Sunday, June 28, 2009

Dapeng

This weekend Vi and I went to Dapeng. It's a town in Shenzhen but you would never guess on the way there or once you arrived. It's an ancient town where they built a military fortress to fight against the Japanese Navy in 1394. It was also the site of the first battle of the Opium War. There, the Chinese Army defeated a British Navy fleet only using canons from land and only fishing boats because they did not have a navy yet. The old village area is still the same with the outlying areas being factories everywhere, typical China. The ancient village does have electricity and people still live there. It was really cool to walk around and see people in their everyday life (well, it was Saturday) and just being part of it for a short time. We saw all of the normal stuff: people doing laundry in the streams, people washing clothes in the streams, kids trying to catch animals, most people playing mahjong and older women making things with her hands sitting outside; it was all really interesting to see. Vi was disappointed because she was hoping for something more like Lijiang or Dali, like our trip from last year, but it was nowhere near as touristy.

We ended up staying the night across the street from the village which just happened to be a beach. We didn't know there was a beach there so we didn't bring our bathing suits. Plus, it's been crappy weather all week and it did slow up this weekend enough for us to have a good time in just a little rain. We hadn't gone anywhere for awhile and were really happy we decided to go dispite the weather.

I've already posted pictures and there's a video of the shipping yard that we saw on the way there but we've never had this view of the shipping yard before so I had to take a video. I don't know if it's big compared to others but it is HUGE.

We're planning another trip soon to Chengdu, Sichuan. They still have the quake zone that you can see. Chengdu is where the majority of the destruction from last year's earthquake happened and it's also the home of the panda reservation. It won't be next weekend since that's the 4th of July but the weekend after that we should be going up there, very exciting.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Sleep Talking

Normally I wouldn't write about a dream or me talking in my sleep but I just wanted to share. I've been talking in my sleep quite a bit lately (I've been exhausted) and waking up Vi. Luckily for me she thinks it's funny. The other night I spoke Chinese in my sleep and she was able to understand what I was saying. It was just a simple sentence, "Ta shuo wo." The translation is "He told me". Something easy, yes, but it was the fact that I was actually dreaming in Chinese and even spoke Chinese in my dream. While my Chinese is far from good, it has become decent recently. Ok, that's all. I just wanted to share my excitement. That's all for now.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Update

I haven't posted a blog in a while simply because life's been normal, but still great. I guess the only interesting thing is that my class was cancelled this last week because so many of my kids were sick. Two of them had Hand, Foot, Mouth disease while over 20 others had a high fevers. It was so bad the CDC came out to sterlize the entire room, but didn't bother with the rest of the school. Since I haven't had any students, they've had me bounce around from class to class helping out and filling in for any absent teachers so it's been a normal week, just not with my kids.

The big trip I was planning with a couple other teachers has been cancelled because I've picked up some more tutoring jobs and they want me to tutor everyday during the summer so the money's just too good to pass up for such a short time. I'll probably take a couple weekend trips to some other cities with some of the teachers and Vi so hopefully there'll be some cool pictures and stories to share coming up.

That's all for now, I'll be sure to try to keep everything up to date.

Friday, June 5, 2009

My Crazy Week

This week was a strange one. First, the week started with a working Sunday which is never fun. Then, Monday was International Children's Day, although I don't know any other countries that celebrate it so I'm not real sure what makes it international and finally, we had no power for the entire day on Wednesday.

I'll start from the beginning. We worked on Sunday because we had Thursday, Friday and Saturday off for Dragon Boat Festival so the public schools make up one of those missed days on Sunday, yay.

Children's Day on Monday was really fun and a new experience for me. Last year on Children's Day, I only taught adults so we didn't celebrate it. This year, I was told there'd be a show by our class students and their parents and I was also to create a 3-10 minute skit that should make everyone laugh. Right before the holidays I was also informed I'd be co-hosting the day's activities with one of the moms and I'd only be speaking in Chinese the entire time. Well, they wrote out a script and I put all of the Chinese in pinying (Chinese with Roman alphabet) on notecards so I could actually read it. I haven't learned to read actual Chinese characters yet, but I have begun the process.

