Although I woke up a few times to use the restroom, I miraculously slept in until about 9am...and I was still the first one up between us three girls. After catching up on my facebook and having a conversation about recycling with okaasan, breakfast was served at 10:30 and I again enjoyed a fabulous meal. I usually eat breakfast first thing in the morning so it's weird for me to wait so late in the day, but it is definitely worth waiting! Scrambled eggs, ham, yogurt, granola (bought especially for me), miso soup, orange juice, and green tea were on the menu. We cleaned up around the house...but it actually ended up as me serenading the others on the piano and taking requests as they cleaned up the house. Hey, whatever brings you joy I'll do it. 

In the afternoon we were scheduled to meet okaasan's family. Her parents live with her sister about a 20 minute drive towards Tokyo. We dropped off Yuko-chan at her university on the way. We all sucked in air to make the car smaller as we squeezed through the alleyway. That's what we'd call it in America, but here they call it a "road." All the homes here have cameras and doorbells right next to the front gate. You don't really need it for this house because as soon as we approached the premises the dog started barking. Yay! A dog!

Okaasan's sister ordered out for lunch....which means some poor fellow brings you lunch in a huge styrofoam box on his moped. You eat out of the dishes from the restaurant, then wash them and bring them back (or he picks them up later). We had tenpura shrimp with rice...so good. Ojiichan ordered katsudon which is a friend pork cutlet with raw egg cracked over the top. This is done when the pork has just finished cooking and is still hot so the egg cooks just a little bit. Even though I'd tasted it before, ojiichan insisted that I "try it" so I did...and it was still very tasty :) I figured out that okaasan's mother and father live with the sister. Otoosan's father lives with us. We topped it off with a nicely ripened mikan (tangerine), took pictures of the whole family, and chatted about things that I didn't understand. Takae's cousin came in to join us, along with Yuko-chan after she had finished her class. Turns out that Takae's cousin is trying to become a famous author and publish some of her manga that she'd written. Before leaving she gave us one of her favorite manga books, though it's old enough to be considered a classic, and I read a few pages with Takae's help in the car. 

We hit the grocery store, ticket store (for Tokyo Disney Sea), and gasoline station on the way back. The guys there not only pump your gas, but wipe down/buff ALL your windows on the car. They also give you a cloth so you can wipe out the interior of your car for dust etc. if you so desire. There were two fellows attending our vehicle, and one in particular who negotiated all the transactions with okaasan. Sitting in the back seat and not understanding the dialogue I was at least able to read his nametag through the window: Taya. He seemed very nice and eager to help. As we pulled away, everyone was talking about how nice he was and how his demeanor was so appealing...Yuko-chan especially took notice and stood up for him when okaasan thought he wasn't very good-looking. I leaned towards Yuko and said, "His name is Taya, if you want to know." Everyone got a kick out of that. Even more so when I suggested driving around all night to run out of gas, then she'd have a reason to visit the gasoline stand in the morning :) 

We didn't get home until 8pm. All us girls hastily made dinner and served it to a very hungry hoard of papa bears! After telling a few more stories I realized that I have to get up at 5:15 tomorrow...because we're going to Tokyo Disney Sea!!!
I hope it's not too hot and I hope it doesn't 
Goodnight.
 
I didn't sleep well last night. I believe it was a combination of a new house, excitement of visiting my friend's family, and the super annoying bug that lives right outside my window. Actually, he probably lives in the park across the street but he is SO loud that it seems like he's pressing his little buggy face against the window screen and screeching his lungs out. How rude. I'm going to close my window Peter Pan-style and tell him to grow up and get lost.

The morning was pretty laid back as otoosan had already left for work at 6am. I skyped my parents before anyone else was up and set up at the kitchen table. As I was giving the skype tour around the house I bumped into okaasan who was beginning to prepare breakfast. Well, that situation turned into me holding my computer waist-high, allowing the camera to face okaasan as she and my parents talked to each other...and guess who had to play interpreter? Me. So there we stood in the kitchen, my hands burning against the bottom of the computer and hands tired from holding the machine for an hour. My mind was fried from trying to interpret things into vocabular that I didn't even know. Okaasan was rewording her sentences into the most simple format for me to understand and speaking very slowly for me, but it was still difficult to understand. She kept on trying to excuse herself but the words kept flowing across the internet connection. By the time we finally hung up I had long since abandoned my post and set the computer on the table. My tummy was begging for breakfast and was richly rewarded. 

