Tag Archives: best of…

gatlinburg in mid-july

I’ve often wondered about what it would have been like to live in a pre-Empire Strikes Back world. To have seen the menace of Darth Vader and not known that he was Luke’s father. To have gone to the theatre and been thrown down a bottomless shaft myself when the secret was revealed.

As it is though, I’ve known about that father-son connection since I knew about Star Wars. When I was six I had my tonsils removed and my mom’s friend rented me a VCR and some videos to watch during my recovery. The only one I remember was Empire. I didn’t quite get who everyone was and what was going on but it was pretty hard to miss the fact that the big dude in black was the good guy’s dad, and the good guy didn’t seem too happy about it.

Now looking at little orphan boy Luke you can see how he’d idolized his dead father. He knew that his dad had been a great pilot and was trying to follow in his footsteps in the face of incomplete information. I suppose it’s something that us sons who’ve never known their dads think about sometimes. And we probably end up more like our dads than we would if they were around.

I mean, if my dad were somewhere other than the cemetery I’d be trying to distance myself from him in my effort to be an individual. The people saying I look just like him would be way more frustrating. I don’t have someone to look at as an example of what I’ll turn out like twenty some-odd years down the line. Hell, I’m older than my dad ever got to be. It’s often a lot easier to idealize someone who’s long gone and you don’t have any reality to fit your ideas to.

Finding out your idealized dad isn’t the whole picture is something that’s sort of shocking.

And when I say idealize I’m also including making some sort of monster out of him. That’s what Obi-Wan is doing in Return of the Jedi when he tries to get Luke to kill Vader. As always, people are more complex than ideal versions, good or bad. What Luke eventually ended up doing though was facing who his father was, painful as it may have been, and found the good in him along with the bad.

Sometimes I wish I had the chance to do that kind of thing but I don’t. I do have an awesome Mom who more than makes up for not having someone to kick and gouge in the mud and the blood and the beer.

Happy Father’s Day.

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you can’t both be wedge; you can’t both be luke

Remember back in elementary school when they taught you all about bicycle safety? Older readers who were thrown in front of traffic on two wheels might not, but I grew up in the ’80s, and we got this stuff all the time (though I’m still a touch old to be part of the “wearing a helmet is natural” generation). It was all about defensive riding to stay safe.

“Suspect everyone is a raving maniac out to destroy you and your fragile little contraption!” they would scream, waving placards of malicious drivers opening their trunks to dump loads of watermelons at 90kmh on the cyclist who came too close. “Examine every parked car you pass to make sure the driver isn’t about to open the door or stick a cricket bat out the window” (I swear that before going to India I thought that was the only use for a cricket bat. Well, that and marmot wrangling.)

I’m sure you can tell where this story is going.

Ning Hua and I rented bikes and took to the streets this afternoon. Every bit of that grade-school knowledge came screaming back. I was seeing the people on the street drawn in safety cartoon fashion as I hurtled downhill on a bike with very poor brakes.

See, in most of China bicycles are common. That’s why Ning Hua wanted to go biking; it had been a while and it’s something he likes to do back home. Here in Wanzhou bikes are strange creatures that no one ever encounters. We were riding in a remote area of the city and I’m sure half the stares I got were at the bike and not me (see that? it’s the one not-entirely true statement in this post – unless this is).

The reason no one bikes here is the mountains (and today my calves are insisting they aren’t hills). Normally I’m right with those non-cyclists. I’m a Winnipeg cyclist; I like my mountain biking on the flattest terrain possible. On a windless day. A wind that changes direction and pushes me both ways is even better. But the weather was awesome and I’d been inside all morning so I was lured out.

Now, Ning Hua is a nice kid but he has no idea how to ride bikes with a person. When two people are cycling in traffic, you have to pick one person and say “You’re Rogue Leader. Go!” This is the person who knows where they’re going and can blaze a trail when needed. This person decides when to ride two abreast and talk but can jump into single file when traffic gets hectic. Ning Hua utterly sucked at leading.

He kept on slowing down so his rear tire would come millimetres from clipping my front when he swerved out into traffic. Then he would stop right at the bottom of a hill to make sure I was still with him, so all the momentum we’d gained got left there. But he did set a nice leisurely pace which is the main reason I won’t be in traction tomorrow.

