Sunday, October 30, 2011

Halloween Weekend Changsha!

Happy Early Halloween!  This weekend has been an awesome weekend!  I had some people visit and we partied a lot!  Shopping, and parties it was really fun!  Friday Night we went to Yali, the folks from the Yale program threw an awesome Halloween Party.  There were some fantastic costumes.  I was boiling in my turtleneck, long underwear, socks, pants and a skirt.  Mariah did my make-up in style!  The party was fun, the foray to Soho was also enlightening.  The music is fun, and the atmosphere is thick with smoke, booze and awkward encounters between people.  The people drink whiskey green tea.  It is whiskey mixed with this really sweet green tea.  It is honestly a bit gross.  There is no room to move or dance, but you make room and do it anyways.  People kept asking me for my hat.  5 people must have tried on my hat!  The dancing was fun. 
The next day we were hungover but I invited my students over to my house. We showed them Hocus Pocus, we were unable to finish it.  It was funny to watch their expressions and try to figure out what exactly was going on in their brains.  Then we went shopping!  Shopping was fun, found a piece of my costume.  Which shall remain a mystery until my next blog!!

Sunday morning I went to Martyrs park to see if the leaves were changing.  They hadn't started yet, but there was a yoga group who was finished by singing their ohms.  Then they got up to dance and sing.  They saw me watching and invited me to join!  It was incredibly fun to sing and dance with a group of people I didn't know at all.

These people were so kind, and sweet.  They took many many pictures!  I am pretty sure I was the most exciting thing in ages.  It was really fun.  One of the ladies got my phone number, so she can tell me when they next do yoga!  So maybe I will learn yoga.  I think my back could use it!  Then the evening Lucy Yi (a teacher from my primary school) and two students came over to make Jack o' Lantern.  Explaining about Jack o' Lanterns and trying to turn long tubular gourds into jack o' lanterns was an experience.  I love the fact that I am resourceful enough to figure out how to do it.


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Hengshan, the CRH, Travel in China

This past weekend I went on a foray to Hengshan.  Hengshan has a very famous mountain that had Taoist, Buddist and Confucius temples on it.  It is a one of the 5 famous religious mountains in China.  It just happens to be in Hengshan.  My dear friends Tina and Jooik also happen to be in Hengshan.  Tina's birthday was on Monday, so it seemed like a good weekend to go.  Hengshan is the mountain, the town is Nanyue.  Hengshan is 120km south of Changsha.  But the shortest part of the journey was taking the train from South Changsha to West Hengshan, it took a half an hour by bullet train.  The CRH is without a doubt the cleanest form of travel in Hunan.  No beetlenut was spit out, no one was smoking.  They also give all the instructions in English and Chinese, every car has a light up sign that tells you how fast you are going, and what the next stop is.  It would alternate between English and Chinese.  The CRH was easier to navigate than the TGV!  Maybe it has changed, but when I last took the TGV they only spoke in french.  I speak pretty good french, but they spoke so fast I spent the first section of the ride worried I was on the wrong train!  No such problem with the CRH!  All the trains are labeled with Alphanumeric labels so you can find what gate you have.

Once I got to Hengshan Xi Station, I was worried about being able to make it to Nanyue.  But a woman named Free showed me the way, I continue to kick myself for not getting her contact information.  She is a student at Hunan Normal University.  Once I got on the bus, they asked me for 4 kuai.  I had 3 kuai and a 50.  They wouldn't take the 50, so some nice person gave me the one kuai I was missing.  The bus had no suspension and the road had major cracks.  It was a bumpy ride, but the country was beautiful and there were tons of incense shops.  The bus stopped in Nanyue and everyone got off.  I decided to walk around, I picked a direction and started walking.  Half looking for a bathroom, half looking for food.  I asked some people where to find Tina and Jooik's school, they said "Follow us we will walk there with you."  So I followed them.  "Are you a teacher there?"  "No, my friend is"  "Oh the teacher who runs."  Tina apparently is famous for running around town, she is training for a marathon on the great wall in may!  So they led me to the School.  The school is nestled in the mountains.  If you sit on the football field and look up, you see forest covered mountains.  And a tiny temple that lights up at night.

