Sunday, September 27, 2009

Visit to Huo Jia

Last weekend I traveled with a fellow Sias teacher, Erica, to visit the hometown of one of her former students. The student met us at the university, traveled with us by bus for four hours to his hometown, and set the rule for the weekend when the first bus money collector stood by our seats with his hand outstretched: we pay for nothing. The student covered not only our travel expenses, but meals, snacks, hotel room – anything of cost whatsoever. The bus ride there was my first extended trip by public bus. The road we traveled on had somehow disappeared. For the first thirty minutes of our trip we jolted and sank through mud and potholes, inching along at the pace of a bicycle. A loud Chinese comedy blared from the speakers, and passengers shouted over the noise to talk to each other. Two or three sat in the aisle on stools, and at one point a woman was trying to walk to the front and had to scoot between my face and the boy sitting on a stool beside me. I leaned halfway into Erica’s seat and tried to brace myself while the bus bounced forward.

Upon our arrival, Erica’s student took us to his uncle’s beauty salon, where his uncle performed the traditional Chinese tea ceremony for us: he heated the kettle and our four tiny cups (they reminded me of the saucers I use to dip French fries into ketchup back home in Texas). He poured the first round.

“First,” the student explained, “my uncle will clean the cups.” And we watched as his uncle poured the boiling water in and around our cups, holding each cup by a pair of tongs while he poured. He poured the water straight onto the table. It was a special table, with two burners built into one side of it and a drain built into the far corner. After pouring the hot water over the cups, the uncle dumped the rest of the kettle out on the table; he kept pouring portions over a ceramic figurine – a half frog, half fish animal that holds a gold coin in its mouth. The frog is for luck. I’ve since noticed that most businesses have one on display.

“Second round,” said the student. “My uncle will pour the tea. And first we will just smell, and then take a little taste.”

The following steps, as far as I could tell, consisted of refilling the teacups until we finished the whole kettle.

Facials

During the tea, the student repeatedly mentioned that he had asked his uncle to find a way to improve Erica’s skin.

“They are freckles,” Erica would say whenever the student talked about her face.

He also mentioned that his uncle had been a barber for fifteen years, and could give Erica a good haircut. He told me that my hair was too short – I did not have enough hair to cut off.

I thought that he wasn’t serious about doing something for Erica’s face, but after the tea there were two Chinese girls standing behind our couch, and the student told us they would help our skin now. Who first?

I sat down in the chair, and one of the girls rubbed a white plastic nozzle into my face, slowly moving it across my skin to show me -- through a TV screen -- the underside of my skin.

“This area of your skin is clean,” the student translated as she moved the camera around. “And this area is dirty.”

“In English, we call those clogged pores,” Erica offered.

After the camera inspections, they told me that I needed to wash my face more, and they told Erica that she needed to use more lotion.

“Now you will rest,” said the student, and we followed him upstairs to a room with two beds. The Chinese girls gestured for us to lie down.

What followed was a forty-five minute facial session in which the girls rubbed all kinds of creams into our faces. They followed a simple pattern: rub cream into face, wipe face with wet cloth, and repeat. They massaged us as well – our shoulders, foreheads, scalps. The two salon girls spoke to each other in Chinese, and I imagined they were making comments about the differences between foreign and Chinese skin, and Erica and I talked to each other from our beds across the room about what was being rubbed on our faces and whether or not it would make us break out.

Ping Pong

In a dimly-lit metal building that evening, we played Ping Pong against China’s next greatest. When we entered the building, kids stood in lines at the tables, waiting to have their turn at a volley against the older men who coached them.

Our student and his uncles procured paddles for Erica and I and coaxed us to a table. I played the student for awhile, and then Erica. And then there were ten Chinese kids facing me from a line across my table. They took turns playing me while their parents stood by, watching. One of the coaches kept coming by my table to instruct me.

“This is attack,” he would say, and stretch my arm forward. He laughingly told me I could move my feet. I thought maybe I’d try to copy his protégé across the table, who bounced from side to side while he waited for the ball to come his way.

When the Ping Pong ended, the coaches gathered the kids into rows in the center of the room and told them to hold their paddles like badges on their chests. I felt out of place when I smiled and raised my peace sign.

