Monday, May 28, 2012

Snakes dying on my table, Sweet pig bone soup, and the Water Buffalo song

Some, aka myself, have requested an update on the Tambon Phajuk Zoo, aka my house.

There's no denying it anymore: the first story of our house is a jungle. The rainy season pushes everyone indoors and it's romantic - the animals love to breed and my lovely roommate P'Ya is pregnant. In all seriousness, it is romantic - the plants and trees and flowers and fruit and creatures are tangled and dense, growing over each other, rich with life. As I write, deafening thunder shakes my bureau and rain leaks in through the dark wood hatches we call windows.

I'm concentrating all further keep-the-house/campsite-people-friendly energy on the war upstairs. (Which is connected to the downstairs, most unfortunately.)


Snake

This has got to be my favorite - I come home after school last week to find that a smallish snake died on our kitchen table. The ants poured in from everywhere to pick it bare - and I'm almost grateful they did the removal job for me (minus the head and the eyes -- don't you think they'd eat that first?), though I'm afraid to put anything on our kitchen table, compounded by the fact that it's also now caked in pesticides and bleach. Maybe the ants killed the snake, come to think of it...


More Animal Babies!

A gigantic greyish brown spider hides between our water heater and the wall in the bathroom. She's camped out there for about a week now. This is all within the ordinary, except for the fact that she is incredibly pregnant and stores a ginormous white sac of eggs under her abdomen. I think she's shrinking because she's got no time to eat as she guards her eggs.

This is problematic because, according to Gift (my student who lives with me), her sac will hatch tomorrow evening after dark. I ask Gift how she is so positive on the details, and Gift laughs weakly and says "Dao" ("Guess"). But she knows an awful lot about this spider (it won't bite humans, the sac of eggs is growing, the exact hatching time and date), so I'd be a little concerned they've teamed up if not for her incapacitating fear of it. Or maybe immunity is part of the deal.

This means I hope against hope those eggs don't hatch prematurely. I'm going to get a kid to come catch her tomorrow; I'm too full of traumatic stress on spiders right now.

Millipedes

They chill here. Approx. 9 inches long. Don't worry about it. Centipedes are more dangerous.


Ants

What's new? Teaming down from the rafters, pressing up from the ground, swarming through the floorboards, living in the furniture, congregating on my bed. Pick a species...there are hundreds. The little small reddish ones are the kings of my bedroom, and there's not an electronic they're not interested in. Oh, and guess what Megan and Eugene - they marched right through the ant chalk barriers. So I'm retreating.

Injuries

Too many to report, mostly related to the football field and running into things. But one is notable. I think a spider (but let's be honest, coulda been any creature) bit me on Saturday, and instead of the red undefined shape, slightly swollen, on the top of the veins in my right hand getting smaller, it's spreading out, deepening its red color, and shooting more and more pain. As of tonight, the inner part is defining itself in a dark red color and a small hardened bump is appearing.


Slugs

These classic greyish brown 6 inchers leave trails behind them, making them relatively easy to locate. When the rains come, the slugs come.

Island Zoo

When it rains, everything drowns. My house became an island yesterday, immediately drowning any hope of making it to church. Fascinatingly, my house is built on much lower ground than the dirt road that leads you there. Surrounded by trees and underbrush, by all means tucked away in the most natural, picturesque sense, the house is also equipped with a dug out "canal" system that loops around to the back. When the rains hit, which has been every night/morning this week, the ground can't soak up the water fast enough despite the vegetation. Water surrounds us at least 7 meters out at the best exit point to the road. Yesterday came dangerously close to first floor flooding.

Oh, I just figured that I'm not the only one who thinks this water was wild - every Uttaradit village is on special alert for potential landslides, thanks to the torrential rain. Tambon Phajuk is a danger zone. Whaaaaaaat. (A couple months before I came to the 'Dit, the region experienced mad mudslides with many fatalities.) Some of our villages have already flooded this weekend.

Adventures

Several of the juniors in my bio class - my guinea pig class from last semester - kidnapped me on Saturday. We rode out to Tambon Pat-hai, a village about 25 km from the school. I spent the day visiting their families, exploring their families' farms and gardens, eating fruit, staring at the river - too muddy for swimming due to the rain - and playing Egyptian Ratscrew. Glorious Saturday. They've hearts of gold.

Teaching last week (Mattayom 4/sophomore biology):


Me, in class: "เชื้อเพลิง ซากพืชซากสัตว์: คุณตาย. คุณเสียชีวิตเป็นเวลานานที่ผ่านมา. นิ้วมือของคุณไม่อร่อย. ดังนั้นเห็ดไม่กินมัน. หรือไม่ได้กินหมด. นิ้วของคุณอยู่ภายใต้หินชั้น และ ถ่านหินชนิดร่วน เวลานาน. มันถูกบีบ และจะกลายเป็น เชื้อเพลิงฟอสซิล. ล้อเล่น. นิ้วของคุณไม่ได้เป็นนิ้ว. มันเป็นเชื้อแบคทีเรีย."

Translation - "Fossil fuels: You die. You died a long time ago. Your finger is not delicious. ...So mushrooms don't eat it. Or they don't finish it all. Your finger is under sedimentary rock and peat long time. It is squeezed. It will become fossil fuel. Just kidding. Your finger is not a finger. It is bacteria." 

And this is why my Thai is not exactly good enough to be teaching non-renewable energy to hundreds of high school students. And yet, I'm the most qualified science teacher they've got? The students begged the director for me to be their teacher because the other teachers don't come to class. I, in contrast, come and speak enough Thai to tell them their fingers are bacteria. I predict Uttaradit will not solve the renewable energy dilemma.


Today at school

I'm catching up three rascal boys who skipped biology last week (okay, for voluntary military training) this afternoon on dynein, a protein in the cilia and flagella of protists, when Ant, one of the boys, (who I'm sure I've mentioned before in this blog) cocks his head and says, "Teacher, you should eat more protein." The other two first try to help me save face and then agree. When 16-year-old boys become your mother, you know your wrists look skinny.

Ant then asks me why I'm vegetarian (for the millionth time) and I tell him how my mom didn't believe I'd actually stay vegetarian. Ant tells me he tried to be vegetarian once: "Only my mom was right - I ate sweet pig bone soup after only 10 days." It's good to know mommies are mommies all over the world.

Oh, and different soups for different folks...


Water Buffalo Song

For those who know both Larry the Cucumber and how essential a symbol the buffalo is to Thailand, you will understand the sheer glory of playing this song for my Mattayom 1 (7th grade) students. It's been in the back of mind for ages, and I finally made it happen. Not a kid could keep up with the pace (my bad), but translating and singing it in Thai coulda earned me a Thai national medal if the honor was bestowed based on how hilarious kids think you are. My sick Thai version is the best thing I've done since forever. If you get me in person, I will sing it for you.

Also, mostly for Courtney: you know the part of the song where Archie the Asparagus comes out and yells at Larry for assuming that everyone has a water buffalo? And that he'll get angry letters from people asking where their water buffaloes are? Well, at the same point in the song, when a little boy in my class figured out what the heck the song was saying (because I told him...let's be real, this song is way too fast), he cries out, "But I don't have a water buffalo!" (Dewa pom mai mii kwaai!)

Haircut

Got a haircut. (Major show of bravery, in my opinion, as I was quite afraid to do this in the middle of nowhere.) I tell P'Oong, the hairdresser, that my hair is not beautiful (pom mai soi). She pulls my hair and says, "Chai ka. Oh but your face is beautiful and your eyes are the sea (ta-lay) and your smile is genuine (jingjai) and your body is catwalk." And for the rest of my life, I will fly back to P'Oong to get my hair cut.