The rest of the household woke up and we partook of a scruptious meal: An egg, thinly sliced ham, yogurt with blueberries, toast with marionberry jam (conveniently brought by me as a gift from Oregon), milk, miso soup, and rice. It was mmm-mmm good!

We spent the morning chatting and planning out the coming two weeks. Pretty soon it was lunch time and we ate yummy cold soba with lettuce, fresh garden tomatoes, tuna, and mayonaise of course! What a perfect summertime meal. 

After all that good food Takae and I wanted to take a walk so we volunteered to take the grocery list on our way out the door. The neighborhood is absolutely beautiful as each little plot of land is manicured to perfection. There isn't any grass, but each plant is carefully looked after whether it is a tree, bush, flower, or edible plant. Passing the park Takae pointed out, "Susie! Look at that!" I took a closer look at the hedge...it had become a mausoleum for cicadas! I quickly learned that cicadas shed their outer...skin/shell/body/thing and leave it behind. It was like a cicada rapture...super creepy. The skins turned brown but were't entirely transparent so it looked like there was still a bug there. Or bugs...because there were many of them. 
Our jaunt took us past Takae's old elementary school and we passed several parks with interesting public artwork sculpted in the centers. I noticed a cloud coming up behind us but didn't really care about it since I was happily taking pictures. 

As our circle came to a close we stopped off at the local grocery shop. We picked up the items for dinner and stepped outside...into a torrential downpour! 

A passing cloud, I was told. 

We waited it out for about 10 minutes, but it kept on raining. Across the sidewalk someone had tied up their little dog out of the main walkway as they presumably were inside shopping. That poor dog stood in the rain faithfully eyeing the entrance in anticipation of his owner's return. 
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I wanted to run out there and rescue him, just so that he could be in under shelter for a little while. There was quite a little crowd of people who had walked to the store unprepared and umbrella-less just like us. The general consensus in this situation is to wait it out. 

Well...I'm an Oregonian. We walk in the rain all the time. I had brought my cell phone and Takae was about to call her mom to see if we should wait or walk or be picked up. I said, "Let's just walk in the rain." I grabbed a plastic umbrella sheath from the stand by the door and put my camera and cellphone inside, tying it shut. I put that inside my grocery bag and put my glasses in my pocket...lot's of good they're going to do me now!

We spent the next 10 minutes walking home in the torrential but warm summer rain, enjoying the freeing feelings of summer and no school or work. The sun was still visible through the clouds towards the West which painted quite a lovely picture through our rainy veil. If my camera was waterproof I would have taken a picture for you. For now, this is all you get.
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We appeared on the doorstep like wet rats...victorious wet rats. 

After a cleansing shower I helped okaasan to prepare dinner. This turned out to be me learning a lot of cooking vocabulary and not really helping due to my lack of comprehension regarding the subject at hand. Japanese Cooking 101, in Japanese. 

We made several small dishes including an unidentified root that doesn't exist in the States and an extremely bitter vegetable native to the Japanese island of Okinawa. My favorite, and coincidentally the most simple to make, was what I'm calling "nasu pizza." "Nasu" is the word for eggplant, and after you slice them into rounds you stir fry them in a pan until they're soft. Add some packaged spaghetti and meat sauce, then put the entire mixture into a flat baking dish. Cover with shredded mozzarella cheese and bake in the oven until the cheese is melted. SOOO good. 

We hung out after dinner and I practiced a bit on the piano. It's so nice to play something acoustic again. 
When otoosan and Yuu-chan came home around 8:30 they brought a special treat: Haagen-Daaz ice cream (of course it's green tea flavor which is fine by me!) Otoosan made a "Family Schedule" and we each wrote our names and potential plans for the next two weeks. We spent the rest of the evening talking about what we wanted to do and checking the details of events. After much internet research we sadly found out that many hanabi (literally "flower-fire" or firework) festivals were cancelled due to the earthquake and tsunami disaster. It seems that the hanabi festival and climbing Mt. Fuji will be our exciting adventures for next year's summer break. This year we're going to Tokyo: Disney Sea, museums, shopping district, Rainbow Bridge, Viewing Mt. Fuji, a baseball game?, and other places scattered in between. I think a haircut and massage might be involved. 
Yes, please.
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"Takae! I am coming to visit you in Tokyo!"
"Okay! I will meet you at the train station, but I might not have a phone to call you."
"That's all right, just look for the American toting a red suitcase and looking lost. That's me!"

