Tag Archives: chengdu

time and work

Yesterday I watched a documentary about the Chinese artist/dissident Ai Weiwei. The scenes where he was in Chengdu made me miss China. Not that I was especially happy when I was living in China, but visiting China after my term was done? I loved it.

Maybe I just miss being on vacation. I know from Australia that working five days a week wears me down. After easter I was joking with some of my coworkers about how I could get used to that 3-day work week/4-day weekend cycle. But it wasn’t a joke exactly. I totally wish my job was a (predictable) part time one. Especially here in Campbell River where I do not need to be working as much as I do to pay my rent (as opposed to Vancouver or Sydney).

I mean, I like making enough money I don’t have to put off buying groceries till my paycheque comes in. I don’t want to make less per hour, just work less. Socking money away in a bank account is something I’ll appreciate eventually (when Aileen and I hit the trans-siberian for example), but for now it’s not exactly providing a huge amount of pleasure for me the way lazy long weekends do.

But I have vacation time coming, and I’m taking it in San Francisco. The Jays are playing two games against the Giants the first week of June and I’ll be there. I bought tickets yesterday and had to fight very hard to not spend hundreds of dollars on each one.

I got one seat behind the plate-ish along the home-3rd base line (which is my favourite place to watch a ballgame from even if it is thirty rows further up from where I’d get them at a Goldeyes game), and the other by the Giants bullpen lined up along the 2nd-3rd basepath. I’m hoping Lawrie’s back with the big club and isn’t injured so I can watch him do his thing fairly closely. It’s too bad about Reyes’ ankle injury.

Sometimes I think about my time here in Campbell River being something like my time in Wanzhou. When I do that it feels more manageable. I mean, I couldn’t possibly go to San Francisco for a week or Vancouver for a weekend from Wanzhou. And I made it through those years all right. But I worked a lot less as a mediocre teacher.

Sigh.

That’s my infrequent update on what is happening in my non-reading life. (For my reading life, as always check Librarianaut)

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sex drugs and spoken word

I don’t think I’ve been this blah about returning home in a long time. It’s not like I was out of money. Longer visas than a month are possible. And I wasn’t sick of hanging out with Holly. Ha. But still, here I am. Far away.

We spent New Year’s Eve with our friends Michelle & James in Chengdu. We had dinner at their apartment (which thankfully had the heat on) with a couple of their friends and then went out. There was a Euro techno-style DJ at the place we went, who seemed very good technically, and if I was into that kind of music I probably would have really liked it. There was another foreigner in a red track jacket who was hanging around the DJ a lot, kind of being nosy, like a small dog that wants to see what’s going on. Red jacket was given the chance to spin a few records and well, yeah, it was obvious he’s not super experienced. He fumbled around a bit, not matching things up quite right. But the music he was using was way more to my taste than the first guy. If I saw Red Jacket a year from now I’d probably like him a lot more. But I didn’t see him in the future. I saw him four days ago at the beginning of 2011 when he still sucked.

The male female ratio in our group was skimpy on the estrogenous, and became moreso when Holly and I left around 2 (because Holly’s 1/3 of the female contingent was much more significant than my 1/12 of the male). The first cabdriver wanted to charge us 50Y for a 20Y ride. We were already sitting in the back seat and when he told Holly that the apartment was too far away we got out again to get into the cab behind him. (The second didn’t try anything funny.) The next day James had a theory that that first cabdriver was actually off-duty and just looking for someone the right amount of drunk for something like that to work. And maybe he did. There were a lot of people in that bar.

New Year’s Day we spent reading on the couches of James & Michelle’s. Then we watched Moon. I love that movie so much. And then Holly and I went to the good Turkish restaurant, where the food wasn’t quite as good as the last time we had it, back in the summer, the night before we left for Winnipeg.