As an aside, Reyn is a really good Rogue Leader. He keeps track of his wingman and doesn’t ride like an idiot. My only problem with him is he’s too damned fit, and I have to kill myself to keep up. And my mom works this system very well; heck, she taught it to me. She used to be the leader but now that’s my job. I always push myself too hard with her too, because she’s biking “for exercise” so I can’t just lollygag and let her have an easy time of it. I have to remind her that she’s not 22 anymore.

I didn’t want to be the leader for the first half mainly because I was getting used to the bike. I love my bike at home and know what I can do with it: how close I can cut corners, what my stopping distance is, all that. This thing was a strange contraption that needed testing.

For a city with all these hills you’d think brakes would be a priority. Mine worked, but it took incredible finger strength to get them to close tightly. And it didn’t help that the bike itself weighs a tonne and a half, which adds greatly to the hurtleability factor in descending (and the sisyphysicality of climbing). I was also getting used to the cars and doing the whole “ride against traffic down Wanzhou’s busiest one way street” thing. And my gears had a very narrow (but thankfully middling) range of usability.

Coming back, though, I was comfortable enough to take over. The problem here was that Ning Hua wasn’t comfortable with the paths I was choosing and we kept on clashing. We had a nice little discussion on our differing cycling philosophies in the middle of about a million taxis and buses trying their damnedest to get in our ways.

His philosophy (which shouldn’t be taken as some general Chinese response to power) was that you let cars do whatever they’re going to do because they’ll hurt you if you don’t. Pedestrians on the other hand are responsible for their own welfare as you heedlessly zoom through crosswalks. (See? No allegory at all.)

My view is that you have to stop for pedestrians because they’re more likely to get hurt if you make a mistake. And you tell the cars to fuck themselves sideways because you can’t hurt them. You have to argue from a position of weakness. Make them back off through fear of hurting you, because how are you possibly going to hurt them? As a cyclist you are the potential victim. So it’s fine to smack the hood of a car that is trying to turn right in front of you. In Canada, I lose more waterbottles from throwing them at cars who cut me off. I also had to explain that I wasn’t trying to represent all Canadians with this (or be allegorical in any way), because he tends to take things that way.

(Greatest inspiration for this philosophy, especially as it pertains to public safety issues: Dave Foley’s “Dear guy I clotheslined while you were riding your bike on the sidewalk” sketch. And, y’know, all those non-violent resistance people.)

By the time we got back and dropped off the bikes back at the saddest roller rink in the world we’d been gone for almost three hours and owed the guy $2.50CDN. Not too shabby for a death defying adventure in cross-cultural philosophy of leadership.

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and may i ask why are you purchasing these articles of clothing?

Today I bought a couple of shirts purely out of spite.

People who get my quasi-weekly emails (and if you want to, just give me your email address in the comments) might remember me mentioning how much I hate the shirts that exist here in Wanzhou. They’re all pastel crap with big stripes and are just ugly.

This past Saturday I was talking with one of my students and he mentioned that they’d had some class meetings to do teacher evaluation kinds of things. He told me that all people said about me was that I should get some new clothes.

To be fair, I don’t have a huge wardrobe here. I have three teaching shirts that I cycle through each week. So yeah, they’ve seen those three shirts a lot. But come on! Evaluating your teacher based on his shirt? That’s low. So I decided to start wearing a blazer and jeans (I kid!).

How this comes down to my delicious spite shirts is that I bought two shirts today, finally finding ones with non-awful colours (although the blue on one of them is pretty pale) AND I WILL NEVER WEAR THEM TO CLASS. Hahaha!

I’ll mention I bought new shirts to build up their anticipation. “A Justin in other shirts exists” they will murmur electrically, but they won’t get to see him. When students come over I will quickly change out of them. I’ll wear other shirts on top of them until I am outside the school gates. Once in a while I’ll be wearing one the spite shirts downtown and a student will see me and the legend will grow, until they are begging to see these mythical shirts that haven’t burned into their retinas.

Of course the other reason for me not to buy any more Chinese shirts is that they don’t fit.

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big balls

Well, Chinese New Year is long over and the libraries are open for free net access again. Yay blog.