I didn't sleep at all last night, and for once it wasn't because of a 6.4 earthquake beckoning me out of my apartment in search of a safe haven. No, my 2am wide-eyed and bushy-tailed demeanor was due to pure excitement. I'm going to Tokyo! It's not the city that excites me, nor the fact that I have two weeks off of work and out of little Funehiki, but that I received the delightful invitation to spend this time with my adopted Japanese family. With a bit of internet research I found a potential train schedule via shinkansen, affectionately referred to as "shinks" by the team and "bullet train" by the rest of America. My morning was a flurry of cleaning, last-minute packing, dishes, taking out the garbage, trip to the daifuku store for omiyage, and grabbing Rachel so we could lug my little red suitcase to the train station. 

I almost missed the daifuku shop on account of being too early. However, I was able to enter and bid the friendly shop owner a good morning before requesting an order of 7 various flavors of filling. These included blueberry, banana, chocolate banana, melon, and chocolate chip. Being prompted I explained that they were gifts since I was traveling to Tokyo today. After a brief language fail gestures came through and she happily wrapped them in cute paper and ribbon and placed them carefully inside an insulated container with cold packs to keep the cream cold. I love Japan. 

The train ride was non-eventful and upon arriving at Koriyama with 40 minutes to spare I went to the ticket window to buy my shinkansen fare. That transaction included more language fails, mostly dependent on me not trusting myself that I heard what I thought I heard...sometimes I take in too much context. In the end I bought my fare and possessed two tickets going to the same destination but with two different starting points...for one train. Not sure what that was all about. Rachel and I exited the eki and hit up Starbucks for our free drink, courtesy of my boss who gave us free drink coupons during our last week of work. I bought my favorite soy macha frappachino but barely consumed half of the cup before turning it over to Rachel. I was so excited and nervous about catching the wrong train and anything else that could go wrong that I couldn't drink it. We parted ways and I proceeded to go through the stile to the platform. The machine accepted my pre-paid ticket and opened the door, but promptly shut again before I could walk through. It spat my ticket back out and beeped in defiance. 

What?! How rude.

I tried again. No such luck. 

Now time was beginning to tick away and I thought, how will I get through this stupid gate? This had better not make me late!

A friendly "sumimasen" (excuse me) appeared out of the air and I turned around to see a white gloved hand extended towards me. 
He asked to see my ticket, then asked if I had a second one. Turns out, you have to stack the tickets on top of each other and put them in the machine at the SAME TIME! Who knew?...

With my bag of daifuku held firmly in my right hand, my stuffed backpack with high-heels poking out the side pockets strapped to my sweaty back, rolling my red suitcase along behind my girly painted toes and bling sandals, I must have been quite a sight to behold. Imagine the sight as I rolled right up to the sign that said "Platform 13 --->" and I saw several flights of stairs stacked on top of each other, looming before me. I stood there in my cute Japanese shirt and leggings as the stairs went up and up and up. I remembered my mom's warning voice years prior, "only pack what you can carry," and I wanted to rewind a few hours back to when I added several pairs of shoes and sat on it to zipper it shut. 

I stood on the platform and watched a family of four preparing for their journey. The little boy was obviously excited for his first shinkansen trip. I was equally excited, but held it on the inside. It's no fun being an adult. 

The shinks was only at the platform for a minute, so I knew getting on the train was the most important thing. Holding a "non-reserved" ticket I was afraid of accidentally taking someone's seat or committing some other shinks faux pas. Unfortunately the line I was in was clearly marked "No. 8 reserved car" and so was No. 9, 10, etc. I couldn't read the signs in the other direction. The train arrived and I figured I'd just ask the conductor once I was on. I boarded and found a white-gloved, hat-tipping man eager to answer my stupid question spoken in terrible Japanese. 

I learned that cars 1-7 were for unreserved tickets. Great. I was on car 8. Well, that's not so bad, just one car to walk through. Well, remember all the stuff I'm carrying with me? Now imagine me going through a train aisle and all the people have also just got on and are finding their seats. Now watch me, the American with the bulging backpack and red suitcase barging through the middle and probably wheeling over some lady's foot. That's me. I made it to car 7 and camped out in the first empty row of seats I found. The train is already underway of course. The row of three seats was perfect: I took the window, my bag took the middle, and the suitcase took the legroom in front of it. Now to relax.

