Actual for You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Reference and Education > Reference and Education > An American Teaching English In Japan

Tags

  • highway
  • could
  • offered
  • increasingly insistent
  • about thirty
  • various products

  • Links

  • Second Mortgage Quotes Online - Why Should You Apply Online?
  • Top Holiday Destinations 2005
  • Do-It-Yourself Credit Check-Up!
  • Actual for You - An American Teaching English In Japan

    The Evolution of Business Service Management (BSM)
    Looking back, the emergence of business service management (BSM) seems inevitable. This new generation of tools helps IT organizations manage technology infrastructures within the context of the key services they provide for their customers. BSM tools are critical enablers for the increasingly popular process-focused IT Service Management (ITSM) approach.What’s driving this evolution to BSM and its related IT management paradigms? Executive Consultant Troy DuMoulin of Pink Elephant, an ITIL events and consulting firm, explains, “The interest in ITIL, the evolution of legislation like SOX (Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002), and the interest in standards is symptomatic of something much more rudimentary. At the base of this growing focus on formalization and legislation is a growing awareness of exposure and dependency that the business has on IT. Before, IT was seen as an enabler, supportive but yet somehow separated from the business processes themselves. But now there is a realization that there is no true separation between the business process and the underlying IT services and systems.”Information technology has become so vital to business today – so ubiquitous in every aspect - that most businesses literally cannot function without it anymore. Even simple manual tasks like filling a car with gas or cashing a check now require the support of an IT system.This heightened reliance on IT has placed companies at a crossroads. They are compelled to address this new dependency by putting processes and technology in place to ensure IT does its job serving the business effectively. So the move to BSM can be seen as a natural reaction to the new way IT interacts with and enables business.“BSM is a way for a company to agree on what the business expectations are, and manage the IT performance to thos
    b and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insi

    Bad Credit Home Loan Mortgage Services - 3 Crucial Things To Watch Out For
    When you are seeking out bad credit home loan mortgage services, there are 3 crucial things to watch out for. Predatory lenders are common among bad credit home loan lenders so it’s important to watch for signs of a shady lender.However, if you take your time and pay attention to details, you will be able to find the best mortgage services for your individual financial situation.Choose a Reputable Lender – Be sure that you are dealing with a reputable company. There are things that should put your guard up right away. Watch to see if the broker is aggressively pursuing the opportunity to give you a loan – particularly if they contact you first – beware. The old adage does apply, and if they offer services or terms that seem too good, and do not conform to the norm, watch out. Carefully research those offering bad credit home loans, checking up on their business reputations and getting a feel for what services and terms are typical.Read The Fine Print - The next of the 3 crucial things to watch out for has to due with having a clear understanding of the terms and conditions offered by those providing bad credit home loan mortgage services. There are many predatory lenders out there and understanding how they operate will help you to steer clear of them. Outrageously high interest rates and fees, balloon payments – a large lump sum due at the end of the agreement – and a loan amount that is based on the value of the house, rather than on your income are just a few of the signs that you may be entering into a predatory loan, one in which they are betting on profiting from your failure, one that they helped to design.Try To Stay Logical - Perhaps the most important of the 3 crucial things to watch out for, the one that will help you to avoid the vast majority of the negat
    The town to which I was traveling, Tokuyama, was a couple hundred miles south of Tokyo. But because of my late arrival, I wouldn’t be able to leave Tokyo until the following morning. I boarded a local train for a hotel that one of the stewardesses aboard the jet had recommended. The train was exceptionally clean, and the Japanese people aboard the car I was on were quiet and polite. Strange symbols, wiggly lines and dots on cards above the windows, advertised an assortment of items that for me were only discernible when a photograph accompanied them. Though of course I had seen Japanese characters before, it was at this moment that I realized I was illiterate in Japan. I could neither read nor write the language.

    I looked out of the window into the wet darkness. There was nothing but an endless stream of lights. Suddenly I was startled to see a familiar symbol. Blaring out from under its bright yellow sign was a Denny’s restaurant.

