Okay.
Second attempt, start. Lost my original blog draft to Baby the
netbook nearing the end of her half-decade tether, but we’ll
soldier on. It’s not like I have a whole lot to do anyway. Besides
plan a flipping wedding.
The
biggest news to share today would have to be Steph and my return home
to the icy-cold climes of Leicester. Next year’s wedding is set to
take place in my home town, so all the planning for that took place
in the vicinity of Leicester. Let’s see. We met and selected our
wedding photographer, Marc (Yeah, with a ‘c’. What a hipster.),
who’s a really nice guy. On the Thursday of the second week we took
a trip down to Castle Gardens near DeMontford for what I learned are
called ‘engagement photos’. Did everyone else know this was a
thing? Because it was the first I’d heard of them. Actually,
there’s a lot about weddings that I didn’t realize I was supposed
to know. Engagement photos, wedding breakfasts, speeches. Oh, stars
above, the speeches! And dancing! It’s not enough to just get up
there and dance, you have to be watched dancing with your new spouse
by the gathered friends and family (who, I’m sure, as part of the
Strictly generation, will be expecting far more than I will ever be
able to perform) and then there’s some rubbish about this guy
dancing with this woman, and your pet rat dancing with your mother’s
uncle’s cousin twice removed, and so on. Steph and I are of the
opinion that we can forget all that. It’s good to agree about
stuff.
Oh
yeah, engagement photos. So, this at least I can understand. It gives
us a chance to try out the photographer, build a working relationship
and whatever, before we actually have the wedding. He gets used to
us, too, and learns what sort of things we’re comfortable with, and
what sorts of colours and locales make us look better. Steph and I
both thought that there was one particular thing that we both did in
too many of the photos, but I won’t tell you what. Don’t want you
looking out for it when you see them, ‘cos then it’ll be all that
you see. I am looking forward to seeing how they turn out, though,
when Marc sends them over in the next week or so.
We
also got in touch with a videographer company, ignite films, who sent
over an ace sample DVD and instructions for the rest of the time
before the wedding. Can I pick 10 fitting
songs for the wedding video? I doubt it. All I can think of it
soundtracks from stupid cartoons about robots, or angry punk rock
from my childhood, neither of which will fit the overall theme of the
wedding.
The
church is booked, so that’s the most important thing out of the
way. We still have to plan the service and the decorations and
whatever, but that’s all no problem at this stage. We also have our
reception venue booked, a place called Halstead House out in the
country. I remember going there when I was little, back when they had
a cafe, but nowadays the place only really does events. It’s a
gorgeous place, and I’m glad we managed to get it. The guy who runs
it, John, is also fantastic, and seems really keen to make sure
everything fits what we want for the day. There’ll be food, but
coming from veggie backgrounds has limited our choices a little bit,
which brings us on to catering.
The
plan as it stands is to have a couple of our favourite foods on offer
after the service, downstairs, before the reception. Chips from me,
and curry from Steph. And anyone who says anything about what we
should be
eating can get stuffed. At Halstead, we’ll just be having dessert,
drinks and some finger food things that the House will be supplying.
Also
have the order in for suits, which need to be fitted closer to the
time. Didn’t think I’d like tails on a coat, but I was surprised,
and the guy in the shop rightly said that your wedding will be one of
the only times in your life that you can
wear them. This was between repeatedly telling me that my original
choice of a dark brown for the coat would make me look like an idiot.
Well, excuse me for not keeping up with Gok flipping Wang.
Oh,
and we even went to the council office on the Monday to register our
intent to marry. It’s all very bureaucratic, I must say. We’ve
let them know the date, our names and nationalities, and signed
countless bits of paper to assure them that no, really, we aren’t
brother and sister. And this information will apparently be going up
on the one screen in the council office that says who’s getting
married when for fifteen days. Apparently this is so people who
object to our union have a chance to see what we’re planning and
get in touch with the office to let them know we’re marrying
illegally. As if people sit all day in front of the screen, just
scanning all the newlyweds-to-be in Leicestershire, looking for
people they know can’t get married! It’s very Hitchhiker’s
Guide. ‘The notice was up on the screen for fifteen days, you were
free to go and read it and have your say’.
