Category: News (Page 25 of 29)

Rubbish, Trash, Garbage Part 2

Recycling Poster

Recycling Poster

This was in my mail box this morning.  You may remember my post earlier this year that showed my trash can and described all the various categories.  This poster is describing another one, recyclable plastics.  So now I have the following categories; recyclable plastics, non-combustible, combustible, cans, glass, pet bottles, cardboard, newspapers, magazines, milk and juice cartons.  All of these have to be separated and bagged.  The newspapers, magazines, cardboard and milk cartons need to be separated bundled and tied with string.  I have until October 4 to figure out how to do it, actually I have until October 14 since I am leaving for China on October 2.  I intend to head to the 100 yen store this afternoon for my supply of string.  I think I will start now so I can get it right before then.  So while you think I may be complaining the new recyclable plastics category actually saves me from carrying my plastic grocery bags and my styrofoam trays back to the store.  Now, they pick them up for me.

My motivation for doing this is two fold.  First, not doing it right makes more work for the sweet Japanese man who maintains our apartment building.  I know he checks each bag of trash I put downstairs or he will hear from the local officials.  The garbage men check to make sure it is done properly.  Second, I love to think that all this recycling that I do and that Japan does helps the earth.  I also love the fact that the local government sent me three posters explaining the change in both English and Japanese.

Little Red Returns

Little Red

Little Red

Hooray!  Last night, Rick brought Little Red back home (see Stormtrooper post below).  It seems like she has been gone forever, although it has only been about a week and a half.  I was so glad to see her that I spent over an hour with her and the English instruction manual setting her back up.  She has a new sim card and battery and seems to have recovered quite nicely.  Ako-san went to a lot of trouble to get her taken care of for me.  I think in the US I would have been offered a new contract and a new phone. 

In fact, when she went in for repairs I really didn’t care if I saw her again.  After two years I was ready for a new phone.  Little Red was a great little flip phone when I got her, but there are some really cool looking phones out there.  Enter the Storm Trooper loaner phone.  Whoa!!! It is amazing how that phone put Little Red in perspective for me.  I love Little Red and was so happy to get her back.  She is tiny and most of all she’s red, my favorite color.  She works and after two years I am finally learning about some of her finer features.  My favorite feature is being able to send and receive email.  Ako-san even arranged an easier email address for my phone.  The last one looked something like this npnwsnerhxi63v0eke at ntt dot com.  How could anyone remember that and anyone receiving an email from that address would most likely think it was spam.  Now, I have a really nice, easy to remember address and anyone receiving an email will most  definitely know that it is from me.  I am so glad Little Red is home. (Please note-My phones did not have names until this experience!)

Mount Fuji

Last Friday Rick traveled with a group from our stake to Mount Fuji.  They spent the night in a dorm and began the ascent early Saturday.  It is a long hard climb and most people who do it, only do it once.  A few of the people from our stake have done it a few times.  This is a picture of Rick at the summit.  He is so amazing!!!

Rick on Mt Fuji

Rick on Mt Fuji

Storm Trooper

Somewhere after Omaha my cute, little, red, Japanese, flip phone stopped working.  I hoped that it would start working again when I returned to Japan, it didn’t.  With my limited Japanese, it is impossible for me to communicate with NTT DoCoMo, my cell phone company.  Rick took it to work and gave his secretary; and mine, I suppose, since she does all kinds of things for me; the assignment to talk to the phone service.  So after a few days I asked Rick for an update.  Well…my phone is in the shop.  Not the answer I was hoping for.  A new phone would have been nice.  Rick said he was bringing home a loaner with my sim card in it.  I thought he would show up with my phone in a black version because I know that the company has some.  I wasn’t so lucky.  Begin playing the Star Wars theme song here.  He brought home the Storm Trooper Phone.  I really haven’t seen a phone this big or ugly in a long time.  My camera is a Sony touch screen and the phone is twice as thick and 1/2 longer.  It won’t even fit in the cell phone pocket in my purse.  I hope I get little red back soon! In the meantime, maybe I have Darth Vader’s number in my phonebook now.

