32nd Annual Crab Feed To Go

32nd Annual Crab Feed To Go

Join us for our

32nd Annual J-Sei Crab Feed

Sunday, February 26, 2023

El Cerrito Community Center, 7007 Moesser Lane, El Cerrito

Early Seating 4-5:30 pm; Late Seating 5:30-7 pm

with live entertainment throughout.

To-Go Pick-Up from 4-6 pm

Fresh Dungeness Crab

Asian Salad, Garlic Noodles, Bread and Dessert

Dinner Tickets: $55/person, $20 for children 12 & under

Menu subject to change depending on availability of crab.

 RESERVATIONS ARE NOW CLOSED.

For more info, call (510) 654-4000 or email suzanne@j-sei.org

 

COVID Safety Precautions

The seatings will be limited to 110 people per seating to allow for social-distancing between tables.  Please take a COVID-19 Antigen Test on the day of the event and stay home if you are experiencing any symptoms or not feeling well.

Pay online using Donor Box below.

New Year’s Greeting from Yuji

New Year’s Greeting from Yuji

Hi Everyone!

 

I hope everybody has had an amazing year! I want to take the time to really send love and thanks for all the support in the past couple of years.  I feel really lucky to be able to again offer Osechi Ryori boxes plus a few other items for New Year’s!
I was thrilled to share this year’s offering with Alan Charazo of KQED:
Place your orders at Tokyo Fish Market, 1220 San Pablo Av Berkeley, open 9 am to 5 pm.  Then, pick-up on January 1st at J-Sei, 1285 66th Street, Emeryville.
Please consider allowing me to celebrate with you!!!

Yuji

Oshogatsu Celebration 2023

Oshogatsu Celebration 2023

J-Sei Oshogatsu Celebration

Friday, January 27th (Hybrid: In-Person and Online)

“The year of The Rabbit is one where the sacrifices of the past are rewarded generously. All the seeds of effort we have sown shall finally bear fruit whose sweetness is determined by the purity of our heart’s intent.”   [Year of the Rabbit. Lifestyle Asia]

What are your intentions for the new year? Our hope and intention at J-Sei is to keep us all connected in community.

11 am – Join us for our Oshogatsu celebration in an intergenerational exchange with students from the American International Montessori School. Enjoy Japanese games with the children, create calligraphy to greet the new year, and learn odori together.

12 pm – Then, enjoy a classic celebratory dish of Chirashizushi, with friends at J-Sei or pick-up To-Go.

1 pm – Our J-Sei Oshogatsu Celebration will be a hybrid program – in-person and online. The program will feature “Silly Green Mask”, a new book by Judith Kajiwara, with illustrations by Felicia Hoshino. A special presentation by the American International Montessori School and odori by Keiko Allen and J-Sei Minyo no Odori.

RSVP to jill@j-sei.org  with “Oshogatsu” in the subject line. Please indicate if you plan to join us in-person or pick-up To-Go.  The suggested donation is $12.  You can pay using the online option below or bring cash or check on the day of pick-up.  Limited space available.

Silly Green Mask by Judith Kajiwara, with illustrations by Felicia Hoshino

Silly Green Mask had been sitting in a file cabinet for 40 years. It was recently found when its author, now a grandma, decided to recycle decades of papers from her files. Folded away were the yellow, tattered pages of a true story she’d written when she was a young single mother. She had once dreamed of making it into a children’s story book. But life got in the way and the dream was forgotten. Upon finding the story, a little bird tweeted, “It’s never too late to make your forgotten dream come true.” Having no clue how to start, she began visualizing her dream until it came to be.

Silly Green Mask is about a very imaginative 3-year-old girl and her younger sister. At pre-school, the girl draws a silly face on green construction paper. Her teacher cuts it out, fashions it into a mask with eye holes, and attaches a string. The mask becomes a source of fun and theater for the girl, instantly turning her into an animated, make-believe character.

Silly Green Mask is about love, family, innocence, imagination and the importance of choice.

