Showing posts with label life as I know it. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life as I know it. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

[LIFE AS I KNOW IT] setting goals

Now that we have all survived New Years Eve...it is January 1st 2014...time to start thinking ;) What do you want to achieve this year? I have mentioned previously that I like to set goals for myself each year and this year will be no different.

To go along with my "mantra" I have been working on a list of goals...personal, work, fitness, etc. I always try to get my list completed before the first week of January is thru, set myself a dead line otherwise half the year could go past before I get anything in writing.

Here are some tips for setting goals that I have found helpful. What are some of your goal setting tips!?

(Source: Mind Tools )

Monday, 14 October 2013

[LIFE AS I KNOW IT] japan 2013, part two; kyoto

Last week I posted about the first part of our Japan trip here...

Here are some photos of our time in Tokyo. It was very hard to choose only a "few" as our time there was amazing and we have tons of photos!

We were very lucky to stay with friends we were in Tokyo - this is there home! 
More "American" style than "Japanese" :)


Our friend Naosuke took us this little Izekaya in Ebisu, it was very small and only sat 8 people. 
It is a "one man" bar. He served + cooked very well. We had some great food that night.


On out first weekend in Japan we left the city and went to Kawagoe. 
It was a very old town from the Edo period. This is a photo I took of the sleeping koi.


We were VERY lucky to stay at a traditional style hotel and 
onsen (hot spring) in Gunma. It was beautiful!


Here is a picture of our room, from the entry. The rooms were divided by sliding doors and 
rooms had tatami mat floors. The bathroom was also very 
traditional with a wooden soaker tub. 


This room is the sitting room. When we got back to our room after dinner we
 had individual futons ready for us to sleep in. They were comfy.


Our dinner in Gunma was sooooo good. We sat on the floor (which took some getting used to) 
and at many many dishes, they were all very good. This is only some of our first "round". 
If only we could get food like this in Canada!


This is a picture of Yudai making silk at an old factory we toured. 


On our way up to Karuizawa we stopped at a small pond to walk around .
This is Tyler, Yudai and Hiro san.


When we arrived at Karuizawa we ate some of the best soba we have ever had.
This is Tyler and I with the Suzuki's (Hiro san, Yuka san and Yudai) at lunch.


We had lots of fun at the "trick art" museum :)


This is a picture of a tiny frog Yudai found the afternoon after the typhoon!
The weather was so calm we went out for a walk in Inagi, the area the Suzuki's live.


These boys were looking for crayfish.


Yudai make us yakiniku - yum!


We met some friends for sushi in Skiji - this is a picture of the fish market in the early afternoon.
 Still a busy little place but the fish auction was long over.


We stopped at Yoyoji Park, this is the Yoyogi National Gymnasium built for the 1964 Olympics.
It was designed by Kenzo Tange.


Just a little street art.


This is the first tori (gate) leading into the Meiji Shrine. It is a beautiful walk thru the
trees as you make your way to the shrine. 

There were a lot of heart motifs at Meiji Shrine. I loved it :)


This is Kumiko san and Miwa san, we stopped for a drink and to give them some
books we brought for them from Canada. 


Everywhere I looked there were cute little details, this is a fence in Shimokitazawa.


This is a picture of the "Cocoon Tower" by Kenzo Tange's son. 


This is Tyler and I at Sky Tree in Tokyo.


We went up the Sky Tree with Nobu san, Hiro san and Tyler at the lower deck.
The view was outstanding. We even seen Mount Fugi, very faintly on the horizon.
We were lucky that the day we went the sky was very clear.


Here is Tyler, taking in the view.


I could not believe how tall and skinny the buildings were in Tokyo with only a sliver of space between.


Hiro san took us to a sushi restaurant where we had omakase from a
"celebrity" sushi master in Japan. 


Here are some of the pear trees in Inagi, the pears were huge, juicy and expensive!


On our last day in Tokyo we went to Iogi, this is the town where 
Tyler lived when he was teaching in Tokyo.
Leopalace was his apartment.

Here is Tyler checking out his old apartment, thumb up ;)


This a picture of the Whale Bridge in Inagi, a pedestrian bridge. 



According to Tyler, the concrete work is exemplary :) I thought this was a cool picture. 

Hope you enjoyed our pictures - we had a great time in Japan and will definitely be going back at some point in our future. We can not wait for our Japanese friends to come to Canada to visit so we can hopefully show them as great of a time as we were shown.

Any suggestions for our next trip!?

Monday, 30 September 2013

[LIFE AS I KNOW IT] japan 2013, part one, kyoto

My husband and I recently got back from a 2 week vacation in Japan. We had both been to Japan before so there were lots of things we wanted to see and do again while leaving time to explore. We also dedicated a large portion of our trip to spending time with friends living in Tokyo.

Here are some pictures from our time in Kyoto. We were only there 3 days, so we made the most of them.

Sanjusangendo Temple - inside this temple there are 1001 Buddhist statues, it is incredible 
to see as you walk thru the long main hall. Photos can not be taken on the inside of 
any of the temples so you will have to take my word on it ;)


At all of the temples you can but a fortune for 100 yen (about $1) and tie it on one of the racks.


My fortune was very good :) 






After walking up the road, stairs, etc you arrive at Kiyomizu-dera. The view from here is beautiful. 
There is not a single nail used in the construction of this temple...crazy! 


Here are some Japanese ladies lighting incense. 




 The roads leading up to Kiyomizu-dera and lined with shops and restaurants. They are 
busy little streets filled with shops and restaurants...people, bikes and cars 
all share the roads.




Tyler and I am my favorite... Kinkaku-ji or Temple of the Golden Pavilion.


Pictures do not do this temple justice, it is beautiful. 


Pruning the bonsai trees from a boat and very long ladders.


 Tyler at his favorite, Ryoan-ji. The zen garden at this temple is what makes it unique. 
You can not help but just sit and enjoy it.


I love all of these nail covers. At each temple they are slight different. I was lucky enough to pick up a 
pair at an antique store and just need to find a place in our home to hang them. 


 As you go in to each of the temples you have to take your shoes off. Millions of people have sat here 
and put on their shoes.






This is a photo of me at the gardens of a temple near Arashiuama, Tenryu-ji. They were beautiful, we 
spent a while just walking thru the paths and around the pond. 


This is the bamboo forest at Tenryu-ji. 






On our last day in Kyoto we went to Nijo-jo (Nijo Castle). Like in the temples you can not take photos 
of the interior so all we have are memories of the paintings on the walls. They were the most beautiful 
of all we had seen. At Nijo-jo there is a nightingale floor so with every step there was a `squeek` :)






...and we are off to Tokyo; he insisted on carrying both bags down to the subway ;)

Stay tuned from some more photos!