It turns out a ton of us showed up to celebrate Tina's birthday.  There were 11 of us.  Her liaison reserved a place at a restaurant for us, and ordered for us.  It was a fantastic meal.  Jooik and Laura snuck off and bought some cake on the way back!  So we had a mini late birthday celebration.  Including a flower candle that was supposed to open and sing.  But didn't work so well.  It ended up being a melted mass of plastic!  On top of an angel food cake, with whipped cream like frosting.  There were grapes, kiwis, dragonfruit, pineapple and tomatoes on top of this cake.  Strips of pink white chocolate surrounded the cake.  It was extremely sweet.  So after we all caught up, we crashed in preparation for climbing the mountain.  We had been warned it would take a long time.  But we were not quite prepared for how long it would really take!  But not because we hadn't been warned.

So we started climbing the mountain at about 9am and left the mountain at about 6.  It took a really long time. We took a round about way, to avoid most of the cars and buses.  The hike up went through several different stages.  We started in temperate rain forest, went into conifers, and then up to shrubs and then up to conifers again.  Although I think the last layer was planted.  The hike was beautiful and the temple at the top was pretty amazing!  After all the climbing, we ate dinner.  Cait and I headed to the train station in a cab that had to stop and shove his headlight back in.  It was amusing!  Then we bought our tickets, for some reason mine was way more expensive than if on the way here.  I think that is because I only had to wait 20 minutes.  I managed to catch the last bus to Yi Zhong, something I was very happy about.  I made it home and took a hot shower.  The next day, I felt like I was 100 years old.  I could barely move!

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Chinese Lesson

Just had my first Chinese lesson, and I believe everyone who wants to teach English should try and learn another language.  It gives me a new appreciation for what all my students go through every day!  Not understanding every word the teacher says, maybe only understanding the gist.  It is one on one for me, I luckily don't have to worry about my peers mocking me!  I can't imagine what they go through.  But an hour of reading aloud was plenty embarrassing for me.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Animals in China

The cat at the Hostel in Zhangjiajie!  Tianzi Hostel

The dog at the hostel in Beijing (Ming Courtyard)
One of the things I was really worried about coming to China was how animals are treated!  Animals place in China is stuck between the old world and and the new.  When you walk around in the morning you see dogs on leashes, immaculately groomed wearing bows and sweaters being proudly displayed by their owners.  You also walk by stores that have cats on leashes, not quite as endearing.  These felines are relatively well cared for.  Both hostels I have stayed in had a pet of sorts.  In Zhangjiajie, there was a cute orange and white cat prowling around, who had a litterbox (first one I have seen) and food and water.  The dog in Beijing was an accomplished beggar and thief, even though he was well fed and well cared for.  His toys were scattered around the common areas.  As far as other pets go I have seen pet birds in cages, very similar to the US.  But not very many of these.  There are places where they sell gold fish in tiny little terrariums.  Almost every toy store sells live turtles, not in little terrariums but in tiny little plastic balls with some water in them and holes for air.  At first I thought they were fake, then I realized they were moving.

The other group of animals are the animals for eating.  They are everywhere and include everything.  In smaller towns this is more obvious, but I do see people carrying around live animals to sell.  A teacher at my school stopped by the English office, and dropped something off.  It was a live chicken in a box, the poor thing was rustling around trying to get out.  I would have laughed if it had gotten out and away.  That being said every time you head to the market you run the risk of seeing a fish being scaled alive, a chicken being killed or any number of unkind killing methods.  The really horrific part is seeing dead dogs and cats hung up for sale.  Although seeing ROUSs in cages can be equally horrifying.  The variety of things that they eat here is impressive though!!