    At the hotel, relaxing on the spacious queen sized bed, I switched on the adjustable lamp and turned on the television. I couldn’t understand a word, but the images were so novel that I flipped around to all the available stations watching a little bit of each. The language was so succinct, so exact, that it felt brittle, as if each phrase might snap in two. The commercials were innocent and pure. The actors in them appeared to be like children who were genuinely enthusiastic about advertising various products, which ranged from stereos to clothing to food products.

    On my bed was a neatly folded kimono. I slipped into it and walked down the hall to the bathroom. There I discovered a tiled floor with four holes in it. In front of these toilet bowl shaped holes were inverted footprints. The idea came quickly to me that I was supposed to put my feet where the footprints were and squat. So I did.

    In a separate room was the bath. When I entered there was a deep tub full of steaming water. I thought some other guest had forgotten to drain the tub. I drained, and refilled the tub, washed in it, and drained the water after I finished. But, I had the feeling I had done something amiss.

    On the way back to my room I noticed a door leading to the roof. As I was four floors up, I thought I might get a decent view of the city, but once outside I was taken with the humid warmth and scent of Japan. It had been raining, and the air felt soft and silky. Occasionally a cool eddy of air would remind me that I was outside, yet the warmth dominated. Wisps of oriental cooking drifted up to the rooftop, and it was these smells that reminded me so empathically of how far away from home I was.

    The next morning I went to the restaurant on the first floor of the hotel and with gestures and sign language ordered breakfast. The waiter shuffled toward me and set down my meal: a raw egg in a white cup and a bowl of noodles. I let the egg go down in one swallow, poured some broth over the noodles, and dug in.

    The train ride to Tokuyama took seven hours aboard the Bullet train. Outside, rows of factories spewed waste. It wasn’t until several hours later that I started to see forests on small hills.

    My train rolled into Tokuyama at six o’clock that evening. At the train station to greet me was Itzuko, the director of the school. A woman of about thirty, her friends kidded her about not being married. Her reply was that she was married to the school. She took me to her home, which she referred to as a rabbit hutch because of its small rooms. There she introduced me to a young girl who was her cousin, and who had been sent to live with her because she had gotten into trouble in her village.

    After shopping for some food in a local market, Itzuko took me to my apartment. Inside was a spacious fully equipped kitchen, a tiny dining room with a foot high table with pillows spread around it, and a larger living room carpeted with a tightly woven straw mat. There were two thin futons for a bed and a heavy quilted blanket. In an adjoining room there were two tables, also low to the ground, which Itzuko told me were used for teaching. My apartment was to be used as a classroom once a week.

    My transportation was provided in the form of a motor scooter, and Itzuko wanted me to start teaching the following day. She said she would come and get me at nine o’clock and show me where the school was.

    After she departed, I lifted my suitcase onto one of the short tables, opened it, and slowly started to unpack and hang my clothes in the closet. I heated some water on the stove and prepared myself a cup of coffee. There was a small balcony overlooking a four lane highway which was about a block away from the front of my apartment. Beyond it stretched a valley, and then farther out, a bay, and behind this a steep green mountain. This would be my home for the next year.

    Before Itzuko left she showed me how the Japanese bath worked. She took great pains to explain how to light the gas underneath the tub and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insis

