And when you have cramped up prison, you let the prisoners out free even if they stayed there for a month or 2 years instead of 15 years to life. That happened in California and other places too.

Death penalties should be used for those who have committed more than a simple crime (i.e. blowing up a bldg, etc.) but America are giving the prisoners another chance. A lot of them go back and do the same (and then go back to jail again :\)
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[identity profile] aoi-no-neko.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 07:52 am (UTC)
The death penalty is not outlawed in the US, in fact it was reinstated in 1976 by the US Supreme Court. Individual states would not be allowed to have it if it was suspended. Only two states do not have it, New Mexico and New Jersey.

The overcrowding in Calif is not due to the death penalty or not having it. California does have the death penalty, and those prisoners are not let out. Overcrowding has increased in the rest of the prison population because of the three strikes law and cracking down on parole violations. And at least where I live, violent crime has increased. Yes, I live in Calif. and this information is from studies and research done here.

I can't say whether I feel the death penalty is good or not. There are some people who commit horrific crimes that will never be rehabilitated. Then there is the problem of people who are wrongly convicted. This really is more of a moral question for each person.
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[identity profile] jiwonnn.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 07:55 am (UTC)
eine frage: wie schaffst du es gleichzeitig geschirr zu spuelen und dabei was auf dem laptop zu schauen? O_O ich kanns mir einfach nicht vorstellen lol
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:13 am (UTC)
Mein Apartment besteht aus einem sehr kleinen Zimmer. Meine Küche, mein Bett und auch mein Laptop befinden sich alle in diesem kleinen Raum. Wo sollte es da also ein Problem geben? XD
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[identity profile] kmakms.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 08:17 am (UTC)
i really like reading your entries ^_^, you should be happy to be on tv, now your pratically a celebrity ;)

I watched Smile, i had no idea what it would be about [i never read anything about it i just went ahaead and watched it] therefore i cried alot, vito is somewhat of a hero for me now, i completely uderstand his feelings after experiencing my own share of prejudices etc all because of my heritage, once i was really happy to read Johnny Depp state he is proud to be a mongral, but now i have vito XD

I agree with you about the death penalty, it is wrong, imagine all those people who have been killed by it that were innocent, lucky for vito he didn't get the death penalty first time round :P

all that food looks sooo nice, i want to lose some weight though lol

woah i wrote so much sorry ^.^
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:14 am (UTC)
It's only local TV (luckily!) and I've been on TV in Japan already in a commercial for our school. That was more than enough. I'm not a person who likes to get that much attention anyway x_X

Thanks for your comment ^^
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(no subject) - [identity profile] kmakms.livejournal.com on September 28th, 2009 08:44 pm (UTC)
[identity profile] ochame.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 08:20 am (UTC)
In Russia, death penalty has been under moratorium since the mid-90s (it is not outlawed, i.e. still on the books, but no-one is being executed).
Not so in the US: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_the_us - and I think it's pretty shameful. Especially considering how racist and classist the justice system is :( So the US ends up in the company of the following "nice"(not!) in terms of human rights countries http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment#Global_distribution
- smack in the middle between North Korea and Pakistan. Shame, shame.
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:14 am (UTC)
Thanks for the information :)
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[identity profile] koumemonogatari.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 08:21 am (UTC)
Mir gings ähnlich bei Smile. So ein ...gemeines Drama.

Ich arbeite zwar auch in Japan, aber das was ich mach is ja was ganz andres^^
Übrings die Technik mit dem Kinder reden lassen und nach jedem 3 Satz ne möglicherweise passende Reaktion zeigen mach ich auch immer :P

Ich hab übrings in meinem Zimmer so weiße Vorhänge mit ... so Löchern drin *lol* so Gestrick like... Weiß nicht wie ichs beschreiben soll XD Aber die sind eigtl ziemlich gut. Man kann noch gut rausschauen aber von draußen nicht reinschauen.

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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 01:45 am (UTC)
Icon love (*_*)v

Haha XDDD~
Ja, und den Kindern gefällt's (die denken wir verstehen alles und hören gespannt zu XD) so süß :D

Ich weiß, was du meinst: http://item.rakuten.co.jp/e-curtain-shop/c/0000000986/
(sieht ein wenig "oma-mäßig" aus, wäre aber billig). Mal sehen, danke für den Tipp ^-^
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kurikuribebi[personal profile] kurikuribebi on September 20th, 2009 09:16 am (UTC)
I think the key is to do alot of things in between. When I was in the Uni, I was usually there until 10:30 with activities and such, but still got alot done during the day inbetween classes.