The book will be available for $23.  Please let us know in advance if you would like your copy signed by the author.

Author Judith Kajiwara – Since growing up on a small farm in Livingston, California, Judith Kajiwara has been on a life-long spiritual quest to find truth, freedom and joy. Livingston is home to the Yamato Colony where many Issei (first generation Japanese) farmers settled in the late 1800s. As a Sansei (third generation Japanese American), church, community and culture established the foundation for her life. After high school, she attended UC Berkeley where she worked as a grassroots community organizer while earning her degree in psychology. In addition to writing, Judith continues to follow her passion for dance and healing. She is a seasoned Japanese Butoh solo performing artist, choreographer, dance teacher and Reiki energy healer.

Illustrator Felicia Hoshino – Born in San Francisco, California, Felicia Hoshino’s prize-winning illustrations can be found in children’s books such as Juna and Appa, A Place Where Sunflowers Grow, and Sora and the Cloud. She enjoys sketch-booking, illustrating portraits, cooking with her husband, and seeing her growing son’s and daughter’s creativity shine.

J-Sei Holiday Schedule

J-Sei Holiday Schedule

The J-Sei Nutrition and Programs will be closed for the holidays from December 24th to January 8th,  We are so grateful for the countless hours and sacrifice the volunteers and staff have given to keep things moving.  We appreciate this time to be with our families and refuel for the new year.

The J-Sei office and staff remain available by phone and email during this time.  We look forward to a fresh start on Monday, January 9th!

Assessing Your COVID-19 Risk

Assessing Your COVID-19 Risk

Festive Holiday Wishes to You!

As we all try to stay cozy, complete our holiday shopping and ponder the new year, we are content in knowing that J-Sei will continue to create opportunities for mutual support, fun and expansion of experiences and thoughts.  We are all quite tired of analyzing our risk for COVID-19, but J-Sei will continue to update protocols to reflect public health guidelines to keep older adults, volunteers and staff safe.

During the past year, it has been encouraging to hold more in-person classes and events that build strong minds, bodies and social connection.  Holding our traditional Harvest Day and Holiday Marketplace in-person was so uplifting and we look forward to seeing more of you in 2023 – perhaps you will join us for our in-person Crab Feed or Flavors of Spring events.

On behalf of the J-Sei Board of Directors and staff, we wish you a peaceful, healthy and joyous holiday!

Diane Wong
Executive Director

How to Assess Your Risk

Excerpt from “COVID experts said “This is it.” then Omicron hit…” by Kellie Hwang, SF Chronicle, Dec 13, 2022

Wachter understands that “it’s exhausting to continuously reassess risk” and that some people have put the pandemic behind them and gone back to “living like it’s 2019.”

“If you’re up to date with your vaccines and boosters, including the new one, and you’re not at very high risk, that’s not an unreasonable call,” he said. “You have very little risk of a severe case, virtually no risk of death, and about a 5% risk of long COVID.”

UCSF infectious disease expert Dr. Peter Chin-Hong concurred that your COVID risk remains based on two factors: who you are, and the company you keep.

“In general, COVID continues to have more serious consequences in unboosted seniors (over 65), and those who are severely compromised and not up to date on vaccines,” he said. “For everyone else it generally has milder consequences, but symptoms can still not be fun or a walk in the park.”

Because Wachter is older and doesn’t want to risk long COVID, he said he continues to mask in crowded indoor spaces, and assesses his activities based on case rates. Anywhere below 10 cases per 100,000 means he’ll feel comfortable getting together in small groups without masks. With higher case rates, he’ll add safety precautions such as testing, and will forgo certain activities such as eating indoors.

Stanford’s Liu advised paying attention to public health guidance, which will vary based on the level of community risk.

“We still want people to live their lives, though,” she said. “Adjusting our behavior according to local conditions is similar to putting on a raincoat and bringing an umbrella when it’s raining and putting them away when the sun is shining.”

Read the SF Chronicle Dec 13, 2022 article

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