Well, it's 2015! I'm sure I say this every year, but 2014 really just disappeared - it was April and then suddenly it was December (and now it's January, what).
It's been a year of change, which honestly I didn't expect, given that my circumstances were pretty much the same as in 2013 - still on the JET Programme, living and working in Chiba City. But there are a few big things that made 2014 very different.
First and foremost, in April I joined my yosakoi team, CHIよREN北天魁 (Chiyoren Hokutenkai). I don't think I knew what I was getting myself into, because I most definitely did not expect for it to become such a big part of my life in Japan. There's so much I could say about what I like about the team and why I'm glad I joined it, but for now I'll just say that it's probably the first time that I've truly felt like part of a team (and I've been in lots of teams) and the first time in a long time (probably since karate in high school) that I've been able to really throw myself into an activity and give it my all. They've actually asked me to be the chair of a new international committee they're making this year, and while I really don't know what that entails or how much responsibility it is, I'm really flattered to be asked and am looking forward to getting more involved and learning more about how things work behind the scenes. Though I suspect this is also the one thing that's going to make it really hard for me to eventually leave Japan...
Then in June, I began my position as the CIR Representative/Project Manager for the AJET National Council, after running and being elected in February/March. This has been another brand new experience of working with council members all over the country and learning about how to organize people around a project from start to finish, which I've never done in quite the same way before. It's a lot of time and quite a commitment, but it's great to be involved and feel like I'm helping contribute to the JET community as a whole. Our terms last until June, so there's still a ways to go, but I feel like we've accomplished a lot in six months so hopefully this'll continue in the future!
Around the same time, I also organized elections and was elected president of the first Chiba AJET council (in recent memory at least). Although I helped out a lot with Chiba AJET before, it's been really nice having a group of people to work with to organize events and the like, and I feel like we've been doing a good job so far. I enjoy running the meetings and being able to delegate tasks, and I think we're setting a good foundation for Chiba AJET in the future as well, so I'm pretty happy with this.
Finally, the last big change was enrolling in Simul Academy and starting their interpreting course. One of my friends had taken a course there in the past, and since I realized if I didn't stay in Japan that this could be my last chance to take it, I decided to sign up (for the sake of professional development). As I mentioned in my last post, I tested into the class that usually takes a year or two to get to if you start from scratch (I was hoping for the introductory course, so getting into one level above - which is also just one level below simultaneous interpreting - was a big surprise) and am the youngest/only non-native Japanese speaker, so in the beginning I was pretty intimidated and thought it was pretty hard, but after a few months I feel like I've settled into the course. I'm too busy to really take advantage of everything and study/review for class like I should, which is a shame, but the material we use is really interesting and I do feel like I'm getting good practice/training. It's really made me realize how my Japanese could still use a lot of work, especially in terms of being able to express things smoothly in a register that is not conversational, so that's something I hope to improve in the future. I've started actually watching/reading the news and am actively trying to read more books in Japanese, so that's something.
So even though a lot of other things happened in 2014 (trip to Taiwan, two! weddings back in the States, lots of big events at work, visits to/from friends, etc etc.), these were the main things that really changed the way my everyday life plays out - now I'm on a pretty set schedule where I have class twice a week, practice once a week, meetings on the other two weekdays, and then the weekends (which are all over the place), which is much busier than before but worth it.
Probably most significantly, though, at least two of these have given me a reason to want to stay in Japan for at least one more year, even though up until now I've considered 3 years the perfect amount of time. I want to be able to keep dancing with my yosakoi team, so I can experience all the different festivals and tournaments at least one more time, and I also want to be able to continue my interpreting course until the end, which requires another 6 months past March.
Ever since I came to Chiba City I've been told that I should consider 3 years the longest I can stay, since technically the JET Programme states that the limit is 3 years in principle, with 5 years being allowed for those with exceptional performance (though most places I know simply take this to mean that the max is 5 years). There's also never been a CIR in Chiba City who has stayed for longer than 3 years, so I was planning to apply to be a Programme Coordinator at CLAIR (the organization that runs the JET Programme) or look for another job (hence participating in the Tokyo Career Forum a few weeks ago).
But, on my last day of work, I was officially asked to recontract for a fourth year! Through some previous conversations with my supervisor and boss, I had begun to think that maybe the possibility existed, but I didn't actually dare to think that they would, because as far as I know it's never happened before. I think the reason they want me to stay is because there will be several big events happening next year (an international wheelchair basketball tournament, 40th anniversary events with two sister cities, etc.) and they'd prefer to have somebody with experience rather than a brand new person, but that works out perfectly because those are also reasons why I would want to stay another year. I've always told myself that I shouldn't recontract if my main motivation behind it were just to stay in Japan, since I believe that work should be meaningful and not just work, but I don't think that this is the case, and so I do think I will recontract. It may just be delaying the inevitable, and I do think I will have to work to find more ways to keep growing at my current job, but it also means that I can definitely stay for one more year and continue both yosakoi and my interpreting course without interruption.
So I think I can say with relative confidence that 2015 will not be my last year in Japan, despite what I thought for most of 2014, but other than that I'm not sure what the year will bring! Since I'm starting off on a path that I hadn't visualized before, I honestly can't say how I'll feel or what I'll be thinking at this time next year in terms of staying in Japan or the future in general, but for now I feel pretty content to let the future stay hazy and just take the present as it comes. Maybe after I turn 25 I'll feel a little more pressure to think about my life after JET, but luckily there's still a good 7 months until then. :)
一年間大変お世話になりました。今年もよろしくお願いいたします。
Happy New Year!
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