Monday, November 10, 2008
Tiny Tots Tricks and Talk: Treat Talking Tots to Tricky Treats.
For this years Halloween celebration we gathered the teachers, students, parrents, and anyone else who saw up going by, in Chengdu's "National Defense Park." The park itself was something of a trip, old airplanes and missles lying about, but the real site was all the kiddies in costumes. Us foreign teachers had really bland, lame costumes while many of the Chinese English teachers,
the children, and parents got just as into the holiday as people back home do.
Costumes ranged in everything from Superman and Tigger to Harry Potter and Juliet. The teachers had a Wizard of Oz theme, though it seems doubtful that they'd seen the movie from the cowardly Tin-man and ruthless lion to the left.
For our celebration we had a short stage performance, really more of a speech and talent show. In which our hosts brought children from all the classes at the Golden Apple American International English School up to parade their costumes for the parents. We foreign teachers were dressed in various degrees of monster outfits and some of the little cherubs, like this little bumble bee, were rather cross with us for being scary.
All of these cute kids are from our "baby class" or Sun Class at the Kindergarten. They're roughly two years old.
This little devil (sometimes I mean that) is Shaun (of the dead), one of my Bosses' sons and one of the little "angels" I work with Monday through friday. Our class is called Moon class and covers the 3 year olds. In the other pictures, the three cute little girls are Lena, on the left, Rosie, in the back, and Maya, on the right. Lena is the quiet well behaved one, Rosie is the quiet misbehaved one, and Maya is the loud one who behaves as she sees fit because she's also the most clever of the three. The problem with the smart kids is that you can't rely on them to behave well, they get bored too easily. The little Strong Bad styled wrestler is Alex, he's another of the really clever students. On this particular day he had decided that I was Buzz Lightyear. His logic was simple: I like Buzz Lightyear and I like Scott therefore Scott is aloud to be Buzz Lightyear. Alex refered to his own costume as "Super Baby" and repeatedly did the Superman "up up and away" pose as he said so, unfortunatly he was careful not to do it with cameras around.
The Last set of Moon Class photos, for now, is William and Hugh. William (Tigger) is one of the bright problem students who teachers can never figure out if they like or not. He's always eager to give the answer in class, always able to demonstrate an activity for kids that don't get it, but simply can't handle not being the center of attention. The pouty Jack-O-Lantern is Hugh (who usually says his name is Huge if asked). Hugh is a new student who is picking up English very quickly (when I started he could understand anything, now he's reliably one of the better participants in class). He has the same behavior pattern that William does, but the excuse that he doesn't always understand when the teacher tells him what he is suppose to be doing.
Following the other three classes's costume pageants, the performance given was really moe of a speach. The "Lords of Oz;" being Dorthy, The good witch, the Lion, The scarecrow, and the Tin-Man; talked about presenting free gifts and candy to the children... at which point the monsters (foreign teachers in capes) entered to put the candy in boxes and tell the children that they had to go work (play) for their candy.
Can you imagine the audacity we had in that? Telling them to go burn off energy so they can have sugar... its like we want the kids to grow up thin or something.
To work for their candy, the children had to visit various game stations and play a game there, one station for each "Lord of OZ" and then come back and tell us monster teachers the "magic words" to open the boxes in which we had sealed their candy.
Some locations were spooky, some were up-beat, some completely ignored the Oz theme to go for something a little more reachable and fun for everyone.
Apart from student getting scared of the fake spiders and being late for nap time, everyone had a good time all around. When they had finished they came back and recited the magic words (with help in the form of visual aids), and got their treasured candy.
There were some photo opportunities worth sharing though, including me being asked to pull a trick on one of my co-teachers by "saving her from the lion" who managed to stay out of the photo all together. Pictures with the lion (myself in one and my Chinese English teacher Michelle in the other. And lastly the Principal team (Shaun's daddy and his college).
Sunday, October 19, 2008
...and we're back.
I'm sure I made a promise of one sort or another not to let my online log of my life lapse, as I am also sure I equally promised to add more pictures...
My excuse is two part, firstly that I've been very busy and secondly that I just got my internet access back after moving in September (which doesn't excuse a lack of post for August.
My excuse is two part, firstly that I've been very busy and secondly that I just got my internet access back after moving in September (which doesn't excuse a lack of post for August.
August in Luoyang carried that hard task of saying farewell to my students and coworkers many of whom I will in all likely hood never see again. I know that I was a positive force in their lives during the time I was there, so that made things both easier and harder.