My boyfriend gets to the apartment at 12-something, so I assume he gets out at 10 or 11. He doesn't seem to do much else aside from work and the occasional going out on weekends, so it might not be just you.
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:15 am (UTC)
Well, I'm not allowed to do anything that's not work-related at work, so no chance. And lately there's no "in-between time" anyway.

Yah, I guess it's normal :/ (esp. here in Japan)
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[identity profile] currynana.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 10:05 am (UTC)
Malaysia still has death penalties...but it depends on what the crime is...i think death penalty has been a long debated issue but there are many people who oppose it and just as many who approve of it. I had to write an essay about it before last year but unfortunately I dont rmb which were the crimes that would lead to d/penalty.

But the sad thing is, apparently there are many cases where the 'criminal' was actually innocent but it was only found out like AFTER the punishment has been carried out. Some are lucky but there are many others, especially before DNA tests and those kinda forensic stuff became more advanced and popular, tht died innocent.

There was even a case in the US where actually the forensic person in charge or sth 'collaborated' with the lawyer to give false testimony of the person because the lawyer felt tht it should be like a warning to other ppl tht they should not commit such crimes. ><

Sorry, I totally ranted too much about tht.

On another note, tht looks yummy!!!!!!!! :D
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:17 am (UTC)
Wow, it's still there in more countries than I first thought. Kind of scary!

Thanks for the info! So scary :/
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[identity profile] 19871221.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 10:08 am (UTC)
where do you work for? I work 3-4 times a week at the cafe/bakery. I like pretty much everything about my job..except i gotta wake up 4:30 am D:
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:18 am (UTC)
I work as a teacher in a language school :)
Bakery sounds nice :)
Bake some German bread and send it to me please!! *lol* Just joking ;)
4:30am????? (x___X)
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[identity profile] bluemchenblatt.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 10:19 am (UTC)
So Smile IS worthwhile watching, huh? Might check it out.
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:19 am (UTC)
Weiß nicht genau. Mir hat's nicht so gut gefallen, weil mich einfach sehr viele Dinge daran aufgeregt haben, aber das lag vor allem daran, dass das Drama auch sehr provozierend ist. Also schätze ich ... ja, es ist sehenswert?! XD
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(no subject) - [identity profile] bluemchenblatt.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 07:41 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 01:15 pm (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] bluemchenblatt.livejournal.com on October 1st, 2009 11:37 am (UTC)
[identity profile] shatterlights.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 01:35 pm (UTC)
there is no death penalty in Sweden. and hasnt been since the middle ages. and i honestly think that is a "penalty" that is only worthy of the dark era of the middleages and before that. when we didnt know any better. its unacceptable to me, i will never accept it and i'm gonna keep fighting against it. its inhuman. it doesnt matter what crime you've commited, how many people you have killed, what ever actions you have done in your life that has led you to prison - i still dont believe that ANYBODY has the right to take another persons life. not as a penalty either, and not to "make up for" what horrible things they did. it doesnt help or make anything better.

agh. it makes me upset to write about this so i'm gonna stop.
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:19 am (UTC)
Sooooooo agreed!
Thanks for your comment :)
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[identity profile] trague.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 01:44 pm (UTC)
Australia doesn't have the death penalty which I think is a good thing. People can change and I think it's important to be able to give a person that chance. In some cases these people have served their time and gone out and worked in the community helping to prevent others from following their own destructive path.

In regards to your tea situation, have you ever tried using a thermos teapot?
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:20 am (UTC)
Is a thermos teapot any different from a normal thermos thinge?
Usually the taste is crap, that's why I don't like using thermos stuff.
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(no subject) - [identity profile] trague.livejournal.com on September 22nd, 2009 11:57 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 23rd, 2009 01:51 am (UTC)
[identity profile] nighstar.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 03:08 pm (UTC)
wow, seems like you dont get enough sleep either (by my standards anyway. i need like 9hrs of sleep to not yawn before noon lol...).

we work the same number of hours a day. i don`t know about other people, but compared to me you don`t have less free time. it`s just that some people, such as myself, are lucky enough to have free time at work as well and can do stuff with that time.

as for mon - fri being nothing but work, it`s true. it`s not related to Japan at all, but yeah... it sucksass. i do the majority of my non-instant/quick-and-easy cooking on the weekend or on friday night when i have the time for it.

btw, your soup looks good. :] i`m glad it turned out well and i hope it makes good leftovers. ;)

"Smile", eh...? sounds very interesting.... did you download this series? i must watch it sometime...

edit: oh, and about the death penalty... i really don`t think much about it. my feelings towards it are conflicting. :/ i dont think anyone should have the right to take another`s life, but at the same time some crimes are just so horrendous...

