Hello and welcome to my new weblog! I’ll try to keep the site updated with my experiences, thoughts and research. Here is what has happened within the last week:
Day 1 – Landed in Narita on Thursday and made my way to Tokyo. Japan looks a lot like America. Talking to people was difficult, but I was able to use the takkyubin service (which ships your bags from the airport to wherever you want) and finally get to my hotel room.
Day 2 – I woke up at 4 in the morning from the jet-lag. Japanese television is really fun to watch even though I don’t understand what’s going on. There was a pretty funny little black-and-white sketch on with these two girls dancing to this song while an old guy and a young guy were watching them.
Anyway, after eating some good tanuki-soba, I made my way to the Japan-US-Educational-Commission (JUSEC) building. I also got some coffee on the way (which was really bad. The cappuccino I got last night was really bad too; I think Japanese coffee may just be bad in general). The staff at JUSEC was really nice, and I finally got to meet Brinkman-san, with whom I had been e-mailing for the last three months or so. They gave me and Yuliy (the other Fulbright student who came early) some fat checks; we went the bank and then straight to the University hotel at Tsukuba. My bags were already there (thanks to the takkyubin). Yuliy immediately put on his yukata and said, “These are awesome.” We ate tuna and mushroom spaghetti at the “Journal Cafe.” I really like Japanese restaurants so far; they are novel.
Day 3 and 4 - Iwata-san lent me and Yuliy some bicycles and took me around apartment shopping. I didn’t really find a place I liked, but I found that Leopalace21 is kind of a rip-off. We had dinner at Iwata-san’s house, she really went over the top and made about 8 dishes. Her husband was really cool and spoke really good English.
Sunday, I just went around looking at various little shops and did a little house-hunting on my own. All the places I found were kind of cheap but really dirty.
Day 5 - Monday, first day of classes. I met the lab-members, they are pretty cool. Ryota-san really helped me out with applying for the Japanese language classes and getting my student ID. He also has a really nice place-10 tatami and new-but is paying 4万5千円 (~$450) for it, which is more than I want to pay. Daya (Dayanand Singh) is a really cool dude. He did his undergraduate in Japan and has just started his masters program here; he speaks fluently, so if I hang out with him too much I won’t learn anything. He’s also been helping me out with house-hunting.
Yuliy moved into his dorm-room today. It was really nice looking and cheap (8千7百円-$87 a month!). I thought about living in the dorms, but I don’t think I want to deal with the rules.
I started really craving American food, so I bought some Pringles and Ritz crackers.
Day 6 - I met Dr. Kaiser today; I had to jump through some hoops to get into the Japanese classes, but everything is fine now. I take my placement test on Thursday and classes start next Monday (?). I also found a house I like, it’s 3万円 (~$300), is clean inside, and is in a nice area. I also don’t have to pay 礼金、敷金 is only 1 months rent and the first month is free. (礼金-reikin-gift money given to the landlord for letting you stay at their apartment; 敷金-shikikin-deposit). I have to wait until tomorrow for the rental agency’s insurance company to approve me. So if everything goes well, I’ll probably move in Friday.
After house-hunting, Daya and I met Dr. Tanaka (Akbar, it’s true); he’s going to be my advisor since he is doing brain-machine-interfacing (BMI). He’s pretty cool; he just got back from a research position at USC for 3 or 4 years. He’s teamed up with some medical professors and they just did an MRI and EEG scan of someone; they are trying to reproduce the BMI-cursor experiment. I think being part of his research team is going to be pretty cool.
Day 7 - I am finally woke up at a decent time today. I think I’ll try to find an abandoned bike today. There are a crap-load of bikes here; everyone rides a bike. I used to think everything would be better at OU if everyone rode bikes, but I was wrong. If everyone rode a bike, there would be no room to walk or do anything. I’ll take some pictures of what I’m talking about later today.