It was easier because they all wished me the best and hard because they were all somewhat glum about me leaving, several of my students (at all levels) cried a little when I told them I was going to be going which is a sort of unhappy compliment.
Then September came around and I got on a plane from ZhengZhou, the capital of Henan province, and flew to Chengdu in Sichuan province where I now am living quite happily. And no, sorry Mom, thats a co-woker and not a girlfriend. She happened to complain that I was too tall and so I remidied the situation for her.
As you can see though, Chengdu is treating me pretty well. As I have probably mentioned before, Chengdu is known as a party city in china. The food is absolutely amazing, the scenery is breathtaking, the historic locations are rather fun, and the women (as you can see) are beautiful.
Not as beautiful as the children though.
This is my morning class, complete with the trouble maker Shaun (the one who does not look Chinese, well entirely Chinese). My morning class is a group of 22-26 (depending on who actually show's up) 3 year olds of various English levels. My afternoon school is where I teach many classes for short periods of time to ages 2-5 but don't get to know the children in the close and person way that I get to know them at the morning school.
Just this last week my afternoon school took all of its teachers on a short trip to a hot spring near Chengdu and then to a famous bridge in that nearby city where we all stopped to take pictures.
The bridge was done in old style architecture which I find beautiful and fascinating on many levels, but mostly I just had a good time running around with my coworkers and taking pictures.
In the group photo with 5 young ladies, the girl in the open gray shirt is Sophie, my co-teacher. In the blue is one of our dance teachers (whose name I don't know yet), in the black is Wendy, our piano teacher, and the other two I regretfully have forgotten who they are.
On a personal note, yesterday afternoon I had a wonderful date with a young lady I met this last week. While I use the word date, we never really called it as such, we just said we were hanging out as friends, but I have reasons to suspect (hope) that there is a potential for more. I don't yet have pictures of her or of many of the other wonderful places in Chengdu yet since I haven't been in the habit of taking a camera with me everywhere I go.
It was easier because they all wished me the best and hard because they were all somewhat glum about me leaving, several of my students (at all levels) cried a little when I told them I was going to be going which is a sort of unhappy compliment.
Then September came around and I got on a plane from ZhengZhou, the capital of Henan province, and flew to Chengdu in Sichuan province where I now am living quite happily. And no, sorry Mom, thats a co-woker and not a girlfriend. She happened to complain that I was too tall and so I remidied the situation for her.
As you can see though, Chengdu is treating me pretty well. As I have probably mentioned before, Chengdu is known as a party city in china. The food is absolutely amazing, the scenery is breathtaking, the historic locations are rather fun, and the women (as you can see) are beautiful.
Not as beautiful as the children though.
This is my morning class, complete with the trouble maker Shaun (the one who does not look Chinese, well entirely Chinese). My morning class is a group of 22-26 (depending on who actually show's up) 3 year olds of various English levels. My afternoon school is where I teach many classes for short periods of time to ages 2-5 but don't get to know the children in the close and person way that I get to know them at the morning school.
Just this last week my afternoon school took all of its teachers on a short trip to a hot spring near Chengdu and then to a famous bridge in that nearby city where we all stopped to take pictures.
The bridge was done in old style architecture which I find beautiful and fascinating on many levels, but mostly I just had a good time running around with my coworkers and taking pictures.
In the group photo with 5 young ladies, the girl in the open gray shirt is Sophie, my co-teacher. In the blue is one of our dance teachers (whose name I don't know yet), in the black is Wendy, our piano teacher, and the other two I regretfully have forgotten who they are.
On a personal note, yesterday afternoon I had a wonderful date with a young lady I met this last week. While I use the word date, we never really called it as such, we just said we were hanging out as friends, but I have reasons to suspect (hope) that there is a potential for more. I don't yet have pictures of her or of many of the other wonderful places in Chengdu yet since I haven't been in the habit of taking a camera with me everywhere I go.
Thursday, July 3, 2008
We may experience slight delays
Travel is often a stressful and trying experience even when nothing at all goes wrong. The further one is traveling the more likely that the effects of it will weigh on them for sometime.
I've not experienced enough long distance travel to be completely certain of myself and my abilities in any foreseeable circumstance in the future.
For my return flight from China to the States this last month I flew from LuoYang to Shanghai, arranged accomodations, and shopped for presents for family all while running a fever and having a chest cold which made it difficult to get out and about. This made the 12 hour flight from Shanghai to L.A. far less comfortable that it might otherwise have been, but rather uneventful none the less.