And that’s part of the blahness. Last time we parted Holly was heading back to see her family so she was excited. And I was about to move to Vancouver so I had distraction aplenty. This time I just came back to take more courses, which is less new and exciting. Especially since I was prepared at some level to be a library school dropout. Not a really prominent level, obviously. I worry about my inability to make the grand over-the-top gesture of throwing away a career(ish) for love. I mean, it’s probably for the best. Especially when Holly gets here for good, but now at the beginning of the term it just feels crappy.

Anyway, once assignments start piling up, it should be a little distracting, right? At least enough for the next six weeks.

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PEK-YVRwards

And my month with Holly is over. Le fucking sigh. The flight from Chengdu to Beijing this morning was nice and smooth, uneventful, but even without problems or delays and such it’s a lot crappier flying alone when you’re not being met by someone wonderful at the other end.

In the last week we celebrated Holly’s birthday at Nanchong’s newest five-star resort. It’d been open for ten days. Holly was getting some flyers for the bakery printed and in the printshop there was a stack of little brochureish things for this resort that they’d been working on. Maybe the stack was like the offcuts or something. I’m not sure. But Holly saw it and said “Hot Springs? Nanchong doesn’t have hot springs!” And then she called to find out if she was reading that wrong or what the deal was. It turned out that there were hot springs (human-created) and that rooms were half-price. So we booked her birthday off from the bakery and went out to live in the lap of luxury for 20 hours or so.

And yeah it was really nice. The hotsprings were outside, but hot enough that I didn’t die. They had like twenty or so different pools where you could soak in water with different stuff in it. We sat in rosepetal water, chrysanthemum, salt, and red wine. We skipped beer and milk. There were more, but we watched the sunset and really that was enough. There were a bunch of rich businessmen and their meinus also taking the waters. Our balcony looked out over the hills and the whole thing was very relaxing.

An interesting thing about the room was the shower. Holly’d seen this before, so it’s more a China thing than a “this hotel” thing. The wall separating the shower from the bedroom had a floor to ceiling window, with a shower curtain on the inside. I don’t think I’d ever really thought about showering as a spectator sport before. Especially not with a Chinese shower and its traditionally fickle hot water supply. My dancing back and forth between scalding and freezing would have been at least as entertaining than anything on the TV.

The rest of the week was mostly at the bakery. We played some Settlers and read some books. I started getting ready for school to start again. And now I’m flying home. Good news though, Holly’s planning to come visit Vancouver in February, so it’s only six weeks. Not too many more long-term departures are left.

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trappings of winter

It’s gotten cold around here. Last night it snowed in Chengdu. The internet says we’re somewhere around 4 degrees outside right now. Which isn’t bad if you have well-insulated buildings and heating, but is mighty shitty if things are otherwise.

Holly has an air conditioner in her apartment which is also a heater, but we can’t run it at night because it’s kind of noisy and it keeps her neighbours up. They left a note on the door about “their bedroom shaking” after the one night we did turn it on. So it’s all about the multiple blankets, which gets inconvenient if you ever want to leave the bed. For food, say.

Although today we did make some good soup/stew/vegetables. We bought the vegetables to make this soup yesterday because of the soup stock Sam’s mom brought us, but when lunchtime rolled around the water to the apartment had been cut off for some reason. It’s hard to make soup without any water. (Also, pooping into a hole you can’t flush brings cholera epidemics to my mind, so it was kind of an uncomfortable day.) The water was restored at like 10pm but before that we bought soup from a nearby restaurant that Holly is rapidly losing faith in. Today we cooked our soup in the rice cooker for hours until really there wasn’t much soupiness to it at all, but it was tasty.

I’ve been getting some writing done but nothing’s going as smoothly as I would like. The story I was working on turned out to be crappy. No, just uninteresting. So I’m repurposing the good details that I had into something else which is interesting. Moreso. I hope.

We went for hotpot the other day and it was some special style of hotpot using a copper pot with a chimney and coals instead of a gas flame. I love mushrooms in hotpot but for some reason, though we had a tray full of them, mushrooms were the last things to get dumped into the cauldron. I had to brave so many unpleasant mouthfuls of bony fish before we got to the stuff I enjoyed.