Edited 2009-09-20 03:10 pm (UTC)
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 01:44 am (UTC)
I need like 8hrs, but try to sleep only 7hrs (x___x)
When I was a teenager and had to study a lot I sometimes only slept 2-3hrs. How the hell did I survive that? x__X

I guess it makes a difference if you can use free time at work as well :)

Thanks! It really tasted great and I'm glad that my first "big" cooking experience here in Japan didn't fail completely. Makes me wanna try to cook soon again ;)

I downloaded the series, because most of the dramas are aired 21-22 or 22-23 and if I have to work I usually don't make it home in time, so no choice :/

Some crimes definitely are, but I think those people suffer more if they have to stay alive, in prison and think about what they've done. If it was really horrible they shouldn't be let out again anyway.
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(no subject) - [identity profile] nighstar.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 03:10 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:11 am (UTC)
[identity profile] shiinait.livejournal.com on September 20th, 2009 06:27 pm (UTC)
In Italy we haven't death penalty... Only life sentence.
I'm against death penalty, but a lot of Italians think that life sentence it isn't enough.
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[identity profile] mtassarion.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 12:42 am (UTC)
take care not to get a burn-out like me. :/ make sure you also take time off as in.. using some time in your schedule in which you are not allowed to do anything. Or time during which you can clear your mind, like meditation or sport (using your bike to go to work does not count at all) or something. Also leave open spots in your schedule so you can compensate for irregularities. But your schedule doesn't seem to be incredibly tight anyway so that might already be okay. Use some computer based program to make your schedule. (but i think you already do that)

as for the food, i still wanted to comment on that entry but i never did because i never really knew what to say. It seems to me that you have unhealthy food in every country. The traditional Japanese cuisine is just famed for it's freshness and healthy contents.. but then, so are basically all traditional cuisines. Maybe if you just look for more fresh foods? I don't think it hurts to actually pay some extra cash for higher quality food. Stuff like getting real wasabi instead of fake. Or fish from the market instead of the supermarket. (assuming you have a food market near you)
Is it required by Japanese law that the food producers put all ingredients on their products? I still haven't figured that out.. It'd probably be a good thing to look at those lists and select products with the least ingredients in them and the least ingredients with incredibly difficult names.

And on the tea, I don't know much about tea leaves because i use powdered sencha. I don't have the traditional utensils used normally for preparing powdered green tea but when I prepare it set a boiler to boil water and i fill a cup with a little bit of water and an amount of powder for the amount of people i'm going to serve. Then I froth the powder in the little bit of water until there are no lumps of powder left. After the water has started boiling and the boiler turns of and my frothing is complete I take a kettle and pour in cold water and the froth of sencha, then I add the boiling water so the temperature will never rise above 70 degrees or so. Any higher and the tea will taste horrible and any lower and it will not pick you up like tea should.
So I never get something to keep the kettle warm. I don't technically need to because I prepare for an exact number of cups so after serving the kettle is empty anyway and I'd have to do it all over again to make new tea. But the whole frothing process is also part of the tea experience in my case. Sort of like the rubbing of the ink onto the ink stone or the pulling of the string during kyudou. (and all those other meditative elements in many things that are Japanese, which is an important thing for busy people like us)

有機煎茶 translates to organic tea (leaves) as far as i can tell. I don't know what that exactly means in Japan but over here it would mean that they didn't use any pesticides on it or any other unnatural chemicals on it. (oh and because of the pesticides you really have to wash your vegetables etc. really well over there, did you know that? I wonder how harmful it can be, especially since they use a -lot- of pesticides in japan)
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[identity profile] mtassarion.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 12:43 am (UTC)

And finally concerning the death penalty. I think it's a barbaric punishment that is obsolete far beyond reasonable doubt. The only reason i could think of to have a death penalty is if a criminal is of such a burden to a community that the community would not survive if they kept them alive.
The argument of that otherwise the prisons would be cramming if some criminals are not killed off is also pretty ridiculous because prisons shouldn't be cramming in the first place, and the proportion of prisoners actually getting the death penalty is usually infinitesimally small compared to the number of prisoners in total. So the death penalty basically has no effect on the number of prisoners unless your name is Stalin, and kill off all the prisoners you have because it entertains you.
If there is any crime at all then it is because the society as a whole has failed in some way, and that only happens when people don't get the chance to develop themselves as integral parts of society. i.e. due to inadequate education, inadequate work etc. etc. If these things are okay then there will be no crime. Punishments are never the answer, they're not even a bandage to cover the wound, prisons are more like dirty water to wash off the festering.