For my flight from L.A. to Shanghai we encountered some trouble with weather and incompetence which I have been assured are rather rare (at least when joined together). Due to bad weather forcing us to be redirected and poor communication over what type of aircraft and flight we were to air traffic control my flight returning to Shanghai wound up being delayed a full 9 hours (on a 13 hour flight) for a grand total of 22 hours between lift off in L.A. and touch down in Shanghai. We spent most of the delay on the ground in FuZhou a mere hour away from Shanghai.
Weather prevented us from landing and being redirected to an airport without the proper Taxi-jack for our airplane size were the primary factors involved in that.
As such between flying sick and extreme jetlag I feel I can handle any circumstance likely to come up in my travels.
Upon returning to LuoYang I've had a great many of my friends here eagerly wishing to talk with me and had my students happily asking many questions.
I'm getting to a point I need to secure my next job in as short order as possible and have moved on to the final stage of the employment process with a position in Chengdu. I am also in contact with a position in Ningbo and will need to make a final decision between the two cities very shortly. Currently I have an offer from Chengdu but do not yet have an offer on the table from Ningbo, simply a good word in with the boss and a strong reference.
Here are the two positions laid side by side:
Chengdu:
7,000RMB/Month + Acomodations near the school, Utilities, 1 free meal on working days (lunch).
Monday-Friday mornings and afternoons
Average schedule 3 hours in the morning (1/2 teaching 1/2 supervising) and 2-3 hours a day in the afternoon.
Kindergarten and Low grade primary school teaching (cute kids).
3 weeks national holiday + 2 weeks paid vacation/year
partial airfare reimbursement (paid as bonus upon contract completion)
Wonderful location near the heart of the City
City of Chengdu: Renowned for Beautiful mountains, lots of rainfall, spicy food, "most attractive women in china" (so the Chinese say, they are good looking on average though), Strong theater/opera traditions, nearby Pandas
Opportunity for overtime at 100RMB per 45-50min class. (~ $15 and hour)
Ningbo:
7,000RMB/Month to start, 8,000RMB after 3 mo. (final ~7,500 after taxes)
2,000RMB (untaxed) housing allowance (upscale single person apartment runs 2,200RMB)
40 hours a week working (preparation and classes combined)
2 days consecutive rest, both will be weekdays
Very small classes (4 students max) with grown adults (college students, businessmen, and people who which to expand their education).
Private office with personal desk, computer, Internet.
City of Ningbo: Coastal city with wide variety of and easy access to seafood, 2 hours from Shanghai, Considerable foreign population and geunie foreign foods such as pizza and burgers, location of a foreign university I am interested in attending year after next for Graduate school (Satellite of the University of Nottingham).
Also on the table until Sunday is my current job
LuoYang:
6,000 RMB/month (with possible resigning bonus)
Free Accomodations + 1/2 utilities (I will doubtlessly get a roommate if I stay where as in Ningbo I am assured a place to myself and in Chengdu can request it ahead of time).
Work 6 days a week very relaxed on weekdays and busy on weekends.
Students from 5-14 years old
Preset Curriculum and easy lesson planning
City: a little dirty and dull, but I will already have many friends here.
I am currently leaning to the job in Chengdu pending emails from current teachers there, I may lean back to the one in Ningbo but I very seriously doubt I will be here in LuoYang again next year.
I've not experienced enough long distance travel to be completely certain of myself and my abilities in any foreseeable circumstance in the future.
For my return flight from China to the States this last month I flew from LuoYang to Shanghai, arranged accomodations, and shopped for presents for family all while running a fever and having a chest cold which made it difficult to get out and about. This made the 12 hour flight from Shanghai to L.A. far less comfortable that it might otherwise have been, but rather uneventful none the less.
For my flight from L.A. to Shanghai we encountered some trouble with weather and incompetence which I have been assured are rather rare (at least when joined together). Due to bad weather forcing us to be redirected and poor communication over what type of aircraft and flight we were to air traffic control my flight returning to Shanghai wound up being delayed a full 9 hours (on a 13 hour flight) for a grand total of 22 hours between lift off in L.A. and touch down in Shanghai. We spent most of the delay on the ground in FuZhou a mere hour away from Shanghai.
Weather prevented us from landing and being redirected to an airport without the proper Taxi-jack for our airplane size were the primary factors involved in that.