    A Re-Think On Guerilla Warfare; Cannot Beat Them, Join Them
    It has recently occurred to me to think the unthinkable. We seem to be having some rather unfortunate issues with trying to put down an insurgency in Iraq that is being sponsored now through another nation state. Iran is giving armored piercing RPG rounds to Iraqi insurgence and Syria and Iran are both harboring and supporting international Terrorist organizations killing US Military men and women.Let me give you a bit of background on my thinking on this. Not too many years ago, I met a gentleman in Colorado Springs, an instructor at the Air Force Academy there, very bright guy. We had a great discussion on F-86 fighter pilot Colonel Boyd's Book on "Guerilla Warfare" and how that relates with political differences of agreement. We sat in the local Starbucks for about an hour or so.Colorado Spings, CO, has some interesting folks, living there, who work at the Air Force Academy. We actually helped clean a static display aircraft that they painted "Red" for a joke and then had to have our franchisee come clean off the water color paint before a big inspection from top brass. I am retired from the Aircraft Wash Guys.Now then my thoughts are this, if these nation states will not stop causing these international terrorist events on our troops, then may as well take these tactics to the enemy and see how they like it. Because rather than sitting like ducks out there, why not show them the same horrific view? The Air Force Academy instructor hated the idea, even though it really is fighting fire with fire.I certainly hope this article is of interest and that is has propelled thought. The goal is simple; to help you in your quest to be the best in 2007. I thank you for reading my many articles on diverse subjects, which interest you.
    , that it felt brittle, as if each phrase might snap in two. The commercials were innocent and pure. The actors in them appeared to be like children who were genuinely enthusiastic about advertising various products, which ranged from stereos to clothing to food products.

    On my bed was a neatly folded kimono. I slipped into it and walked down the hall to the bathroom. There I discovered a tiled floor with four holes in it. In front of these toilet bowl shaped holes were inverted footprints. The idea came quickly to me that I was supposed to put my feet where the footprints were and squat. So I did.

    In a separate room was the bath. When I entered there was a deep tub full of steaming water. I thought some other guest had forgotten to drain the tub. I drained, and refilled the tub, washed in it, and drained the water after I finished. But, I had the feeling I had done something amiss.

    On the way back to my room I noticed a door leading to the roof. As I was four floors up, I thought I might get a decent view of the city, but once outside I was taken with the humid warmth and scent of Japan. It had been raining, and the air felt soft and silky. Occasionally a cool eddy of air would remind me that I was outside, yet the warmth dominated. Wisps of oriental cooking drifted up to the rooftop, and it was these smells that reminded me so empathically of how far away from home I was.

    The next morning I went to the restaurant on the first floor of the hotel and with gestures and sign language ordered breakfast. The waiter shuffled toward me and set down my meal: a raw egg in a white cup and a bowl of noodles. I let the egg go down in one swallow, poured some broth over the noodles, and dug in.

    The train ride to Tokuyama took seven hours aboard the Bullet train. Outside, rows of factories spewed waste. It wasn’t until several hours later that I started to see forests on small hills.

    My train rolled into Tokuyama at six o’clock that evening. At the train station to greet me was Itzuko, the director of the school. A woman of about thirty, her friends kidded her about not being married. Her reply was that she was married to the school. She took me to her home, which she referred to as a rabbit hutch because of its small rooms. There she introduced me to a young girl who was her cousin, and who had been sent to live with her because she had gotten into trouble in her village.

    After shopping for some food in a local market, Itzuko took me to my apartment. Inside was a spacious fully equipped kitchen, a tiny dining room with a foot high table with pillows spread around it, and a larger living room carpeted with a tightly woven straw mat. There were two thin futons for a bed and a heavy quilted blanket. In an adjoining room there were two tables, also low to the ground, which Itzuko told me were used for teaching. My apartment was to be used as a classroom once a week.

    My transportation was provided in the form of a motor scooter, and Itzuko wanted me to start teaching the following day. She said she would come and get me at nine o’clock and show me where the school was.

    After she departed, I lifted my suitcase onto one of the short tables, opened it, and slowly started to unpack and hang my clothes in the closet. I heated some water on the stove and prepared myself a cup of coffee. There was a small balcony overlooking a four lane highway which was about a block away from the front of my apartment. Beyond it stretched a valley, and then farther out, a bay, and behind this a steep green mountain. This would be my home for the next year.

