This is for those few not on Facebook:
2. I have been professionally published in newspapers and magazines. My first paid free-lance publication was a book review of David Mitchell’s debut novel Ghostwritten in The Daily Mainichi News August 12, 2000. I have also published articles in Tokyo Classified (which is now known as Metropolis), The Asahi Evening News, The Japan Times, and Eye-Ai (an English language Japanese culture magazine).
3. I still publish, but only dry academic pieces about teaching English as a foreign language in small university journals. This year I wrote two separate articles about project based learning.
4. Before moving to Seattle I was signed up for classes at the University of San Diego, but I decided not to enter after my Grandma reneged on helping me with the tuition. I never regretted the decision; I met/established most of my best life-long friends while in college in Seattle.
5. The reason I chose to go on the JET Program was so that I could have a one-year experience abroad. I have been in Japan for more than 11 years now. I have lived longer in Japan than I have in Seattle.
6. Before I came to Japan I filled out an application for the Peace Corps, but I didn’t turn it in because I thought “2 years” was a too long of a commitment to make.
7. Before I got my MA in Education at WWU I tried to get into several English Literature Ph. D programs, but was turned down by them all. However, in a sense I have become a university professor, but, I would much rather be teaching English literature than English language.
8. I still feel a bit guilty about being a teacher in Japan. I got into teaching as a form of public service and because I love reading and writing and wanted to share that enthusiasm. In some ways I feel my proper place is teaching The Great Gatsby in some inner city high school in America.
9. I have been to 32 countries-mostly in Europe and Asia. I love to travel and love to experience foreign cultures-especially the food culture. I think I need to branch out in my travels: South America, Africa, and the Middle East? My next trip will be to Thailand and Cambodia for a conference in Phnom Penh. I am also contemplating doing a conference in Bangladesh in September.
10. Traveling and living abroad has taught me to be satisfied with fewer possesions and has made me realize how incredibly lucky we are to have been brought up in a wealthy and relatively free country like America.
11. Living abroad ahs made me more patriotic. I frequently have to defend our country over criticism by other foreigners. I always admit that there are things the government does that I do not support, but I point out that America is the best and worst of many things. So I point out the things that make me proud like the constitution, the superior higher education system, the history of dissent seen in people like Thomas Paine and Patrick Henry, and all the great leaders like Jefferson, Lincoln, FDR, etc…
12. I often also have to defend the people of America as well. Some foreigners think that we are a nation of religious yokels. But I tell them that most of my friends have advanced college degrees, passports, have traveled outside America, speak foreign languages, and are deep thinking liberals.
13. I really love to read and learn: books, magazines, websites, journals, menus, everything. I think I average reading about a book a week-usually between 45-50 a year. I never thought I’d be fluent in a foreign language, and I don’t think I’m there yet, but I feel that my speaking ability is getting close.
14. I would love to write a novel someday, but I fear I am more of an expository writer/memoirist rather than a fiction writer. If I ever do write a novel I am sure that one is all I have in me.
15. In high school I had made plans with friends to buy a bass so we could form a cover band. I am still planning on getting a guitar and learning how to play. Next year…
16. My first rock concert was Quiet Riot/ Lover Boy.
17. I have only had one car accident: a head on collision outside the city of Shannon in Ireland. Mel Marquis was in the passenger seat and was thankfully unharmed.
18. I’ve basically been working since I was 14 with a paper route for The Spokesman Review. I have worked at Chuck E. Cheese, Pier 1 Imports, in a Sony TV factory for a month while in San Diego, Benetton, The Boisere Café, a summer as a construction worker/laborer, Ray’s Boathouse (a restaurant), AAA Emergency Road Service, Bullie’s (a restaurant in Bellingham), a shoe shop in a mall-besides teaching jobs for the last 12 years. Last year I did one wedding as a celebrant in Japan (not my thing).
19. I went to a Catholic grade school and when I was in the fourth grade I pulled a veil off a nun. I still don’t why; she was one of my favorite teachers.
20. When I was 14 or 15, I refused to get confirmed into the Catholic religion. My mother wasn’t too happy. I recently took a religious quiz and it said my beliefs were most in line Buddhism and least in line with Catholicism. I don’t believe in religion. But I don’t think that means I’m not spiritual.
21. I grew 2 inches and gained 20+ pounds between the ages of 18-20. Before that I could dunk a volleyball with one-hand. I think I can still touch the rim though.
22. During garbage time of a big loss I scored 6 points in less than two minutes in a high school JV basketball game: outscoring the point guard I replaced by 6 points.
23. One of my nicknames in high school was “Dubbage”-because I didn’t smoke it. The others are: “Catfish”, “Night Train”, “Porkchop”, and “LeCoy”. I made up “Catfish” and “Night Train” myself-don’t ask why. I was at Mike Visaya’s house for Thanksgiving and we were hungry before dinner so they fed us pork chops. Nobody calls Mike “Porkchop”-why is that?
24. I have had more friends than family members visit me in Japan.
25. I work at five different universities and when class is in session I teach Monday through Saturday (20-90 minute classes a week) . But I still get about 5 months paid vacation a year. I don’t teach again until April 8th, which is why I have time to write this.
Number 6 cracked me up, since I, fresh out of college, also thought the Peace Corps was too long. Came to Japan instead. Fifteen years later...
Posted by: ted | February 12, 2009 at 08:42 AM