As such between flying sick and extreme jetlag I feel I can handle any circumstance likely to come up in my travels.
Upon returning to LuoYang I've had a great many of my friends here eagerly wishing to talk with me and had my students happily asking many questions.
I'm getting to a point I need to secure my next job in as short order as possible and have moved on to the final stage of the employment process with a position in Chengdu. I am also in contact with a position in Ningbo and will need to make a final decision between the two cities very shortly. Currently I have an offer from Chengdu but do not yet have an offer on the table from Ningbo, simply a good word in with the boss and a strong reference.
Here are the two positions laid side by side:
Chengdu:
7,000RMB/Month + Acomodations near the school, Utilities, 1 free meal on working days (lunch).
Monday-Friday mornings and afternoons
Average schedule 3 hours in the morning (1/2 teaching 1/2 supervising) and 2-3 hours a day in the afternoon.
Kindergarten and Low grade primary school teaching (cute kids).
3 weeks national holiday + 2 weeks paid vacation/year
partial airfare reimbursement (paid as bonus upon contract completion)
Wonderful location near the heart of the City
City of Chengdu: Renowned for Beautiful mountains, lots of rainfall, spicy food, "most attractive women in china" (so the Chinese say, they are good looking on average though), Strong theater/opera traditions, nearby Pandas
Opportunity for overtime at 100RMB per 45-50min class. (~ $15 and hour)
Ningbo:
7,000RMB/Month to start, 8,000RMB after 3 mo. (final ~7,500 after taxes)
2,000RMB (untaxed) housing allowance (upscale single person apartment runs 2,200RMB)
40 hours a week working (preparation and classes combined)
2 days consecutive rest, both will be weekdays
Very small classes (4 students max) with grown adults (college students, businessmen, and people who which to expand their education).
Private office with personal desk, computer, Internet.
City of Ningbo: Coastal city with wide variety of and easy access to seafood, 2 hours from Shanghai, Considerable foreign population and geunie foreign foods such as pizza and burgers, location of a foreign university I am interested in attending year after next for Graduate school (Satellite of the University of Nottingham).
Also on the table until Sunday is my current job
LuoYang:
6,000 RMB/month (with possible resigning bonus)
Free Accomodations + 1/2 utilities (I will doubtlessly get a roommate if I stay where as in Ningbo I am assured a place to myself and in Chengdu can request it ahead of time).
Work 6 days a week very relaxed on weekdays and busy on weekends.
Students from 5-14 years old
Preset Curriculum and easy lesson planning
City: a little dirty and dull, but I will already have many friends here.
I am currently leaning to the job in Chengdu pending emails from current teachers there, I may lean back to the one in Ningbo but I very seriously doubt I will be here in LuoYang again next year.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Yes, it was an earthquake... and there's going to be another one at 5:00pm.
Of all of the interesting happenings to have graced me in my stay abroad, today was the first time when I was granted with anything that I had to fight not to laugh at. It was also the first experience which was purely human and had nothing at all to do with being in China versus being in America... I can very much imagine much of the same thing happening in Oklahoma while my home in California has been home to similarly foolish behavior during tsunami warnings.
Today, roughly about noon or so, my apartment building began to rock back and forth like a boat on a gentle sea. It was strong enough to rock the ship, but just sort of give it that peaceful motion that makes you feel a little uneasy until you work out the rhythm... that is, when it happens on the water. On land it presents something of a different sensation in most people. For me, I just found it odd because it felt too weak and too smooth to be an earthquake. In retrospect, I imagine that this quake was caused by a very different type of tectonic movement than San Andres creates, thus explaining the difference in feeling as it reached me here in LuoYang.
The real event was a 7.8 quake which was recorded in Sichuan province, I currently don't know more than that, but I also haven't gone looking. I'm waiting in part for the foreign news agencies to pick up the story so that I can read all of the available accounts and then put together the most likely version of the story based on the available information (being a literature major has had unforeseen side effects).
Here in LuoYang, the tremors were enough to be felt, but only enough to gently sway the ground, not even enough to disturb books on the shelves. Still all the people still at home had empties the buildings and were standing between the tall structures looking up at them and frantically dialing numbers on their cell phones. Local cell networks were busy for around two hours following the event as everyone in the city called about to find out if everyone was alright.