    Before Itzuko left she showed me how the Japanese bath worked. She took great pains to explain how to light the gas underneath the tub and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insi

    Blogging Outsourcing - New Web.2.0 Opportunity
    For the IT tasks an outsourcing company may need to use some specific software or hardware, while a blogger only needs a computer and a connection to the Internet. Of course, not only a computer. A good blogger must have good brains and surely appropriate experience. It is good to hire a journalist for the blogging outsourcing, however it is advisable to employ someone, who is familiar with blogs, and has some experience in writing or at least reading blogs. The employer is to develop a definite plan for the type of content, which needs to be present in the blog and think of how often the blog is to be updated.Before starting his work, a blogger must get acquainted with your business and understand the specific nature of your organization. It would be wise to supply an outsourced blogger with leaflets, advertisements and the Internet pages of your company before he actually starts working. It is important to remember that blogging outsourcing, just like usual deals with immediacy and a conversational tone. . It's important that the blogger you hire understands this fact and is able to work at different time of the day.Blogging outsourcing is a field, which is to be controlled by the outsourcer in order to prevent the possible misunderstanding. You may hire a perfect blogger; however it is still necessary to watch that he doesn’t write about the things you don’t want him to. There is a way to take care of it, unless the articles in the blogs have to appear instantly. The blogger can send his works to the employer prior to publishing them on the web.The essence of blogging outsourcing lies in the communication. The feedback received from customers after is a really important f
    h dominated. Wisps of oriental cooking drifted up to the rooftop, and it was these smells that reminded me so empathically of how far away from home I was.

    The next morning I went to the restaurant on the first floor of the hotel and with gestures and sign language ordered breakfast. The waiter shuffled toward me and set down my meal: a raw egg in a white cup and a bowl of noodles. I let the egg go down in one swallow, poured some broth over the noodles, and dug in.

    The train ride to Tokuyama took seven hours aboard the Bullet train. Outside, rows of factories spewed waste. It wasn’t until several hours later that I started to see forests on small hills.

    My train rolled into Tokuyama at six o’clock that evening. At the train station to greet me was Itzuko, the director of the school. A woman of about thirty, her friends kidded her about not being married. Her reply was that she was married to the school. She took me to her home, which she referred to as a rabbit hutch because of its small rooms. There she introduced me to a young girl who was her cousin, and who had been sent to live with her because she had gotten into trouble in her village.

    After shopping for some food in a local market, Itzuko took me to my apartment. Inside was a spacious fully equipped kitchen, a tiny dining room with a foot high table with pillows spread around it, and a larger living room carpeted with a tightly woven straw mat. There were two thin futons for a bed and a heavy quilted blanket. In an adjoining room there were two tables, also low to the ground, which Itzuko told me were used for teaching. My apartment was to be used as a classroom once a week.

    My transportation was provided in the form of a motor scooter, and Itzuko wanted me to start teaching the following day. She said she would come and get me at nine o’clock and show me where the school was.

    After she departed, I lifted my suitcase onto one of the short tables, opened it, and slowly started to unpack and hang my clothes in the closet. I heated some water on the stove and prepared myself a cup of coffee. There was a small balcony overlooking a four lane highway which was about a block away from the front of my apartment. Beyond it stretched a valley, and then farther out, a bay, and behind this a steep green mountain. This would be my home for the next year.

    Before Itzuko left she showed me how the Japanese bath worked. She took great pains to explain how to light the gas underneath the tub and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insi

    Day Trading Tips For Beginners
    When primitive people have invented money, all they have in mind is to find some means to solidly show the actual exchange of goods or services between two persons or groups. Since then, any exchanges of goods have been centered on money, bearing the most tangible form of trade.As time pass by, trading has significantly evolved in different industries where money is not the primary agent. Trading becomes a profitable venture; and had created a remarkable spot in the economy.Today, there are many kinds of trading. Every type of trading depends on the kind of exchange that will take place. For instance, FOREX or foreign exchange trading focused on foreign currencies.Among the many trading types, day trading has slowly etched a name in the industry. With its remarkable turn of profits, day trading has quite gained a good reputation.What is Day Trading?Day trading generally stands for the system of selling and buying financial tools such as bonds or stocks throughout the day.In other words, day trading is a series of material exchanges that all happens within the day. Hence, in day trading, every piece of stock bought has its corresponding sale. The profit or deficit is identified on the discrepancies between the goods and the trade price.The main concept of day trading is based on the premise that all of the transactions are carried out within the day to ensure that there are no changes on the current closing price.Changes usually take place overnight, where the preceding closing price will be changed depending on the result of the day's trading activities.Sounds easy? Guess again.Day trading may not sound complicated and may not even look perilous to one's financial status. However, trading experts say that more people tend to lose during the day tr
    tment. Inside was a spacious fully equipped kitchen, a tiny dining room with a foot high table with pillows spread around it, and a larger living room carpeted with a tightly woven straw mat. There were two thin futons for a bed and a heavy quilted blanket. In an adjoining room there were two tables, also low to the ground, which Itzuko told me were used for teaching. My apartment was to be used as a classroom once a week.