Rodent of Unusual Size

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Saturdays in Changsha

Saturdays are so nice, lazy mornings in Changsha.  A late morning of delicious soy bean smoothies, a bread roll and a 9:30am stroll to Martyr's Park.  Martyr's Park early in the morning has groups of people practicing dancing and martial arts.  But at 9:30 they are all done, and moving off to make room for the parents, grandparents and children!  The children are given balloons, bubbles and other things to keep them happy and well behaved.  Strolling through to see the rides slowly come alive.  Roller coasters, bumper cars, haunted houses.  Simple pleasures like feeding the Koi fish are doubly enjoyable when watching little kids shriek as the fish swarm around the small pellets of feed.  Walking around the lake, watching the trees that are beginning to turn.  Smiling at people, waving at children, hearing the customary "Waiguoren."  The sun, the breeze.

Then a nice game of soccer at Yi Zhong.  Senior 3's and Teachers versus Senior 1's.  I am terrible, but I get better every time!  Then over to fireworks!  The "Hooray for Saturday!" fireworks show was new and different!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Fireworks, Yuelu Mountain, Scooters and a Chinese Teacher!

First of all I was hit by a scooter!  on Saturday October 8th!  I was crossing Qingshuitang road, didn't look both ways hear a guy yell, I stepped back and he ran over my foot.  He screeched to a halt and turned to yell at me.  But I started saying "Duibuqi!"  He rushed to reassure me, and went on his merry way.  This reminds me of high school, someone would bump into me and I would say "Sorry".  But regardless I was ok and continued on my way.

So it was beautiful on Saturday, just gorgeous.  I spent the whole morning working on lesson plans and visual aids, so I figured I needed a break.  I invited people to climb Yuelu mountain with me.  Everyone was really busy!  So I hopped on a bus and went to the mountain my self.  This is my second time at Yuelu mountain.  I still haven't found any of the cool temples that are on it, but it is beautiful.  It was fun to hike it, and watch people staring at me as I huffed it up the mountain.  The leaves are starting to change it was quite beautiful.  Half way through I realized I was taking pictures of trees that I want to send to my father to have him id them.  Not knowing the local flora and fauna is weird and off putting.  The hike is paved the entire way, like most hikes in China.  But there are off cuts here and there were you can see more of the mountain.  There is also opportunities for LPT (Lazy person Travel) a chair lift and a bus that brings people up to the top of the mountain!  That being said, once you get off the main road it is easy to find a spot to be alone and relax.  I might bring my sketch book and my pencils.  I haven't tried to sketch landscapes before.

So after the mountain I met up with Maureen and Courtney!  We went to a restaurant and ordered something I just learned how to order.  Chaomian!  (Fried Noodles)  rou si chao mian!  (Pork fried noodles) 肉丝炒青!  Oh so delicious!  Then to the 5th tone (a coffee shop near the mountain), I got a chai latte, it wasn't very good.  Then to the river front and a fireworks show.  The "Hooray for Saturday" fireworks show!  Every Saturday they put on a show that shames our piddly little 4th of july fireworks!  The fireworks were amazing, I was about to buy a lantern then I realized that we didn't have enough people to send up the lantern and document.  So that idea fell by the way side!

Monday was Teresa's birthday.  Teresa is our Field Director.  She has been so helpful, and kind.  We went to a place called "O'Malley's" where you can get a huge burger!  Seriously finishing one of those was tough!  Her party was really fun and gave me one of those "look at all the nice people I have met in China" moments!  I want to thank Teresa for making my adjustment to China so simple and awesome!
Me and Teresa!
Then the best thing ever happened last night (Tuesday October 11)!  I have a Chinese Teacher now!  Twice a week I will go to her office and study Chinese for an hour.  I am inspired, I have started making flashcards of words that I learn.  Today I learned Shanzhu (Mangosteen)!  Now can I figure out how to eat a shanzhu? ζ€ŽδΉˆεƒε±±η«Ή?