Two hours after the quake, my chinese boss got ahold of me by cell. "I was just calling to make sure everything was okay and that you didn't get hurt in the earthquake." She said with real concern, "Oh so it was a quake, it felt a little odd so I wasn't completely sure." I mentioned having entertained such ideas as high winds with a structural defect so far. "Yes, and you want to be careful there is going to be another one at 5pm. I hear its safer to be inside when it happens, but I don't know." "Don't worry Tracie, I'm a Californian... I know what to do in case of an earthquake."
The friend I was on the phone with through Skype began laughing at that point, only having been privy to my half of the conversation he was amused, but when I told him about the declaration of the still to come quake with the schedule ready time he was baffled. I'm still somewhat at a loss to explain why the news agencies here reported predictions (well, assertions is more the way of it) as to the times the aftershocks would strike at (or that we would feel them more than 24 hours by train away from the epicenter).
Still, it was the gathering of people between tall buildings, the flooding of the cellphone networks, and the confidence that once the ground had stopped shaking, all possible danger was passed, which left me very amused in the end.
I am sure a great many people did not derive any pleasure from the event that happened today, and I wish those actually harmed by the events all the best both now and in the times to come... but for those people who were panicking around me I had only one thought:
This is exactly what I will look like if I ever live in an area that gets Tsunamis, Volcanoes, or Tornadoes. I'd include Hurricanes... but those are a lot less likely with my current interests.
Today, roughly about noon or so, my apartment building began to rock back and forth like a boat on a gentle sea. It was strong enough to rock the ship, but just sort of give it that peaceful motion that makes you feel a little uneasy until you work out the rhythm... that is, when it happens on the water. On land it presents something of a different sensation in most people. For me, I just found it odd because it felt too weak and too smooth to be an earthquake. In retrospect, I imagine that this quake was caused by a very different type of tectonic movement than San Andres creates, thus explaining the difference in feeling as it reached me here in LuoYang.
The real event was a 7.8 quake which was recorded in Sichuan province, I currently don't know more than that, but I also haven't gone looking. I'm waiting in part for the foreign news agencies to pick up the story so that I can read all of the available accounts and then put together the most likely version of the story based on the available information (being a literature major has had unforeseen side effects).
Here in LuoYang, the tremors were enough to be felt, but only enough to gently sway the ground, not even enough to disturb books on the shelves. Still all the people still at home had empties the buildings and were standing between the tall structures looking up at them and frantically dialing numbers on their cell phones. Local cell networks were busy for around two hours following the event as everyone in the city called about to find out if everyone was alright.
Two hours after the quake, my chinese boss got ahold of me by cell. "I was just calling to make sure everything was okay and that you didn't get hurt in the earthquake." She said with real concern, "Oh so it was a quake, it felt a little odd so I wasn't completely sure." I mentioned having entertained such ideas as high winds with a structural defect so far. "Yes, and you want to be careful there is going to be another one at 5pm. I hear its safer to be inside when it happens, but I don't know." "Don't worry Tracie, I'm a Californian... I know what to do in case of an earthquake."
The friend I was on the phone with through Skype began laughing at that point, only having been privy to my half of the conversation he was amused, but when I told him about the declaration of the still to come quake with the schedule ready time he was baffled. I'm still somewhat at a loss to explain why the news agencies here reported predictions (well, assertions is more the way of it) as to the times the aftershocks would strike at (or that we would feel them more than 24 hours by train away from the epicenter).
Still, it was the gathering of people between tall buildings, the flooding of the cellphone networks, and the confidence that once the ground had stopped shaking, all possible danger was passed, which left me very amused in the end.
I am sure a great many people did not derive any pleasure from the event that happened today, and I wish those actually harmed by the events all the best both now and in the times to come... but for those people who were panicking around me I had only one thought:
This is exactly what I will look like if I ever live in an area that gets Tsunamis, Volcanoes, or Tornadoes. I'd include Hurricanes... but those are a lot less likely with my current interests.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Revenge of the Cookie
When I first started keeping track of my personal experience here in China I had called this Blog "Behind the Iron Fortune Cookie" but the name really didn't fit. There was no resemblance to the previous communist era in China during that time. Before I came many of you, many of the people in my family and many others who I never met tried to tell me what I could expect in China. I heard everything from being told that I would have no electricity or water available in my home to being told that I would be arrested by the military and interrogated.
Neither of those are even slightly plausible realities, then or now. There has been no change recently in the Chinese government with regards to the protests of the Olympic Games being held in China or the more tangible disruptions to the progress of the Olympic Flame.