The Storm Trooper

The Storm Trooper

Traveling across America with Kristina and Jack

kristina and Jack

kristina and Jack

Kristina, Jack and I are crossing America this week.  Kristina is moving to Boston to get her Master’s degree in Education at Boston University.  I am really glad that I get to help her drive her car to Boston.  It’s not very often that I get to spend so much one on one time with one of my children and I really cherish it.  We are laughing a lot and really enjoying this time together. 
We started Monday evening by driving to Park City to spend the night.  We had a great dinner and called it a night.  It had been a long day moving her furniture to storage in Bountiful and then loading the rest of her stuff into the car.  While I did help move the furniture, and boy it’s not easy getting a queen size mattress out of a basement, she did virtually all the loading of the car.  Tuesday, we drove to Grand Island Nebraska.  Wednesday we decided that we could get much farther than our planned stop near Chicago and Kristina set the goal to make it to Ohio.  At 10pm we stopped at a Holiday Inn Express just 13 miles across the Ohio border.  Today we covered Ohio (stopping at Kirtland) and Pennsylvannia.  We are now in Palmyra, New York.  We stopped at the Hill Cumorah on our way in and will see the rest of the church history sites tomorrow before heading east again, this time to Boston!

Hot time, summer in the city

Fish on a Stick
Fish on a Stick

One of the fun things to do in Tokyo during the summer is to attend a Matsuri (festival).  There is something going on somewhere every week.  Andrew and Leigh were here visiting the past two weeks and one day we went to the Chinese Lantern Festival at Asakusa.  One of my favorite things about about any matsuri is the sreet food.  Rick loves this kind or food because it is what he ate as a missionary, it is his comfort food.  However, fish on a stick is not one of the things I plan to try, ever.  Fish on a stick is at every festival and is very popular.  I could not get Andrew or Leigh to try it.  Leigh did find the Japanese version of french fries.  It is an entire potato, peeled, a stick poked through the center, cut in a spiral and  deep fried.  It is finally sprinkled with cheese powder and then drizzled with Japanese mayonaisse.  Yum!!

 

Japanese fries

Japanese friesAsakusa

The end…

of Seminary (for this year, anyway).  Seminary ended last Thursday.  I thought that I would be happy about it and get to sleep in.  In some ways I am happy about it, but I am not sleeping in.  In fact, I am getting up even earlier.  It must be due to the fact that I am getting to bed earlier, no more late nights doing final preparations for my lesson.  When I say earlier, I mean really early.  Today it was 3:30 am!  That is a bit early for me.  I read and studied and then went for an hour long bike ride.  Tokyo is great at 5:00 am.  It is light and there are not too many people out.  I can ride on the sidewalks and not have to dodge the crowds.  This morning I rode to Omotesando and Harajuku.  It was so quiet.  This is the good part about not having seminary.  I have three months to study what I want to and go for early morning walks and bike rides.

Walking home from seminary last Wednesday morning I realized that it was almost over for this year.  Thinking about not seeing my students for three months caused me to cry for a minute.  I will definitely miss the kids that are graduating this year.  Friday morning I woke up and started planning for next year and teaching the New Testament.  I figured out that if I read 4 pages a day between now and the end of August I should have it finished.  I have memorized 5 of the 25 Scripture mastery verses and will learn 2 each week and will have all 25 done before we begin again in September.  I am excited to teach again.

Garbage

I thought about writing this post a month ago and didn’t. My thought process went like this… “I should write about my trash. I could post pictures of my trash can and all my little bins and explain why it takes so much of my time. Yikes!!! What does that say about my life when all I can think of to post about is garbage!!!” Maybe I better take my camera and get out and see if I can find anything more interesting to blog about.” So the garbage post was never written. However, I have changed my mind. If the rest of the world was as obsessed as the Japanese are about how they get rid of things, then the world would be in much better shape.

The first time I began to understand the importance of this trash thing was when I was still living in the hotel. I bought something at a food court and when I went to cleanup I was a bit confused by the garbage bin. There was a hole in the top to pour liquids in. A place for plastic and a place for food and paper. Everything was written in Japanese. Luckily, there were pictures.

On the first day we moved into our apartment the man who manages our building took me to the basement trash room and explained to me in Japanese what to do with my trash. He pointed to a sign on the wall also in Japanese that explained everything, it also had pictures. On the way out, I noticed a sign just like it, only in English. I made a mental note to come back after he went home and study the English version, which I did.

I have several categories of trash: combustible (food scraps, paper and anything that can be burned), incombustible (plastic, metal and anything that cannot be burned), cans, glass bottles, PET bottles, paper and cardboard, cardboard milk and juice cartons (these have to be rinsed and cut flat) and styrofoam. Each of these must be disposed of separately. This means I would need 7 or 8 different containers, one for each category of trash. At first I was going crazy with all the little bins in the kitchen and laundry room not to mention remembering which day each type of trash was collected.