Friday, October 7, 2011

Conversation with a Student: The People of my Generation Knows how to use Rights!

Skittles_Patty   08:53:14
you are excited for your test?
Minimum of Max   08:53:18
GREAT
Minimum of Max   08:53:21
no
Minimum of Max   08:53:35
i'm still in bed now
Minimum of Max   08:54:58
but some of(i think it is lots of)students report it to goverment and some tv station
Skittles_Patty   08:55:19
wow
Minimum of Max   08:56:11
we have 7 days off during national days
Minimum of Max   08:56:36
but school cut two days
Skittles_Patty   08:56:48
oh no! to make you take a test!
Skittles_Patty   08:56:58

Minimum of Max   08:58:35
but we use our rights just like american!
Skittles_Patty   08:58:46
and tell the news people?
Minimum of Max   08:58:53
yeah
Skittles_Patty   08:59:36
cool!
Minimum of Max   08:59:39
some students called the tv station for 2 hours
Minimum of Max   08:59:45
one by one!
Skittles_Patty   09:00:15
wow, the tv station must have been surprised to hear from so many students
Minimum of Max   09:02:13
not our school,other school also have to give back the 2-days-off
Skittles_Patty   09:02:46
so you do not have a test?
Minimum of Max   09:02:52
so all the students in changsha don't have to go to school!
Minimum of Max   09:02:54
yeah
Skittles_Patty   09:02:57
wow!
Minimum of Max   09:03:31
this was our first 7-days-off sice junior 1
Skittles_Patty   09:03:44

Minimum of Max   09:03:49
it's meaningful!
Skittles_Patty   09:03:58
very
Minimum of Max   09:06:16
the people of my generation konws how to use rights!

I don't know what else I can say.  This is interesting and amazing to me, I don't know how American students would react if their vacation was shortened but I am almost positive they wouldn't do this.  Their parents might.  But interesting to think that the 15 and 16 year olds I teach are using their rights in a way that never would have dawned on me at that age.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Beijing Cultural Hub or Rip Off Market!