It’s also really nice having a girlfriend at hotpot who likes stuff like duck intestines so I can pass them off to her when our hosts were placing the choicest entrails in my bowl. Thank you Holly. I don’t know why duck intestines are so cringe-inducing in me, when I can eat those shredded stomachy bits with impunity. Probably because I ate those stomachs for so long before realizing they weren’t a kind of chewy mushroom.

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29 chengdu

I’ve made a list of cities in China that I have a relatively informed opinion about. More than 2 days in a visit or multiple visits are my requirements for being relatively informed. In order of preference (and ignoring small cities) they are:

  • Hong Kong
  • Nanjing
  • Lhasa
  • Beijing
  • Shanghai
  • Chongqing
  • Chengdu

The list was created primarily to put Chengdu at the bottom of it.

This was my best experience of the city though. It wasn’t too cold or raining. We could get a cab when we needed one. In fact there were only 10 minutes when I hated it. We were on a bus going somewhere Holly wasn’t sure how to get to and didn’t know if she’d recognize when we passed it. We were jammed in and I had too much stuff because we were heading back to Nanjing. I haven’t thanked Holly for not getting mad at my black mood there. [Thanks Holly!]

We stayed at a really good hostel called The Mix out by the Wen Shu Monastery. When I say it was really good I mean it felt very much like we were travelling not in China. The rough appearing couches and everything else. We didn’t ask if the dog was allowed in.

Catherine stayed in the common area while Holly and I did the checking in stuff. Then Catherine went to bed and Holly and I hung out with Fish, who used to be her Chinese tutor back in Nanchong. He’s trained in dentistry and just got a job at an insurance company. He’s also planning on taking the tests to become a pilot. They’ve expanded the program so people older than high school grads can get into the career. There’s a fitness and a handsomeness test. He was talking about it being a dangerous profession, which I’d never thought of before.

He’s watching Friends now and I got a bit of a rant off my chest (about the lack of reality in these underemployed people in that gigantic apartment in New York) and Holly described me to Fish thusly: “Justin may seem very quiet but when you ask him the right question he gets very excited and loud.” Which is probably pretty accurate. The other day Will asked if I was an environmental activist and I said I wasn’t very active, but I didn’t really know how to answer that kind of question. Holly did it for me: “Justin is a minimalist in all things.” I think there are plenty of things I’m not minimalistic about but that’s much more accurate than calling me an environmentalist.

Anyway, Fish’s ex-girlfriend was there too. It was a little awkward because her English wasn’t as good as Fish’s but whatever. She’s an anaesthesiologist. We were talking about the perks of those kinds of jobs and the troubles in medical systems in different countries. He hadn’t seen Sicko (and neither had Holly) so lots of the stuff I said about the US system was incredible to them (but true!). There was a blonde possibly European girl sitting nearby and I’m sure to her I sounded incredibly stupid bragging about Canadian healthcare.

When Fish and [I forget her name completely] left Holly and I went to pick up sausages for Jiaozi’s [Catherine's dog] breakfast. Oh they sent chills up my spine. So processed and squishy. Holly got one too. Even though she’s thinking of cutting back on the pork in her diet. Which is much easier when you aren’t in delicious Sichuan.

On Monday we walked a huge distance down from the hostel to Hua Xi the medical school campus of Chuan Da where Johnny lives. Johnny is a really great guy. He’d been working on an experiment which finally worked on Saturday so he had time to hang out. Over lunch he explained what it was about but I didn’t quite catch the whole thing. Something about Science! Getting to lunch was a bit of a production as we wanted to leave our bags at Johnny’s but a guard at the gate wouldn’t let the dog on campus so there was to-ing, fro-ing, carrying, leaving and hiking around to the restaurants the long way. But we got to chow down Sichuan style one last time. Yu Xiang Qie Zi and those rice cakes (Guo Ba) that sizzle and crackle when the sauce goes over them. I’d forgotten about that stuff because I’ve only ever eaten it in biggish CEE groups.