In China right now there is a strong atmosphere of Nationalism very similar to the state of the US shortly after the 911 attacks. Part of this has to do with the fact that China is still very Nationalistic (a trait rare in the first world in recent days) and also due to the fact that what little outside opinion they hear is currently negative of their country.
The facts:
+ Many foreign protesters are using the Beijing Olympic games as an opportunity to put pressure on the Chinese government to change their approach on issues in Tibet.
+ The Dali Lama has openly called for non-violent protests and does not wish for protests to halt the Olympic Games in China and has openly stated that he feels China deserves the games.
+ In London, France, and San Fransisco, pro-Tibetan protesters have tried to interrupt the progress of the Torch relay even up to attacking a handicapped athlete.
+ Many foreign media groups, some of them tabloids like the German magazine Bild and other usually credible news agencies such as The BBC, CNN, and The New York Times, have used images which are unrelated to their topic and or made unsubstantiated claims at a point in time where the Chinese Government decided to stop blocking the English language version of these websites giving China's educated population more access to them.
The results:
The Chinese people have over reacted to what they viewed as an Anti-Chinese bias in the western media and world. What is truly nothing more than capitalistic sensationalism has been misunderstood to be designed malice.
The Internet using population, always indicative of the most fanatical and least socially adjusted individuals of any population, has taken extreme stances and actions which are being further highlighted in Western Media, detracted from the real issue and pouring gas on the flames.
Internet rumors from Chinese sources are excepted with less questioning than before because the supposedly superior western media has presented untrue or questionable information lately.
One such rumor has been of a French company which supports pro-Tibet groups and a full Boycott has been called for in China.
The Chinese people are still reacting in a mostly peaceful fashion, though just like in the US as of 911 it is wise to keep you head down and not openly express views that conflict with the majority.
The change is not a pleasant one and the reaction is both more severe and has less grounds than the reaction in the US following 911. This reaction has not negatively affected me here in China though I find the general attitude towards foreigners changed somewhat in the last week, I also know that because of how fast the change happened and how temporary the cause was, it will be gone again shortly.
I wanted to assure any family member who reads the news that I am in no real danger because of the events lately and that I continue to have a peaceful and fun time in China.
These recent events have given me a much deeper perspective into notions such as Democracy and Nationalism so as to understand the theories which went into the formation of the United States America all the better. I regret that these events haven't changed my perception of the current state of America.
This was just a short blog post before anyone sent me email's asking me questions about the reaction to Olympic protests.
I can honestly say, I am now eager for the Olympic games to be over though, the fierce pride that the Chinese people have over being recognized as equals by the great powers of the world can be a very comforting and very good thing, but it can just as easily turn into a nasty circumstance. I would like to see what the nation is like when it is more, at rest. I think that life here wouldn't be too different from life back home if there wasn't such a galvanizing point of conflict to deal with.
Neither of those are even slightly plausible realities, then or now. There has been no change recently in the Chinese government with regards to the protests of the Olympic Games being held in China or the more tangible disruptions to the progress of the Olympic Flame.
In China right now there is a strong atmosphere of Nationalism very similar to the state of the US shortly after the 911 attacks. Part of this has to do with the fact that China is still very Nationalistic (a trait rare in the first world in recent days) and also due to the fact that what little outside opinion they hear is currently negative of their country.
The facts:
+ Many foreign protesters are using the Beijing Olympic games as an opportunity to put pressure on the Chinese government to change their approach on issues in Tibet.
+ The Dali Lama has openly called for non-violent protests and does not wish for protests to halt the Olympic Games in China and has openly stated that he feels China deserves the games.
+ In London, France, and San Fransisco, pro-Tibetan protesters have tried to interrupt the progress of the Torch relay even up to attacking a handicapped athlete.
+ Many foreign media groups, some of them tabloids like the German magazine Bild and other usually credible news agencies such as The BBC, CNN, and The New York Times, have used images which are unrelated to their topic and or made unsubstantiated claims at a point in time where the Chinese Government decided to stop blocking the English language version of these websites giving China's educated population more access to them.
The results:
The Chinese people have over reacted to what they viewed as an Anti-Chinese bias in the western media and world. What is truly nothing more than capitalistic sensationalism has been misunderstood to be designed malice.
The Internet using population, always indicative of the most fanatical and least socially adjusted individuals of any population, has taken extreme stances and actions which are being further highlighted in Western Media, detracted from the real issue and pouring gas on the flames.