Matt, Sarah, Mandy and Tony in their room!
On October 1st, which was a terribly rainy Changsha day we packed up our bags and met at the Changsha HuoCheZhan (Train Station).  Mandy, Mariah, Sarah, Matt and I met, gave our tickets and walked in.  We walked to the appropriate waiting room and a half an hour later we were on the train in our rooms.  Mandy, Sarah and Matt were sharing one room with a young man named Tony.  Who turned out to be an alumnus from the school where I teach.  He is now going to university and studying mechanical engineering.  He is very good at speaking English and I am looking forward to getting to know him.  Mariah and I were in another room, for a while we were hoping that it would just be the two of us.  But then we got a roommate, a silent Chinese man who snored really loudly!  We played some Egyptian Rat Slap, Slap Jack and some speed.  But soon it was time to crash.  They give you a pillow and blanket, and small beds that weren't that bad.  Trains (at least sleepers) are a very civilized way to travel.  We left at 6pm, fell asleep around 10pm woke up at around 7:00am and we were arriving in Beijing.  The sun was coming up, and the sky was blue, a deep enjoyable blue.  The air was a crispy 40 degrees.  We walked around and found the place to buy everyone's return tickets.  The one counter that spoke English.  Ate some baozi and then followed the crowds onto bus 22, got off at the subway stop.  We hopped on the subway 2 yuan from the Military Museum to BeiXinQi our stop.  We climbed the stairs and arrived in a cute neighborhood.  It was so much quieter than the average street in Changsha.  There were no scooters on the sidewalk!  We walked along looking for our hostel and we ran into a wedding procession, which was beautiful.  Eventually we found the Ming Courtyard.  It was down a cutesy little Hutong, the people there were very nice.  There was a huge courtyard that had people lounging and sun bathing.  There was a restaurant and bar where they served western food, and had fairly cheap imported beer.  I was staying in a four room girls only room, my friends were in a four person room together.  We checked in, dropped off our stuff and went in search of food.  (We of course made a quick stop across from our hostel and got Xiaobing (fried bread).  Then we went to the main road and looked for a restaurant.  Ordering is always a bit stressful in China, especially if there are no pictures.  We managed to find a Zhege (a restaurant with pictures that you can point at and go "Zhege" that one) restaurant, and they over charged us.  A quick recommendation if you go to Beijing never eat at restaurants that do not have their prices listed and write down the prices of the dishes you order.  That way you won't be surprised.  But they charged us 5 yuan for the plates, cups and bowls.  Yeah really.
Then we walked to the Forbidden City, using my incredibly useful map I brought from the US!  There were thousands of people and we arrived around 2:30.  We paused to snap some pictures and were surrounded by Chinese people who wanted to take our picture, this became a game for us.  Spotting people who were taking our picture.  Some people were outright filming us!!  But the best thing we came across was a family who gave their baby to Mariah so they could take a picture.
This baby was so cute, other parents tried to do this later but the children would freak out.  We might be the first non-Chinese people they have ever met.  Crazy to think about.  We bought our tickets and went into the Forbidden City.  It was huge!  Words cannot describe how huge it was, it was full of people from all over!  Mandy, Mariah and I strolled through, not really bothering to go inside of any of the buildings.  We enjoyed the walk and the gardens.  Sarah and Matt wandered off to take their time walking around, really seeing the Forbidden City.  Mandy, Mariah and I left the Forbidden City and I practiced my bargaining skills.  I was offered several charms, the original price was 1 for 35yuan.  I managed to get 4 for 10.  Mandy managed to get 5 for 10.  Then she was addicted to Bargaining.  She became the bad cop when I bargained.  We walked around and eventually met up with Matt and Sarah.  We tried to cut in front of the Forbidden City to get back to our hostel, but police were pushing people back.  Then we went under the road to Tiananmen square, but we were unable to cut through that.  Lines of police officers were making a no pass zone in the middle.
Tired and hungry we wandered back up next to the Forbidden City and found a Jiaozi, Baozi, and Mian place.  (Pot stickers, steamed buns, and noodles)  We got pork jiaozi, veggie and egg Baozi, beef noodle soup, egg noodle soup, and Chaomian (fried noodles). This was the a wonderful meal, it was warm, filling and it gave us what we wanted.  They made fun of us because we all added Lajiao (hot peppers) to our food.  Living in Hunan had made me addicted to spicy food.  I am going to have to start cooking with my own peppers.  I need to learn how to cook Hunan food so when I return I can keep eating it!  But the Chaomian was wonderful, I am going to have to see if I can find a noodle place near me that does this.  Refueled we returned to our hostel, taking the subway to our hostel's road that was covered in red lanterns.  Being in Beijing for GuoQingJie (National Holiday) was awesome, there were lanterns everywhere and flags everywhere.  There were also people everywhere!  Tons of people, just crowds everywhere.  So we made it back to the hostel, did some walking.  Matt and I went to the bar at the hostel and drank some booze and spoke to people from all over the world.  We met a German who was heading to North Korea. (Sidebar, did anyone else know Kim Jon Il's son and grandson were on facebook?  I just saw that on BBC).  We also met an American who was planning on traveling around SE Asia and by an odd twist of fate ended up in Beijing!  It was nice and relaxing.  The hostel had western toilets and mattresses, it is weird to think that the hostel was "nicer" by western standards but all I wanted to do was sleep in my bed!  So we woke up early to go on a tour that our hostel offered:  The Summer Palace and the Great Wall, shopping time and lunch included.  180RMB.  Amazing price, but uh when a tour says it has shopping time that means it has a deal with a store.  There were 13 of us.  5 World Teachers, 5 Teachers with another program, a couple the man was German the woman was Chinese, and a German Backpacker who is living in Bangladesh.   The 5 teachers from the other program were so young.  One was our age, the others were all just out of high school.  I felt so old and responsible in comparison.  Our tour guide Judy, was from Hunan!!  It was such a pleasant surprise!  She got very excited and asked us what we thought.  She laughed when we told her we missed the Lajiao.  She said she missed it as well.  We loaded up in the bus and  went to the summer palace, it was too crowded to get into the actual palace, so we took a boat ride on the artificial lake.  The summer palace was gorgeous!