Monday morning came and I dressed nicer than my normal t-shirt and shorts to go to school. When I arrived, Meier's Mom (the other co-host) was waiting for me with a purple wig for me to wear. The skits were performed mainly by one student and either their mom or dad or both. A couple skits had numerous kids and parents involved. The skits ranged from famous stories being acted out, singing, Beijing opera, magic, story-telling to cooking demonstrations. My skit was called short because the other foreign teachers were involved but some of their Chinese teachers didn't let them leave their classrooms to help (I forgot to add, my class was the only one in the kindergarten that had parents in the classroom or that did a show).

After all of the shows were over, all of the parents, students and teachers from our class went to a 5-star hotel's buffet. The parents paid for the teachers, excellent. It was a great lunch and one I really needed. I haven't been eating Western food very much because it's so much more expensive than eating Chinese or cooking at home and I've been craving it pretty badly so that took care of that need.

I've posted pictures on picasa from Children's Day, they're not the greatest but they're ok. One of the parents will be making me a copy of the video from the day so I'll post that video online, too. It's obviously longer and I'm not sure where I'll be able to do it since I can't access youtube but I'll figure something out. This way you can all hear my Chinese.

On Wednesday, the school and the entire area was without power. The government shuts off the power in certain areas during the summer for a day in order to save money and electricity. Luckily, I live in the city center so they'll never do it to my apartment area. The parents and Chinese teachers, not the foreign teachers, were told the day before so I only had 4 students show up to school. Needless to say, I didn't have to teach that day which was quite nice. Before 9am my shirt was completely wet from the sweat because it was in the low 90s that day and the humidity here is extremely high, and that's coming from someone who lives in humid Atlanta.

It was a pretty crazy week but luckily it's over and I'm able to sit back and relax finally. It's a beautiful Saturday and when Vi comes back from work after lunch, we'll head to the beach for the afternoon and evening. If it's a nice day tomorrow, too, we'll probably head back to the beach for the whole day. It's just so hard to stay in the city when the beach is so close and it's so beautiful outside.

Until next time...

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Pete's Birthday in Wuhan

First, let me start by explaining why I haven't posted in a couple weeks. The blog site has been blocked here and I can't access it. I'm having to go through a proxy server to access my account to post this blog. I can only guess someone posted a blog that wasn't approved for the general Chinese public. Anyways, I'm able to post blogs but can't put any pictures on this site so you'll have to look at my picasa site to see the pictures.

So, earlier this month, a group of five of us went to Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, for Pete's 21st birthday. Me, Pete (21 from England), Ross (37 from Australia), Jack (19 from Denmark) and Chris (20 from South Africa) took a weekend train trip to Wuhan.

It's a tradition in England that when you turn 21, you take a trip with friends to somewhere you've never been so we decided to do something special for Pete since he's away from home. We chose Wuhan because we've been hanging out with a local businessman, Jack (we call him Chinese Jack since there's already a Jack), from Wuhan, and he's been inviting us to Wuhan for over a month now. We decided to take him up on his offer.

We left Friday rigth after school to the train station and took a 12 hour train ride to Wuhan. The train ride was easy, trains in China are great. We arrived a little before 6am to a rainy Wuhan. We hopped on a bus and made our way to the area we would be staying. Chinese Jack took us to a small area where we had a traditional Wuahn breakfast. A Wuhan breakfast consists of hot, dry noodles and a form of baozi, steamed bread with meat in the middle. The noodles were extremely dry because of the sauce and we're just so-so.

After breakfast we went to the hotel and took naps until noon. Chinese Jack woke us all up and we took a 5 hour walking tour of Wuhan. The city's quite beautiful and definitely unique in China. At some point in its history, they had Russians, English and even Americans in the city and they all influenced the city in large ways. The buildings and architecture is all very British while another area was very, very Russian feeling. As for the American influence, they had YMCAs and churches all over the city.

On the walking tour we also stopped into a back-alley shop that had counterfeit products (you can see the video) where I bought myself and Pete fake Rolexs for very, very cheap.

After the tour we made our way back to the hotel area and hung out at Chinese Jack's brother's restaurant and bar until that night. That night we watched a soccer championship game, I'm not sure what because I don't really follow it but of course, the Englishman does.

