Weekend With Guests From Japan

japanese women in hoop house Once again we opened our home to guests from Japan this week. Long-time readers may recall when we hosted Kayoko and Anna in summers past through the Ohio 4-H Program. Hosting international guests has so many benefits that of course we said yes when asked by daughters of our friend Naoko if they could stay with us for a few days.

Japanese serving ramen

I was pregnant with Lil when we hosted Naoko in 2005. She mothered me through a hot summer, creating a special bond between us. We met her daughters Maiko and Yuiko on our trip to Japan in 2007 and welcomed the chance to house them for a few nights this weekend during their short spring break vacation to Ohio.

Maiko and Yuiko arrived on Thursday evening after a lengthy wait on stand-by in the Chicago airport. On Friday, we drove North out of Columbus to see Amish and visit with the animals at Six Buckets Farm. We came home for dinner with friends which featured venison sausage and pie that Maiko helped cook.

posing with dairy cattle

On Saturday, the girls shopped the Worthington Farmers' Market and Mall. We visited my father-in-law's studio and City Folk's Farm Shop before Maiko and Yuiko made us ramen for dinner.

We saw Maiko and Yuiko off to another friends' home on Sunday. Their visit was short and we couldn't show them everything we wanted to, but that's OK. We're building a relationship sure to last a lifetime with more visits over the years.

ohio barn buckeyes O H I O

 

It's that time of year when Ohio 4-H is looking for host families again for July 24-August 19, 2013. You don't need to be a 4-Her or have any special plans this summer - the children coming here want to see real life in a family with a 10-15 year old host sibling. If that's you, please read the Ohio 4-H International Program website to fill out an application or contact me for more information.

Momo Sake {Recipe for Peach Week}

momo sake peach drink recipeWelcome to Peach Week! I declare it so because peaches are in season in Ohio and I love them! Before I get to the fruit of today's post, let me introduce the creator of the recipe, Anna. Anna is a 20 year old Japanese college student staying with us for two weeks. She is a chaperone to a group of 100 Japanese youth staying with host families throughout the state of Ohio. Anna was matched with our family because she like gardening, agriculture, and cooking.

When Anna arrived at our home Thursday evening, I showed her the peach (momo in Japanese) juice leftovers from Wednesday's peach canning extravaganza. With two other ingredients from the fridge, Anna showed me how to make Momo Sake, a delightfully refreshing summer drink.

Her pairing of peach nectar and sake is something I never would have arrived at myself. Cross cultural tastes are one of the things I love about hosting exchange students - they introduce us to the most delicious ideas.

 

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Momo Sake

2 ounces seishu sake or shochu (Anna prefers shochu, I like sake)

2 ounces peach nectar

4 ounces club soda, or to taste

one half cup ice cubes

1. Fill a high ball glass with a half cup of ice cubes.

2. Pour sake, peach nectar, and club soda over ice. Stir vigorously with a spoon for 5-10 seconds.

3. Enjoy!

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Stay tuned for sweet and juicy stories during Peach Week, including a review of Branstool orchard, peach cobbler recipe, and tips for canning.

 

PS. The pork giveaway ends tonight, Monday, at 8 pm. Leave a quick comment for a chance to win a cool piggy cutting board, $25 gift card, and more!

Talking to Children about the Japan Earthquake

Article first posted as 'Guiding Children Through Tragedy' on Technorati, where it made the Thursday front page! japan statue how to talk to kids about disasterNews of the Japan earthquake and resulting tsunami and nuclear disasters is hard to stomach as an adult. Around the world, people are struggling with their feelings of helplessness, insecurity, and anxiety.

In this information age, children are often witness to images from a disaster. Even if parents manage to keep them sheltered from media, kids can sense when their mothers or fathers are worried about something big.

Andy Newman in the New York Times tells of his wife assuring their six-year-old daughter that the photograph she saw of rescue workers helping a Japanese person in visible distress was, "a movie for grown-ups."

This type of shielding does little to actually protect children; it instead can lead to misinterpretations and confusing feelings that the child cannot process alone.

To find another way, I sought out the wisdom of the late Mr. Fred Rogers. He advises parents to explain disasters in an age-appropriate fashion, focusing on the helpers like rescue and hospital workers. Being naturally self-centered, children need to be reassured that they are safe and their feelings are accepted.

On the day of the Japan earthquake, my personal world was rocked. We have very good friends in Japan, including my 'sister' Miyuki who was a bridesmaid in my wedding. I immediately shared with my five-year-old daughter Lil, "There's been a big earthquake in Japan where the ground shook for a really long time. I'm worried about our friends there." Just like Mr. Rogers said she would, Lil asked about herself. "We are safe here in Ohio," I explained, continuing with a little description of plate tectonics.