    My transportation was provided in the form of a motor scooter, and Itzuko wanted me to start teaching the following day. She said she would come and get me at nine o’clock and show me where the school was.

    After she departed, I lifted my suitcase onto one of the short tables, opened it, and slowly started to unpack and hang my clothes in the closet. I heated some water on the stove and prepared myself a cup of coffee. There was a small balcony overlooking a four lane highway which was about a block away from the front of my apartment. Beyond it stretched a valley, and then farther out, a bay, and behind this a steep green mountain. This would be my home for the next year.

    Before Itzuko left she showed me how the Japanese bath worked. She took great pains to explain how to light the gas underneath the tub and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insi

    Start Small To Win
    The majority of businesses that attempt to have all of their success within the first month, inevitably fail.Now this isn't the first time that I've explained that the majority of my new students expect the big difference between successful eBay sellers and not so successful eBay sellers to be simply product access. I spend a lot of time and energy explaining that the product is third on your priority list, and that handling Internet traffic and creating compelling ad copy are much more important than access to products. But even so, you must start small!You undoubtedly have aspirations of making millions online by selling tangible products, but I suggest selling downloadable products while you practice becoming effective at handling Internet traffic and writing compelling ad copy. Acquiring the resale rights or Master resell rights to digital products, although time-consuming, is fairly simple to do on line. I personally own the Master resell rights to more than 500 products; shoot me an e-mail if you need some. Need_products@pjexec.com.When you buy the Master resell rights to a digital download, the product usually comes with a pre written ad. You have a few choices here. You could change the names in the pre written ad and list it as it is, or you can use the pre written ad to help you write your own ad, or you could simply write your own from scratch. But, the important part is that you'll be practicing the two most important parts of your new business, traffic and ad copy.Chuck Mullaney http://www.iauctionsuccess.com http://www.pajamaexecutive.com
    b and heat the water, as the water was cold when it came out of the tap. The following morning it was with great delight that I took my first correct Japanese style bath. It was very comforting soaking in the deep narrow tub, and this time I had done all of my washing outside of it while sitting on the small stool, as Itzuko instructed, and then soaked in the tub of water. This is the way I should have done it at the hotel the previous night.

    The only problem was that it took a long time to heat the water. The T-oar used for circulating the water helped, but all the same it was like heating a thirty gallon tea pot with a one burner Coleman stove.

    Itzuko pulled up promptly, and I followed her on my scooter to the school. Driving on the left hand side of the road was not difficult, but shortly after we started out I heard a wailing siren behind me. I couldn’t make out exactly what it was in the vibrating mirror, and I was afraid to turn around and look for fear I would throw myself off balance and fall off the scooter. I thought it must be a fire engine. The siren got unbearably loud, and its shrill sound was increasingly insistent. A voice boomed out of a car loud speaker. I didn’t understand a word of it, but the tone was insistent. I decided they wanted me to get out of their way, although it was a four lane road, and they could have easily passed me. I pulled off and watched Itzuko speeding away, furtively glancing in her mirror. As my mirror slowed its vibrating, I could see four uniformed men in one little car with blue flashing lights on its roof.

    I turned off the motor scooter. A policeman dressed in a black uniform marched up to me, his hands held dutifully onto his thick black belt. Another of the policemen stood on my other side, while two others remained with the car.