That night we went to a KTV, karaoke lounge, for a little bit but soon left to find a dance club for Pete. This was the most interesting part of the trip. The first place we went into was packed but over 80% guys so we decided to leave and find another place. We walked into 4 other clubs but they had less than 10 people in each one. We were very confused by this and asked Chinese Jack about it the next day and he explained to us that the mafia controlled this area of Wuhan so they decided whose bars would be successful and whose wouldn't. When we walked back to the first club, we noticed that there were numerous people in the Army hanging outside and were shown that most of the guys inside were mafia so we decided to just call it a night.

Sunday was actually Pete's birthday so we went out for a proper lunch. We found a traditional Chinese restaurant and the food was great and extremely cheap; six of us ate for 251 RMB (roughly $35). During the lunch we all tried, and surprisingly liked, frog ovaries. We also made Pete the insides of a goose head and yes, the Chinese people would eat so it's not that strange here.

After lunch we had a couple hours to spend before our train ride back so went to a massage place next door and all got foot massages for less than $3. The massages lasted an hour and by the end of it, they told us we could have full-body massages for just $4 so we decided to stay for another hour to relax a little more. The massages were great and extremely relaxing. We walked around for another 30 minutes before heading back to the hotel to get our bags and head to the train station.

We arrived back in Shenzhen Monday morning about 7:45am which meant our train was late because it should've arrived at 7:20am. We called the school and told them we'd be slightly late, we're supposed to be there by 7:50 to greet the kids. When we arrived the principal wasn't mad but actually seemed happy we went to another city to see more of China.

The weekend was so fun we've decided to take weekend trips for everyone's birthday from now on.

I'll be sure to try to keep the blog updated, even through a proxy.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Flag Raising Ceremony

My school led the flag raising ceremony this last Monday. We have it every Monday morning and my class finally got their chance. I've posted pictures and videos on my picasa site for you to see. Enjoy.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

The Fam


It's Saturday night and I just spent most of the day with Vi's family. It started at 9:30 this morning when a car with her aunt and grandmother arrived to pick us up and drive us to Dongguan for lunch with her family. We all met in Dongguan because her father and uncle share an apartment near where they work and it's more convenient for everyone to meet there rather in Heyuan.


We got to her father's and uncle's apartment around 10:30 and I met her mother, father, aunt, uncle, brother (about 19) and cousin (about 16) right away; her sister (about 22) ended up coming a little after us. We all sat in the living room for a little bit and talked before heading to lunch. Her uncle was able to speak a little English and her cousin was better at a little conversation after lunch but other that that, no English was spoken. Her mom had her younger brother teach her how to say, "How are you?" but she was too nervous when she met me to try and say it. Even though she didn't attempt, it meant a lot just knowing that she was trying to learn some English to make me feel more comfortable.


Meeting the family isn't quite like in America. They don't really shake hands or give hugs or anything, it's just hi and that's kind of it, short and awkward.


We headed down the street for the restaurant her aunt works at for lunch. It was an excellent lunch and I tried some new local dishes and dishes from their hometown that I've never had before. I ate dove for the first time and the other stuff I tried I have no idea how to explain. As usual, it was all very good though. Lunch was much better than dinner on Tuesday night. Everyone was laughing and talking and just having a good time. We had an entire room to ourselves and there was a tv in there and Vi's younger brother watched tv pretty much the whole time, which was kind of strange to be eating with the tv on. Her younger brother's in his 2nd year of college so he's roughly 19.


After dinner, we were told to bring out our camera for a picture. Well, Vi didn't tell me to bring a camera and so we didn't have one, this was a bad thing. We went outside and rented a camera, came back and took some pictures. I was happy about this because I wanted to bring my camera and take a picture but I didn't want to be that foreign dork asking everyone to take a picture so I could document this day, since it is the first time I'm meeting her family.


After dinner, we went back to the apartment for a little bit to continue talking. Her family could tell how awkward it was for me so they called a car to come pick up me, Vi, her aunt and uncle and take us back to Shenzhen shortly after we came back. This was when we handed out the hongbao (I spelled it wrong in my last post, this is money given in red envelopes) to everyone. Her family was very nice and it seemed as though they liked me enough and they at least didn't disapprove me, which is very nice. Her cousin commented on my long eyelashes, something most Chinese girls do, and the rest of her family pointed out my big smile and said it was beautiful, that was nice.


Overall, it was a good experience. I'm really glad I got to meet almost all of her family, she has one other uncle I haven't met. They all seem to really enjoy being together and reminded me of being with all of my family. Everyone was laughing and joking with each other, really enjoying each other's company.