No, I was concerned about Jeff, whom I'd left downstairs in the lobby, by the coffee bar, with a tall cup of joe and Accounting for Dummies. An hour and a half is quite a while to wait, and I knew that if he decided to hunt down a bathroom, or step outside to take the air, he could be tricky to relocate. I stuck the cell phone that he doesn't know how to use in his shirt pocket, having earlier scrawled across its back, in indelible black marker: Emily 555-555-5555. (Well, no...not really 555...my real phone number, for which the 5s are subbing. But you knew that.) And I changed the ring to something more shrill that he'd be sure to recognize as a phone-ring, and not a random jazz riff appearing in the air out of nowhere.
As it turned out, he waited just fine. And I realized, afterward, that a smaller solarium-like lounge, at the end of the hall on the second floor, might be a safer, less frenetic place to wait, should he keep preferring to come with me.
And as for Japanese class, I am glad I'm still at it. Apart from a few minor switch-ups in class roster, (Lizzie⇋Bouzu, as mentioned, being one,) the classroom was a mirror-image of last semester, with (this time) Paul-san to the left, Duane-san to the right, and several other pleasantly familiar faces. It's something my brain needs. Brains are like pizza dough. Real, handmade, Italian pizza dough that needs to be pummeled a bit before being tossed in the air, spun a few rotations, then stretched against its natural elastic tendency to shrink back on itself. Well, take that brain. 46 new kanji to learn this semester. Exactly the kind of abuse I need. And I guess, if worse comes to worse, I can sit Jeff in the back of the classroom.
2 comments:
You know one of my sisters-in-law is Japanese, and loving in Tokyo? If you ever go for a visit I can hook you up so you know someone there. My eldest brother owns a house in the suburbs there, but is still living in London paying for it, while his wife and daughter are in Tokyo.
Avanutria did some Japanese classes, but I'm not sure how much she retained.
It's hard to retain Japanese. New concepts stick best to a pre-existing grid, much in the way crossword puzzles become easier the farther you get in them. The Indo-European languages I've studied fit nicely into my grid, but with Japanese...I'm having to form an almost completely new one, so it can take a while before a given word has some other piece of knowledge to link to that helps me remember it.
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