The Mountains

On our last day with our student and his family, his uncles drove us to the mountains a full hour’s drive away, near the border of Shanxi Province. We drove a long way up the road of one mountain, but were turned away before we reached the peak. A man in camouflage told the uncles a landslide had occurred further up the mountain, and we heard multiple rumbles before we descended; we stopped first to pick Hawthorne berries from the trees along the road.

The uncles drove Erica and I to another mountain, again some distance away. This mountain was more treacherous-looking: it didn’t have slopes for sides, just walls. We drove up the sides of cliffs to get to the top. The student explained to us that his uncle had come here many times before. He was taking us to a small village where a famous Chinese film was made.

At the village, while we waited for our lunch, we walked into stone buildings that one of the locals told us were two thousand years old. It was quiet. Some of the villagers sat in chairs and watched us, one laid corn out to dry in the sun. A lady showed us the smoky fire pit she cooks over; the village didn’t have electricity. One of the women made lunch for us. She made us a chicken she had taken fresh from one of the many coops that we saw in the village.

When the Chinese cook a chicken, they boil it whole, pull it out, and chop it up. The village lady set ours on the table with head, heart, bones, skin, feet, and other unnamable pieces. I watched my hosts suck the skin off the feet, while I mostly ate the tasty egg and mushroom dish beside me. I kept trying to eat chicken, but I couldn't find any meat. I’d stick my chopsticks into broth and hope to pull out something white, but everything I saw looked like gristle or fat, or insides. When my Chinese companions pulled pieces out of the bowl, they never hesitated. What they picked up with their chopsticks went straight to their mouths, and a few seconds later they’d pull a bone out from between their lips. They were putting down parts I didn't know you could eat.

Our friends’ hospitality culminated with a free ride all the way back to our university. After our lunch at the village, the uncles drove us the four hours to home, and when we arrived late that night they left us with cakes, and fruit, and the entire bag of Hawthorne berries that we’d picked on the mountainside.


Saturday, September 26, 2009

Week in Pictures

Take a look at some important Sias events that took place this week:

Ceremony marking the end of mandatory Freshmen military training







Candlelight Ceremony to welcome Freshmen










Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Dinner

The new foreign teachers took a trip to Zhengzhou today, the large city one hour by bus from Xin Zheng, in order to receive the physicals that the government requires of all foreigners who intend to stay in the country longer than thirty days.

About twenty of us boarded the university’s full-size tour bus at 7:30 am. On the road to Zhengzhou, we heard a loud, deep pop from the front of end of the vehicle. The driver slowed, and I thought maybe there was a flat tire, or that we had crashed, until I saw black fuzz whiz by the windows. The bus came to a stop.

“Bird,” the driver shouted down the bus aisle, and all the teachers turned to look. The bus kicked into reverse and we drifted backward on the highway until we could see the bird, a large pheasant lying in the opposite lane.

I thought our driver was climbing down the bus steps in order to remove the bird for the safety of other drivers. I watched him pick it up by the tip of a wing and run back to the bus’ cargo doors. When he climbed back on the bus he said, “Dinner!” And we teachers looked at each other -- the newly-arrived first-year’s were wide-eyed and one second-year was laughing.


Sunday, September 20, 2009

Yi (one)


The Day I Traveled Halfway Around the World

Excerpts from my journal, just for you:

My mind is chaos -- in two hours I will board my flight for China. I sit at the JFK airport, across the table from a French woman who has shared a half of her tomato and mozzerella cheese salad. She is the second visitor I've had at my small round table. A few moments ago, a Chinese woman approached and asked if she could sit across from me and eat her ramen. She didn't ask in those words, exactly, because she didn't speak much English. I tried out the only three Chinese words I know: Ni hao (hello), and Xie xie (thank you). When I told her I was going to China, she informed me that our flight had moved from gate six to gate seven, and not much later she finished her ramen and taught me the Chinese word for "goodbye."

And now I'm sitting across from a French woman, who also does not speak much English, and we have quietly eaten our salad, only saying words every now and then. She has expressed to me that I can stay with her if I ever come to visit France, and she gave me her address, phone number, and e-mail. She has been to Beijing (where I am going), to Japan (where I was born), and she loves New York (where I am). She looked at me a moment ago and told me as much, while her eyes beamed. And then for awhile she rummaged through her purse, pulling out crumpled pieces of paper, her passport, a coin purse. She explained to me she could not find her phone.