Love from my Aunt Nancy

I've spent the last 8 months quite happily tucked away from most things back home. I love the 'Dit as my cocoon, somewhere special I can love, somewhere special I can be loved, somewhere secret and divine. Rural and full of children, the middle of nowhere and the heart of somewhere. The past 2 months, I've sprung from the cocoon to "work" in my entomology lab in Trang - albeit another secret cocoon - and explore a little Communist country to the north. My Aunt Nancy's visit reminded me a bit of the outside world, of the friends back home, of my sisters. How I love it so much here, but I love it so much there as well. That it's not where we live, but how we live, that defines us.

But that is just a thought, and not perhaps the most brilliant thought of all. Because I'm back in the 'Dit, enveloped in the joys of communitarianism, which only the 'Dit exemplifies so well, and I begin to think that a home is a value, that a region is pride itself, that Tambon Phajuk is a little inside of my soul and I'm a little inside of its history.

So this individualism - me in my new 'Dit home, as distinct from everyone who is not here - bounces off this communitarianism - we, as a community, value our neighbors as our family - and perhaps makes me a poor representative of the communitarian spirit. Oh I don't know. I just love the 'Dit so much and treasure a year to be myself, on my own, so not on my own, so not by myself.

 Thai Educational Flaws

I'm not much for Yahoo Voices (nor did I know it existed), but a student wrote a letter to my friend Maya, a Fulbright at a northern boarding school - a prestigious Chulaporn nonetheless. He included this "article" on the Thai educational system. He asked Maya to respond to the article as well as add her thoughts on the problems of the Thai educational system. Some of the article is just a random lady spouting off this or that, but many of the problems listed in the article are true, in my opinion. Maya's student who wishes so badly to attend university in the US but is afraid he won't measure up because of how he's been educated does indeed face significant obstacles. But little does he know that US public education often sucks just as much as the Thai system, and at least everyone values respect in Thai schools. Plus, in Thai schools, everyone is constantly racing to give food to one another. Thailand (and the US) does love itself some irrational policies. Here in the 'Dit, our director purchased 10 flat screen TVs, running us deep into the red. But we have no paper. Kids sleep in class and not a teacher bats an eye - if they even bother to come. My students have learned English since preschool but can't answer "How are you?"

I'm no stranger to American educational problems. I aim to be the kind of teacher I would've died to have in high school - one who dedicates her time to the students, who doesn't spend it all buddy-buddy with the teachers, one who actually cares what I'm teaching, comes to class, energizes and loves, throws out sweet facts, is tough without being mean...and walking down the hallways, watching some teachers themselves sleeping away on their desks (only pausing from rest when whacking a kid with a stick) while kids play on their phones, you kinda feel like THESE BABIES I LOVE THEM SO MUCH. Then I remember that this is pretty much exactly what my high school was like, except the stick was detention.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Back where I come from

The aircon cools my room down to a frigid 90 degrees. I snuggle under 2 blankets and scramble around for the controller to turn off that mechanized Antarctic. 

Here’s what I like: terrariums.

Finally managed to teach a not-so-into-English student a 3-syllable word on the football (soccer) field. Accident. I say "accident" whenever I step on his foot haggling for the ball, and now he says it whenever I do anything. Like anything.

I also taught my students filler words such as "like" and "I mean" and "uhhh", spicing up conversations around here. "How, like, are you?" I'll take it.

Conversations with my roommates revolve solely around which creatures we’ve most recently spotted in our house/zoo.

Breaking news from Phajuk (name of the nearest village) Zoo, i.e. my house:

Today, geckos gave birth on my bedroom aircon. JINGJOP-NOI (gecko babies) LEGS ARE SO ADORABLE. These babes’ entrance into the world may not be quite as popular as panda births, but still, something to be proud of.

Two tarantulas. An orb spider. One in my bed, one in the shower, and one splattered against my wall thanks to a successful tarantula hunt. Thanks to Hunger Games – my pastime between spider spottings – providing inspiration. I feel a bond with the killing-machine-survival-bent heroine. This is the first time I’ve bothered killing spiders – they’re such useful creatures, but even I ain’t sleeping with those.

Beetles. En masse. And what appear to be dung beetles, which are attracted to the lizard crap (which is composed of ants), which appears to kill off said dung beetles, which attracts more ants to eat the corpses, which attracts more lizards. Ah, the circle of life.

The beetle problem is growing rapidly because they like to die everywhere, enticing ants. This infestation is new – I never noticed them before.

A bird. For real.

Crazed black ants barred the front door while eating the corpse of a snake yesterday. I didn’t look down, and found myself a centimeter away from a dead snake, and my feet drowned in biting ants guarding their lunch.

Rats scampered between my garlic and their expansive mansion under the washing machine (or rather, their numerous condo properties all over our house). Earlier, they ate through our electrical wires as well as our washing machine wires.

Biting flies. Pale green, delicate, tiny, and freakishly painful.

I’m glad my roommates and I can bond over these creatures – they are always calling me to extricate, which is making me employable as a humane exterminator (i.e. one who moves animals outside, minus the ants, which I flick/kill because not even E.O. Wilson’s Ants can convince me that my keyboard or sheets are good hangout spots). This may be the only job I’m qualified for upon return to zee homeland.

My roommates are chill with everything else besides the animals themselves. Prevention is apparently not a thing. For instance, we’ve peaced out for 2 months (“summer” break) so I’m downstairs bleaching all our surfaces and appliances (trust me, ain’t nothing like introducing bleach to a 3rd world country), and washing dishes, and Puung, my beautiful 29-year-old roommate, comes down and exclaims, “What are you DOING?” Because hygiene is a pretty foreign concept around here. Why in the world would I clean?

Granted, given the rate of regression, it’s a question I ask myself. So far this term, in regard to the ants, I find that a few in the bed doesn’t hurt. Plummeting standards…

Consider the rural Thai doctor who examines a man with herpes and then moves into the next to give a child a physical without washing his hands. (My dear friend Megan spent March running around a Thai hospital, and she has many other lovely tidbits.)

In the beginning of May, my aunt visited. We hit up Bangkok, where she was surprised to learn that we were actually staying in one of the best parts of town. We hit up a small island, where we were both surprised to learn that we out-sabaied the Thai people by not making any reservations on a Thai holiday. Thanks to my running shoes and my pathetic appearance and Thai language skills, which extract sympathy from the peeps yo, we got ourselves a room. But others on our ferry were not so lucky

Watching my aunt – so sabai – figure out Thai culture filled me with happiness…now she knows how to say “Mai roo” (“I don’t know”) and “sabai”, that schedules are nonexistent, that you’ll never find anything twice (think that magic room in Harry Potter), that getting anywhere is an hours-long process where you rely on luck, sympathy, and more luck, and that being a customer is a privilege – not everyone wants your money. She also knows why no one gets anything done around here…it is just too darn hot.

We headed to Chiang Mai and stayed in a 5-star boutique spot that utterly, utterly, utterly destroyed any hope of a smooth transition to Phajuk Zoo, my ‘Dit home. We hung out with elephants, frequented monk chats, learned Thai massage, met lots of older travelers who about killed me with their travel stories (I mean, hiring drivers, thinking staying at the 5-star spot was like “living like the Thai people live”, etc. I hope I am that sabai when I’m old), and also generally tried to never leave our residence.

Our descent into the ‘Dit was metaphorical. But we stayed in the capitol city (UTTARADIT MUANG), and had access to food, which is kinda a novelty out in Phajuk. My aunt made my kids so happy…she is the bomb.

