- Flight and Orientation were good, met new people and had good accomodations
- Tottori is rather rural, think FoCo blended with Commerce City.
- Food is good everywhere, and relatively inexpensive
- My new phone is EPIC, btw you can still message me through FB, Line (cstjohn), or google hangouts, and my US phone still gets texts.
- The school I work at is a trade school/high school. These are common in Japan.
- It is Summer Vacation out here, so I have a month to prepare for lesson plans and schedule myself.
The long flight was pretty good. The plane had a widescreen touch screen with a lot of video content, which supplemented my already large entertainment library I brought with me on the plane.
We arrived at Narita Airport, which much like DIA is large but far out from any city. We took a bus into Tokyo. The road systems are fascinating, with much of their roadways either elevated above ground level snaking their way around, or buried underneath the city.






The next nights were spent exploring Tokyo a bit more. I went to a game center, aka an arcade, which was rather impressive. Arcades are very common in Tokyo, with a variety of things to play. They tier their floors by gameplay style, for example there was an entire floor of music and dance games above the gambling casino style floor.
I also went on top of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, which features a famous view of the city, much like the Empire State building for New York. It was quite amazing to see a city that continues out of my line of sight. (Sorry for the potato quality)
After orientation finished I departed from Tokyo to Tottori, which is even more rural than I expected. The best correlation I can make for the city is Fort Collins and Commerce City blended together. It has the amenities which make it a city, but only just. The plus side is the city is rather easy to navigate, and my apartment is very centrally located. However, due to its remote nature many people in their 20s move away to Osaka, which has created a dearth of youth culture. So it does not sound like there will be much for me to do within the city, however it seems that I will be kept quite busy at work during the weekdays anyway, so I do not foresee it being much of an issue.

My first evening in Tottori ended with meeting the other ALTs for dinner at a good restaurant called Source Cafe and a small local bar run by our landlord's son.
To end the week I went to school for my official first day. I work at Koryo High School, which is a non-academic school. The best way I can describe this is the school is a trade school/high school, whereas the academic high schools are college-prep schools. This is interesting because the homerooms are divided among career orientations. For example homeroom 3-F is the 3rd years studying food prep. These students take their common core classes like math and English, and also take classes in cooking, food distribution, etc. I find this system very interesting, because it gives students valuable life skills by the time they graduate, yet I do not think I would have trusted my 14 year old self to decide my career path (especially considering I don't think my 24 year old self has figured it out yet).
Since it is still summer vacation, the only students at the school are there for club activities, which are taken much more seriously than in the US. Best way to think of it is club activities are like 5A varsity sports, they are students' jobs outside of school. I spent most of my day beginning to conceptualize my self presentation, which my first round of classes will be. I spent the afternoon proofing one of the English club student's speech, which she will use in a competition next month. Throughout the day I met various students, all of whom were rather shy. I have heard this is a common theme across Japan with foreign teachers. Yet a few of them became more social the more I spoke to them.
So it has been quite a trip so far. I will be easing into the school routine this month before school starts up on the 27th, which will hopefully give me time to prepare for classes and build my schedule. Next on the list is finding places to exercise and ways to travel!
PS. While I haven't heard too much from people in the US since I moved out here, that could be due to the time difference. However, now that I have my phone again I am online through Facebook, Google, Line (username: cstjohn), and my US phone still receives texts.