Skype Call – May 23, 2020


After a hiatus of two weeks, it was wonderful communicating with Nari, Nobutaka, and Yuriko. Nari told me that Japan has 46 prefectures, and 39 are open, so that is encouraging news. His son just had his 20th birthday (hatachi), like our milestone birthdays at age 21. They went out for a steak dinner. His brother and mother are in stable condition and for now things are looking up in Japan.

Nari read an ESL article about the necessity for truthfulness in describing whether a college or university will be teaching classes online or in-person https://breakingnewsenglish.com/2005/200521-online-lessons.html as it may influence the student’s decision in considering offers from various colleges or universities.

Nari asked me about the phrases, “sounds like a broken record” and
“eager beaver.”

Empathy

When my sons were teenagers, I learned that my neighbors’ 13-year-old son, John, had leukemia. I had never encountered the word and went to the library and looked through the card catalog to find Doris Lund’s book, Eric. I read the book in one evening and sobbed and cried through the night and on and off for three days after that. I frightened myself with the guttural and primal sounds that came from beneath my diaphragm and went into the closet, afraid that the neighbors would hear and come knocking at my door. Lund had portrayed the painful process of watching her fit and athletic soccer-star son go through an acute leukemia diagnosis and treatment. Eric was diagnosed in 1967 and died in 1972 at the age of 22. Lund watched her husband’s face permanently change and shared her excruciating pain and sorrow through her book.

Overnight, I had crows’ feet around my eyes and aged about ten years. I didn’t know about hydration or moisturizers that may have mitigated the imprints on my face.

When I visited John’s grandmother who lived two doors down, I remember her shock in seeing me and she said, “You are old!” I didn’t think to tell her that when I learned that her grandson had leukemia, I read Doris Lund’s book, and cried cisterns of tears. Since then, John has been in remission, married, and has two children. The treatment protocol for childhood leukemia had improved over the years.

Over 60 years have passed and the worry lines on my forehead have deepened, there are more lines between my eyes, my nose has flattened somewhat, and there are dark spots on my face. I have accumulated large bags under my eyes, and remember being shocked when I noticed chin hairs, some black and some white. I purchased tweezers and remember a friend saying she bought a magnifying mirror to find them, so I bought one too.

I am reminded of Shakespeare’s Sonnet 130:

My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun;
Coral is far more red than her lips’ red;
If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun;
If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.
I have seen roses damasked, red and white,
But no such roses see I in her cheeks;
And in some perfumes is there more delight
Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.
I love to hear her speak, yet well I know
That music hath a far more pleasing sound;
I grant I never saw a goddess go;
My mistress when she walks treads on the ground.
     And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare
     As any she belied with false compare.

Skype Call – May 2, 2020

We did not have a Skype call today but we did last week. Nari went on a third interview but hasn’t heard anything. We all wish the best for him and feel the weight he is carrying. If he gets the job with Hanshin Railway, he will have to take a combination of four trains and subway lines to get to work within one-and-a-half hours. He mentioned the word kibishii for harsh or severe.

I mentioned an article I read about Professor Tasuku Honjo, a Nobel laureate who stated that the corona virus had to have come from the Wuhan laboratory in China and that it was man-made rather than natural. I have since learned that the post was false and the words attributed to the professor a complete fabrication.

Nari read an ESL article about the Sahara in Morocco having been the most dangerous place on earth 100 million years ago. Paleontologists have found fossils of ferocious predators. Even the fish were five times the size of anything else they’ve seen.

He asked about the phrase “you should jazz up your wardrobe” and “stubborn as a mule.” I hope that next week, we’ll all have something good to report.