Friday, December 4, 2009
This term Renee asnd I are both teaching seven classes/fourteen hours of classes a week. This is a normal load for Peace Corps teachers in China. Also, Renee and I both have all sophomore classes. She teaches at Hong He where we now live. I teach three classes here, but four classes in Xing Hu where we used to live. I take the bus three times a week. But as you remember Xing Hu is beautiful and we have friends there among teachers and students. Renee comes once a week to visit and we eat with some students.
Various things break up the time. Renee is working on producing a play of A Christmas Carol in English (a monumental task, by the way, in a land where no schedule ever remains the same for more than a few hours and we have yet to have everyone at a rehearsal and we don't know where and when we will perform. Oh, my! But I figure none of the effort is wasted. The students have had a lot of opportunity to hone their oral English skills.) and I continue to enjoy my tennis and ping pong and tai chi. Then we have a few regular activites - a trip to a big store in Chongqing once a month, English Corner, dinner with students, church, and lots of casual social interactions. One weekend we went to Chongqing to the Anti-Japanese War Museum (War of Resistance against Japan Museum) The curator wants to change the name. I have been working on their English signage.
Then last week we had four days and three nights in Jiangjin. Jiangjin was where we were last summer to teach the teachers. We were invited to come back and visit the teachers , see what they were doing, and share some more ideas. It takes some planning and effort to do this as we had several classes to make up and plans to be made in order to go with everyone's permission.
The visit did not go exactly as we had envisioned. We visited mostly primary schools. At each school one of the teachers gave a demonstration lesson to a relatively small class with multimedia equipment. They did great, but we did not see a typical Chinese teaching situation. Then Renee and I did a lesson. It was Thanksgiving time so we talked about giving thanks and did a song. Then we met with the teachers. At each school they had invited all of their English teachers and other local teachers to come to observe the lessons. In each school we had twenty or so teachers watching us and talking with us. We were surprised to like being celebrities. (Actually, I wasn't surprised. I have always liked being a celebrity:) At each of the schools we were greeted by swarms of kids, some even wanting autographs!
One afternoon we went into the countryside and up a mountain to see a tea plantation and take a wet walk. On the way back we stopped at a school. The students obviously were not used to seeing foreigners. Instead of running towards us, they stepped back from us. Our first attempts at greeting them failed. Finally, one of the Chinese with us took my hand and shook it. Then a few students were brave enough to timidly do the same. Another experience for us.
Another aspect of the trip was to visit with Mr.Li, his bride-to-be Shelly, and Summer. They were the people responsible for us this summer. We had become good friends and looked forward to spending time with them. We enjoyed our visit a great deal. Mr. Li and Shelly have now planned for their wedding to be January 10. We will be going back to Jiangjin to join in those festivities. We feel like matchmakers because we kept urging them all summer to plan the wedding for while we were here and when we would be able to come. They have done it.
Now to get through the holidays so far from home, the hardest part of being a volunteer in China. (Well, other than BEING in China, which never ceases to be an adventure.)
Sunday, October 18, 2009
National Day and Beyond
The next morning, after about a 12 hour ride, we arrived in Feng Huang, an old city that bore some resemblance to Venice. There we met our guide and our fellow travelers, all of whom were Chinese and most of whom spoke only Chinese. That was our first big challenge.
THen the frustrations of touring began. We waited almost three hours for our bus to take us to the next destination, 5 hours away. When the bus came, it soon broke down. We pulled off the highway, and the bus driver fixed it with a screwdriver! He wasn't about to slow down after that, and the five hours were reduced. We arrived at our hotel at midnight, survived the mad dash for rooms (nothing assigned), and fell asleep. The next morning we would see Zhang Jia Jie, a famous mountain park.
The next morning I missed the start time by a few minutes because I had misunderstood the instructions, and I was embarrassed. I think our guide realized then that she had to be more careful to make sure we understood inmportant information. She made sure after that that we were watched over a bit.
Zhang Jia Jie was outstanding. It is most famous, I think, for its strange rock formations. Rich and I decided to try the cable car lift to the top and then walk down.
Considering that it was a national holiday week, the wait for the cable car could have been much worse than it was, 2 1/2 hours. People were friendly, though, and the time passed pleasantly. The ride was worth the price; we rode very near to the rock formations and felt like we were going to crash into one just before the we reached the top. The ride down, after some snacks, began simply enough, but after what seemed like a thousand hundred steps down and up and down, our leg muscles were screaming. And they screamed for several days. Squat toilets were excruciating. We even had to think twice before getting up from a chair. Ah, well. We're not as young as we thought we were.