Phew!
This wedding stuff is easily the most complicated thing I’ve ever
experienced, though to be fair I dropped Math and Science after GCSEs
in favour of Drama so what do I know about complicated things.
Putting everything into a working order is turning out to be
incredibly difficult, especially
with neither of us being in the flipping country until a week or so
before the big day. But the wonders of technology prevail, and Skype
has allowed us to set up meetings with various people regardless of
where in the world we are.
It
was great to be back in England, I must say. The weather was
wonderfully chill, a superb break from the murderous heat and
humidity of Kobe. The food is top class, and by ‘top class’ I
mean really tasty, not necessarily classy.
I must have eaten beans on toast, topped generously with sharp Welsh
cheddar, every single day I was there. And I do think I ate all
the fish and chips, and drank all the cider. Got a health check this
afternoon at the ward office, and I doubt they’ll be very impressed
with my weight again this year. Pfft, I’m beyond caring at this
point.
It
was also nice to see Steph’s mum, who flew in from Seattle to lend
a hand with wedding stuff. Having been awash in the horror stories of
parents taking the reins with their child’s wedding, I was honestly
a touch nervous. But Marsha was genuinely full of good advice and
reminders that it’s our day, and we are expected to do whatever we
like with it.
Can
I just say briefly that looking at weddings on the internet has
caused me to question my faith in humanity? I mean, I’m sure you
really like Doctor Who. But is it really something you want as the
theme of one of the most important days of your life? At what point
does the day stop being about you, and start being about Peter
Whatshisface? I mean, I’m making a massive sacrifice by not
insisting on Pokémon as the theme for our wedding, but it is for the
best. Twenty years down the line, when hopefully there are kids in
the equation, will I be able to shamelessly look them in the eyes and
tell them that the day I married their mother the flower girls were
dressed like Bellossums, and our vows included the line ‘to have
and to hold, in health but also when Paralysed, Poisoned, Burned or
Asleep’? I’m not sure I could. Our wedding is about us, and I
guess I want the focus to be on myself, on Steph, and on God who
brought us together. If you think your interest in a camp British
sci-fi identifies you and your relationship with your partner, you be
my guest and drive away from the church in a flipping police box.
It’s just hard for me to understand without knowing you like I know
myself.
Right,
anyway, it was good to be back. We managed to get to Bradgate in our
time back as well, which was really nice to see. It’s a gorgeous
park, and the deer trump anything Nara can provide hands down. Many,
many memories. And also Twycross Zoo, which is excellent. Monkeys. I
forgot how much I like monkeys.
We
even managed to take in a couple of films. Apparently we missed the
boat for Pacific Rim, which we’ll have to rent some time, but we
did manage to get to World’s End, which I really liked. It’s no
Hot Fuzz, the ending is really confused and doesn’t seem to know
what it’s doing, but the fights are just phenomenal and there is
a good heart somewhere in there, even if it’s hard to see at times.
We also got to see Monsters University, which was also great. Not as
good as the original, but a stand-up prequel and massively
entertaining. Going to see that movie also set the scene for one of
the most awesome moments of my trip back. The cinema was packed with
kids, as you might have expected, and as the pre-trailer adverts ran
we shuffled through the noisy dark towards some of the last seats in
the house, right near the front. I’m standing there in the centre
aisle as we look around for the C that marked where we’d be sitting
(there wasn’t one, as it turned out), when I hear a familiar voice.
‘Pikachu’, it says. I turn, wide-eyed, to the cinema screen,
where Pikachu is waving down at me. And it really did feel like it
was for me alone. Music roaring in my ears, Nintendo bellow down at
me once again that Pokémon X & Y will be the best thing the
gaming world has ever seen! Horde battles! 3D Pokémon! Macarons!!
And so soon!! I nearly fell to my knees in surprise as the game logos
sprung up big and beautiful on the silver screen. It was as though
Pokémon had followed me half way round the world to remind me that
it was looking forward to my patronage. Mine! Maybe I’m not
explaining it well, but the whole thing was awesome in a very true
sense of the word.