(omg i had to do another double comment because i had too many characters... :s this only happens when i comment on your blog, wtf..)
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(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:24 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] mtassarion.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 04:12 pm (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 22nd, 2009 01:50 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] mtassarion.livejournal.com on September 22nd, 2009 11:11 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 23rd, 2009 01:52 am (UTC)
[identity profile] nekoyousei.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 02:53 am (UTC)
I live in the US and as others have stated, some states have the death penalty while others do not.
I'm really torn when deciding on which side to be on...I think if someone did a horrible crime...like an act of terrorism where many people are killed or people were tortured or something like that...Then I would kinda lean towards the death penalty. But other times, I think something like solitary confinement for so many years would be a good punishment. I think death is an easier, less painful way out, ya know?

I feel so bad for that little girl. I think it's more common for boys to be bullied than girls, but when you start to reach middle and high school (6th-12th grade), girls can be so cruel. :( Maybe you can see why they are bullying her and try to help her out by giving her some advice?
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 05:26 am (UTC)
I think there's no way for us to find out what exactly happened. I think HER TEACHERS in HER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL should be the ones responsible for such a thing!
When something like that happened at my school, students always went to a teacher who was in charge of these kind of things and then they found a solution together. I wonder what's different here in Japan. hmm
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(no subject) - [identity profile] nekoyousei.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 02:36 pm (UTC)
[identity profile] asahifirsa.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 08:16 am (UTC)
If it helps working monday to friday is also rough outside of Japan. I work 9-18 and that's only if I don't have to stay longer... sometimes I even come in during the weekend to finish stuff...
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 22nd, 2009 01:52 am (UTC)
Ja, das weiß ich schon :/
Und nein, das hilft nich wirklich, das macht's nur noch schlimmer *g*
Ich fühl mich manchmal so, als hätte ich 2 Vollzeitjobs (einer davon ist Japanisch lernen - Vollzeit *g*)
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[identity profile] mhizxkyloz.livejournal.com on September 21st, 2009 03:17 pm (UTC)
I don't think Australia has the death anymore.
It's just life in prison or something.

Is Smile worth watching?
Lol -__-" I couldn't stand 1L of Tears to be honest? Alwells.

Hahahaha that chowder soup looooks sooo nice
D: I think all the junk food from uni is making my gain weight in unwanted places!!

AHHH!
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 22nd, 2009 01:57 am (UTC)
I'm not sure if SMILE is worth watching, really. It's very painful to watch and you might not like it. It's not a very nice drama at all ... so I really don't know if I should recommend it or not.
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[identity profile] mary-in-wonder.livejournal.com on September 23rd, 2009 12:50 pm (UTC)
okay, I might be stupid, but kind of work schedule is this 2pm-10pm? Who the hell works till 10pm? I mean...schools don't stay open that late....and what parent lets her kid stay outside that long (in school), starting from morning?? I've known Japanese are crazy, but this is insane!

Broccoli is expensive too? No waaaay! That's such a hated vegetable! XD and the green bread....bwahahahha what's that? people can create reaaaaaaally weird stuffs!
yuch, I hate soy milk! Don't they sell normal milk? from lovely cows? o_O or that's also expensive?
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 01:09 am (UTC)
Japanese kids have school until late afternoon followed by club activities, piano lessons and then cram schools called "juku" here in Japan. You might think that that's the schedule of a high school student, but most elementary school kids' schedule is just as busy!
The younger ones (elementary + infants) can leave school earlier and then come to our school to study English, that's why we start at 2pm. We can't start earlier as the kids are still in school then.
The last classes are usually adult conversation classes and jr. + high school classes.

Of course they sell normal milk as well, but I like to vary what I eat and so I sometimes use yoghurt, soy milk etc. as well :)
Normal milk is not pricy although a little bit more expensive than back home (= Germany)
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(no subject) - [identity profile] mary-in-wonder.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 09:50 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 25th, 2009 01:48 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] mary-in-wonder.livejournal.com on September 25th, 2009 05:58 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 25th, 2009 02:12 pm (UTC)
[identity profile] nameni.livejournal.com on September 23rd, 2009 05:54 pm (UTC)
I always tell myself that if I ever get to live in Japan, bread is going to be the one thing I'll definetely find hard to live without... I love bread so much.

If you want to stop the heat from eskaping maybe you should try a tea cosy? here's the wiki page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_cosy Maybe you could make it yourself or ask someone who's good at sewing or knitting to make it for you?

