JM posts

Two Paralympic Sports that I Enjoy Watching

Wheelchair rugby and blind football, soccer in American English, are two Paralympic sports that I really enjoy watching. I saw a blind football game between Japan and Colombia on Sunday night. It is amazing to see players dribble the ball between their feet even though they can’t see it. The goalkeepers are the only players who can see, but blind players can score against them. Colombia scored a point against Japan and went on to win 1-0. Wheelchair rugby is even more exciting because it is rough and fast-paced just like regular rugby. Players hit each other in their wheelchairs and sometimes knock each other over. This time the Japanese team played five games and won every game. They beat the U.S.A. in the finals and got their first gold medal! (131 words)

JM posts

Why Such Long Hair?

I met two boys, one Japanese and the other Korean, who had very long hair. The Japanese boy was in elementary school. Actually, I thought he was a girl when I first met him because of his hair. When he entered junior high school, he cut off his long hair and looked like the other boys. I met the Korean boy when he visited Fujimae Tidal Flat last December. He was a junior high school student, and his hair was even longer than the Japanese boy’s. I met him again when I went to Korea last week. This time, his hair was short like the other boys’. Why did these two boys grow their hair so long and then cut it short? They wanted to help other people who had lost their own hair, so they grew their hair long, cut it short, and made a hair donation. (148 words)

JM posts

A Dangerously Slow Typhoon

Typhoon 10 has been in the news for about a week now. It is called Typhoon Shanshan outside Japan, and it is one of the slowest-moving typhoons ever. The early weather maps showed it hitting the Kansai area by August 28, but it changed direction and hit southern Kyushu on August 29. The winds were over 100 kilometers per hour. Some houses lost their roofs, and some stores lost their shutters. The wind was bad, but the rain was even worse. Some places got more than 400 millimeters of rain in one day. There have been landslides and flooding in many parts of Japan. Shanshan is no longer a typhoon. It’s a tropical storm now. Even so, you need to be careful. Some places are still getting a lot of rain.   (131 words)

JM posts

Readers’ Corner: A Misunderstanding at a Chinese Restaurant

When I ordered a set lunch at a Chinese restaurant in Yokohama, the waitress, an elderly woman, asked, “What would you like to drink?” I said, “Oolong tea, please.” She brought a huge pot of Oolong tea when the lunch was served. I was surprised to see how big the teapot was, and I couldn’t drink all the tea. When I asked for the check, I had another surprise. The total was 1,300 yen even though the set lunch was only 700 yen. I asked the waitress about it, and she said that the Oolong tea was 600 yen. I said, “What? I thought the tea came with the set lunch. You asked me what I wanted to drink.” She replied, “Drinks don’t come with the set lunch.” I should have asked, “Does this come with lunch?” when I ordered the tea. (142 words)

JM posts

Great Communicators

How do children from different countries communicate? On our trip to Korea, everyone had a smartphone, so they used online sites to translate. Some children were better communicators than others. Of course, if you can speak the language of the other person, you can communicate more easily. There was one Korean girl who spoke Japanese very well, and she talked to everyone. A couple of the Japanese students could speak good English, but one tried much harder than the other to talk to the Korean students. One Korean boy couldn’t speak Japanese or English, but he shared his love of nature and video games with the Japanese boys. All of these children were great communicators, not because they could speak another language but because they shared their thoughts with everyone.  (130 words)

JM posts

Is It Hot?

When we take children to Korea, they sometimes have problems with the food. A lot of Korean food is hot and spicy, and kimchi is served at every meal, even at breakfast. Japanese children aren’t used to eating spicy food, so some of them don’t eat very much. Luckily, meals usually come with rice and five or six side dishes. Not all of those side dishes are hot. One of the girls, who doesn’t like spicy things, kept asking me the same question, “Is it hot?” That is a difficult question! To me, many things weren’t hot, but she couldn’t eat them. (102 words)