My husband, a nuclear engineer by trade, and I continue to read the news. We save talking to each other about the tragedy for after our daughter's bedtime.

What I do share with Lil, who visited our friends in Japan at age 1 1/2, are our tangible actions. I reached out by email to our Japanese friends Naoko and Miyuki. When Naoko responded, I read the important parts to Lil to let her know that our friend is safe. I made several paper cranes and they will sit by our dinner candle until I have confirmed that Miyuki too is well. We are deciding as a family whether, where, and how much to donate to relief organizations.

Knowing that natural disasters will continue throughout my life and my daughter's, I wish to give her tools to process her feelings and be safe. Mr. Rogers says it best, "if we can bring our children understanding, comfort, and hopefulness when they need this kind of support, then they are more likely to grow into adults who can find these resources within themselves later on."

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Update #1: Miyuki emailed us on Thursday. She wrote "Everyday all of the Japanese TV program shows only earthquake news now, and I can’t believe this very worst event…

I’m assailed by a feeling of seeing a fiction move…

Anyway, my family is fine, so don’t worry about us, and please pray for all the sufferers."

We are, of course, very relieved to know that our friend is well. Certainly we are thinking of all in Japan and around the world affected by natural and human disasters.

Update #2: The Japanese exchange program I volunteer with is still looking for host families for this summer. If you want to do more than donate to Japanese relief services, consider opening your home to a student. Read about how my family benefits from hosting exchange students or jump to the Ohio 4-H International host family application. Keep in mind that your home must have a student aged 11-17 to be a host sibling for this program.

Thinking of Disasters and Japan

golden palace japanOn Thursday night, Alex and I watched the No Reservations episode in Dubai. The excess, building on shifting sands, and rapid multi-culturalism pictured in that show led us to discuss the meaning of our way of life. Is it possible to make a difference on a small scale? Can the world handle Dubai style consumption? How does instant communication affect things? We concluded that it's best for us personally to live our life in a sustainable way, but always be practical and prepared for disasters. We reasoned that natural resources or disasters will likely limit population and expansion at some point, but it's hard to tell how high technology and near-instant communication will affect such events.

At 2 a.m. on Friday morning, Devie wanted to go out and Alex walked her downstairs. He looked at his phone and an alert about the earthquake in Japan popped up. Shocked, Alex shared the news with me.

Our sleep was restless after that. We have people in Japan. We have visited and know the beauty and history there.

We emailed our closest friends, Naoko and Miyu. Naoko responded within a half hour (amazing, technology is!) that she and her family are safe. She wrote "We live on 4th floor,so we shaked like hard rock!!! We are often feeingl earthquakes,now. Dirty water came out from ground." In another message later in our day (her Saturday morning) she answered my questions about the oil refinery fire in her city, saying "My home is near  at the Chiba oil refinery, we can see the red sky. We are worried about air pollution ,because Yuiko can't stop cough.She has asthma ."

We have yet to hear from Miyu. She does not live very close to the epicenter, so I imagine communications are slowed from overuse and/or power outages.

Fortunately Japan is well prepared for earthquakes. It looks like the death toll was limited by strict building codes. The strong Japanese economy and government will easily manage rebuilding.

Even when we are worried about them, we so appreciate our ability to make and visit friends around the world. Foreign friendships provide the context to internalize world history and care about far-off disasters. We hope to revisit our Japanese friends in person in 2012 when the earthquake will hopefully be a distant memory.

Bring the World to You: Host a Japanese Exchange Student

japanese guest on family vacationohio family visits Japan We have 'people' in Japan. People who have lived with us, vacationed with us, and treated us to tours of their home cities. We have people who mothered me during my pregnancy and attended my wedding. People who were foreign exchangees and are now family.

We met our people, Miyu, Naoko, Kaoko, Kristiina and more, through the Ohio 4-H International Program. Ohio 4-H has been arranging exchanges between Ohio families and a Japanese English language learning program called Labo for over 30 years. In 1993, my parents hosted a Japanese student for a month and went on to host several others, including Miyu for a year of her high school. After Alex and I were married and settled back to Ohio, we hosted three adult exchangees.

Naoko's Visit serpent mound ohio

The benefits to inviting exchangees into your home and having friends-like-family around the world are enormous:

  • World news and conflicts are viewed in a broad light.
  • Communications, during the homestay and after, must be creative to overcome the language difference.
  • Exposure to new games, ideas and foods make us grow as a family.
  • Our daughter is growing up with a global awareness borne of genuine concern for her friends in other countries.
  • Visiting local places with a foreigner allows you to experience them in a new way.
  • We have friends to visit in their homeland.

