yama steez 1

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from Mexico
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from Norway
seen from Canada
yama steez 1
(The Other) Nobu
dancing in the street
U.S.J.
Day 185
I always start class by asking each of my students a questions (eg. Where do you want to travel? What is your dream job?), and having them ask me one question each. Due in large part to their limited knowledge of the English language, their inquiries are usually relatively boring; they'll ask things such as "What fruit do you like?" or "How old are you?" Yesterday I was teaching some of my favorite High School students. This particular group of kids is super smart and their English is near perfect. I knew they had it in them to ask me more well thought out questions than "What animal do you like?" (P. S. - I like unicorns). I challenged them to ask me something that they had never asked me before, and something in which they were genuinely interested in knowing my answer. I was thoroughly impressed with the quality of questions I received. After meditating on the challenge for a few minutes, my students threw me back some curve balls such as "Why did you come to Japan?", "What's your favorite thing about Canada?" and "If I gave you ¥1000000000, what would you do with the money?" One student's question and the conversation it provoked, however, really stood out and I haven't been able to stop pondering it since. A boy named Kento asked me the following: "When you were my age, 15 years old, what were your dreams?" I told him that I had always wanted to travel the world. He replied, "You're doing that right now, aren't you? You are a very long way from your home country." "I guess you're right," I mused. "What else do you dream of?" he continued. "I really want to help people," I said, not giving specifics for fear of revealing my innermost dreams incase I fail to fulfill them. "You're doing that right now too," he immediately replied. "You help me every time you teach this class. Maybe you should dream bigger."
Day 125 (part 2)
Dear Future Self:
You are lovely.
You deserve everything you've ever wanted.
Don't for a second forget it.
Keep your head up and your heart open.
Much love,
Your Current Self.
Day 120
My life is a bowing war.
Day 107
I have gone from knowing absolutely no one here to consistently triple-booking myself.
Lessons of the day: Making friends is easy if one has an open heart and mind. Prioritizing friends is hard.
I want to please everybody.
I can't please everybody.