My Kids Are Perverted
Ok, so I'm an assisstant teacher in three Japanese middle
schools. The grade levels are ichinensei, ninensei, and sannensei.
Translated this just means "1st years", "2nd years", and "3rd years",
and it's equivalent to American 7-9th grades. So the kids are about
12-15 years old.
For the ichinensei, they JUST started learning English. So this
means they know nothing. Well, they know "Good Morning" and "I go to
school by bike", but that's about it. Some of them don't even know
that. It's not a bad thing, try to think about how much
Spanish/French/German you knew after 3 years of it in High School. I
took HS Spanish for 3 years and all I took out of it was "Yo quiero
taco bell". My apologies to Mrs. Gonzalez, Ms. Kuchinski, and Mrs.
Mach.
You know what's kind of funny though? Some kids can't say "Good
morning", but damn near all of them can ask if I have a big **edited**. Or,
"bigu dikku" in Engrish.
Y'see, Japan's an island no bigger than California, where
everything is filtered. There are so few foreigners here, their only
impressions of things outside of Japan comes from the media. And to be
honest, they don't really give a damn about anything other than
America. So yeah, try to imagine a country where the perceptions of you
are created by your movies, music, and MTV. And when you stop crying
and shaking at the sheer horror of that thought, I'll be here waiting.
....Okay? Ok. So anyway, the whole "black men have big **edited**s"
stereotype stretches far and wide, even to the nation's 12 year olds.
Part of why I'm here is not just to kind of sort of help teach English,
but to "broaden cultural perceptions". Break stereotypes, challenge
preconcieved notions, all that jazz. That's good and all, but this is
one stereotype I think I'm just gonna let slide.
So anyway, I get asked "bigu dikku" A LOT. Every 2-3 days in
fact, which is amazing considering I got asked this question about 2-3
times *in my entire life* in America. Locker room jokes aside. How do
you answer that anyway? To a 12-15 year old? I wave them off and say
"No no no." Then they say "Oh, sumaru dikku?" (trans. "Small **edited**?")
and OF COURSE that's wrong so I have to correct them. It's just a
no-win stiuation.
On the days I'm avoiding them asking me that, I'm avoiding them
actually trying to grab it. I **edited** you not, I have to play Dodge**edited**
with Japanese Jr. High kids on a weekly basis. Boys and girls! Age,
gender, doesn't matter, they all want a stab at it. The boys are
actually more persistant though. I had one boy grab for it, and when I
said "No!" he put his hands together and, in English, said "Please!" Oh
hell no. I was sitting next to a 12-year old boy who kept grabbing at
it, and when I told him "No!" he asked "Why not?" I wondered if there
weren't some cultural bounds I wasn't understsanding, so I said clearly
"age 10 years and become female since birth, then we'll talk." His
solution was to ask the girl sitting next to him to trade seats, grab
my **edited**, and tell him about it.
That is so NOT what I meant.
I wish I could say it stops there, but actually, it gets worse.
Let me introduce you to a game Japanese kids like to play called
"Kancho."
Actually, it's not so much a "game" as it is kids clasping
their hands together, sticking out their first fingers, and shoving
them up your butt. I'm really not joking.
You know, before we come to Japan, they tell us a lot of
ultimately useless stuff. What kind of computer to bring, if our DVD's
will work, clothing sizes, that kind of nonsense. Nowhere, and I mean
nowhere, in the 3-4 months of orientations did anyone ever mention that
at some point, a Japanese kid may try to stick their fingers up our
butt. That's something I would have liked to know, personally.
It's called Kancho, and just about any kid can be a Kancho
Assassin. Even the sweetest little girl may be prone to jam her fingers
up your ass the second you turn around. This happened to one of my
friends, which just goes to show - don't trust anyone. I'd say the
little girls are the most dangerous cause they have natural ways of
lowering your defenses. I was pretty lucky. Before I came, I bought a really big,
really baggy pair of pants. The kids try to Kancho...but they just have
no idea where my ass is! It's beautiful! I had one kid try and find his
fingers hit nothing but jean fabric and air. Yes! But I've actually
gotten pretty good at dodging it, much like Spider-man I have developed
a Kancho Sense that tells me where and when it's coming before it
comes. I parry fingers like a pro. My record is still 100% Kancho Free.
Ha! America 2, Japan 0.
All in a day's work I suppose. |