Skip to main content

What Happens in Anime Club...Is Obviously Not Staying in Anime Club

Because I'm spilling the beans! But before I do that, I have a shoutout to my very best friend ever: April Bell.

Today when I got home from school, there was a suspiciously heavy package waiting for me at our apartment adressed to me from Kate Keatly. So I opened it, and guess what I found:
Oh my goodness! I was so surprised! Halloween candy (including sour patch kids, my favorites!), a jar of Jiffy peanut butter (I am SO digging into that with a spoon tomorrow!), lip balm, PEEPS!, photos, a squeezy skull that has eyes that pop out (I scared the bejeezes out of my host mom with that!), pictures of us/ her (which nearly made me cry, April you look so pretty!), Seventeen magazine (just the sort of smutty-smut I wanted), and a copy of the Mash which she writes for (and has a small blip that I'm featured in, whoo hoo!)

Here was my reaction:
I am very, very, very happy. On a scale of 1-10 I'm registering at 1000. I love you so much April!!!!!!!

So. Onto the anime. I picked a pretty laid back club, if I do say so myself. It only meets twice a week, Mondays and Wednesdays, and there's no set time you have to leave, so some days when I have a lot of work I only stay 45 minutes, and if I have nothing to do I stay until about 5pm (hour and a half). What usually happens is that everyone sort of does their own thing for a bit, which is anything from card games to studying to drawing on your own (I said it was laid back, didn't I?). Then usually we do a character swap. We draw numbers out of a hat and pair up. Then we say what anime character we like and the other person draws it for us. If you pick an obscure character, you usually give them a reference picture or something.

So here's some stuff that I've drawn/ had drawn for me (and all of them have that annoying arm shadow in them, but I tried to make the pencil has visible as possible).

Inuyasha, that was the first picture drawn for me


Kazehaya, from Kimi ni Todoke; he is probably one of my dream anime guys. (I also did not draw that one)

THE SEXYNESS!

Ranka Lee from Macross Frontier. Mostly I just like that anime for the music. Drawn by one of the cutest first-year middle schoolers. She always bows and is so polite. I just want to hug her!

(This was actually the reference photo I gave her.)

Dead Bones Brook from One Piece (this one I drew)


Luffy, also from One Piece. Possibly my new favorite anime. Luffy = boss.

He's gonna be the Pirate King! `(^^)'

Maka from Soul Eater. She also kicks some serious butt, as shown by the deadly SCYTHE she's wielding.


The reference photo I used.

Ikuto Tsukiyomi from Shugo Chara. Also drawn by a middle schooler, and she called me SENPAI (term for someone above you in school). It was a complete manga moment and MADE MY DAY!

He is also sexyness!

And that's what goes on, more or less. But since midterms start for everyone next Friday (but not me, muahaha!) there's no club. So I guess I have more freetime to work on my Nano novel, now 16k/50k into it! Now I'm going to go read my new magazine...

Comments

  1. Those are amazing!

    Also...another box is coming...no idea how long it will take.

    We love you so! Clare

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

文化祭!(Bunkasai--Cultural Festival Days 1 and 2) and Man I'm Tired!

So this weekend was Musashino Joshi's annual Cultural Festival, an event that all high schools (I would assume) have, where the school is open to the public and classes and clubs put on events, or set up quiz games or food booths. Essentially it's like a carnival. Traditional culture...not so much (though there are aspects of it). Mostly it's just good fun. My class was doing a chocolate banana food booth, so on Friday (the school-wide prep day, even though techincally it was another Japanese holiday) we got cardboard and began making our booth, which was Hawaiian themed. And you'd think it wouldn't take very long, but it took the entire day and then about half an hour on Saturday. (Also, what' you're seeing is Summer Uniform Form 1.5, where there's the sweater over the shirt.) But in the end the booth turned out pretty sweet, if I may say so myself: The top says Chocobana, and the sides of the poles are made to look like palm trees with a monkay on it

Enoshima: The Heavenly Maiden and the Dragon

This past Monday was a national holiday -- Mountain Day -- so, of course, Troy and I headed to the beach instead. Well, to an island near a beach since (as some of you may know) I'm not exactly the beach-going type. Plus I'd just climbed Mount Fuji, which was more than enough mountain for me. Enoshima is a small island off the coast of Kanagawa Prefecture, fairly near Kamakura. It's connected to the mainland via a bridge, so you can just stroll on over from the train station. The entire island is dedicated to Benzaitan, the goddess of everything that flows -- time, water, speech, music, and knowledge. According to the "Enoshima Engi," (a history of the shrines and temples on Enoshima) there's also a legend associated with the creation of the island involving Benzaitan and a dragon. In brief, the area around Enoshima was once wracked by violent storms and earthquakes. Eventually the tumult ended and a heavenly maiden (Benzaitan) descended from the clouds.

Homecoming

This is it. It's Friday, February 3rd and in less than 24 hours I will leave this house for Tokyo train station, which will take me to the airport, which will take me...home. Most of this week has been taken up with goodbyes: to schoolmates and teachers, and later, close friends. There were tears involved. I think the photos will do it a lot more justice than I could: Kohei, from tennis group. All the tennis people got together for dinner at an okonomiyaki (think cabbage pancake, with yummy stuff like shrimp in it) but first we went to a boardwalk which had nighttime light shows. Top: Anime Club. They threw a small party for me, where we ate lots of food and watched (what else) anime and talked. Bottom: one of my English classes. They asked me to teach them an American game for the last day, so I taught everyone how to play Heads-Up 7-Up. They were pretty good at it. The other exchange student, Nom, and my Japanese teacher. The last view of school: the walk leading u