Internet rumors from Chinese sources are excepted with less questioning than before because the supposedly superior western media has presented untrue or questionable information lately.
One such rumor has been of a French company which supports pro-Tibet groups and a full Boycott has been called for in China.
The Chinese people are still reacting in a mostly peaceful fashion, though just like in the US as of 911 it is wise to keep you head down and not openly express views that conflict with the majority.
The change is not a pleasant one and the reaction is both more severe and has less grounds than the reaction in the US following 911. This reaction has not negatively affected me here in China though I find the general attitude towards foreigners changed somewhat in the last week, I also know that because of how fast the change happened and how temporary the cause was, it will be gone again shortly.
I wanted to assure any family member who reads the news that I am in no real danger because of the events lately and that I continue to have a peaceful and fun time in China.
These recent events have given me a much deeper perspective into notions such as Democracy and Nationalism so as to understand the theories which went into the formation of the United States America all the better. I regret that these events haven't changed my perception of the current state of America.
This was just a short blog post before anyone sent me email's asking me questions about the reaction to Olympic protests.
I can honestly say, I am now eager for the Olympic games to be over though, the fierce pride that the Chinese people have over being recognized as equals by the great powers of the world can be a very comforting and very good thing, but it can just as easily turn into a nasty circumstance. I would like to see what the nation is like when it is more, at rest. I think that life here wouldn't be too different from life back home if there wasn't such a galvanizing point of conflict to deal with.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Back from the Wilderness
With a New Year comes many changes, usually for the better and on the order of keeping up old commitments while picking up some new ones. Well the new year has certainly seen some changes. I decided to drop the Shakespeare villain facial hair I had been fostering for too long now, as well as the hair which had become simply too long. The pictures above are all me, though I have trouble seeing the resemblance from time to time. The darker photo in your upper left hand corder is of me in Chengdu las October getting ready to hike up a mountain. In the middle was a photo taken today on my camera in LuoYang's National Peony Park and on the upper right is a picture taken this last February at Pu To Mountain near Ningbo. Like wine, aging seems to improve the face the camera finds.
I'd like to talk about all the amazing adventures I've been having in the time I've not been updating, but really I've been sort of lazy lately. I traveled in January and February, but with my workload maintaining a very hectic schedule I've simply been content to crash early and watch the odd DVD here and there for my entertainment.
So to start with lets get some pictures of China's real source of wealth, the actual land and what it has to offer. Nothing about noisy cities or interesting people, but the reasons people should have to travel here.
Sichuan Province, a land of Spicy food, attractive people, Panda's, and Mist. I visited only a few of the scenic places outside of the city of Chengdu, but it remains one of the most amazing locations I have ever seen in my life.
The very landscape seems to be alive with fantasy and myth even into days which have long forgotten how to believe in such things. These majestic mountains are virtually always cloaked in thick folds of mist though on the day I chanced to visit a light peppering rain also frequented them. Rain is no stranger to these lands and is more often about the province than sunshine in some areas.I visited Sichuan Province October of last year with a friend. At the time I was there I still spoke next to no Chinese and was mostly at the mercy of good friends to show me the ropes of being in China, let alone in this wonderful city and area. Chengdu and Sichuan province are my top choices for locations to move to for the next year I intend to spend teaching in China.
Following my October exploits I settled down to my normal work teaching some of the most adorable students I have ever had the opportunity to meet. These two, Brandon and Judy (Who has changed her name to Lettie because she made a friend who had the same English name) were in my KK class (the 9th (K) Kindergarten level class (K) which my school had held. They are both now in SF class (S is the next level up , I'll let you work out what the F is for). Brandon likes to play in various ways which test not only his strength by my own, he also is one of the few children I know who still pretends to be Superman. Judy/Lettie is a darling little girl who can be very shy or endearingly affectionate with everyone she meets. She recently celebrated her 6th birthday.
While I was handling business as usual, the seasons changed. For a California boy that is a big deal as it simply doesn't happen back home. The weather went from very humid and hot... to well, something else entirely.
The snow fell heavier this year than it has in several past years, or so I am told. Many of my coworkers credited and/or blamed me for this depending on their feelings regarding snow as it very much did seem to be for my benefit after I admitted to never having lived anywhere which had Snow and to have been looking forward to trying this out. As you might guess, it makes it hard to ride that bike when I go places.
Still, with the change of the season, my students didn't change too much. Oh they advanced in the ciriculum, their studies improved, and many things went forward positively, but children remain children; and I am certainly still one of them at heart.