We ate at our local spot in the ‘Dit before she left, whereupon she left me with a great evolutionary question to ponder: “So, why does everyone have black hair? Don’t you think they’d pick up some highlights?”

And on that note, she was off, leaving me to wallow in the ‘Dit, a place I love, though it takes some getting used to again.

Finding food, literally having nowhere to go besides the bathroom post-7 pm, eating rice and two eggs for lunch everyday, trying to get bitten by as few animals as possible every day…

Yuun, a friend from the Trang jungle, came up to the ‘Dit on Saturday for a funeral. We got to chill, and at some point, he pointed out a monitor lizard in the underbrush. This confirmed I should wear my glasses more often, because these are my fave Thai animals (in the running, at least), and apparently they’re running all over the ‘Dit unbeknownst to me.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

CHINA (during 2 of the biggest Chinese political scandals in recent history (but this post ignores that))

[Warning: skip down 3 paragraphs for anything that relates to the title.]

Love from an real hotel room in Bangkok, courtesy of Fulbright. (I've taken a couple real showers and slept in a real bed and I'm the most clean/comfy I've been since America. For reals - jing jing.) 

After 5 weeks in the jungle and almost 4 weeks in China, I'm free (ISARAK in Thai) from Chinese blog censors. I'm pretending the censors specifically targeted my blog because I believe in freedom.

There are loads more stories from the Khao Chong forest that I'm skipping for the sake of posting anything at all. When it comes to recounting heaven on earth, the perfect is the enemy of the good.  I loved driving jeeps with my peeps through rivers (and getting stuck until 3 am in utter darkness), learning how to ride a motorcycle, marveling over the killing and consumption of weevils and monitor lizards, teaching long-haired jungle research dudes how to play Egyptian Ratscrew, swimming with all the little babies, and basking in God's mountains. "Crazy" and "Forest" sound the same in Thai (if you ignore tones, and I do mostly ignore tones) for good reason. Fulbright posted a tidbit I wrote on my life in the forest: "Lizard Eggs in my Luggage" (title is a rip-off from Gerald Durrell, who I love). Feel free to check it out on the Thai Fulbright site via the link.

Dear ones, China with Karen (the Chinese teacher from the 'Dit) reintroduced me to a nation that respects logic, a culture that is apparently down with PDA (?), and a people who like to YELL a lot. Also, forced chopstick use. In Thailand, men huddle and drink whiskey. In China, men huddle and play chess. I taught at Karen's old primary school for a couple days, and the kids LISTENED and the teachers respected me and everyone cared about learning. So beautiful. But as I headed back to Thailand on Sunday, all the peeps on my flight moshed me at the airport to marvel over my Thai (thank God, because I had to learn Chinese and was afraid of falling back in Thai). They kept making me cut in front of them in lines, giving me snacks, being so interested in me, and paying me extraordinary compliments; I felt IT IS GOOD TO GO HOME. And Thailand is home. 

But this post is about China. So here are a million silly stories and a handful of pictures from the first few weeks in China. I wrote this while traveling. Karen says it's literary. I taught her that. On purpose. So she could use it wrong.


Karen’s Country

I’m not in real China. I’m standing next to Guangzhou’s famously imposing opera house, staring at the Canton Tower. I’m not sure where I am, maybe downtown Chicago. But I’m definitely not in China.

Karen and I tour the Guangzhou Museum, nodding at inkstones, posing with arms folded in front of ancient Chaozhou woodcarvings. We stop at the puppets, but we can’t be bothered to look too long. Just take a picture. This isn’t even China.

Is this China, Karen?



at a real museum...wow this isn't the jungle and i need to ditch the t-shirts
Is this downtown Chicago + palm trees? Where is the third world??? And the billion people? I'm so confused.

We meet a girl on the subway. She’s asking if we need help; I’m asking if she needs help. I mean, we’re the ones with the map.

She’s 18, fashionable, and studies in London. We’re going in the same direction, we walk, cruising bakeries, but she doesn’t leave us. She watches us eat. “Wow, you two eat so much.” She refuses a bite. We’re in the Xienhepu District where the rich people and foreigners once settled, way back in the day. She invites us to her friend’s house because her friend “lives in a villa so you don’t need to sightsee.” She doesn’t care if we tag along or not, but I think she does, because she waits for us in another bakery, watching her weight, watching us.

Her friend is 19 and silly and wears clunky orange pumps about a mile high. She tells us that her father is an architect. “But he’s an….amateur,” she says. “Wow,” she adds, pleased with herself, glancing at me, “I know so many words!”

She’s rich. We know that because she tells us. She says she’s kidding as she cocks her head and pets her dog, which is in fact a polar bear, in my opinion. But I don’t know dogs that well.

She likes it when I name in English the furniture in the room. Grandfather clock. They all like that. Because it’s an antique, like their grandfathers.

I look at our subway friend and our rich friend. They are only girls, but they hold their phones in such a way that they look all grown up, so busy, so bored. They are the Guangzhou elite, clad in what is probably modern Chinese fashion, looking the part.

You two are so chic, I tell them. “Yes, I used to dress so mature. My mom told me, ‘You dress so mature,’ so now I try to dress young,” answers the rich girl. And I wonder if she thinks ‘chic’ means young or that her orange pumps have child written all over them. Because the only thing those orange pumps have written all over them is ‘wow.’ Even subway girl thinks the pumps are too much. “I saw your shoes down the block when you came to meet us,” she whispers to her friend, “and I had to call you. I don’t understand.”

So chic, I repeat. The rich girl smiles and hands me her iPhone and brushes back her hair. “Can you take our picture?” They lean sensually on each other even before I take the iPhone. “It’s a good thing I look even better in real life than I do in pictures,” she laughs.

We tour the house and end up staring at her brother, sleeping in his room. She says his name and he opens his eyes. He sees a white girl standing over him. “You are in my dreams,” he whispers, lazily fumbling for his glasses, unsure whether he really wants to wake up.

“Mmm, I wanted you to meet him,” says his sister as we exit. “He likes the foreign girls.” Our meeting was very short. I’m wearing a t-shirt and haven’t seen my comb for two days (Karen stole it). I’m not a very good dream.

She wants to know if I will tell Harvard Business School about her.

Maybe you should apply to college first, I tell the rich girl who will study at Harvard Business School.

“Mmm, the Bachelor’s degree?” she responds distractedly. She has the weight of the world on her shoulders.

Karen has long left us, stealing away my camera and photographing the house. “This is real China, very traditional,” Karen whispers in English. It’s a European-style villa, built by Europeans for Europeans. But there’s a shrine, with grapes in front of it, and later, I reach for one. Karen swats me away. “They’re for the ancestors,” she hisses. I think I’m hungry, I signal with my eyes.



I'M SO EXCITED TO SPEAK ENGLISH - CHINESE PEEPS ACTUALLY LIKE SPEAKING ENGLISH!!

Karen ditches me cuz I'm trying to talk China and politics. Secure the intellectual perimeter and whatnot.
the tea set

Karen and I spend Easter at a seminary. I thought China didn’t have churches. We make some calls to see if the church checks passports. Sometimes only the foreigners can attend church. Karen won’t pretend she’s American: “I’m the Chinese.”

It’s a recurrent topic of conversation.

“Remember how I like to pretend I’m Thai in Thailand? I would give anything to actually be able to pass as Thai,” I persuade her. “It’s fun – see how people treat you. It’s an experiment. And you could actually pass as American; you should try.”

“I’m the Chinese,” Karen declares. She’s a little disgusted. I think, no fun at all. She thinks, why would I want to pretend to be something I’m not?