The second day at Zhang Jia Jie we walked for 7 kilometers along a lovely stream. Picture the bike path along Ridley Creek but with fewer trees and mountain on either side. It was a great place for families; children could safely wade in the water and skip stones to their heart's content. By this time we had formed a friendly companionship with one of the families, a dad and a mom, a little boy, and a grandma. They showed us many things along the way, including sonme new taste treats at the periodic food stalls.
Satisfied, we had our final meal in Hunan and prepared to travel back to Chongqing. This time it was a two part train ride. The first train was extremely crowded, but we did have tickets and thus seats. We had been told that we would receive our tickets for the sleeper train when we exited at Huai Hua, another Hunan city, but when the time came, no tickets materialized. Long story short, our whole group was able to ride the train with no tickets, taking the beds of people who had just left the train. Our Chinese friends kept saying "Follow us, follow us," and what else could we do? Many people had to know what was happening -- the ticket takers, the conductors, the exit managers. I have never felt so Chinese as I did that night. Who knows the truth of what happened to our tickets or the money that was supposed to purchase them, but we did arrive home safely with a story to tell.
Now it's back to work. We are trying to get ourselves organized to do a little entertaining because we need to reciprocate for many kindnesses, but time moves so swiftly.
That's probably a very good thing:)
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Lions and Tigers and Bears
You may also remember that the zoo, which is the largest in China, has two parts -- a walking part and a riding part. This time we started with the safari section. After being asked to "wait a moment," a standard phrase here, we were supplied with a driver and a translator, and a van. For about 45 minutes we meandered through several fenced areas populated by lions and tiger and bears and many other animals. The driver was terrific. He knew where all the animals liked to snooze, so when we could not see anything, he would bang on the side of the car and Presto! an animal would appear. The animals roam over large areas, most of them fenced. However, the bears can come right up to the van.
After the conclusion of our trip with lots of photos to show for it, we proceeded to try to fulfill our second goal, to see some live animal shows. Last time we missed them all. As we approached an information counter, someone drove up to us in a tram. It turned out to be Song Bi, a young man we had met last winter on the 501 bus. He invited us to hop aboard and let him be our guide. The first stop was a performance of tigers and bears, a wolf and some chimpanzees. The tigers and the wolf jumped through hoops of fire. The chimpanzees had a tea party with Western style knives and forks. The bears danced, but we could not believe they were really bears because they had such a human shape, like someone dressed in a bear costume.
We stayed around for awhile and watched the attendants play with a baby chimp, and then rode off to the next show, the seals. There were five of them in the act, but one was rather contrary. We could not decide whether it was trained to misbehave or perhaps was just being introduced to the act. They did some clever tricks, but the performance needed a climax. It just ended.
This time when Song Bi picked us up, he asked if we would like to see the zebras. We had been thinking that we should head toward home, but why not see the zebras first? Were we glad that we did! The zebras turned out to be a baby zebra, only one month old. He was being tended in a small enclosure under the shade of a tree by two young men. One of them the zebra clearly regarded as her/his mother. We were invited in to stroke the baby's coat. Sooo soft, like silk. While we were there, some young ladies happened by for a look. We decided that the baby zebra could be something of a babe magnet.
Students here like to comment that the weather in Chongqing is "changeable." No kidding! 90 degrees one day; 65 the next. Today is rather lovely but in the sun it is hot. One week it was nearly 100 degrees; no one moved if he didn't have to. We do miss spring and fall. And all of you as well.
Saturday, September 5, 2009
GENERATIONS
We flew back to Shanghai from Istanbul after 16 wonderful days and went almost immediately to Wuxi. Wuxi is a city north of Shanghai. We had been there in 2006 and met a family where four generations lived together. I had hoped and we have tried to get back so I could interview them. They agreed and graciously enabled us to come, stay, and be cared for like royalty for five days. It would have been a great China experience even without the interviews. The family is super and were so helpful and cooperative, thinking most often of our comfort and needs rather than their own.
I was able to interview the men of the family in each of the generations. I was able to get a story of one family's progress in China. Through them I heard about the War with Japan, the Liberation of China, and the Cultural Revolution as well as the great economic change that grew out of Deng Xiao Ping's economic reforms.