I took several of my breaks off to go have snowball fights with my older students, something they thought was a lot of fun (mostly because they got to peg me more than I got to peg them... but they've had practice). While I didn't participate in making snowmen this year I did see many amazing ones in the city.
The snow blanketed a usually somewhat dirty city in a clean sheet of white making everything stunningly beautiful in a strangely quiet sort of way. The cold did eventually start to seep in through the excess I carry on my person, but I had lost enough weight that I was able to double up on clothing. I made it through the cold of the winter a fair deal easier than I expect to get through the heat of summer.
In January I visited the Shaolin Temple, but the day I went up I was under the weather and the pictures I took were not very good to begin with. January is not a good time to take in Chinese Temples because all of the natural plant life is dead at that time of year. I plan to go back soon to get some proper photographs. Febuary was my next big adventure into the metropolitan jungle of Shanghai. Shanghai has more of a lanscape than a skyline as it is one of the largest cities in the world (easily making Los Angelas look rather small when you realize that nearly the entire expanse of Shanghai is more like a city center than a suburb).
Shanghai is a strange mixture of old Chinese architecture, modern Chinese architecture, Gothic western architecture, and modern western architecture. I stayed rather close to The Bund which is a district of Shanghai known for the Gothic western buildings and for shopping. Like New York City, many of the impressivee old buildings are banks.
Closer to the city center the image begins to look very different to the point where it becomes hard to believe that all three of these pictures are taken within the same city and even harder to beleive that they were all taken within a thirty minute walk of each other. In fact the first two pictures are literally opposite each other. The upper right is of the Pearl TV tower, the third tallest TV tower in the world, on the right is one of the many banks on the street opposite the view of the river taken above. The other picture of the city center was taken after a 30 minute walk through the shopping district, or roughly 20 minutes walking if you don't dawdle. In yet another place in the city, in between the two, there was a display for the Chinese New Year which was being celebrated at the time I was in Shanghai. The area is a recently rebuilt old city center which serves as a tourist attraction and a place for local shopping. This area also houses the noteworthy Jade Gardens.
Many displays were set throughout the artificial lake at the center of this old city replica. Each display is suppose to represent a scene from a famous chinese story, though I have no idea what any of the stories actually are.
After muscling through the crowd with a new friend I had met durring my stay in Shanghai I actually went to the Jade Gardens which in true chinese fashion containted neither jade nor gardens. Instead the Jade Gardens are famous for unique rock formations created through a process which my language ability doesn't begin to let me follow.
The Gardens are actually a Toaist Temple which have been maintained due to the beauty, fragility, and rarity of these stones. As I could understand very little of the signs which were not in English, and couldn't always follow the ones which were in English, I don't have too much more to say on that account.
My favorite picture from the Temple however is something which had no caption. The chinese people I saw there and I nicknamed it the Dragon Chicken.
After Shanghai I went to Ningbo and do to spending time about the city with friends I simply didn't think to take pictures of it. It was a pleasant enough location but nothing really called for a picture the way things like the Dragon Chicken or the Temple in the Jade Gardens did.
But eventually I took a day trip to Pu To mountain, a location which had a sign that would forever explain this country to me.The sign doesn't actually explain China in most respects as I find it to be a wonderful country full of wonderful people, but I hear stories from people here and occasionally meet people who make me think that the English on this sign is more accurate than anyone wants to admit.
Pu To Shan is one of the four holy mountains of Bhuddism and as such features some breathtaking monuments like the one I took a picture infront of. To get an idea of its real size you can see this picture well.
Pu To Mountain is known as the Sea Gate and is actually a sizeable island with a multitude of Temples and holy sites scattered about it. There are hotels and resturants scattered about these shores since whatever belief made them sacred has sense left the Nation.
And then after my trip I went home and have not been up to much. The remainder of winter was mostly a little brown and not very eventful. That is, nothing eventful until now that Spring is upon us.
Spring sees the drab coat of late winter shrugged off in brilliant displays of vitality, especially here. Luo Yang is famous in China and much of the world for these majestic flowers. The Peony as well call them in the west or Mu Dong as they are called here are huge, multiple petaled flowers. They can often reach the size of a salad plate in diamater and are nominally half spherical at several stages of blooming.
These giant flowers bloom for a handful of days before wilting making them a brief but marvelous phenomenon and the entire city is full of them while they are in bloom. The pictures of the flowers have all been taken in the last couple of days.
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