But hanging out with Johnny is very easy. He’s relaxed and helpful and just an especially cool guy. His girlfriend is evidently very ordinary though. I guess that’s the danger of being slightly extraordinary; the people around you might suffer by comparison. We eventually settled on the word “interchangeable” to describe her, which is something Johnny is definitely not.

The story Holly tells is how once when she came to visit him her phone had died so she didn’t know where he was going to meet her. But she thought “Johnny’s such a good student; he’s always in the library” so that’s where she went, checking each room till he appeared, to everyone’s delight. Near the statue of Marie Curie is where they always meet and talk and snack. He has a dorm room where he keeps some stuff but lives off-campus, being taken care of by his girlfriend’s(?)/landlord’s(?) family, something Holly thinks should irk her but it doesn’t. His dormmates just play video games till early in the morning and Johnny’s very glad not to have to really live with them.

He had to go to work though, and Catherine had to buy two kinds of Italian meat for Eric (who has Hepatitis C but doesn’t explain to people that’s why he doesn’t drink) so we put her in a cab and got on the 503 bus out to Du Fu’s Thatched Cottage. To get there our bus passed through the Tibetan part of town. We saw monks walking past religious supply shops but more indicative these days were the police cars on every corner. Every corner meaning four cars at the intersections and one at every alley. The cops themselves seemed pretty relaxed. Most were sleeping. But on our return trip all their lights were flashing and instead of one sleeper to a car there were four nervous looking officers. Down one road there was a huge crowd and loads of police but we couldn’t tell what was going on. Earlier down at the big square by the mao statue we saw about a dozen police and military cops holding their guns, patrolling. Some police in regular uniform but more in helmets. It wasn’t the massive formations we had after our Wanzhou riot, at least not right after. Though those had been around last week. Todd wasn’t allowed to take pictures of them with the Big Brother eye ad, not at night.

Holly’s been asking everyone about their points of view on this Tibetan situation. The cabbie taking us to the airport was very erm prejudiced, complaining about the Zangren wanting to put five people in the car or wanting to pay 10 when the fare’s 15, or speaking their Zanghua gobbledygook all the time. At that last point he realized he sounded a bit silly (especially since his Sichuanhua was pretty thick) and the two of them laughed. There’s a fairly wide perception that the Tibetans are lazy and thieving and they’re lucky that China supports them so well. When this cabdriver began he called them all a big Ma Fan [trouble/nuisance]. The stories of bombs and buses and a car that had a bomb in it that was gone and a Tibetan stabbing a guy through a bus window as it drove away are word of mouth stories, not news reports thankfully, though I wonder if those rumours would spread as fast with a freer press. Selah.

Catherine was very impressed with the gravity of the situation and how concerned Chinese people are about how this will affect them, and their fear and all that. Holly finds the Chinese people to be over it, unconcerned “The army’s in there now and things are back to normal.” You just downplay it and talk about 1.3 billion smiles welcoming Olympic athletes and show some pictures of pandas and such. It’s more of a concern for Holly than for Chinese people, she feels, which means imprisonments and disappearances of anyone up there having anything to do with the protests is pretty much assured. No one would think anyhing’s wrong with that.

Oh and we went to Du Fu’s Thatched Cottage. That was where we were taking the bus. On the way Holly asked if I felt Chengdu had changed in the last four years. I didn’t but reminded her of my lack of deep connection with the city. She was saying there seemed to be more touristy little streets and places catering to the backpackers coming through. But maybe she just felt that because int he first couple of years she didn’t go into those areas of town. It’s funny how being part of an organization gets you stuck in its ruts. Like the Jiaotong/Traffic Hotel. There’s nothing really wrong with it but we stayed there as the default CEE option. We’d scatter to our various rooms and well, whatever. It doesn’t have any character. High ceilings I seem to remember. But it doesn’t really compare with the Mix. Which might be becoming the new MPC default, even though it’s further from the airport and the airport bus.

