I think pussy is fine.
And that's my hot take.
I think pussy is fine.
And that's my hot take.
acket.
I choose to read that without context as it's on a GTX page break for me. I know the context, but I choose to read it without, and it's poetry.
Me too.
If we had ‘like’ buttons for posts I would instantly like that.
I know you're all really anticipating the final report on my colonoscopy, lol.
Overall nothing major, no cancer, however there was one piece they couldn't fully remove and while initially the doc thought 3 years, he now said to be on the safe side, to come back in 1 year....which is fine, I'd rather be cautious. He saw no indication of cancer on that one either but preferred to have it cleared out next year.
But you'll be in Japan next year! Better figure out the healthcare stuffs too if you really are moving to Japan soon...
Not sure about Japan, I know Taiwan has very cheap healthcare. Even without insurance, medical costs can be cheaper than the US with insurance! I’m talking about overall cheaper prescription costs, testing costs and treatment costs. Of course advantage of US system is that once we reach our deductible, insurance will cover us 100%. However, cost could skyrocket if you need further special care in Taiwan…
Anyway, need to figure out how foreigners in Japan do with their healthcare issues…
Japanese Language Post:
On the note about moving to Japan........obviously knowing the language can be a huge barrier...which is what I'm spending the next several months getting over.
I do have generalized conversation skills that are a bit rusty, but those I can pick up again easily. I know Hiragana and Katakana, just need to be able to read them faster...I'm still a bit slow. One issue with Japanese is there's no spaces between words...that makes things tricky.
Then there's Kanji which has....generally....2,140 "common" characters with different readings depending on context etc. I've gotten advice from several places and the most basic advise seems to be related to a book "Remembering the Kanji" which tells you the basic keyword definition...in English. The concept being that it's way easier to get the jist of what a kanji means and that the other contexts and readings will be more easily figured out later.
On that note, I had an idea about how I can "learn" these kanji better, is looking up an image to go with the kanji...and putting them on a powerpoint doc. I'll share once I get further along so you can see what I mean.
That and just taking in lots of input from various media...variety shows, dramas...NOT really Anime (due to a few reasons...I prefer "regular" day to day dialogue and sometimes you can't tell how someone is voicing words without seeing them speaking directly). I wish I could do constant "immersion" of watching/listening to media but I have other things I have to do.
I also have duolingo which is...........ok for some things, and I have the Genki Volume 1 textbook. I found some decent learning games on Steam as well which I've tried out.
So overall what I'm saying is that I'm taking a lot of inputs from various sources and building up knowledge. Seeing/hearing words from different sources in different contexts is really helpful (while also trying not to get burnt out in the process). It obviously helps to be interested in Japan and Japanese things, and seeing as I love so many things from Japan and have Japanese writing, it makes it easier.
I also have Japanese friends that I can converse with
If anyone has any questions, let me know.
I tried to learn Hebrew when it looked like I'd be taking more regular trips to Tel Aviv with ZipRecruiter. I found Duolingo to be really tough because I couldn't really get a good handle on what the different glyphs sounded like. I have to imagine Japanese would be really similar, though in my experience at least the katakana glyphs are easier to tell apart. Not to sound insensitive, I had a lot with Hebrew where I was like "okay, how does this one that looks like an 'n' sound compared to this one that looks like an 'n'."