The Ohio 4-H Program is looking for families who can host students ages 11-17 this summer. The 4-H program provides training, support and some activities during the homestay while the host family supplies a bed, daily meals, and a host brother or sister of a similar age. All the details are on the Ohio 4-H International website.

Apply to be a host family today and bring the world to you this summer!

 

Considering

chickens eating scraps in the snowSnow covers soil,the medium of my most real work.

My hands are too clean when idle from planting and tending and harvesting.

Choices and possibilities swirl through my hibernating mind.

I am considering:

a fellowship application,

attending and speaking at conferences,

homeschooling and unschooling and public lottery,

preparations for winter cooking classes,

acting on the whispered suggestions to start an extended family homestead,

chaperoning American teens in Japan,

or tossing it all aside to live off the land somewhere.

The simple life is not always so simple, yet I am thankful for opportunities and contemplation.

Added to Simple Lives Thursday.

Change Your Life This Summer: Host an Exchange Student

When I was twelve, my family hosted a Japanese girl named Megumi for one month during the summer through the Ohio 4-H International Program.  Hosting challenged us all to communicate differently, show off our community, and open our hearts to new relationships.  We learned so much about ourselves and had so much fun that the next year, my parents agreed to host a high school girl, Miyuki, for the whole year. I'm second from the left rocking out some braces

Miyuki became a lifelong friend that year, more like an older sister.  She brought lots of laughter into our home and taught us to drink Japanese tea and rice.  She traveled with us on a family vacation to Arizona and delighted in experiencing American customs.

The summer Miyuki went home to Japan, I traveled there for a two month exchange.  At the young age of fourteen I stayed with Japanese families I had never met, traveled Tokyo subways and trains by myself, and experienced with wide innocent eyes the beauty of Japan.

Five years ago when I was pregnant with Lil, Alex and I hosted a Japanese adult chaperone in our home.  Naoko pampered me and I loved it.  Having her spend a month with us was the perfect excuse to go visit places in Ohio we love but rarely make the time to visit, like Serpent Mound and Hocking Hills.

We traveled to Japan as a family in 2007 to visit our friends.  It was an exhausting trip with a toddler but what an experience!  Exploring temples, trains, sushi, and subways are memories we will hold dear forever.

Last summer, another chaperone, Kayoko, stayed with us.  As often as I can, I volunteer with the Ohio 4-H International Program helping with exchangee orientation and departure, presentations at the state fair, transportation and more.

As you might expect, these experiences have changed my life for the better.  I now have friends as close as family in a country around the other side of the world. Lil is showered by gifts from Japan on her birthday and New Years. I know a little of the language and can speak from experience about the Japanese culture.

What's it to you?

I want you to consider hosting a Japanese exchange student.  The Ohio 4-H International program is recruiting families right now for their exchange program with the LABO Japanese organization.  This exchange is renowned for the quality support staff and host families overwhelmingly say the hosting experience is a positive one.

The month long exchange program places 12 - 17 year old Japanese youth with families who have a child of approximately the same age.  Families with or without children can host the college students and adult chaperones who travel with the group.  For 2010, the Japanese students will be in Ohio July 23 - August 18.

The first host family matches will be made in early March and continue until the last exchangee is placed, usually in mid May.  All the details about the program are found in the Programs Booklet (another .pdf).  Please consider filling out an application (link opens .pdf) today!

Guest from Japan

On Thursday we welcomed Kayoko to our home.  She is an adult chaperone for a group of 110 Japanese students visiting Ohio for the next four weeks.  The Japanese youth are organized through the Labo organization and host families are organized through the Ohio 4-H International program. My family hosted several Japanese youth when I was young. In 1994 I traveled to Japan for two months with the Ohio 4-H International Program.  This early exposure to foreign culture certainly opened my mind and my heart.  I very much want other families to have a similiar experience and so have been volunteering my time with the International Program for the last five years.

kayoko at easton

Kayoko will stay with us for two weeks before she moves to another part of Ohio.  We hope to share many delicious meals and the highlights of our fair state with her.  We have already been to Easton, the North Market and Franklin Park Conservatory.  Ohio State Fair, Cuyahoga National Park, Main Library and Art Museum are on our list.  Any other suggestions?

PS.  Want an international experience of your own?  Subscribe to my feed and watch for announcements when we are looking for host families next February!