I
also watched some films on the flight over, actually. Die Hard 5 was
stupid and entertaining, as I expected, and was a really good
pick-me-up out of the slump of watching all 800 hours of French
sombre-fest Les Mis. I’m sure it’s better live, or maybe when not
on a plane, but I just didn’t like it. It was slow and boring, and
I didn’t like the characters. Also thought it was weird to have the
characters always always
singing, even when they’re not saying anything important. The only
musical experience I have is Blood Brothers (excellent) and those
musical episodes of Scrubs and Buffy, and in all of them we were
given breaks from all the songs with bits of dialogue. Turns out, I
much prefer that to a single, million hour long song like is Les Mis,
even when sung by Wolverine. Oh, and I saw Wreck-it Ralph, too, which
was pretty cool. Worth it for the brief glimpses of Sonic the
Hedgehog, which always threatened to give me a nostalgia-riffic heart
attack, and that’s even when I saw it on a stuffy plane and the
ending credits were sung by AKB 48. Those poor girls. This time, it
was so obvious that they did not care about their music. That’s
what you get for commercialising art, or something.
What
else was there? Had a good chat with my brother again, all the way
down in New Zealand. It seems funny that I’m in an almost
neighbouring country now, but to talk to him I flew all the way to
the opposite side of the planet to him. Still, it was great to see
him on Skype. I do miss my little brother, and I eagerly look forward
to arriving in NZ in January to see Hobbiton. Him.
I meant ‘him’. It’s funny, having the little guy getting
married before me. I’m over the affront, and now I’m just keen to
see what he does with his wedding so Steph and I can improve on i- I
mean, be inspired by it.
Oh,
right, Steph and I got new phones yesterday. And what a hassle that
was. We wanted out of Softbank, seeing as our two years were up and
in Kobe, at least, they can be a bit iffy with foreigners. Despite
having all their catalogues and reference guides in English, I might
add! When we first got our phones we paid with credit cards from
overseas, not having Japanese accounts yet, and a week later went in
to change the payment details. Can we do that? ‘No’, we were
told, by the flustered looking attendant in the shop, ‘no way’.
So we left, and for a year spend a ton exchanging money to pay the
small costs of our phones. Only, second year comes around, and
suddenly all the new
newcomers are switching to Japanese accounts after a week of using
foreign cards. We go back in and ask again. ‘Of course you can,’
we are told. ‘You even could have last year!’ See, what happened
was the flustered looking muppet saw two scary gaijin come into his
shop and ask duh I dunno something about
phones I don’t speak English so whatevs even tho they’re speaking
perfect Japanese. And said ‘no’.
Could have asked him for the time. ‘No’. Could have told him to
call an ambulance ‘cos I’d been shot. ‘No’. When we switched
to au, I did explain this to the lovely woman from Softbank who took
our details, and I do hope she’ll do something about it.
Let's
talk about something else. Short time skip, and my health check's all
done. I'm slightly fatter, but ultimately lighter than last year, and
also shorter. Not sure how that last one works. Blood pressure's up,
but no tuberculosis. Not a bad result, all in all. Also been up to
the annual Job Training, and after than Summer School at the Foreign
Studies university. It was my first time in a position of
responsibility among the JETs, which was pretty nerve-wracking, but I
think everything went well nonetheless. That's what comes from having
this ace community, I guess; folk you can rely on. Next Job Training,
or rather, the Skills Development Conference, is in November. I have
a proposition for a discussion down for then, though I don't know if
it'll be accepted.
Summer
School, likewise, was excellent. My school's kids came for the first
year ever, and though there were only two of them they really did
well and I think had a great time. Steph's kids were fascinated by
me, as well, having never met their ALT's legendary fiancee...
fian... however you spell it – before. But now the break's over,
and tomorrow it's back to work. Well, 'work'. The holiday continues,
so the kids won't be in, but I'll have meetings and things to go to
in addition to preparing new classes. Nothing strenuous, but still
doesn't beat sitting at home all day playing Saints Row, which is
what the typhoon today forced me to do. 'Forced'.
Alright,
that's it. Thanks for reading.
I just got round to reading this, and had to break for laughter during the 'weddings on the internet' paragraph. I am looking forward to seeing what you do in March!
ReplyDeleteAlex