I never have to see fireworks ever again. It’s very good that fireworks have never been too huge a focus for my life because I’d now have performed cunnilingus on the virgin Mary far too prematurely. Hong Kong’s New Year fireworks were amazing. There was no wimpy warning shot; it started with a cloud of light and noise. The choreography actually worked, there was a variety of exploding balls, but no giant soaring cock ducking and weaving between buildings in the skyline.

I saw them with the people from this Danish guesthouse I stayed at where I met an Aussie guy named Grant who is studying Chau Gar Praying Mantis Kung Fu from the Grand Master here in Hong Kong. The idea is that he’ll train for a year here and then go back to Brisbane to open a school there. This school will be in direct competition with the school run by the only other Aussie to study with the Grand Master. That other teacher “did the master wrong” in some murkily indeterminate way and so he wants Grant to go down there and steal all his students.

The retreat here in Lantau is boring but it’s great to hang out with my friends. We’ve been eating well outside of the retreat centre itself. The Indian food at Chungking Mansions was really good, and there’s stuff like nachos at the bars around here. Also, if you’re in Hong Kong, go to Ned Kelly’s Last Stand. It made me realize how much I miss live music. It felt like a speakeasy and there were people from all these marching bands who were joining in with the house band. Beer was stupid expensive, but whatever.

That’s it, can’t dump too much out there at once.

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the fascist in me

I like to think of myself as culturally sensitive. I don’t go around saying stuff like “Why don’t all these people just learn English?” or anything. I didn’t puke when we had tongue of bat (tongue of bat!) in our hotpot yesterday. I don’t make a big deal out of little kids in split pants crapping in the bushes.

But today I read something that made me disgusted. Cultural relativism was thrown aside as I asked how a country can be so stupid.

A quote from Beijing Review:

Those who applaud the practice say that carpooling should be encouraged because it is convenient for rides, reduces the economic burden of carowners and alleviates the pressure on traffic. Objectors regard carpooling as an illegal business that should be stopped, saying that it disturbs the normal market of passenger transport, like taxi and buses.

Yes, some people want to make carpooling illegal. That’s much better for everyone on the whole fucking planet.

I strongly believe cars are the biggest problem in China today. People are so excited they can afford cars, and I just turn into a big old Indian from the 70s.

I wish the only drivers here were professionals. Our school has a bunch of drivers on staff. They get promoted to different vehicles as their seniority increases or something. But that’s their job. If there have to be personal vehicles (and it’s not like anyone’s going to give up their status symbols anytime soon) it seems the height of idiocy to force them to drive with only one person in them.

Yes there are more nuances to this debate (about insurance and stuff), but the environmental factor is completely ignored. The air is awful in the big cities and people complain about it all the time. China Daily is always printing stories about what an environmental leader China is. The taxis here in Wanzhou use CNG (which I assume is some sort of natural gas) instead of regular gasoline, presumably as a pollution fighting measure. Somehow I doubt that all these private Volkswagens do the same.

There are so many buses and taxis here people just shouldn’t be allowed to own a car at all. What kind of oppressive regime is this? And they don’t want to disturb the market? Say hi to communism in the 00s.

Listening to: Nuclear War from the album Adbusters – Live Without Dead Time
by Sun Ra And His Arkestra

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wiggidy?

Months ago I was asking a class about an article’s “scattering like leaves” simile. No one would say if they knew what it meant. I wasn’t sure if that was because leaves didn’t fall here or they just didn’t know what scattering meant or what.

Today I saw dried yellow leaves on the street downtown. “Ah,” I thought, “Leaves do scatter and fall here.” Then I spotted the workers and cursed that my camera was up in my apartment.

There were three guys with long (dare I say 10-foot?) poles hitting the branches with dried out leaves on them. Whack! Whack! And leaves would fall, evidently to be swept up later. There were piles under each tree. Little kids were frolicking and old people walked picturesquely in the autumnal showers. Whack! Whack!

You can’t trust leaves to fall on their own, you see. Not if they’re still around in December. Whack!

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boom

The bank picture probably is connected with everything. Margie heard that in the original fight on Monday night (between a couple and a bangbang man) people got very angry and set fire to a police car. Which could have been in front of the bank. That kind of puts things in better perspective than a fist-fight causing the city to be overrun with police and army people. One of my students said that two people are in jail now because of this.

Also, one of my friends who knows about these things gave me a list of possibilities for those controlled explosions I heard Tuesday night.

