The Second 50

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Friday, March 25, 2011

Parent Language

As I sit here munching on my tasty, crunchy, melty, spicy, nori seaweed snack – the better to absorb iodine to protect my thyroid from possible radiation from Japan – I ruminate on the night my father taught me to count from one to ten in Japanese – he did -complete with mnemonic devices. It was about 9:30 PM, a dark, balmy night, and we were standing behind our car, under the glow of a parking lot light at the Audubon Shopping Center in Audubon, NJ, waiting to pick my mom up from her shift at JC Penneys. While we waited he taught me: Itchy Knee – scratch your knee, Sun She – make a sun with your arms over your head and point to yourself if you’re a girl, Go Loco – make circles with your pointer finger around your ear, Hitchy Hotchy – there’s not a lot you can do with that, but it sounds like hippy, hoppy, so hop from foot to foot. Finish up with coo joo. That just sounds so cute you won’t forget it. That was more than 40 years ago.

Now that I am learning Japanese through Rosetta Stone, I realize that he did a pretty good job. Itchy knee, sun, she, go loco, hitchy, hotchy, coo, joo translates to ichi, ni, san, shi, go, doko, nanna, hatchi, koo, jyu. He got the number “seven” wrong or maybe I don’t remember it right.

He drove a medic’s jeep in Japan during World War II. My uncle said my dad was too young; it must have been the Korean War. My dad wasn’t there to speak for himself, and my uncle isn’t here to state his case anymore, either, but I ask you – Does that sound like Korean to you? And where else would a maintenance man with an eighth education come up with 1-10 in Japanese? (The internet wasn’t invented yet and I’m pretty sure the Pitman library didn’t have a foreign language collection.) He drove a medic’s jeep in Japan in World War II. He did.

5 Comments:

Blogger silvergirl said...

I remember the interminable waits in the JC Penny parking lot - why did we go so early??? I don't remember being taught anything much less Japanese. Mom has or had pictures of Dad in Japan - where is Korea geographically in relation to Japan? What years did WWII occur in and what years Korean?

Fri Mar 25, 10:43:00 PM PDT  
Blogger *Xquizit.$.Xhalationz* said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

Fri Mar 25, 11:50:00 PM PDT  
Blogger *Xquizit.$.Xhalationz* said...

::i luv how u write. it's like... i can feel how u feel when u think your thoughts::

also, it is absolutely astronomical how i have been craving and eating lots of sushi lately. your post helped me realzie its probably because my unit includes the radiology department and also some of my patients may be walking radon exhibitors!!!! i've had sushi 40 out of 60 days. sushi pizza so many maki & timaki i dont remember them all lol i had seaweed salad and sushi the other day. deeeelish and chewy. i had squid salad and sushi today. more chewy and still yummy.

Sat Mar 26, 12:03:00 AM PDT  
Blogger Amity said...

Four can be either shi or yon. Seven can be either shichi or nana. Shi and shichi sound like the word for death, so they have alternate pronunciations.

Sat Mar 26, 03:46:00 AM PDT  
Blogger tuckeredmom said...

World War II was from 1939 - 1945 and the Korean War was from 1950 - 1953. My father was in both wars as well as Vietnam and so was my father-in-law. My father was also stationed in Japan post WWII, twice. One of my brothers was born in Japan and graduated from high school in Japan. So perhaps your father was in Japan during the Korean conflict.

Your father had the number seven correct. It can be either shichi or nana.

Fri Aug 12, 05:50:00 PM PDT  

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