Being that it’s technically summer vacation for the students, my supervisor told me that I didn’t officially need to be at work. This carried a heavy overtone of “you should go to make a good impression,” though, so I trooped off to IJHS, one of two junior highs that I’ll be working at. I start at IJHS “officially” in September, but showing up today at 7:55 got a lot of “so serious!” and “what a good worker!” and “so dedicated!” comments so hopefully I’ve made a decent first impression. However, I’ve also been told that I need to “take some time to get used to the town,” so I left at about quarter to one.
The tea lady of IJHS and one of the other teachers seem to be sort of taking me under their wing at this particular school. During lunchtime, a bigger number of teachers than I’ve seen in one building so far materialized out of nowhere and all came in to eat in the teacher’s room, and Tea Lady and the other teacher came and plopped themselves down right next to my desk and talked to me. I’d forgotten my lunch at home and had been planning to just leave early anyway, but both of these women pressed bits of fruit on me and were sharing their food, so... it would have been really rude to turn them down. Plus, Tea Lady told me that she practices kimono in her spare time, and invited me to lunch with her sometime (”maybe with my kimono practice group”). I’m going to try to get info about where she does kimono lessons so I can get in on the fun.
I met all three English teachers at this school today, and since I definitely don’t want to use their names on the internet... I’m going to try to figure out nicknames for people. Anyway, the three of them all stopped by my desk (conveniently labeled “ALT”). The oldest one, who has really good English for a Japanese teacher, spent quite a while talking to me about Seattle, his time traveling the US during his study abroad in Wisconsin, a trip he took to Colorado with his kids recently, and politics. I’m learning more and more that people here want to talk about the election, if only to get some validation about the way Trump vs. Clinton has been presented in Japanese media.
The other two English teachers said hi to me as they came in to eat their lunch. One of them is an older lady who seems really competent and assured -- obviously a veteran teacher -- and one of them is a slightly younger woman whose voice was so quiet I had to strain to hear her. I’ll see how the next month goes, and then figure out how I work with them in classes’ context, but they both seem nice enough so hopefully we’ll be able to get by.
I left a little before one, with the excuse that I needed to get home to clean up my apartment a little and fetch photographs to print. I’ll be heading back to this particular school later in the week (going to the two elementary schools in the meantime). IJHS is the closest school to my apartment and I still almost collapsed from the heat before I got home, so for the sake of my dehydrated, non-heat-resistant body, I think I’m going to have to get a car soon. When I got home, I was in the process of changing clothes when the doorbell rang, and I’ve thus discovered that my walls are apparently thick enough to block the sound of me calling “Just a moment, please!” but not thick enough to block the sounds of footsteps or things being dropped upstairs. In any case, I now have a redelivery slip for a magazine and the knowledge that my post slot in the door is apparently too small to fit much more than a little envelope through. Japan doesn’t do “leaving things at the door” (given that my apartment’s front door is five steps from what might be the busiest road in my town, I guess this makes sense) so I had to figure out how to schedule redelivery online. Fingers crossed I got that right.
It’s thunderstorming again today and the air feels heavy and still. I might take a nap before I make dinner.