We returned home to a new apartment on a new campus and have been entertaining our friends since we arrived. One event of personal significance was my (Renee's) birthday. We celebrated for several days. On the big day itself Rich and I rented bicycles in the morning and tooled around the campus. It was a bad day for campus riding because the students were arriving and the thoroughfares were clogged with cars and taxis, but we survived. We had lunch at the new canteen and had fried chicken, a rare treat. In the evening we invited the other foreign teachers to join us at one of our favorite eating spots, the one where we can order mashed potatoes -- no butter but almost a taste of home. Two days later we traveled to our old campus and ate birthday noodles with several of my former students. The birthday noodle is long, long, long, a symbol of longevity. Last but not least, two of my students brought me a lovely bouquet of lilies. I enjoyed every minute.
Now getting ready for the new school year is the challenge. Classes begin in just one more day.
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
IF IT'S TUESDAY IT MUST BE TURKEY
Monday, June 29, 2009
SO MUCH TO DO, SO LITTLE TIME
Hope you enjoyed meeting our new friends in the last blogs? We have enjoyed every one of them and more. A few of our friends here want to make it into the blog as well. Two of them are the art students I have lunch with on Mondays and then tutor in English . Their big test was in late June - hope they did well. Renee and I have shared one class. The Freshmen class I had last term she has had this term. It has been good to have these students in common. Many have become friends, especially the boys.
At the beginning of May, Renee went to Nanjing to visit her sister
Melanie. Melanie was in Nanjing because her daughter Lau
rel had given birth to their second child, Victoria Grace. Renee was able to go and visit Chad, Laurel, Melanie, Victoria, and her big brother, William, who is himself just a toddler. What a
great opportunity. Renee got to spend time with Melanie and also hold the baby.
On May 28 was the Dragon Boat Festival. It is celebrated here in China by eating sweet sticky rice wrapped in some sort of greenleaf, not bamboo but like bamboo. We got to eat that, zong zi, several times that day with students and with two families. On our campus, because we
have a lake, they also held dragon boat races. There were 16 boats. The crowds gathered early.
The campus was closed to outsiders, who had to watch from one end of the lake. We could get pretty close to the action and people hooted and cheered. No one seemed to care who won.
Taking part is more important here in China.
We spent the day with friends, and we were able
to feel a part of the Festival. The Festival has
a bit of a strange history. It celebrates a wise civil servant who drowned himself out of sadness for the fate of his kingdom and his inability to help effectively. In the story, the dragon boat
s were sent out to search for his body and people threw zong zi into the lake to feed the fish so they wouldn't feed on him At least, that is one story.
This second semester my secondary project has been to start a men's group. I invited my English Teaching Major boys to meet with me. We met six times this term.
We met and talked about teaching and the role of men in China and America, played ping pong and badminton; watched Rocky and had a good discussion about Phialdelphia, underdogs, and film making, and, of course, we shared a meal together.
The picture is minus Dwayne and Steven, but you can see it was a good group. Renee, not to be outdone, began meeting with a group of girls for lunch on Fridays. The girls come from various backgrounds, but are mostly tied together by Renee's friend Serena. (Rich thinks he is my motivation. Ha!)
Renee and I have both lost weight, but we are not always
sure how that has happened. Many activities these last months have involved eating. 1) Two senior girls visited us and brought the makings for dinner. It was a great meal, and it was interesting to watch them work at prep
aring it for us. 2) Another dumpling adventure took place with our neighbors and friends, Sally and Ji. We spent a morning helping making the dumplings and then shared the feast. The grandmother was the boss
, but we all had our hands in the makings. 3) We have become friends with the local Catholic priest. Wang Fang has said he would visit us and he did. We shared a meal with him and the translator he brought with him f
or fear he would have to speak English. 4) Another group of meals dealt with our class monitors. We both invited them to a dinner. (Now "not to be outdone by Richard did motivate me to eat with my monitors:) We planned our menus, reserved a room, ordered the food, and led a meal. The monitors were suspcious that we could do this, but surprised by our ability to order a good meal and make the arrangeme nts. The night of our dinner, I/Renee was joined by one of our voluntee
r friends from another site. The students definitely enjoyed her beautiful young face.