The Empress' Marble Party Boat
  The summer palace was burned down during the Opium wars.  The Empress Dowager Cixi, the dragon lady rebuilt it.  She ascended to the throne when her husband died and she was the only wife with a son.  Her son was 6 or something, so she ruled behind him.  He died at 19, and she picked her nephew to rule.  Who was 4 years old, so guess who got to rule behind the scenes!  Yup Dragon Lady.  She would use the pearls from the man-made lake to grind into her makeup.  The summer palace was beautiful.  I wish we had gotten a chance to walk into it.  So after an hour of walking around the outside, we boarded the bus again.  I managed to sneak some bargaining in before we boarded the bus, and got a hat for 10yuan, when the original price was 35.  The traffic was so bad it took us 2 and a half hours to get from the Summer Palace to the Jade Factory, we were given a tour by a woman whose name tag said "Sweety Ass."  Then we were given a half an hour to shop around.  I don't think anything was under 300RMB.  It was beautiful but honestly we were ready to go in about 10 minutes!  But lunch was served in a restaurant next to the shop.  We were given "Chinese Food", no lajiao, and there were french fries.  Nothing had any flavor.  It was so boring and there were forks.  My fellow Worldteachers and I were eating with our chopsticks in true Chinese fashion.  The others were using their forks to scoop food onto their plates.  Judy ate with the workers and probably had a better meal than we did!
 We pressed on to the Great Wall.  The traffic was so bad we couldn't even make it to Badaling (the main tourist area) we went to a different area, that was pretty crowded anyways.  We were given an hour here, and it was impossible to get up high enough to get a good view.  But it was amazing to walk on the stairs, they were high, and worn down there were tons of foot grooves.  People were everywhere.  The further parts of the wall there was no one but we didn't have time to make it there.  It was a bit disappointing, if I end up in Beijing again I will go to a further site and hike it.
Mandy, me, Sarah, Matt and Mariah
After the wall, we waited for forever for the others who were extremely late.  I built some Guanxi and bought the driver a pack of cigarettes.  I am sure he was confused, but was grateful.  We tried to buy another hat but they would not bargain down past 25yuan.  It wasn't worth it.  So back on the bus, and back to traffic. We drove past the Birds Nest Olympic Stadium and to a pearl factory.  By this time we were starving.  The German couple bounced.  The younger teachers were buying stuff at the pearl factory, at the jade factory and at the wall.  The tour let everyone off to go to the Birds nest and took us back.  We tipped both the driver and Judy, thanked them and told Judy we would have to meet up if she came to Hunan again.

That evening we went to Wangfujing, and I got scammed!  Majorly scammed, this could have been a huge downer if Mariah wasn't there to make everything better!  We laughed about it and looked on the bright side.  Watch out when you are in Beijing.  People there are really good at scamming tourists, and every time they offer you a price you should pay at least 1/5th of what they are offering.  Check the prices in restaurants and keep in mind how much you paid.  You should never have to pay for plates in a restaurant.  Most important, never follow nice people!  They are lies!  There are nice people who will give you directions or help you buy a subway ticket.  But if someone says "hey there is a cool place near here..." don't go!!!