At seminary church, little girls dance around in white dresses preparing for the Mandarin service. The church serves Dole orange juice and banana bread. A list of silly rules are printed on the back of the bulletin:

Don’t be late or leave early without a reason.
Don’t wear revealing clothes.
Prepare yourself for worship.

If I didn’t already love Jesus, I wouldn’t come back.

The Easter service isn’t traditional.

“He is Risen,” proclaims the pastor.
“Truly, He is Risen,” God’s people respond.

But I always say, “He is Risen Indeed.”


For a moment, I long for home.

Easter in China isn’t really Easter. So Chris, my friend from Harvard who graciously hosts us in Guangzhou, decides we need to spend the night drinking (in celebration of the resurrection). I buy peach rum. Our friend Peter from Easter/Yale/Fulbright buys Guinness.

Peter flirts with Karen. But Karen thinks Chris is the bomb.com.

“He’s manly, very smart, very kind,” she evaluates the next day. “Hmm, I think very good.”

But affection can only distract us for so long. Karen orders me to watch my purse for the millionth time. “Everything is stealed.” Karen insists that China is the nation of theft.

Chris agrees. “The train is full of thieves,” he reminds us on the day we leave. “I usually sleep with my laptop under my shirt. And I tuck in my shirt. And get the top bunk. But don’t drop your stuff on the floor. Because once I dropped my iPad and I got really depressed because I thought it was stolen, but the conductor guy found it. But the train is fun. You can read if you bring a light, and you can sit on the bottom bunk and make friends. It’s not like the bus.”

Before we get on the train, Karen calls her mom. I’m sitting on my bag, watching girls walk by in beautiful shoes. Their high-heel waddles butcher their auras.

“My mom was robbered,” Karen announces when she hangs up.

The train is fun. You can sit on the bottom bunk and make friends. Karen plops right down on that bottom bunk. “Umm, should we sit on other people’s beds?” I ask. The American in me is thinking about property rights. Karen looks at me like I’m nuts. “Where else can we sit?” she aggressively counters. This is real China.

Karen and I have a competitive friendship. We’re masters at mercilessly correcting one other. When we get angry or exasperated, we conclude with “This is just a culture thing.” That catchphrase enables our friendship to smooth over the rockiest moments, but it also muddies our perceptions of each other’s cultures.

We sit on the train and play the card game speed. I joke, you are China and I am America. Who will win? America wins a couple rounds. But before our last round is finished, Karen throws in the towel and declares, “I guess we’ll never know.” And she’s probably right.

Though you can’t say I’m not trying to seal the fate of the rivalry. We lie in our adjacent top bunks and I lecture Karen about the interconnectedness of the Chinese and American economies.

“You know,” I conclude, after a good forty minutes of fair statements. “China is very poor. Your GDP is the size of Namibia’s.”

Sometimes I refer to Karen as China. Trying to relate Karen’s opinion about Cantonese speakers in Guangzhou, I begin, “China says–” before catching myself.


China teaches me how to use chopsticks
Part II. We train it up to Guilin. Guangxi Province - Karen's home. 

I’ve acquired whiplash on the train by bumping my head. (China is for short people, even though Karen is the shortest Chinese person I’ve yet seen.) The rain starts as we enter the city. The train station is slippery and muddy. We walk down the stairs with my bag and I slip and fall, sliding down 4 or 5 steps. There’s a chorused gasp around me, but nobody helps me up or sees if I’m okay. This isn’t friendly Thailand. This is real China.

On the street, a young man with long hair and a mustache approaches us with an iPhone he had just pick-pocketed. He’s positioned so he’s facing away and holding the iPhone outstretched behind him; his neck is craning to look us temptingly in the eye. He’ll sell it for 2,000 yen. Karen gets the picture and walks on; I’ve lived in Thailand too long – I think he’s maybe asking for my number.

……Dear Karen is such a sweetheart and a picture of perseverance. Seeing her world and her home made me realize how completely incompatibly our lives have gone done. For us to end up in the 'Dit together is a love story. More on this thought in independent convos for those who are interested......

Leo, a 25-year old Chinese computer genius (I mean, let’s be real) helped us install new internet stuff. We temporarily leave with Leo to pick up a motorcycle (he drops us off in a lot and then goes to pick up some parts). Karen and I end up a bit stranded after we realize we forgot the motorcycle key. Karen freaks out about Leo not being able to get back into the apartment and about life in general. She pouts and I lecture her when I can’t stand it anymore (which takes approx. 4 minutes): find happiness in the moment, it’s not the end of life as we know it, Leo will understand, don’t pity yourself, etc. etc.

We get home and the door’s wide open because Leo borrowed the spare key from the neighbor. I mime to Leo that I think he did tae-kwon-do to get into the apartment. Leo tells Karen that I must be American because I think all Chinese can do kung fu. Actually Leo, I said tae-kwon-do and I don’t discriminate in favor of the Chinese – I think all Asians can do tae-kwon-do.

Leo leaves but the internet doesn’t work right away. Karen eats a kumquat and takes a nap. Before she lies down, she pours boiling water into a cup and hands it to me. I shake my head. She thrusts it at my chest and smirks, “This is China.”

And in China, as Karen has told me, people only care about themselves. In China, people are greedy. In China, people don’t smile. In China, people don’t like you unless you spend lots of money. In China, people drink hot water.

That’s what China says.

“Do you know the word ‘stereotype’?” I ask.
“No,” Karen replies.
“Okay. That’s okay.”

We visit her aunt and uncle in the afternoon

We flirt with Leo later that night. A storm hits and the internet goes back out. “Call him,” Karen commands. I call him and repeat the only phrases I remember: you’re super cute, hello, and his name. Then I toss Karen the phone.

She sneers when she hangs up. “Do you know what he said? He said, ‘I’m playing video games so I can’t talk to you too much.’ Crazy!!!! That’s why he’s poor,” Karen spits disgustedly.

She storms out and later wanders back in. I think she’s rescinding her harsh prediction of Leo’s fate. I’m wrong. “Let me say why I think he’ll be always poor. Two things: because he’s not smart, first, and then he’s lazy. He’s not like Chris. Now that’s a man I respect.”

We discover that my computer works with the ethernet cord while her computer doesn’t. “It’s my computer that’s the problem!” Karen gasps. “Wow, we shouldn’t have Leo come tomorrow. Because if he comes, we have to pay him 10 yen!” Let me clarify for the reader that 10 yen is approximately $1.60.

Leo will always be poor.

In Guilin (and, as we discover later, Beijing), people think I’m Russian. After the third random person inquires, Karen takes a good long stare at my face.

“I agree,” she evaluates scientifically. “You look Russian.” I tell her she only thinks that because she’s never seen a Russian. I’m right:

“What do Russians look like?” she subsequently asks.

“I don’t know…they have blue eyes,” I answer ambiguously, due to my lack of knowledge about Russians.

“All of them?” Karen asks, surprised.

“Probably not.”

It’s part of a recurrent discussion on identifying people by ethnicities. I tell Karen she can often distinguish between Thai and Chinese because she’s lived in those countries (not to mention the blaring fact that she’s Chinese). I can distinguish between Americans and Europeans because I’ve been most exposed to western culture and people. Yes.

We play the European versus American versus Australian game all of April. For the record, I am super good at that game. And Americans don't come to Asia as much.

Karen’s uncle treats us to fancy Chinese brunch. Karen snaps a picture of us and he studies the resulting image. He tells Karen that I look much better in pictures than in real life because my nose is high. Thank you, Uncle Karen. 


