Monday, November 29, 2010

Thanksgiving in Macau

So on Thanksgiving Day I bunked off classes and went to meet our domestic helper in Macau. Jacky, our Filipina maid couldn't get another visa to return to China so I was meeting her to give her plane fare to return home. I'd never been to Macau before, but it is an hour ferry ride from the port 5min from my apartment.
As we left the port, I could see my apartment complex(small whitish ones) the Shenzhen Bay Bridge to Hong Kong and the distant skinny high rise apartments of the Ha Tsuen neighborhood in Hong Kong, barely visible through the suffocating South China smog.

As I rode the ferry I got to see the industrial side of Hong Kong: gas banks, electric power stations, and the oyster beds of the Pearl River Delta. I passes many container ships heading all over the world; Panama, Los Angeles, Hamburg, Sydney, Columbia etc. I waxed philosophical about all the things humanity has accomplished and yet the tender thread that we still hang by. A situation that was at the front of my mind since the bombing in South Korea two days prior. We have done so much, I live in a place that sends products to all ends of the earth at record speed, but malaria still kills children; millions per year, and no matter what we will grow, love, age and die. Somber I know, but the power and the beauty of all we have done is a result of our fear of mortality. We want to do so much, make so many things, experience more and more, create more and more, because we all know our time is finite.
Out of my thoughtful mood, I arrived in Macau for the first time - breezed through immigration and met Jacky our maid. We at lunch/dinner at the Sands Macau, I had sushi for Thanksgiving day. And I saw a Michael Jackson impersonation concert. I missed my first ferry trip, so I bought the next departure, and found a toy store in the ferry terminal!
Optimus Prime!!!
Star Wars Legos!
and Board Games!



silly I know, but I don't get to see things like Harry Potter Clue and Pirates of the Caribbean Life everyday!

Island Fun

So the previous weekend(not the most recent one) I visited Hong Kong again, for a Temple trip but also to meet some other YSA from Guangzhou and grab some Mexican food on the Island and do some touristy things. My Dad has seen everything and my Mom isn't all that interested in waiting in a long line to go up a mountain. So after getting lost in Soho for a little while, we found the Mexican restaurant, ate amazing Mexican food(I had a pork chimichanga) and we lucky enough to happen upon a street fair on Elgin St. while we were there. I bought a beautiful handmade necklace from this artisan selling her beautiful wares. And we saw some singers advertising their Macau show.


Kenya, Sharah and I went up Victoria Peak to take a look at Hong Kong and enjoy some actually brisk autumn air.

We hunted down dinner at a place called Modern Toilet...and Taiwanese chain...however, the location that we found seemed to have been closed for good(it seems that some people don't appreciate the novelty of eating their food out of miniature toilets)?
We were all pretty bummed, but Kenya most of all :(

Monday, November 22, 2010

The Art of Subway Flirting

When riding the metro, perchance you spot a young coed that catches your fancy it is important to meet their eye and hold their gaze for a bit...release.
In a minute or so, before the next stop meet their eye again, allow a coy pleased smile.
Wait.
Glance again.
Catch a thinly veiled grin.
Enjoy.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Canteen Craziness

So today I decided to eat on campus. The closest canteen to my classroom building is for teachers, but students are allowed to eat there too. The food is a little better, a tiny bit more expensive and people wait in line better. So I usually eat there. Today, I was planning on going there for lunch with my Mexican classmate Josimar but he told me that the system of payment had changed. Instead of just paying at each booth with you student card, quite easily after pointing to what I want, I must tell a cashier at the front, where I want to get food from and how much money worth of food, pay him, he gives me a receipt and then I can go and ask for my food at the booth that is written on my receipt.
Evidently this is because the teachers were complaining that too many students were eating in the "Teacher's Canteen," but the management likes the students eating there because they make more money. So making it more difficult for everyone to eat there was the compromise.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Yesterday and Today