Mandy, Sarah, Matt, Mariah and I
The temple of grain!
The next day was one of the best!  Temple of Heaven, which is a huge park with gardens.  Local people dance and play with their children.  We walked into the temples and made idiots of ourselves posing in pyramids, to give the people something to look at.  The temple was beautiful and not as crowded as the other places we had been.  It was a nice reprieve, the buildings were ornately carved and painted.  There were people posing for wedding photos, and people from all over the world.  It was weird to hear different languages.  I ended up speaking french to the gentleman who took this picture.  He thought we were bizarre, but eh who cares.  I love this picture though.  Mariah was the instigator of this particular pyramid scheme.  But it ended so well who could complain!  We definitely got some looks!  But it was so much fun.  We walked around the rose gardens and caught some live music in the park.  We decided to pass on the other temples and split up to do some shopping.  Mandy, Mariah and I stayed together and went to Qianmen, the tourist shopping district.  We walked up to Tianamen and spent a bit more time there looking at everything.  It was a little odd to be smiling in pictures on Tiananmen square.  To think about all the history in that place.  All the Communist propaganda, and the giant group of police vehicles.  Then it was back to the hostel and off to Sunlitun, the giant western street in the Embassy district.  We met Tommy, a friend of my brothers.  We went to Biteapita (a fantastic Mediterranean restaurant)  My dinner of Eggplant Moussaka and humice was delicious!  Tommy told us about Beijing, as we left the Sunlitun district the girls and I reflected that it was too western.  It wasn't China.
We took the subway back, I tried desperately to meet up with some other WTers, but the subway was closing.  As I was running to catch the last train, I got a call from Mandy saying they had changed my room at the hostel.  She wanted permission to move my stuff.  Almost in tears I gave it, she moved my stuff into her room.  I luckily caught the last train that got me 2 blocks from the hostel.  Someone gave me directions and I walked the rest of the way back to the hostel.  Matt, Mandy, Sarah and Mariah listened to my rant about Beijing, Matt bought me a beer.  We sat and talked about things that were going on, good and bad at our sites.  And bonded.  At midnight we threw balloons at Matt and wished him a happy birthday.  I gave him a map of Changsha, and we sat and realized all together that although the trip was fun.  We missed Hunan, and our sites!

My last morning, Sarah left before I woke up to do a hike on the great wall.  I went to the Lama temple.  I waited outside for it to open with a crowd of Chinese people all carrying giant packages of incense.  I asked one of them what it is was.  They told me the word and told me it was a holiday today.  I couldn't figure out which one.  So when the doors open, people rushed in and lit their incense praying for whatever it was they prayed for.  The lama temple was smaller, more intricate, and full of relics.  It was amazing.  Just beautiful, there were monks walking around.  I really liked the Lama temple and I recommend it highly.
Then I returned to the hostel.  Mandy, Mariah and I took Matt to a birthday breakfast at the hostel restaurant!  Then we went to Wangfujing, and finally met up with Andy, Emily and Nora just as Andy was leaving.  We went to Snack Street again, which has live scorpions on sticks.  They deep fry them for you and then you eat them off a stick.  I didn't go for it, I should have.  I was looking at some stuff with no intention of buying and this woman started bugging me.  We started bargaining, she wanted to sell me a fan.  I really didn't want it (which is an amazing bargaining tool).  She started at 85, I got her down to 20. Then gave up, and bought a fan I didn't want.  That was the end of my beijing experience.  I will keep the fan as a reminder that I might get ripped off, and need to be more careful.  I left the others and headed to the train station.  I was helped by some kind people.  My roommates were very kind.  I played some solitare and one woman got really into it and kept telling me where to move!  Then I taught the other woman how to play speed.  She got pretty good.  I wonder if she will play it again.  But I fell asleep and when I awoke I was back in Changsha.  Sweet Changsha!

Overall thoughts, Beijing is something you need to do.  But I wouldn't ever want to live there, and get really used to saying "Bu yao"  I don't want!  But Beijing is an ancient cultural hub and a rip off market so watch your pockets!