Grandma Yie Yie and the Ancient Village that looks like Damascus + rice

(pictures first, explanations later)







village entertainment with Karen's friends who came to visit Nie Nie



honey and water in Guilin

to Guilin on the train




literally Karen's kindergarten that has been abandoned due to depopulation in the countryside






NIE NIE!!!

in Guilin before the village - Karen's uncle's wife's students


To grandmother’s house we go on Saturday afternoon. She resides in “the village.” Said village never reveals its name.

We take a bus to the nearest main road and then retrieve Karen’s bicycle from a tiny roadside shop. The village is a fair 25 minutes away. Karen rides and I walk because I’m unconvinced by her claims that she can pedal the both of us + luggage. After trekking quite a distance, I cave and hop on. We make it about 200 meters before biffing it in the mud. We are laughing so hard at the ridiculousness of the mud and the cloudy sky and the abandoned road and our heavy bags and our delicate bicycle and our adventure to the village that I forget “I told you so.”

[picture – bike accident]

But I remember it on the morrow when I see the gigantic black spotted bruise that looks like death.

Grandmother’s home is brand new and the upper floor reminds me of a country lodge. It is a welcoming place tucked away in what may be the middle of nowhere. (But competition is steep – since coming to Asia, I’ve seen a lot of candidates for the middle of nowhere.) Grandmother is super touched by my visit. We’re in a room alone together and she hugs me like no tomorrow. Grandmother is smaller than Karen and wears the signs of age and labor. Her hands are bent and crinkled and wrinkled.

Four of Karen’s friends – two boys and two girls, all a couple years older than I am – will spend a night with us and are already preparing dinner when we arrive.

They think I’m just like a movie star because of my high nose. “Mmm, classy,” appraises one girl. “Yes, so high,” says another.

“But don’t you think all white people look like movie stars then?” I ask, eliciting a comment about my particular beauty.

“Yes, you all look like movies stars,” Karen’s friend replies, smashing my dreams of nasal uniqueness.

We kill a big spider – probably the biggest spider I’ve ever seen. And I’ve seen a lot of big spiders because spiders are sometimes my hobby. I merely point out said spider crawling beside grandfather and one of the boys smashes it. He then tracks spider legs all over the room and doesn’t bother cleaning them up.

This is because in China, the floor is the trash can. I could say so much about this. But I’ll refrain.

I play cards with grandmother. We eat papaya. Everyone else has long abandoned us to sit on a bed and drink beer. Grandmother and I play ‘War’. We quit so grandmother can drink tea. No one wins.

In the morning, Karen wakes me up early (9:30) to traipse through the rice fields. The frogs croak hidden underneath the grasses. Frogs so loud that I keep scanning for ugly birds cooing ugly noises. A man plows his field underneath a cemetery sprouting up on the limestone mountain.

[picture – man and cows]

We visit her grandfather at the rock mine. He is the lone man working; the rest sit gambling at a small tea party-sized table. That is perhaps the best way to describe Chinese tables  – they are the tables we used as children to sit our American girl dolls at while we pretended to be proper. We stuck our pinkies out. We ate unidentifiable morsels from our Easy Bake Ovens. The chairs are adorable.

The rock mine boss loses 1,000 yen.

Karen’s grandfather teaches me Kung Fu. He encouragingly bobs his head and gives me a thumbs-up. But he tells Karen in Chinese that I’m not sturdy or powerful.

He reads me like a book. So much so that later he spots a green tailed butterfly and calls me over. It is one of many humungous Lepidoptera perching on the building’s walls. They love it here, translates Karen, because at night, the lightbulbs are on. It seems to me a suspect reason, but the Lepidoptera are indeed perching beside the unlit lightbulbs.

 [ picture – butterflies ]

Despite the unique butterflies, the wall carries a curse. Painted in Chinese characters: Whoever steals our dogs will die.

We head back to Karen’s village. Her village is like Damascus. Clay brick houses filled with sticks, many abandoned. Not that that’s my picture of Damascus. But it kind of is. I feel like I’m in the Middle East 2,000 years ago. Karen’s old school is one of the abandoned buildings filled with sticks. It is gorgeously dilapidated.

“I studied here when I was 5. I was very stupid. The teachers beat me every day. I went home but I could never remember the assignment. Nobody wanted to be my friend.” It is a fond memory.

In the afternoon, Karen and I walk to the vegetable garden on the mountain slope. Karen stops and grabs rice shoots from a village woman and tosses them into the wet field. I try too, though my shoot ends up on a lump of mud and the village woman says something that I don’t understand. 

Karen tells me that it’s okay we left her friends behind because they don’t like to go outside. But two of them come up while Karen picks vegetables (and I take pictures). Karen teaches them American slang – ‘the third wheel’ – and I feel redundant, like my work here is finished.

On the way home, Karen comments that many of her friends study politics. “But I don’t like politics,” she laughs for the millionth time. “The Chinese news serves the government so we just hear, ‘Oh, this leader is visiting the poor people and this leader is talking with other countries.’ We only hear the good things.

This makes it difficult when I’d like to talk about Taiwan with a real live Chinese person. Before, Karen was frustrated when I brought up Taiwan somewhat incidentally in Uttaradit. After hearing that Chris and I have similar political views, she just says she doesn’t follow politics.

In the village, Karen served as translator while I conversed with a real live Chinese person – Karen’s 27-yr-old male friend who studied social science – about Taiwan and Facebook:

We see the world from different viewpoints. America cares about America. China cares about China. We have the same goal – keep our countries safe and secure. I ask about censorship. Once, he says, England censored a video about people blowing up buildings. China is just doing the same thing. I ask about the younger generation. Do they think the same things? What about the youth using software to access censored sites like Facebook? Should they be fined? I don’t know, he says. The government has a good purpose, and so do the people who use the software. Everyone thinks they’re doing the right thing. I ask him about the media. He says American media hides things as well. China’s media is just doing the same thing, only more officially.

He asks me who elected Obama, who donated to the campaign, telling me that politics are corrupt everywhere. I tell him he can find out online. He tells me there are terrible things about America that I don’t know. I tell him that the people who hate America the most live in America. And they tell everyone. Americans enjoy conflict, a good expose, revealing the dark side. We aren’t a country that covers stuff up. I believe this more and more the longer I live in Asia.

Should Taiwan be a part of China? Taiwan is a part of China; it will always be; we are one.

I don’t know what I want him to say. I probably wanted him to be slightly less predictable.

He hasn’t heard of Facebook.

Karen’s friends return to the city. As Karen says, “we should pick them,” which means that we should accompany them to the road where the bus will pick them up. Karen analyzes the two boys who spent the night.

“I like the fatter one. The one who smokes. I think not bad, huh? He’s more manly. The skinny one is not protective. The girls want to keep walking but he’s lazy and wants to go home. He should listen to them. That’s why I have the white fever.”

Karen has the white fever. I’m supposed to find her a boyfriend. I’ve found her 3. But one doesn’t swing that way, one is previously engaged, and one is Chinese. She wouldn’t even look at the Chinese boyfriend. Karen thinks white men are more protective.

We pass some chickens. I comment on their girth. “Mph,” Karen grunts. “Those chickens aren’t fat. They’re big and very tasty. In China, after the women give birth to a child, they eat chicken soup.

“But at my grandmother’s house, the chickens don’t give birth to eggs everyday. They give birth only some days.”

So we try to find eggs to buy. But we only find duck eggs. And they are furry. And I don’t like furry duck eggs.

On the muddy paths through the rice field back to the village, Karen lies down. She is beautiful.

Near her home, a woman plants her fields. We grab a sheet of seedlings and get to work. Karen deserts me after approximately 2 minutes. I stay for an hour throwing those shoots into the paddies. Children swarm in now and then to help me, though they swarm out nearly as quickly as they come. Eventually, the children steal me away to essentially beat me. And kick mud at me. Chinese children are violent.