"Oh no." I tried to make my face look as displeased as I could, and to be somewhat useful I offered to throw away her empty salad dish. When I returned, she was holding her phone in the air, smiling, and we both laid our hands on our chests and sighed -- the universal gesture, it seems, for expressing one's feeling of relief.

Then I discovered that she had been looking for her phone so that she could take a picture of me:

"Photo," she said as she pointed to the phone. "Please take a photo."

So I obeyed her gestures and stood by the window, where a jumbo jet would form the background, then sat down, then got up and moved the chair so that I faced the window, and finally smiled as she took the picture. She would sen it to me by e-mail, she said.

"My son," she went on, "she always asks me if I've found new friends. Now I can tell him..." She gestured toward me.
"Now you can tell him 'yes,'" I said.

She also produced a box of chocolate-covered hazelnuts from her purse, and instructed me to open it. I told her I loved chocolate, after I had taken two pieces, and we smiled at each other while we ate them. She waved her hand over the box just before she put it up, and after I took one chocolate, she waved again and said, "No -- many! Many!"

She has said Bon voyage now, and moved away with her cane.

I am grateful that someone reassured me, even moments before I boarded my plane, that no matter how limited my language skills, how uneducated my cultural knowledge, how unfamiliar with the landscape, the geography, I can still somehow connect with people whose background I know so little about.

I left within an hour after I said goodbye to my new French friend, flew thirteen hours to Beijing, waited four hours before boarding an hour flight to Zhengzhou, then was met by a Sias University employee who drove me thirty minutes to the campus at Xin Zheng.
"Firsts"

Many of the teachers at Sias, when they first come to China, keep a list of things they are doing for the first time. Here are some "firsts" for me after being in the country for almost five whole days now:

First time to...
1. ride on a two-story plane
2. put toilet paper in the trash can instead of flushing it (which must be done around here)
3. eat a little fish fried whole -- eyes, bones, and all. First time to eat several foods, in fact: rabbit, egg plant, steamed dumplings with vinegar, black mushrooms, and other things
4. attempt to speak Chinese
5. bargain (admittedly, the bargaining was done mostly by the company I was with, though for the products I was buying)
6. own a Chinese cell phone
7. see a mouse in my own apartment
8. take a trip with other Sias foreign faculty and students (we went to the Yellow River)
9. wake up at six in the morning for four days in a row (jet lag is not my friend)
10. help a Chinese student with an English paper

Cultural Observations

As I sat on the plane, a foreigner before I'd even left American soil, I noticed a few things that I wasn't used to seeing: many of the Chinese carried-on quite a bit more than I did. Though the airline official allowance is one carry-one and one personal item, the stewardess helped a man for nearly ten minutes as he filled an overhead bin with bags of merchandise he and his party had apparently bought while visiting New York. Many passengers spent considerable time placing their items in the overhead bins, and they all carried similar items: bags with brand names like Gucci, Dolce & Gabbana, Louis Vuitton. My fellow travelers also seemed to have no problem getting within a hair's breadth of each other. While I stood aside to wait for one Chinese passenger to finish loading his carry-on luggage, the Chinese man in line behind me charged past me and stepped so close to the one obstructing the walkway that they were touching each other, and the impatient passenger stood just like that until space was created for him to move forward. And while on the subject of "touch," since arriving here I've seen that it's perfectly normal on campus for two girls to walk arm-in-arm or hold hands.

One cultural aspect I've noticed that I particularly enjoy is that few of the people at Sias and in Xin Zheng are quiet or shy. In many cases, students have approached me, introduced themselves to me, and asked me questions. During my first Chinese shopping experience, I entered what is known to the teachers here as the "Superman" store and was shouted at by a little boy of about six or seven. He kept repeating "hello," and offering me some of his snack, and was later scolded by his mother for slapping my rear end. I'll admit that slap made me jump two or three inches and probably made my face turn red. A similar occurrence happened later when I was walking down the street with another teacher, only this time the other teacher was the victim of a little Chinese friend's slap, not me. In any case, I'm excited to get to know the students here, and excited that even though I'm eager to get to know them, many of them will be less timid about talking with me than I am with them.