One last event before the break for summer was a boat outing on our lake. Four of my boys
from HongHe invited us for the outing. On a hot day we boarded a raftlike covered boat and paddled our way around the lake. It was good to get another view of the beautiful campus and fun to share the ride and then dinner with the boys.
Excitement on the ride was provided by another student who was fishing along the lake. When he saw us he stripped down to his underwear and swam out to us. No swimming allowed, of course, but that only added to the excitement. A great time was had by all.
Graduation is a bittersweet time. The term ending, friends leaving. Graduation here means that each department will have a party for its graduates. We were invited to several of these parties P.E., art, music, dance, landscape design. Notice which one were were not invited to? The P.E. celebration provided a formal invitation and a place at the head table with the head teachers. They provided us with flowers as well as all of their teachers. At one of the art celebrations I got to sing "You have a Friend".
I (Renee) had a chance to tutor one of our teacher friends in English for a few weeks. His name is Duan Qiang; he is a vocal teacher and performer. I think I mainly succeeded in encouraging him to open his mo
uth and speak. I don't know that he learned much new info, but he did become more confident. Also, quite by accident, I discovered the efficacy of showing/assigning movies to my classes and
using them as a basis for discussion. When the students have something to talk about, they do much better, especially if they are in a small group. I wanted to help them understand something about the Civil Rights movement in America; I used
The Great Debaters and Remember the Titans, both of which star Denzel Washington. The third movie, on which I based our final exam, was The Miracle Worker, the story of Helen Keller and her teacher, Anne Sullivan. The Chinese students are very sensitive emotionally; that movie wiped them out. Movies are very accessible here online.
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Meet and Greet
This morning Jason joined us to watch the Dragon Boats. He often helps to organize us. We got to know him because he came to help us with our computer. He is a Chemistry-Environmental Major, but he knows computers. He knows them well enough that he is one of four young men who the school has hired to keep everyone's computers working. Tonight he borrowed our camera so he could have pictures of his friends. He downloaded on our computers and sent the pictures to his. We have been involved in his love and life. He will work for an environmental company next Fall and graduate in a year. You have seen his picture before when he climbed the mountain with us. The picture is from the Pear Blossom Festival day at the top of the mountain.
Zen Wei (Heidi) is our counterpart. She is the school contact for us. When we need to know something or do something we are supposed to go through her. You know she has her hands full with us. She on the other hand is supposed to relay all of the school information to us. She will be studying in America this summer. She is a sports woman and we have played tennis. The picture is from the Sports Meerting Day. The teacher with her is "Colin." He taught in one of the rooms after me last semester and observed me. We got to talk and are friends. We often ride the school bus together. He can remind me that my frustrations are small things and the Chinese teachers face them as well - they are just better adjusted. Colin is working on a poetry article for publication. He will be moving as well as us to the new campus sometime this summer.
These two nice looking gentlemen are my CHinese tutors. I meet with Gao Bin (right) on Tuesday mornings. He is from Shandong on the east coast. He is studying Journalism but hopes to go to graduate school to study Chinese. He is an basketball phanatic and I have learned many basketball words. We watched the NCAA finals together. Jackie (Shi Zhen Xin) is a business English major from Hebei Province. He has been involved in several schemes to get rich quick since we have been here. He has a girl friend in one of my classes and that also takes his time. We have been meeting during our lunch break time this semester. Jackie is a go to guy when there is a question about anything.
This semester I have been having lunch with the same group of students every week. I have gotten to know them pretty well and most of their English has improved accordingly. On Monday I meet with two art students, Wang Wu and Wu Ji Guo. On Wednesday I meet with Janey and Dane, two girls from my Class 6. Janey, who didn't say a word last semester, asked me if she could have lunch with me this semester and we have made it a practice. We are often joined by her friends or mine, but Dane and Janey make up the group. They will be teachers and do prsctice teaching next Fall. On Thursday I eat with Liu Shao Xin, a Journalism student and Gao Bin's roommate. I met him early last semester eating dumplings and we have been friends ever since. He is part of what I call the Shandong mafia. There are many students here a long way from home. He is a class leader. In order that he doesn't have to speak English every week, we often have an English speaker with us whom he invites. He is the tall one in the center.