1. flashbangs..as you mentioned, though these are normally only dispersed in tactical clearnace sweeps….aka before shooting people which im sure you would have heard.
2. Fireworks…totally unrelated event
3. High powered blanks for crowd dispersion
4. A teargas cannister being fired 3 times in revolving action out of one of those old soviet revolving riot control guns
5. A sks or AK47 firing on burst mode once (3 automatic rounds discharged w/ one pull of the trigger) although im assuming you know the tiny bit enough about ballistic weapons to know a rifle firing when you hear one…that said with distance and echo could be one ill-disciplined
military/cop had a accidental discharge (the firearm kind, you sick fuck)

So there’s more word on the street info. I hope that redeems me and Sean doesn’t have to take the cheese grater to his arm.

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loose ends

I like the variety of comments I’ve gotten about my Tuesday escapade. From “Ha ha! You’re going to die!” to “This kind of thing happens in China. Here are some other articles” to “I’m glad you’re not dead. My life is boring” to “I’m so proud of you!” But my favourite came from my friend who’s in Taiwan and was seriously worried. Like, more than my mom (who did call me on Wednesday to find out how worried she should be). It’s a different kind of propaganda machine there than here. I forget about that sometimes.

The riot police are still surrounding the square, but they’ve got all these disco coloured strobing spotlights going. If it’s a camouflage attempt, it’s not working. And last night they were setting off fireworks down there. Just to confuse me about the Tuesday explosions I’m sure. I insist that what I heard on Tuesday was much more controlled sounding and at a higher pitch than the fireworks. And there were fewer of them. But I didn’t see them, and I did see (and videotape) fireworks last night.

A student told me that in the original fight people flipped over three police cars. He said he heard it from a guy in the fruit market, but despite that impeccable source (word on the street) I don’t know if I believe it. In fact, I’m sure I don’t believe it. But I wouldn’t have believed a lot of Tuesday, so the information is there for your perusal.

Listening to: Square One from the album Square
by Buck 65

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the power of fighting

It’s amazing what a little fist-fight can do.

Supposedly all of that stuff yesterday with the riot police and the army and everything happened because two guys got into an argument on the street. I got this story from Wang Kun this morning.

There’s an out-of-work guy who says something to a guy and his wife walking down the street. Words are exchanged. Things get physical. The out-of-work guy hits the woman. The guy grabs a bangbang stick and starts hitting him. I think. It could have been the other way around. In any case they’re having this fight and the guy says something to the effect of “What are you doing? I work for the government and I could break you like a twig!” To the effect of.

People heard that and got angry about this corrupt official beating up a guy and threatening him with government problems. People got angry in crowds. The police and army are called in to make sure nothing happens. And because the guy said he was a big government official they go to the city square to protect the municipal government building. I still don’t know what those flashbangs were last night around 11. It could have just been dispersal type stuff.

The soldiers are still there today. Maybe 150 of them sit in the square with their riot shields, while others form a perimeter. Then they trade off. The crowds watching them aren’t as big as yesterday, and I didn’t try getting any pictures.

The thing that bugs me about this story is that just down the street from the square is a bank that has had an obvious fire. It seems like that should have something to do with all of this but maybe it doesn’t. Maybe. I’ll ask some students what they’ve heard tonight. They’re always good for rumour an innuendo.

It’s funny how the paranoia gets to you after being screamed at by army guys who don’t have to respect any pesky civil rights. I took a picture of a construction site this afternoon and a guy came up and wagged his finger at me so I stopped. He was just some guy walking down the street who had no authority at all and I flinched hard.

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don’t get used to this frequency

Alright, let’s just call this the most eventful day I’ve had in China and be done with it already.

I just got off the phone with a girl Xian Qian (no clue at all) who called very politely and sang a fragment of You Are My Sunshine and talked about her middle school and asked about my plans for Christmas before realizing that I was not the droids she was looking for. She thought she was talking to the former foreign teacher who lived here named Johns.

And I feel like a really shitty journalist because at about 11pm I heard 6 controlled explosion noises and saw flashes from downtown. I imagine it was connected to the soldiers and the cops and everything. I was getting ready for bed and didn’t throw on my clothes and grab a camera and rush down there. I also hadn’t had the fortitude to stay down there earlier so I would know what happened. As it is now, I’ll have to rely on rumour hearsay and lies to find out what happened.

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