Just to show these things happen in real life in Japan. I was chatting with my conversation class yesterday and one of my students was showing pictures of her and her friends at a baseball game in Fukuoka. So I asked who drove them there, and she pointed to the picture and said, "he did" at which I did a double take since I'd assumed everyone in the picture was female. I would have been more embarassed, but the other two guys in the class had also thought the guy was a woman *L*
B. has been over to eat dinner and watch AMVs and chat. I had a pretty easy day today, considering it was my Kindergarten class in the morning and both B. and K. were watching. The kids were actually slightly less energetic than usual, but still managed to get in at least one good grope *L* It was so cute the other day btw, when I was teaching on wendsday, the kiddies were cooking apparently, so the teacher comes in while I'm in the middle of the lesson and offers some badly put together sandwiches to the shrine on the stage behind me. Then five minutes later, they come in and offer me a sandwich the kids made. It's really fascinating to see differences in culture like that.
Ended up in another of my weird discussions in conversation class today. It was quite fascinating to talk to someone who still farms rice and her family has been doing so for at least seven centuries.
B. has been over to eat dinner and watch AMVs and chat. I had a pretty easy day today, considering it was my Kindergarten class in the morning and both B. and K. were watching. The kids were actually slightly less energetic than usual, but still managed to get in at least one good grope *L* It was so cute the other day btw, when I was teaching on wendsday, the kiddies were cooking apparently, so the teacher comes in while I'm in the middle of the lesson and offers some badly put together sandwiches to the shrine on the stage behind me. Then five minutes later, they come in and offer me a sandwich the kids made. It's really fascinating to see differences in culture like that.
Ended up in another of my weird discussions in conversation class today. It was quite fascinating to talk to someone who still farms rice and her family has been doing so for at least seven centuries.