There's no death penalty here in Poland and I must say than when I was a child I always said how I couldn't agree with it. I said things like "Why do we have to pay taxes and therefore pay the living costs of murderers and rapers?" I still believe so but now I understand that there is this percentage of chance that this person is not guilty. So what then? I seriously don't envy people who have to judge this.
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 01:17 am (UTC)
Even when I just spent a week in Italiy I was carving for dark / whole grain bread!!! I can't believe I'm able to survive here in Japan. It's possible but I'm still carving for bread ;o;
You can order it online, but of course it's quite expensive -__-;

AAAHH!!! That's what I was looking for!!! I remember reading about something like that (used in China) and couldn't remember what exactly it was!!! Now I remember! Thanks so much *hugs* :333

I agree with you. Even if it costs other people money in form of taxes, nobody has the right to judge other people's lives even if those people thought they can judge other people's lives and killed other people :/
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[identity profile] amvn.livejournal.com on September 23rd, 2009 06:58 pm (UTC)
Yeah, I also feel like time is just flying away recently, I guess that's how it is when one has got so much to do XD I know my October/November will be especially hectic, as my experiments starts then. I'll have to prepare staying at uni everyday from 6am to 8pm then *sigh* I hope you're getting enough sleep though, that's really important :)

It's so awful when people are being bullied, I've heard it's quite a huge problem in Japan (maybe it's because of the whole "group"-mentality thinking there, and if you don't follow you get picked on, no wonder the suicide rate there is so high). I hope they do more to solve these issues, because it really shouldn't be like that.

Norway abolished death penalty after WWII (the infamous jerk Quisling was the last one to be executed on Norwegian soil, but he deserved it IMO). But generally I'm not agreeing with it, because so many innocent people are put away like that, and personally I think it's a way better punishment for the criminals to get life-long sentences than being allowed to "escape" through death (because that may be a relief to some of them rather than being locked up). Plus, many countries use cruel and inhumane methods :/ so yeah, I'm not a fan either.
Btw, I recently read about this guy somewhere in the US being "unsuccessfully executed" because they couldn't find a proper vein to inject the lethal injection, so he had to wait another week for it all to be done again! Talk about insane, I wonder what it does to a persons psyche?!

I'm glad it all worked out for you with the curtains ^_^ good luck on finding new ones!
And so much yummy food <3 I tried the malted milk from the marusan-brand - one of the best ones I've tasted, it might even beat Vitasoy and it was also no added sugar (apart from the malt extract) :D The cream chowder looks so yummie as well, I first thought it was
北海道クリームシチュー XD I love that too!
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 01:22 am (UTC)
I wish you good luck with your experiments then :3 *hugs*
Yah, time sure flies by too quickly and not only when I'm busy ;___; ... why is there no "stop" or "pause" button? ;o;

Some Japanese people told me that it often happens to kids that are too nice and won't say anything back. They easily become the victim. And most other students just go along with the bullying because they're too afraid of becoming a victim themselves. I agree that Japanese teachers should do something about it!
I heard that most teachers at THAT school are overburdened and are just transfered to another school then .... it's ridiculous! That doesn't solve ANY problems *sigh* *shakes head*

I totally agree with what you've said! I think that's it!!! Most people would suffer way more to stay alive in prison than just escaping by death. And what happened there in America sounds quite ....... scary!! :/

Thanks for reminding me XD I almost forgot! I shall look for some nice ones today :D
北海道クリームシチュー << haha XD actually that's what I wanna try next XD
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[identity profile] evilblueberry.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 09:16 am (UTC)
I think if no one really said anything except for seeing you on TV then I guess what you said was okay. :)

That soup looks really good and easy to make. I'll have to write the name down and see if my japanese market has it so I can try it.
And omg ur broc is such a nice healthy green color! lol Its very hard to find produce in my area that has a healthy color.
I eat rice pasta a lot its really good. I only eat it with stir fry sauce though.

I saw the first episode when it first came out but the fansub group stopped subbing it so I didn't see anymore. But I cried in the first episode lol
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[identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 09:20 am (UTC)
I hope so (^^'')

It was really a good borcolli indeed :) Hope the next one will be just as good :)

Oh, they finally finished subbing it: http://community.livejournal.com/ourhour/tag/smile
Otherwise I wouldn't have been able to watch it ^^; ... Dramas like that I still watch with subs (;^ω^)
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(no subject) - [identity profile] evilblueberry.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 09:34 am (UTC)
(no subject) - [identity profile] chochajin.livejournal.com on September 24th, 2009 09:42 am (UTC)