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Rockstar, Guanxi, and Beijing!

My primary school is a reverent joy!  I love walking through the gates and being followed by children shouting hello!  Now my students will accost me to show me their newest toys.  Like China's version of the hacky sack!  I think it is called Jiangzi or something.  I will have to ask yet again!  But you kick it around, the students were thrusting their Jiangzi's at me and asking me to do it.  When I kicked it I invariably was unable to kick it more than once.  They would say.  "Two times.. Two times"  I managed to fight my way out of the circle of them, saying I had to go.  Then I worked my way up the stairs, getting accosted at each floor with "hello" "What is your name?"  and various toys being shown to me.  Then I made it to class, taught my 'ly' adverbs lesson.  On the way out I met my friend Sarah, but realized I had forgotten my water bottle so I had to walk back through the school.  The kids were following us singing "What is your name? A B C D..."  it was intensely adorable and enjoyable.

Then we were joined by the other Sarah.  As we split up to go our separate ways, I shut the door and realized with horror that I did not have my keys.  So I call Teresa no answer, called Michaela she told me to call my liaison, so I called Sunny no answer.  So I look at my phone and decide to call Ms. Chan.  Ms. Chan doesn't speak any English.  So I call her up, at 1:15.  Which is in the middle of the siesta time, she sleepily answered..
"Wei?" (hello?)
"Zhe shi Patty, wo wang wo de yaoshi"  (This is Patty, I forgot my key)
"oh Patty.... *something something* ni de yaoshi?  *something something* liang dian, hao ah?"  (your key? 2:00, ok?)
"Liang Dian, hao ba!"  (2:00 ok!)

So I wandered off to the soccer field to see my friend Wayne.  Wayne showed me around the Orange Isle Music Festival, and helped me buy a beer.  Before I remembered that he was a student at my school!  But he had invited me to watch a game.  It turns out this game was Yi Zhong (my school) versus Yali (another school).  It was a fairly legit game.  There was a student who was acting as Ref, no one had on uniforms besides their school uniforms.  And it was really fun to watch the game unfold.  Cheering when we scored.  Clapping when someone on the Yali team managed to score a goal from the kick off.  He sent is flying straight into the goal. It was impressive!  The game ended at 2, when it was time to go back to class.  Because of the bad weather the 2nd day of Sports day was canceled so I didn't have to run at 2.  Like I was supposed to!  But I was a little sad.

So with the game over I headed back to my house to wait for Ms. Chen.  I was sitting in front of my door when my neighbor came out.  This is the same neighbor that I gave a giant watermelon to on Mid-Autumn Festival.  She saw me and immediately understood.  She said "Ni de yaoshi?"  I nodded sadly and pointed at the door.  She smiled and pulled out her cellphone. And called someone.  I could understand the gist of her conversation which was something along the lines of. "The foreign teacher is locked out.. oh you are coming.  Ok."  Then she invited me into her extremely nice apartment, gave me tea and a pear!  We chatted a bit, in broken English and Chinese.  Ms. Chen showed up to open the door just as my liaison called me back.  I thanked everyone, and went into my house.  I can't imagine being locked out of my house could be so nice.  I finally know my neighbor's name.  Peng Jiang (I think...).  She is a teacher at Yi Zhong.  My goal of being friends with my neighbors doesn't not seem so distant now!

As I think of my trip to Beijing I am reminded of a list of people that I want to get presents for:  Mr. Gao (the vp of Yi Zhong) who gave me 500 yuan for national day, Ms. Chen, Sunny, Momo, Peng jiang, Lucy Yi, Pan, and Amanda.  All these people make my life a bit easier and make me feel welcome everyday.  As I watch the torrential rain, I can't help but be thankful that Beijing is far away from Changsha.

HAPPY NATIONAL DAY!  I am hearing the fireworks already!

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