An elderly man who watches me plant rice wobbles over to grandmother’s house to praise my work. The American girl plants the rice very well. One thousand Chinese farm points.

New day

It is only 7 am and I’ve already sparked a vicious village soap opera. Grandmother, upon hearing that some of the village boys kicked mud at me and punched me the night before (all in good fun, perhaps; as Karen says, “Chinese children are shy and violent”), made a visit to a boy’s grandmother. One thing led to another and both grandmothers ended up back at our house yelling at each other so loudly that the whole neighborhood was on pins and needles. Apparently grandmother 2 wanted to wake me up to get the details before she punished her grandson. Grandmother would absolutely not disturb my sleep but thought that boy should be beat, beat, beat. A fight ensued. Yelling matches are common occurrences in China.

7:30 am is follow-the-leader time. Karen and I trek through villages and fields with the schoolchildren to the tiny primary school, Karen’s alma mater. About 120 students. I fall in love.

The babies get to school early and so do we. Karen and I are the only ‘adults’, and the teachers apparently come much later every morning. The babies follow me everywhere when I have my back turned toward them. If I turn around, they sprint away in every direction. This is of course my dream use of time. At one point, the students gather near the entrance, with some students leaning out the windows on the second floor. I stand 30 meters outside the entrance and dance.

It’s after 9 when the first teacher rolls in. They witness the mutiny.

Karen is responsible and finds the school director. I show the kids the bird call. The school director alerts other primary schools about my visit, and literally thirty teachers/directors and the superintendent come from around the region to observe me. They watch me teach all morning, sitting in the back of the room on little stools. I am a celebrity.

At lunch, 30 teachers head to the nearest actual town to eat. This is where I learn about the Chinese toast. At meals, they toast each other about every 20 seconds. Our table had about 15 people around it. We stand up, tap the paper cups on the big heated bowl on our table, and then bump our peanut milk or weird egg-tea-whiskey against all the other peanut milks and egg-tea-whiskies. Toasts happened, I kid you not, about 40 times during lunch.

“She has not adapted to our toasts,” a teacher says (a fact I only know due to Karen’s translation). Which is true. I generally eat sitting down if I’m at a table.

Back at school, I play in the school field before classes start. I make up a game that involves no explanation or behavior management. I sing Ring around the Rosie at the top of my lungs, fall down, stand up and then point at a kid, yell “You!” and chase said child all around the school yard. Repeat. 100 kids participate in utter rapture for 30 minutes.

By the end of the day, I’ve taught introductions, crocodile features + opposites (it’s nearly impossible for me to talk to a large group of people without mentioning crocodiles – it’s my comfort topic), and a few other things that guarantee fluency within 4-6 weeks to the 2-6th grades.

This is likely the best teaching experience I’ve ever had: children filled to the brim with happiness in the classroom, eagerly listening, eagerly repeating, eagerly participating. Thirsty for knowledge. Despite all the crazy things I hear about urban China, the median number of students per class is 20, with the third-grade class being only 16.

[picture – kids at school]

No uniforms, unlike Thailand. The teachers –practically all women – wear pants, even jeans or leggings. In Thailand, they dress far more prettily. The babies just wear their play clothes, often the same clothes everyday from what I gather, messy as heck, caked with dirt stains, shoes falling apart. In Uttaradit, I forget how poor the students are until I see them outside of school because they wear uniforms. Here, those ripped t-shirts are a constant reminder.

The best thing about this school is that the kids have to listen (unlike Thailand, where teachers don’t really give a ‘(Uttara)Dit). The worst thing about this school is that outside of class, the kids are actually wild. As in wild animals. As in uncivilized. As in vicious. As in the Lord of the Flies cast. This is all very well and safe if the children are captured and caged and you look in at them, but I’m not an observer – I’m the bestest toy these kids have ever seen. And I’ve fallen right into the lion’s den.

Luckily, the mosh pit that forms around me during class breaks and after school only results in one child crying. Two children master the bird call.



they watched me teach

i promise i only teach the birdcall before and after class

teaching may be only for my personal benefit
this is the best bird i've ever drawn




We walk home with our village’s kids. Kids push each other over drops into the fields. They chillax on the grass. They catch butterflies then lick their fingers.

We wash our clothes in the river. Well, Karen washes, and I talk about boys after complaining that there’s no way our clothes can get clean if we scrub them on the pavement by the river. Our clothes get clean.

Karen wades to the other bank of the river. She must make an appearance at her family’s field to show them that she “cares about planting rice.” What a diplomat.

I retrieve chicken eggs with grandmother in their old house-turned-chicken coup. I thank God I don’t live in the chicken coup.

I eat those eggs. Aroi mok, as the Thai say. How chur, as the Chinese say.

But I miss American water. And for a second, eating vegetables and rice like I’ve done for the past 7 months, I miss Trader Joe’s.

New Day

It’s drizzling. The rice planting means the fields are wet and muddy anyway, but this morning is especially slippery on the little raised mud paths that weave through the fields. On the way to school, Karen warns me “Be careful!” too late. I slide off the path into the muddy field. The muddy sinking sand. I can’t pull my feet out. So I eat reach my hand holding my egg cake thing around the umbrella I’m caring and take a bite. Karen is exasperated. Always too slow, she says. This is not the time to eat your breakfast. But we can’t stop laughing, which makes pulling me out a near impossible task. In fact, we almost call over some farmers to help. I think God helps us, because I finally retrieve both my feet and my sandals. I walk barefoot to the next village near the river.

I scrape off mud from my shoes and pants with sharp rocks in the river. Karen stands on a bridge disapprovingly. Always too slow, she says. Stuck in the mud. Eating your breakfast. Always too slow, always late, you are slower than the Thai.

My babies at school are the crown jewels of my heart. Oh how they listen, and oh how I love. A mere day ago, I think Chinese children are insane violent criminals. Today they are children.

We learn about crocodiles and birds, running and eating, worms and eggs, sleeping and WAKE UP!, hungry and yummy, happy and bored. Acting, singing, dancing, talking, talking, talking. Stick your tongue out – “TH”.

I eat dog. Chopsticks thrust into every which dish. In and out of that bowl of dog meat, I watch them maneuver to my vegetables, I watch the teachers stick those greasy chopsticks into my eggs. Sharing these bowls, sharing these germs, sharing that poor canine pet slaughtered, chopped up, and sold at the market. The teachers tell Karen they like me because I’m so carefree. I’m adapted to Chinese meals. But I’m not. I’m just left resourceless, languageless, know-how-less in a foreign dog-eating land.

When I was little, sometimes the neighborhood kids and I would discuss China. Usually in reference to Tikki Tikki Tembo or some other such story. Or nuclear weapons. Or fortune cookies. And a kid, usually an annoying boy with a sneer, would inevitably interject, “THEY EAT DOGS IN CHINA!”

And you know what? That annoying sneering boy was absolutely right. They eat dogs in China.

dog in a bowl
Besides making my physically ill, the teachers sit around debating about teaching philosophy. The teachers, who’ve sat in the back taking notes in every class I’ve taught, say they understand my teaching style. Karen translates, “They’ve learned they should praise the children more.”

We’re eating in what is essentially a small prison cell, complete with barred window, walls stained in weird ways, and a TV. And I think, hmmm, prison cell, China, and philosophy…Who can blame me for the thought associations of Karl Marx and communism?