Today actually started yesterday.
Friday in Hong Kong I bought a new skirt from the Mong Kok market, at H&M a new coat(it will get cold here), a scarf, sweater, green corduroy skirt, and a wool muffler. At Uniqlo(a Japanese chain, that I’ve fallen in love with) two pair of legging pants, and a smock shirt/skirt. If you didn’t already know this…I have a shopping problem. I actually decided to go to HK because I needed a new pair of loafers, my awesome pre-mish white leather loafers finally wore through on the heels, and I conceded I needed a new pair, I had already checked the big markets here for shoes…alas most were made of plastic and just awful. So I headed to Mong Kok, and started looking for Sperry Top-Siders. After seeing a few, and their price tag – I started looking at other options. I found a pair of Sanuk’s that I really liked and definitely thinking about my friend Randy Hurd and his fondness of these shoes, I bought them. Anyways, heavy laden with shopping I returned home late to Shenzhen, the border crossing I chose was packed with people, and people who kept cutting in line. 200+ people and only 5 open checking terminals to exit Hong Kong. Then to enter China, only one Terminal for foreigners and the guard was getting trained. I nearly threw my shopping down and turned around. But I couldn’t because I needed to return home to stay at someone else’s apartment that night.
I slept at a Branch member’s apartment because both parents were going to be out of town and they asked me to just spend the night, so I watched The Sorcerer’s Apprentice with three of the kids, and slept there. I awoke early to get back home and get showered to head to the Temple in Hong Kong with my Dad. However, when I got down to the parking garage, my scooter would not start, either the cables or the batteries are bad again, or something else. Who knows, it was made in China, not for export….
So, it isn’t yet 6am, and I’m trying to get a piece of machinery to work so I can go to the Temple. It won’t work, so I start walking(I hadn’t brought any money with me at all and I was locked out of the apartment I slept in). It’s about 3km home, so I walk as fast as I can. Even though I speed walked it was really pleasant, the streets in the dusk before dawn in Shekou蛇口(my neighborhood) are peaceful, don’t smell like they do during the day, and they aren’t full of loud spitting people. A few breakfast carts were out early for bus and taxi drivers, smelling of steaming bamboo and warm soy milk. As I pass the wharf on the way to my apartment, it doesn’t smell as strongly as it does in the afternoon, and most of the ships are still out busy over-fishing the Pearl River delta. In the distance I can see trullers out checking the oyster beds on the Hong Kong side.
I get home and my Dad isn’t even awake yet. I hurriedly shower and get ready in a new skirt I bought in the street market in Hong Kong the day before(so awesome, that I’ve lost enough weight to buy things in the South Chinese markets that fit me…even if it is the largest size they have). So I’m rushing to get ready to get in a taxi and head to my Dad’s favorite border crossing(Fu Tian Kou An). I’m about ready, and my Dad knocks on my door saying he was up most of the night throwing up(bad bacon) and isn’t going. I was going to go anyways, but remembering the state of the apartment, and my broken scooter, I decided to stay at home. I sleep a little more, wake up and walk to the import market a km away, get treats for my Dad, and cheese to make quiche for a Young Women’s service project in my Branch. I walk home, do my Dad and I’s laundry as the quiche bakes. Not my usual crazy fancy fare, but I hope it did me proud. I take the quiche to the school, catching a ride with the “Black Taxis”(Gypsy cabs) that wait outside our apartments and the guy driving me drove me once to University when I was running late, and he remembered me, and we were able to talk a little bit, we talked a bit about the weather, about Minnesota, about where he’s from in China(also a cold place) and about how the wharf smells bad. I didn’t even realize it till now…but that’s probably the longest conversation I’ve ever had in Chinese.
After I drop the quiche off, I decide to walk home. Shekou at night is a completely different place. Cafes are open and teaming with people. Men are squatting or sitting on stools on the side walk playing cards for small bets, there is this one restaurant(still have no idea what the big deal is) with huge crowds waiting outside, sitting on chairs waiting to eat there. I side stepped bike shops repairing cables and inner-tubes on the sidewalk. I walked past the Shekou theatre where a movie was playing outside, I don’t know exactly what it was about, but the subtitles I could read kept mentioning Beijing. I bought a sugar cane/aloe/lychee fruit drink and it was bit too sweet, but really refreshing as I walked. I found a restaurant down the street from our apartment complex(across the street from my bus stop and right by the future metro station) that has parts of dogs hanging up to be ordered and eaten. The streets are full of people strolling, and smoking. The site of the future metro station is so interesting. As soon as there were no gaping holes in the ground, the barriers were pushed aside and people have been walking through the construction site to get to their destinations more quickly. Something completely unthinkable to me a few months ago seems obvious, “well of course I would walk through an active construction site to get home faster.” As I walk the song “South China Moon” by Bishop Allen starts playing on my iPod. I look up, and the sky is smoggy and I can’t see the moon. I realized I had made a list in my head of places to go and see all around my neighborhood. Even though technically most of the foreigners in the city live in Shekou, it is still China, and Shekou is one of the oldest neighborhoods in Shenzhen, so it is teaming with nightlife and character. I can get a drink at Starbucks and then walk down the street for dog BBQ. When I got home, my Dad had Mexican take-out waiting for me, and it was still hot.

Bangkok

Ok...I know it's been over a month since I got home - but here are a few photos of Thailand
I had a really great time, being there with my folks, getting out of China was great for my Dad and I was able to see more of Asia. Here are some highlights.

Wat Phra Kaew




Royal Palace


Wat Pho(largest indoor reclining Buddha...also...yes that is sweat on my Dad's shirt)




Bridge on the River Kwai...the REAL one...yeah it was awesome...My Dad and I were in nerd heaven.






Ayutthaya - old capital - while we were there, a few of the sites were having water pumped out of them, the river was at flood stage











Random Photos