My fifth friend is new. We met about Easter time. She and her group of friends often are in a group which we meet with on Sunday afternoon. It is quite a nice treat to be accepted into a group of young people. Ellen is an English major at Chongqing University of Technology and Vocation here in Yongchuan. Renee and I have enjoyed our conversations and her colloquial Englgish. Through her we have been invited to a wedding party for one of the group members and into several homes. We feel very accepted.
Our lives are full. Tomorow we will have lunch with the Catholic priest. He is nervous and is bringing his friend from the Foreign Language school in town so we can communicate. It will be a good time.
Monday, May 4, 2009
Spotlights
This is our beautiful friend, Serena, posing by a peach tree in blossom. She will graduate this year and receive a degree in Landscape Design, a perfect major for this lovely place. Then she will go to Nanjing Seminary, where her sister is already a student. She tried to go directly into the graduate school, but the exam was too difficult and instead, she will be admitted as a junior undergraduate. We have shared many precious moments, especially talking about our Best Friend. She often translates for us at the Protestant Church.
Here is David, one of my tutors. You saw his picture in the last blog preparing jiao zi. He is a man of many talents, especially cooking. It is a saying here that Chongqing men cook, and many do it very well. It is interesting that often students say that their mothers and grandmothers usually do the cooking, but on special occasions or for special company, the fathers and grandfathers cook. David is a big fan of American movies and American music. He can warble "Country Road," and recently watched Mamma Mia four times straight. From that movie he likes to sing "Money, Money," but we both like "Slipping Through My Fingers." Although he is only a freshman, he takes his tutoring very seriously and is always prepared with a variety of challenges and activities for me each week.
This is Sally. She is one of the young mom's that we have become acquainted with during the time we have lived here. She and her husband, Ji Quan Peng, have invited us right into their lives. We have an open invitation to drop in whenever we can, and we have learned so much about child rearing Chinese style by observing the care of their new little one, Ji Dian Shuai.
We call him Shuai Ge, which means handsome. Sally teaches Landscape Design and is back to work after having leave last term. Here "day care" is provided by grandparents. Even if they live far away, the grandmas at least come for many months and provide priceless service. Our friendship with Sally and her family has been made much easier because she is fairly fluent in English. How lucky we are.
Another young woman whose English is quite good is Becky. I'm sorry that we do not have a better picture of her. She is standing next to me in this photo, taken on a foggy, foggy day on Tea Mountain. Becky and her parents own a DVD/CD shop in Yongchuan. Becky has not had the educational opportunities that many people her age have enjoyed, but she has benefited from several years of Peace Corps tutors. I have joined those ranks, but I don't really have to teach her much. We are reading Tuesdays with Morrie together. She is a good friend too and a tremendous resource for all the foreign teachers. She often translates for us at the Catholic church.
The girl with the big smile in this picture is Hua Hua. Because of her, I know a few things about Chinese hospitals. When Hua Hua broke her leg last fall and had to spend almost a month in the hospital, I visited her several times. She is a very friendly girl, as you can see, and by the end of her stay, she was on good terms with all the patients and nurses and doctors on the ward. Breaking her leg was a devastating blow to Hua Hua who loves to dance and run and play a variety of sports. She has been very brave and has taught me a lot about perseverance.
Each one of these people, and so many more, bless our lives every day. They encourage us and we try to do the same for them as they face many of the stresses and strains that are common to people everywhere. Sometimes we marvel at their coping strategies. We are learning many things about our own American attitudes about life. In fact, I feel I am getting a better perspective on American culture by living in China. Rich and I both are realizing that we have little patience, and are constantly trying to "move mountains" with grit and determination when we might better try a little "wu wei," doing by not doing. Recently, I have been thinking about the Serenity Prayer -- Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change; the courage to change the things I can change; and the wisdom to know the difference." Amen
And speaking of mountains, there is mountain building in progress near our apartment. This "mountain" often spilled rock onto the athletic field when we had a heavy rain. The solution has been rather ingenious. After removing all trees and all loose soil, the workers used wire to reinforce then blew concrete over all. There are many small round holes in the concrete, about 4 inches in diameter. We think it will be for drainage, but some say "maybe they will make a waterfall." It also looks like an invitation for a mural or a perfect rock climbing wall. We're just happy to have it finished and to have our most direct path to everywhere open again.
And one more interesting thing. Have you seen a leaf like this? It appears to have worms crawling on it, but they are not worms at all. Instead, they are a configuration of the leaf. Do you think it is some sort of protective adaptation?