The ride was most enjoyable. It was like melting a stick of butter in a frying pan and you kind of stir it around as it melts. Seamless. A cloudy day, but the vivid green of the rice fields were bursting with color. Through several tunnels and small villages the shinkansen roared past, its rounded nose pointing the way to a bustling metropolis. It seemed to say, "Excuse me, pardon my intrusion on your quiet field, but I have a very important mission carrying very important people and we're kind of on a very tight schedule so if you don't mind I'm just going to go as fast as I can and pretend I was never here. Goodby---"
Stop number one, a half-hour into the ride, I could barely believe that time had passed. A few more passengers joined us but there were plenty of open seats. I listened to my soothing music from my headphones and was tempted to catch up on the sleep I missed last night, but the beautiful view and bewitching speed of the train kept my attention out the window. 

No sooner had I boarded the shinks than an hour had passed and it was time to say goodbye to the white magical machine. 
I was practically doing the potty dance by that time and was relieved to find a bathroom immediately after the platform. My phone rang and I knew it was Takae calling me, having borrowed her dad's cellphone. Due to my inopportune location, I did not return the call but immediately left the restroom and looked for her smiling face. In 2 short seconds I heard the familiar voice "Su-chan!" and saw her standing on the other side of the stile. Now an expert, I placed both tickets in the machine and was uninhibited by the gates as I passed through them. Greetings ensued, and as we proceeded to walk out she commented, "I am surprised that you only have one bag. I was expecting to see the red suitcase."

Eh?

Oh crap. I left it in the bathroom!

The stile-man kindly let me back through the stile with a magic push of a button and I retrieved the suitcase, standing at attention as though it belonged there. If this was an airport they would have brought over bomb-sniffing dogs and run me through a body scanner....twice.

I'm certainly glad Takae led me the rest of the way to her house because we boarded no fewer than 5 other trains for the remainder of the journey. Her mom (okaasan) picked us up a block from the eki. We exchanged greetings and "ohisashiburi desu ne" (it's been a long time!) and the tears began to flow. I felt so loved! Truly this is my other home. 

As I first entered the house I was anointed with my own pair of house slippers and a pair of hashi (chopsticks) which were a dark wood with dark red glossy strip at the top underneath gilded cream-colored sakura blossoms. Okaasan was impressed that I could use my hashi and eat sushi. Yes, it's a talent I possess. We went to ojii-chan's room (grandpa), sliding back the door to reveal a tatami-mat floor. I stepped in to greet him and committed my first of probably many mistakes: take off your shoes (inside slippers too) before stepping on tatami mats. I'd even been taught that before but it slipped my mind. Well, I guess I'll really remember it now!

The rest of the afternoon I enjoyed good conversation, courtesy of my translator, Takae, and a home-cooked meal. Everything was delicious, of course! Having not eaten since 7am that morning, lunch at 3pm was fabulous. We talked about the weather, about where I live, and about where I want to go in Tokyo. Of course the conversation eventually steered towards the earthquake that happened in March, fears surrounding radiation, and the quakes that shake Fukushima-ken on a weekly and sometimes daily basis. I received multiple admonishments to be careful, to be concerned for my health, and to leave Japan if I ever felt uncomfortable or in danger. In the end my message was: if it's good enough for you to live here then it's good enough for me. We're all people and it doesn't matter where we were born--that's just luck of the draw. As long as I feel that God wants me here then I'll stay here. You are like my family!

That brought more tears. 

Otoosan (father) and Yuko-chan (Takae's sister) came home from work a few hours later, each with a fresh and different bouquet of flowers they had bought at the bus station for me. SOOOOO sweet!

The rest of the evening was filled with stories, laughter, more stories, gifts, daifuku (which was  HUGE success), dinner, plans for next summer, plans for Christmas, plans to climb Fuji, and a little bit of sake. Konpai! Okaasan mentioned, "Susie, you are speaking more Japanese now than even when you arrived here just a few hours ago. You are improving!"
I pointed to the empty shot glass that previously held warm sake. 

"It's because of this." 

Point taken. 

Turns out, me and ojii-chan have something in common: we both like sake. 

I was given the tour of the house, the lights, the bathroom, how to operate the shades and air conditioner, and left to my own devices. Now that I'm most decidedly done writing this narrative, I'm going to catch up on my beauty sleep.