On my first trip to Costco I found the perfect trash can. It has three separate compartments and pop-up lids. Each compartment has a pail with a handle. So now instead of three of the bins I have one nice looking one for combustibles, incombustibles and glass bottles and cans.

Then in the laundry room I use a basket for the newpapers and cardboard boxes which must be flattened. I have another bin for the milk cartons and combine the PET bottles and the styrofoam in another. I have gotten quite good at making sure everything is disposed of properly. Everything can go downstairs to the trash room except the styrofoam and I have to carry that back to the grocery store for recycling.

When it comes to garbage, I am grateful that I live in an apartment instead of a house. My friend had mounds of trash building up outside her house because the garbage men would not take it. They knew she was a foreigner and so they would open her bags and check them. If she had made a mistake they would not pick it up. They would always leave a note in Japanese explaining the problem.� She does not read Japanese.� It took her a month to get it right.

I suspect that our building manager sorts through the trash before he puts it out for the truck. I suspect this because my trash disappears soon after I put it in the trash room. The bins are always empty every afternoon at 5:00. There must be another trash room in the building where he takes it all to check and make sure we are doing it right.� Should it bother me that someone is picking through my trash?� Well, it does.

Recycling has become a way of life and it bothers me, when I return to the US or visit Allyson in London, that everything pretty much goes in the same bin.� Kristina does have a large trash can for recycling, but they don’t sort it.� Salt Lake County must pay someone else to do the sorting.� Over the last 18 months I have come to appreciate the Japanese for being so obsessed with trash and I have stopped complaining about how much time it takes.� In fact, it doesn’t take that much time at all since I have figured out my system.

12 things you didn’t know about me

Dee tagged me so here goes. 

1. I’ve never been tagged before!tomatoes.jpg

2. I love green vegetables, especially spinach!

3. I love tomatoes.

4. I murmur a lot.

5. I actually like getting up at 5am everyday.

6. I will make a roundtrip long-haul flight (over 7 hours in duration) every other month during 2008.  My long haul flights are 12-14 hours each way.  I really love my family to spend this much time on airplanes!!!!!

7. I like a lot of indy music.

8. My current cause is microcredit.  Visit http://www.kiva.org/ to see why.

9. Most of the time, I like the fact that we don’t own a car.  I like to figure out how to get places by bus, train, walking or on my bike.  The only time I really wish I had a car is when I want to go to Costco.

10. I love to read.  Currently, I am reading The End of Poverty by Jeffrey D. Sachs, Banker to the Poor  by Muhammad Yunus and Joseph Smith-Rough Strong Rolling by Richard Bushman. 

11. The idea of being in an earthquake terrifies me.  So why do I live in one of the most earthquake prone countries in the world??????? I have faith!!!! Notice the link on my blog to the US geological survey, Earthquakes!!!! I use it often to seen where the epicenter of the tremors I feel are located and their strength.

12.  I don’t like to go to parties where they sell you stuff.

So that “might” be 12 things you don’t know about me.  Not very exciting!  If I am going to do this right I guess I should tag someone else. 

I tag Alex, Laurie, and Kaylene.

Famous????

Recently, one of the assistant editors of the for the Church News was in Tokyo for his grandson’s baptism.  While he was here he visited my early morning seminary class, took pictures and interviewed my students.  Yesterday one of the parents told me she had seen the article he wrote on the Deseret News website.  It was also sent out in newspaper form on February 23.  So, if you live in Utah or subscribe to it you can see it there.  It was fun for my class!  Brother Hill being from Utah was in awe of students who get up for early morning seminary.  He talked to my Japanese student Megumi for an hour.  She gets up at 4 am every morning to catch the first of  the 2 trains she takes at 5am to get to the church just before 6am.  Her parents actually selected a high school for her based on the proximity to an English speaking seminary.  Most Japanese seminary students meet once a week and participate in the home-study program.  I have 17 students and almost all of them get to the church by walking, biking or razor scooter.  Meg comes on the train and the other 5 are in a carpool.  They amaze me everyday!!!  When I wake up at 5am on cold mornings and just want to crawl back under the covers I remember that Meg is already on her way.  I jump out of bed and hurry to the church to be ready when she gets there at 5:55am.  Their dedication inspires me.  You can check out the article at http://www.deseretnews.com/cn/view/1,1721,495006810,00.html 

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