Karen gets caught up in a heated debate about ping pong. Chinese villagers love to yell. You win the argument if you have the loudest voice. Karen most definitely lied to me by omission when she stayed silent in Uttaradit when I told her that Americans love to debate. Well, maybe the Chinese don’t love to debate, but they do love to yell at each other. “They have nothing else to do,” Karen laughs. I, on the other hand, am not willing to joke. I am afraid I will get shot by the yelling village grandmothers. Or plowed to death. 

In class, I teach the kiddies to say that Karen is beautiful. This is my most unwittingly brilliant move. The boys run up to me after lunch and say, Rachel you are beautiful. Rachel you are very beautiful. Rachel you are beautiful. I hug them. They push their friends forward so they can tease each other when I chase them to hug them. Shrie die la, I reply. The one Chinese phrase I remember and pronounce correctly: you are super handsome.

Yesterday, two girls gave me candy. I kissed them on the forehead. Now they’ve told their friends about the kiss from Rachel. So they are becoming more and more brave, nudging each other forward, copying the boys, Rachel you are beautiful, testing me to see if I’ll bestow more kisses. Darling girls, I say, you are beautiful. And I kiss them.

I teach the 5th grade girls line dancing. Or what I call the line dance, which is a series of choppy movements I make up on the spot that includes a warped grape vine and a do-si-do.

The school director commands us to play ping pong. This is Chinese tradition – prove your worth through your ping pong game. It feels like a test. We stand our ground, each individually. The 5th grade watches intently. The school director apparently teaches physical education. He is one of three male teachers, and by far the youngest (about 50), constantly smiling.

I tell one of the teachers how happy/crazy the children are; she says it’s because I’m here and that before, there was no “fun teaching” so the kids weren’t so happy/crazy. The no-fun-teaching part might be true. But I doubt these kids are ever anything but happy/crazy.

Afternoon classes start late so the students can form a mosh pit around me and do the hokey pokey and interpretive dance. It’s like one great big mosh pit game of follow-the-leader. I raise my hand, they raise their hands. I jump like a rabbit, they jump like rabbits. I turn around while shaking violently, they turn around while shaking violently.

It. Is. Seriously. A. Glorious. Moment.

[picture – mosh pit]

And it makes my heart so full…it is worth coming all the way to China, all the way to Guangxi, all the way to a tiny village, all the way through the rice fields hidden behind limestone mountains, to this little school hidden behind a cemetery, just to meet these precious ones. Just to let them run away from the kisses I blow.

And I am good at blowing kisses, much thanks to a handful of Thai girls at the Uttaradit market. Toss kisses up like tennis balls and serve them to a child. Or like baseballs and bat them. Or like volleyballs. I have so many kisses to give. These children have so many kisses to receive.

I start to cry when we leave. Karen rolls her eyes. The children run after me. Bye bye Rachel you are beautiful.

Two days of 100+ children following me and copying everything I do. Two days of 100+ children shyly wanting my kisses. Two days of 100+ children listening to me like angels in the classroom. Two days of 100+ children calling Hello Rachel, Rachel, Rachel.

Two days of hearing my name, my real name, not my Thai name.

The only downsides of the day are the bathroom situation and the fact that I’m a terrible vegetarian because people stuck their doggy chopsticks into my food. A Thai woman had warned me not to come to China because the bathroom stall walls are waist-high so people watch each other do their business. It’s true that China has a greater percentage of squat toilets than Thailand (or perhaps not, maybe I’m just really good at avoiding squat toilets and being dehydrated). But today is the first time I encounter one of those low-wall stalls. And it was nearly a traumatic moment. If it were actually a traumatic moment, I wouldn’t write about it. I probably wouldn’t even be alive right now. Luckily, I could stem the torrent of massive cultural misunderstanding because it happened with Karen.

I tell Karen I need to go to the bathroom. She accompanies me so she can read the Chinese characters to identify the women’s bathroom. The school’s teacher bathroom has two low-walled stalls. I go in and am locking the main door when Karen nonchalantly pushes open the door and follows me. Yeah, no, that’s not gonna happen, I tell Karen. She is confused. But I need to go to the bathroom, she says. Yeah, not right now, I say. Why? There are two stalls, she points out. Ha, definitely not right now, I say. I am American. I am not Chinese.

I love you, but I am not peeing with you.

Karen plays ping pong with the director

one of these bags is not like the other...

follow the leader and never go to class
We go to the market and miss the little songteow that could take us home (see dead chicken picture above). Karen is stressed, stressed, stressed that we’ll miss it, and we do. “HA, what a joke,” exclaims Karen. “We’re always so slow.”

We walk home. Karen finds me a spot to pee next to the road. She thinks it’s adequately concealed. Seeing as I can see all the people driving past on their motorcycles, I firmly disagree. Karen, ever since I left America, people stare at me and watch my every move, I stand out like tie-dye, I’m not peeing next to the road. She says I’m crazy. I think she wants her village to watch me pee. She stands there laughing, under the limestone mountains, eating a peanut biscuit.

We meet a man on the way home who tells Karen that I’m beautiful. But there are gradients of beauty in conversational Chinese. He means that you’re about a 7, Karen translates. So is that a 6 or 7, or a 7 or 8? I ask. He could mean you’re an 8, actually, Karen acquiesces. Okay, let’s take 8. That’s pretty good.

[In Beijing, men say I’m about a 9 [that could mean 8]. Because I’m Russian.]

We pass a group of men huddling around two Chinese chess players. It’s the male pastime. The Chinese peeps always play intellectual games. The schoolchildren spend lots of free time at school in the library. Karen says the Chinese are a lot smarter than the Thai. I am from Uttaradit, so I really have to stay out of that.

I can, however, say that I am not considered particularly smart. At Karen’s aggressive request, I showed Nie Nie (Grandmother) and Yeah Yeah (Grandfather) a few songs from my teaching. It’s after dinner and we’re sitting in our little tea party chairs and I have to drag Yeah Yeah up to sing “I want to be your friend” with me. The song has some pretty sweet actions. Yeah Yeah is a good sport, but I’m about 95% sure that he thinks I’m utterly stupid. He leaves immediately afterward and later on the phone with his son, mocks the dance. “She didn’t do much while she was here,” he begins. “She can’t cook very well, and she didn’t work at the quarry, but she did dance for us. Like she was dancing with ghosts [shout out to Karen’s translation on everything],” Yeah Yeah relates.

Oh Yeah Yeah, if only you knew how popular that song is with 8-year-olds.

New Day

I prepare to leave the ancient Chinese farm village for Yanshuo. I almost think I don’t need to explore Guangxi any farther. I’m living under the limestone mountains in the rice fields in a miniscule village that looks like Damascus and has roaming roosters and children who’ve never seen foreigners and dogs being slaughtered and cows traipsing down the narrow dirt streets. I’ve planted rice and fallen in the mud and picked vegetables and eaten homecooked meals and washed my clothes in the river and fed the chickens with Nie Nie and learned Kung Fu from Yeah Yeah. I’ve slept early and woken early, warmed myself at the fire where we cook after dark, chased the children and heard the croaking frog choruses.

And now to stay in a hostel in Yanshuo? Maybe I will live with Nie Nie and Yeah Yeah forever. I don’t even know the name of this place, much less remember the names of all these children. In the village, people ignore the one-child policy. Nie Nie was concerned that people might think Karen and I are spies from the government when we wander through the other villages. In the village, people are more free, planting rice until dark, eating rice until midnight. Free to love children, give them life.

Karen leaves me early in the morning for the dentist in the city. We’ve been joined at the hip since I arrived at the Guangzhou airport, so I’m kinda hapless without her. I clean Nie Nie’s upstairs lodge area without asking Nie Nie to locate the cleaning supplies. So it takes me a freakishly long time, much like everything I do. My mopping is half-hearted because the midnight storm soaked the hallway and muddy shoes desecrated the entire house. Mommy says it’s not that I can’t mop well; it’s that I choose not to mop well. I agree.

