NHK world has some cool learning programs too, first i thought wtf this is childish, but it's actually working
wude wrote:NHK world has some cool learning programs too, first i thought wtf this is childish, but it's actually working
Spokane wrote:As long as your not Japanophobic.
Lucky you, I'm sure it'll be fun as heck. I pray your journey is a safe one.
Master Kyodai wrote:I was fascinated from the very first moment. It wasn't just the city itself, it was everything - the people, the architecture, the food, the tech, the landscape and so much more. I will never forget how i got out of the subway station, ready to step onto a Tokyo street for the first time in my life - and it was raining so badly. To my surprise a woman ran up to me, hold her umbrella over my head (getting wet herself) and asking me if i need directions. She was not a tourist guide, official or anything, just a common housewife caring about some random stranger in a city of 30 million people. From that moment on i knew i finally came "home".
The job i applied to was actually a rather boring frontdesk job for an agency renting appartments to foreigners in Tokyo. However, when i sent them my CV they were immediately like "You have so much experience with computers, we have an opening for a systems administrator job". So i got offered a much higher paid job without even asking. I'd not have had a problem getting the lowest paid job and cleaningg the hotel or whatever. I think being a stooge in Tokyo beats being a king in germany, but you need to have been there to understand that.
Spokane wrote:Are you pretty good at it, like fluent?
Lyo wrote:Hello,
I don't want to tell anyone what to do, but I think that considering the recents informations on Fukushima situation,
I'll personnally not go to Japan for now, but really want to go there one day.
A lot of informations can be find on this website (in french and english) :
http://fukushima.over-blog.fr/
Peace.
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