Thursday, June 25, 2009

Ancient history

I've been reading some of Blaine's old stories because we are thinking about writing a book together, and I stumbled on a story he wrote just 2 years ago about a family trip we took to San Diego. The headline was "Simple Pleasures for the Sippy-Cup Crowd."

It included this excellent photo of Arno, who was really, really, really into pirates (and donuts) at age 2 1/2. He has since become serially obsessed with Superman, Spiderman, Batman, Star Wars (Luke and then Anakin Skywalker), Transformers and, now, Ben 10.


I'd forgotten most of these details, and it was an excellent reminder of how far we and the children have come as a family. They're older and more interesting, we're older and more patient - and we're all better at managing adventures and travel uncertainties together without having to deal with naps and, for the most part, tantrums.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Asphalt playground

When you don't have a backyard, you use what you have for a playground: a flat side street very close to our house.




After a very comfortable May and June, it's gotten into the high 80s during the day; the humidity will be reasonable until early July. Around 4:30/5pm, when the sun is low and Blaine finishes his work, he takes the children outside to ride their Razor scooters and to kick or play "Monkey in the Middle" with a soccer ball.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Baby food

Japanese baby food is so different than American baby food! I saw these at the big Nissin grocery store.

This is my favorite. How many American parents think that their babies would eat sardines?


It's amazing to think how baby-food companies train citizens for the national diet. In the U.S., you often see very sweet baby foods like mashed yams and carrots and, in some brands, bland grains tarted up with corn derivatives.

But the Japanese seem to think that (1) seafood is pretty important and (2) sugar doesn't have to be the dominant ingredient.




Thursday, June 18, 2009

North Korean insurance scam

Blaine has a truly excellent story on the front page of Thursday's WashPost: about the North Korea goverment's insurance scam that brings hundreds of millions of dollars into the "hermit kingdom."

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Grand Sumo


Last month, when Lucinda and Arno didn't have school, I took them to see one of the three annual Grand Sumo tournaments in Tokyo. It was fantastic. The kids loved it and it was, astonishingly, one of the best bargain outings this city has to offer.

I learned a lot about sumo when I wrote a story about it for Kateigaho International Edition, the arts and culture magazine that I work for in Tokyo. Last October, I went to a sumo "stable" to see an incredibly grueling practice session, interviewed a wrestler named Chiyoshuhou, and ate lunch with a group of the lower-ranked men. Here is my post about my visit to the Kokonoe-beya stable.

Of the six national tournaments every year, three are held in Tokyo. Each tournament lasts for 15 days; in the top two divisions (Makuuchi and Juryo), the wrestlers have 1 match each day. The lower divisions compete in 7 matches each. Those who win a majority of their matches improve their ranking; those who lose a majority slip lower in the rankings. (Here's the tournament website for details.)

The Grand Sumo tournaments take place near the Ryogoku subway station in the Kokugikan arena. There are sumo murals painted outside.


This is what it looks like inside. Google tells me that sumo is deeply tied to the shinto religion and shinto ritual. The wrestlers face off on a clay-and-rice-straw platform that is rebuilt for every tournament, consecrated by priests and off-limits to women.



If you buy general admission tix, you can sit right in front until it gets more crowded. So we had great views all day. I even saw the wrestler whom I interviewed - and he won his match.


Going to sumo is kind of like going to the circus. People order box lunches, beer and sake that are delivered to their seats in large shopping bags. Our lunch was this huge box of Morinaga's Milk Caramels.


At noon, we wandered around and watched lower-ranked wrestlers walk around in colorful cotton yukata and sandals. Highly ranked wrestlers wear more expensive dark-colored kimonos and seem always to be followed around by younger rikishi carrying supplies in plastic boxes. Wrestlers have greased topknots, and the Old-Spice-like smell of the grease pervades the arena.


There are, naturally, all sorts of sumo trinkets to buy - and we bought Blaine the coffee mug on the right.




The main events -- matches in sumo's top two divisions -- begin at 2:30pm. In box seats, before their ticketholders arrived, we watched a procession of the Juryo (second-highest) division. These guys are not necessarily that tall, but they are quite huge - probably 250+ lbs. They get to wear one of the "skirts," which typically cost thousands of dollars (or millions of yen) and are sometimes covered in jewels, when they reach the top two divisions.



Here's one of the matches, captured on my little digital camera. One of the wrestlers might be Bulgarian - definitely not Japanese. Audio from Lucinda: "Why is he choking him? Why is that other guy choking him?"



We left at 3:30pm - 5 hours after we arrived - just as the matches in the top division were about to begin. I'll definitely take the children back and hopefully Blaine can come along, too.

Arno - in Japanese!

It's news to us, but it turns out that Arno can sing the Willowbrook song in Japanese, too.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Arno loves his school

Arno loves his preschool, Willowbrook International School, and he has been singing the school's song lately.



He's feeling kind of sad because all of his closest friends from Sakura/Sakuranbo (cherry blossom/cherry) class are moving up to kindergarten. Most of them will go to Nishimachi, Lucinda's school, but Arno still has a year of pre-K ahead. Fortunately, he's a friend magnet and we're sure he'll be happy as long as there are a few talkative, action-packed boys in his class.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Blaine's latest...

... is about Toyota's new, 3rd generation Prius. He spent a few days last week at a Toyota mfg plant in Toyota City and said the new Prius gets 50 miles/gallon and has been adjusted to suit larger (some might say "fatter") American customers.

It's a little crazy to think about how much money the US Govt is pouring into General Motors and Chrysler, which are just starting to reinvent themselves to build cars w/ better gas mileage. Meanwhile Toyota and Honda are ready to crush them before they get out of the gate. US automakers have been so short-sighted.

In other "Blaine's latest" news, North Korea has sentenced 2 American women journalists to a dozen years of hard labor.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

7th Birthday Girl


We celebrated Lucinda's birthday at our house today with 14 of her friends! The girls were incredibly well behaved and nice to one another. Each time a girl arrived at the door, the rest rushed over to welcome her.

There were two crafts: decorating a birthday crown and decorating a wooden picture frame and a postcard to put in it. Some girls went a little crazy with the glitter glue! Blaine ran the games: (1) Simon Says and (2) Musical Statues. The menu was easy American food: PB&J, tuna sandwiches, Lays potato chips (a huge, huge hit), crudites, watermelon and birthday cake.

I made the cake with a very successful recipe from an expert-baking mom at Willowbrook but both layers mysteriously fell when I took them out of our screwy French oven. Fortunately, it tasted great despite its pound-cake density.

When the girls sang a boisterous rendition of Happy Birthday, Lucinda looked as happy as I've ever seen her.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Blaine's latest...

... is a fascinating story about Kim Jong-un, the third son and apparent successor to Kim Jong-il.

Blaine and his South Korean assistant got some excellent details about briefings to South Korean lawmakers by the South Korean intelligence service, plus independent info about how children and soldiers are singing or chanting about the 20-something son and heir.

Blaine finished his story about 18 hours ago and it was immediately posted on the WaPo's website. Oddly, several of his references and even some of the language in Blaine's story pop up in the story that was just posted by the NYT.