2018年2月25日日曜日

2018/2/4 Multicultural Playgroup Ichigo-Ichie Report

(日本語でのレポートはこちら)

The 15th Ichigo Ichie took place on Sunday, February 4. 43 participants (22 adults and 21 children) from Australia, China, Taiwan, U.K., Malaysia, and Japan had fun together.  We began with singing, "If you are happy and you know it clap your hands" in four different languages.



Saran Wrap Ball Game

We had a fun game, "Saran Wrap Ball Game".  This is played at Christmas party in America.  You wear oven mitts, and unwrap a big ball of saran wrap with several gifts layered throughout the ball.  You get to keep the gift you unwrap along the way.  It was difficult even for adults to unwrap the saran wrap with oven mitts, so both the kids and adults were excited! 



Having and Raising a Baby in Oklahoma, USA

The day's guest speaker, Shoko, made a presentation.  She lived in Oklahoma from 2009 to 2016, and gave birth in 2012.  Through the experience of pregnancy and childbirth there, the biggest difference was “insurance”, she said.  Only necessary care/exams were covered by insurance, and she had no financial treatment for giving birth.  So, the medical cost for pregnancy and delivery she paid was $6000 (approximately 650,000)!

Family members can attend the childbirth in America.  Shoko’s husband was in the room for her C-section, but he fainted…  She requested to keep the umbilical cord, as Japanese people do.  The doctor accepted it, and also asked her if she wanted the placenta! 



She also showed us the baby gifts from her American family and friends.  Since her baby was born in winter, she got eight blankets; some were handmade.  She also got a cake decorated with a small crane (her baby’s name has a word “thuru” meaning a crane in English), a baby tooth box, and a hot dinner to feed a new mother.
 
After 90-day maternity leave, she returned to work.  There was no pressure for taking sick leave at her work.  Also, many parents worked from home while taking sick leave and some brought their kids to their office.  Employers must provide a space for working mother to pump milk, so she pumped milk at work. 

Others, she talked about baby food, daycare, outing with babies and so on, pointing out the difference from those in Japan.  In addition, she wondered if the floor was clean for babies to crawl, because it is not the custom to take off their shoes in America.  Although her family had no shoe rule in their house, she saw people let babies crawl on the floor.
 

Greeting in Korean & Story Time

Yuko, who had lived in South Korea for one year, taught us how to greet in Korean.  “Anneonghaseyo” is used for “Good morning”, “Good afternoon” and “Good evening”.  Also we learned “gomawo” (=”Thank you”), and two expressions for “Good bye”.





Last, we had a story time.  Tinky, from China, read kids a Japanese picture book, “Nezumi-kun no Chokki (“Little Mouse’s Red Vest” in English) in Chinese, and Japanese mom, Mie, read it in Japanese.  The book is popular among Japanese kids.  They enjoyed the story in two languages at that day.



Upcoming Meeting 

Next Ichigo Ichie is to be held at Café Kokoraku on April 1, Sunday.  The theme is “Compare difference between kindergartens (yochien) and nursery schools (hoikuen) in Japan.”  Application requirements, nursery hours, annual events, mom friends, etc.…  There are a lot of differences in many aspects.  See you at next Ichigo ichie!

(Reported by Naoko. Photos by Shinichiro)