The Sushi Trio

Family of two, soon to be three…living life in Tokyo…

Lighting June 16, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — sushitrio @ 2:48 pm

When we arrived at our new apartment in Tokyo last August, I was horrified to discover that all of the lights in our apartment are fluorescent. As in the sort of lights that have the ability to highlight under eye circles and make you seriously question how you look in your favorite jeans (which I did manage to zip up today, without even lying down – they didn’t look so pretty, but they were on!).

I have since learned that fluorescent lighting is the standard for Japanese homes, and that they call our warmer, more subtle lighting “yellow.” I suppose they do have something in the fact that it is more energy efficient, but blech.

I clearly stated upon arrival that we would be putting in nice and friendly “yellow” lighting all over our apartment. We never really got around to that being busy with baby and all (and because we’re a bit cheapo). Maybe with the good lighting, though, I would have been a bit more pleased with my figure in my skinny jeans.

Though, I’m pretty sure that the lighting didn’t have much to do with the almost total lack of circulation in the mid-region of my body while said jeans were on.

 

And a not so auspicious start… June 15, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — sushitrio @ 1:08 pm

Well, I intended to write each day until we leave, but I have been stricken with another bout of mastitis (if you don’t know what that is, its a boob infection, and yes, it is totally as fun as it sounds).

So now that the fever has somewhat dissipated, I am back to the original game plan. Which leads me nicely into today’s topic – our adventures in medicine!

The birth story has already been written, and I can’t say enough about the wonderful people at the Toho Women’s Clinic. Plus, they are always very helpful with the boob issues, too. But enough about that. We are lucky enough to have an English speaking Pediatrician just a three-minute walk from our house, and we have made good use of his proximity since Matilda has joined our family. Sometimes for the occasional cough or runny nose, and our regular checkups…sometimes for worries that many new parents experience when they put their child’s clothes in a dresser that was found on the street, and all of the clothes take on a strong scent of mothball. (In our defense, it totally did not start smelling like mothball until 4 days after we’d brought it into the apartment, and we even took it into our handy Japanese shower room and hosed the living daylights out of it before putting Mati’s clothes in there. Despite several of these hosings down, the dresser is still quite useless and smells like my grandma’s attic.) It’s a learning curve sometimes, people. Yeah, so Dr. ? is pretty good. Of course, I can’t remember his name, and his card has his name written in Kanji so you can forget my being able to read it.

We’ve been really fortunate here with the Japanese National Health Care System, and except for the fact that they don’t cover preventative medicinal procedures or CHILDBIRTH, Matilda is covered until she is 6, and we can go visit Dr. ? as much as we want!

Finally perhaps the most frightening experience here so far was when Matilda had her first cold, and I needed to get some saline drops so that I could moisten things up before using that bulby snot sucker thing. The drugstore only had menthol nose drops, so the pharmacist made us go to the Ear, Nose, and Throat doctor, which is just in the building next door (you don’t really seem to need appointments a lot of the time, which is nice). Well, no one really spoke English, so we just kept pointing at Matilda and her stuffy nose, and they sent us into see the doctor. She had me hold Matilda on my lap, and then, quick as lighting, blew a big load of saline up Mati’s nose, and used a super-powered hydraulic snot sucker. Matilda was not pleased if you can imagine. But it did clean her out very well. Then the doctor smiled at me, and charged me 100¥ ($1) for the little bottle of saline solution.

Of course, I am lacking in the lightning fast snot sucking skills, and never did quite achieve the level of success as the ENT doc. And I just have the lame-o rubber bulb. I wonder how much her machine costs?

 

19 days and (sort of) counting… June 12, 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — sushitrio @ 9:24 am

So I used to write on my old blog (jelly-doughnut.blogspot.com) quite a lot, while living as a single girl in Berlin. Now that I’m all married with a baby, I seem to have less time on my hands. And I’ve been introduced to Facebook, which has the capacity to making blogging seem redundant. Hence, I have not written a thing on this blog in about 6 months! Therefore, so all of my quirky memories of this quirky country don’t float completely out of my head, I’ve decided to try to write a post for the last 19 days we are here in Tokyo. I have no clue if anyone ever reads this blog – and honestly, the little ticker on the side of the page means much less to me than the ticker on my Germany blog did. For the most part I am doing this to get back to writing every day – and to preserve these funny memories for my feeble mind. Apparently I have now become afflicted with a severe neurological disease known as “mom” brain. It is real. It exists. And I have it big time. I can’t remember diddly. In fact, twice I have left the house without diapers (having placed them next to the diaper bag before leaving the house, but never having had placed the diapers into the bag itself). Luckily, a friend was able to pinch hit with a couple of spare nappies to tide us through.

Anyway, I’m not going to write about baby stuff – unless it is weird or interesting Japanese baby stuff. I mean, if you know me, you have already likely been subjected to endless photos and info about my daughter, and if you don’t know me, well, why would you really care if my daughter prefers sweet potatoes to bananas (bananas, of course!). Segue…

Baby food in Japan is a bit different than our good old Gerber in the US. They do have the requisite banana and applesauce, but also have adventurous (to me, anyway) flavors like “Flatfish with seaweed” and “Sardines with rice and root vegetables.” Plus, it is bloody expensive! One jar is about $1.30, and that is the tiny jar, not the big one. However, upon attempting to make our own baby food, and having Matilda spew it all over the table because we do not own a fancy high-powered blender capable of creating the smooth purees her refined palate requires, we trucked over to the International Food Market to buy foreign baby food. We bought enough to last us until the end of the year (25 days supply) and it cost around $65.

She’s an expensive little monkey. See you tomorrow…