When she arrived we took the metro to Nerima, for these first few days she would be staying in a hotel close to the school and my dorm. It was funny because the moment we got on the metro she started talking very loud and I was like 'ssst, oma! people don't talk on the metro here' and she was so confused haha. She ended up learning a lot more weird rules Japanese people have that day like standing left on the elevator, no eating/drinking while walking, no shaking hands when you meet someone...
We checked in her luggage at the hotel and headed to Aoba. They had spring carnival going on and I was expected to be there so I asked if grandma could come along. Spring carnival is basically a big festival in the school: kids perform, foodtrucks, fair attractions, games, shops where the kids sell stuff they made...It's a really nice day and teachers don't have to actually work except for being there and talking to parents when we get approached.
Grandma got the chance to meet the whole team and everyone loved her! We talked, ate, walked around and watched performances.
Around 16:30 grandma started to get very tired from the jetlag. So I dropper her of at the hotel and was planning on going to my dormroom for a bit to pack my bag and clean up. But on my way I ran in to some of my colleagues having a drink at the park so I joined them instead.
I went to get an adapter and simcard for grandma and drove my bike back to her hotel to pick her up for dinner. We got korean fried chicken and she loved it! We're both more then ready for a good night of sleep and a busy day tomorrow, goodnight. <3







Zo fijn dat jij en oma dit avontuur kunnen delen! ⛩️
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