Nie Nie walks me to the main road. This is quite the hike, and not a short one, so I’m much indebted and constantly trying to send her back. I say “wah” (“I”) and point onward and say “nee” (“you”) and point toward home. She refuses to leave me. Our journey is an arduous one: incredibly slow and full of Nie Nie lecturing me about something while simultaneously interjecting compliments about my character. Or at least that’s what I surmise…my Chinese is nonexistent at best. She’s holding her waist in a bit of agony; Karen’s told me countless times about her grandmother’s physical problems. Nie Nie is trying to persuade me to take her umbrella as it might rain. She doesn’t realize that the farther she gets from home, and the farther her journey back, the less likely it is that I’ll steal her umbrella. After all, I’ll be on a bus while she’s still slowly walking home.

I succeed at one point in sending her home when she knows I’ve seen her holding her waist. We hug, and she says my name, “Reshey” (I can’t spell her rendition…it sounds nothing like English, much less my name). Tears start piling up in her eyes.

I’m human, so I can’t help tears either – here’s tiny Nie Nie all hunched over and with those gnarly hands that look like stems holding my hand and petting my hair and forcing hard-boiled eggs from her chickens on me and walking me all the way across the fields and fields and fields and giving me a cute red paper packet with money as a blessing (Chinese tradition) and I am empty-handed and touched and so ridiculously late.

Karen joins me not too long after I arrive in Yangshuo and we spend the late afternoon biking around curvy roads along the Li River and through the limestone mountains. We of course don’t stop at any “sights” (except to take pictures from the road) due to our cheapness and lateness (mostly the former). But we find a glorious windy road tripping through the mountains, populated by [mountain?] lambs.

Dinner’s at the bakery. Never have we seen a bakery we haven’t entered. To Chris’ chagrin in Guangzhou. He didn’t know that he couldn’t politely appease our longing eyes resting on that streetcorner bakery when we were theoretically late to meeting someone by saying “I mean, I guess we have time.” That was all we needed, Chris. We’re going in.

Yangshuo is nice, but we just came from the farm village, which is likewise littered with limestone peaks. We’re jaded. We’re villagers.

Ghangxi’s limestone region reminds me of Perelandra. So ridiculously magical, hard to imagine scenery more gorgeous.

But you can count on us to try. We left Yangshuo before 24 hours passed for the Longji rice terraces and Tiantou village. The Yao ethnic minority group calls this spot home.

Tiantou – “The road to Music from Paradise”

It took us hours to hit up that terraced rice. After hopping off the bus in a ‘transfer’ village, we were pitied and coaxed onto a random bus to chase the correct bus, which was the very last bus of the day and had already left. Or so they say (which in this case was true). The buses stop early because it’s dangerous to drive up to the terraces in the dark. We successfully chased down the correct bus farther up the mountain, which was driven by an insane man. We almost died several times, jerking around the tightest turns. I’m standing next to a villager with two burlap sacks that are moving suspiciously. I figure out that it’s because the bags have animals inside when the bag starts crawling onto my feet. The man just smiles at me, and I think, “Um, is he gonna get his chickens off my feet anytime soon?” Answer: no.

We arrive at DaZhai and hike hike hike in the twilight to Tiantou. Gasping for breath and totally , we thank Jesus that a few village kids head up at the same time.

“Since I’ve met you, I’ve been really busy. You always want to go here and there, do this and that. Now I have to take a shower and do laundry…wow, so busy!” Karen tells me, making me wish we could’ve halted all our busy stayed longer in Tiantou, cuddling under the fluffy white comforters with our windows flung open and moths flying in and out with the cool breeze.

We could stay here forever. Here, we leave a bit of the tranquility of our hearts. The remainder of our time together is hardly so peaceful, so carefree, so lost in the thin air of the mountains, breathing deeply all for a mist. 

Beijing

The journey to Beijing is stressful, pulling strings to get Megan (my friend from Fulbright who joins us in China) on the full train. Luckily, Karen’s friend knows the conductor, and he gives Megan his bed. NBD. That’s how much Jesus loves us.

We love the Summer Palace, but not for the reasons we should. Not the history, or the architecture, or the buildings, or that feeling that we’re walking where out ancestors once walked. We love the Summer Palace because it’s spring. The wildflowers bloom, the lilacs blossom all around us, reminding Megan and I of home. The mockingbirds and their classic tails perch here and there, being so obvious that even we couldn’t miss them. Don’t walk on the grass, but we do. The lake-dividing bridge (aptly named because it divides two lakes, as the signs constantly remind us) populated by parallel rows of weeping willows and low, crooked dark trees with thick pink flowers.

The couple practicing their accordion and violin duets, who could set up a money case but don’t even try. Our favorite “where are they from?” game, which we master.

In the Garden of Harmony, we bask in the sunshine. I stare at the ripples’ reflections on the painted ceilings of the pavilions, Karen and Megan watch the “golden fish” dart to and fro. We stroll to a forgotten corner of the garden, and Karen stops, points, and exclaims, “These fish are happier! These fish are so happy!” And we are happy too, in that Garden of Harmony.

Karen leans back on me, but quickly straightens up and glares at me, “You’re good looking, but not good touching. Megan, you’re such good touching. But I’m good looking and good touching. Oh! (looking between Megan and I) I feel so sorry for you two!”

We leave the Summer Palace, whole sweet potatoes in hand, for the metro. We’re riding back home when we pass the Peking University East Gate stop. “Ooo, we could theoretically stop here and visit the university.” It’s a moment of perfect harmony, thanks to the harmony garden. Without confirming with each other, we all three spontaneously and independently jerk up and sprint off the train. Classy moment.

I think those train peeps respected us. Those passive looks didn't fool me.

Peking University…Soviet campus mixed with Ivy and those recurring pink flowers, how we wish we knew the name! The library. All these brilliant young Chinese students milling around us, doing tai chi, watching us watch them. Feeling like we’re back in college, eating nasty Chinese pancakes on dirty steps, buying drinks from the convenience store.


Great Wall in abandoned mountains. We're the only visitors. Totally abandoned spot. Surreal. (Tiantou and the Great Wall and Nie Nie and rice planting were easily the trip's highlights.) 

Hiking up the mountains pre-Great Wall, I saw a goose stuck between 2 fences. To Megan's embarrassment, I tracked down the man who lived near those fences and communicated to him in Chinese about his stuck goose. Just kidding. I acted it out. NOBODY TAUGHT ME TO SAY "SIR, YOUR GOOSE IT STUCK" in Chinese. WHAT THE HECK. That's apparently more handy than "Hello" and "How much is this?"  Gotta figure that out in Thai...

Finally get ourselves onto the VERY LONG MOUNTAIN WALL sans ladder (K and M heart-attack-ing) after several near death experiences. Answered my lifelong question about if/why the Great Mountain is effective. It is yo. Also, you climb up mountains to get on the wall and while you're on the wall. Makes sense now that we think about it. But we really didn't get the strenuous exercise memo in history class.

Killer mountain top experience and all that. You had to be there. Praised Jesus.

Slept in a woman's tiny freezing cold house with a natural gas leak.

We love the Great Wall. We claimed it for America. You're welcome, America. We figured you didn't have enough to deal with all the Chinese peeps seeking asylum in our embassies.
just a classy Tienanmen square, China-knees-American democracy picture
apparently the faces we unthinkingly make outside the communist party building

these noodles beat us

summer palace



just us and our wall