    He barked something at me in Japanese. I didn’t know what he wanted, but I guessed he wanted to see my license. I produced my international driving license. He studied it very carefully. He beckoned to the other officer standing ten feet behind him who rushed forward, snapped to attention, and after having it offered to him, examined my license. He said something to the first officer, who looked at me suspiciously. The second officer, a more compassionate soul, asked me a question in Japanese. I motioned that I didn’t understand. Then the second officer beckoned to a third officer. The third officer rushed up, snapped to attention, and the second officer spoke with him.

    I wondered where Itzuko was.

    The third officer approached me.

    “Work Tokuyama?” he asked.

    “Yes, I replied. “At the English School.”

    He smiled and bowed to me and then translated this information to the others. They all bowed, their expressions relaxing, except for the first officer who didn’t appear convinced. He spoke sharply to the third officer who was doing the translating, who in turn spoke again to me.

    “Work license?”

    I quickly produced my work permit. The first officer scrutinized it. He walked to the back of my scooter and pointed to a broken tail light.

    The translator spoke.

    “School must fix.”

    “Yes, of course,” I replied.

    The officer handed back my work permit and license. They all bowed respectfully and walked back to their car. I got back on my scooter and rode in the direction I had been going. I had gone two blocks when I heard a horn honking behind me. This time it was Itzuko.

    “I lost you, Jim-san. I look everywhere. What did they want, Jim-san?”

    The tail light is broken.”

    “Okay, I fix, I fix. They will call me. You watch, they will call me. We must go now, Jim-san. Many students to teach,” she said looking over her shoulder.

    The school in which I was to work was on the third floor of an office building. It was housed in one large room which had several tables set up, two desks, one of which was Itzuko’s, and the other mine. There was a television and video, and in a corner a small table for children. Stacked around all of these tables were miscellaneous books, maps, and games. On Itzuko’s desk sat a pink portable pay phone which she unlocked when we entered the school.

    Above my desk was a chalk board that had my name written on it, and below my name a list of other names and times. These were my students and the times that I was scheduled to see them. But I would not be teaching all of them here at the school. Itzuko explained that I would ride to many of my students’ houses and give them lessons at home or at an agreed upon meeting place. Only about half would actually come to the school. She would show me where they lived, and then I would be on my own.

    After a few weeks I was motoring around Tokuyama and the Yamaguchi Prefecture with a growing sense of confidence.

    On one particular day, my duties as a teacher took me to the Club Naka. Above this bar I would teach the hostesses English. In the evening they dressed up as Geishas. The reason they wanted to learn English was so that they could converse with the traveling business men who came through town. They were a willing and attentive group of young ladies, and the owner of the club attended classes as well.

    They invited me to come to their club. I told them that I couldn’t afford the high prices that I had heard they charged. In this club there was a charge for your drink and a charge for sitting and talking with one of the girls. The more time you took with the girl, the more money you paid, and of course you were expected to pay for her drinks as well. All of this was kept track of by the owner. You were presented a bill at the end of the evening. The girls told me not to worry about the cost, as it would be on the house. At first I thought they were just being polite, but they reasserted their invitation each time I taught the class.

    On the evening that I first went to the Club Naka, I didn’t recognize any of my students. They were completely made over in their Geisha outfits: white painted faces, dark black hair stacked high on their heads, long fingernails, and elegant floor length kimonos with pads strapped to their backs. I was used to them wearing shorts, loose shirts, and sandals during the classes. They always had a

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.actual4u.com/article/217311/actual4u-An-American-Teaching-English-In-Japan.html">An American Teaching English In Japan</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.actual4u.com/article/217311/actual4u-An-American-Teaching-English-In-Japan.html]An American Teaching English In Japan[/url]

    Related Articles:

    What Makes The Secured Loans Market So Lucrative?

    Selling Your Property - How to Present to Potential Purchasers

    Pitfalls of Buying a Vacation Home

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com