That list of favourite cities from before is based almost entirely on my physical experience of the places. I don’t know the language or the people well enough to have a clue about what they’re like socially or culturally. Everything is based on what I could see or feel or hear. Very sensual but not in a sexy way. Transit systems are important to me. Barring transit it needs to be walkable, but I just love Metros. There’s that automated system happening so you don’t have to speak. It seems to go all the time. They’re generally cleanish (though Beijing’s is feeling like it’s the exception to all of these). Stops are announced and route maps are laid out. Nothing like a good metro system. Chengdu’s is being built under their streets and it’s clogging up the aboveground traffic fiercely. I’m glad this wasn’t happening back when I was dragging my mom around town. Sidewalks all blocked off. Buses following weird routes. Confusing.

Holly was almost involved in two accidents walking around in CHengdu. One was a madan driving an SUV who was speeding and passing a car by gunning the engine into the bikelane/sidewalk where we were walking. She jumped out of the way and was fine. In fact, we went right on with our conversation as if she hadn’t just been almost killed. Then walking on Johnny’s campus an electric bike loaded down with cases of bottles swerved and toppled, spilling bottles (not their contents) all over. Students leapt to assistance as did Holly and I. I replaced Gatorade bottles in a box feeling useless. Holly’s instinct in that instance was to hold up the falling bottles instead of getting out of the way. The woman on the red bike thanked everyone and we were delayed a little more from meeting Johnny.

The Cottage itself has a whole park complex surrounding it. We came in the north gate where a girl was playing the Qin. Really well, though she didn’t seem to be too into it. There were trees and pavillions and there didn’t seem a better place to be an old Chinese person. We saw replicas of the cottage, some Tang Dynasty pottery that proves they’ve been building and rebuilding it in the right place all these years, an uninspiring collection of his poems from 1982. The collection was uninspiring as the old copies looked little different from the new ones. The cottage replica was pretty much like a modern peasant house in the country. Same sorts of stuff in the kitchen and the study and all that. It’s pleasant to think of writing in a place like that. Easy to think it’d be easier, though somehow I’ve learned enough about this craft to doubt it. Anyway. Expensive but beautiful park that I enjoyed and would return to.

The War on Liquids made it to China this month. At least to Chengdu. As of 3/18/2008 the sign said. Holly had to check her bag because of it. She’s a girl and needs face washing things. The table with all the stuff covered by the ban included sealed packages of Dou Gan [thin sliced dried tofu in sort of a spicy sauce]. How does that make any sort of a difference? Although thinking about it now, 3/18 that’s post Xinjiang girl on the plane with the gasoline isn’t it? That story sounded so dumb at the time and now it’s obvious it was made up to give an excuse for the new CAAC regulations. All this stuff is bullshit and doesn’t make anyone safer anyway. So angry. I can’t take any tools if I want to travel light. But that’s why I don’t use toothpaste when I travel no more. Or shampoo. When they ban toothbrushes I guess I’ll give up oral hygiene altogether. But they haven’t yet.

That flight was delayed by the rain. “Water falling from the sky? We’ll solve that problem somehow!” And for the first part of the flight I thought we’d crash for sure.

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travels with my mom: chengdu


mom’s new pet
Originally uploaded by
Hungry J.

We left Wanzhou to hang out in Nanchong for 20 hours, basically enough time for Holly to get all confused and have a meal with the [organization redacted]ers in town there.

We took the bus there and it went through a lot of poor villages and farms and such. I always forget how Sichuan is poor. I guess it comes from answering students with my relentlessly upbeat “I like it in Wanzhou” because I don’t want to sound like a whiner.

Anyway, then we went to Chengdu. Last summer when I was asking Mom what would be interesting for her in China (history? mountain climbing? shopping?) the only thing she felt strongly about was seeing pandas. So we did that in Chengdu.

We got up early and saw all of these big guys eating breakfast. It really is ridiculous how cute they are. And why won’t they fuck to save their species? All the female pandas I saw were pretty freakin’ hot.

There was a panda kindergarten where young pandas were playing around, trying to climb trees and knock each other off bridges and such. And a baby panda who’d been born in the summer who was kept in this horrible glass enclosure. It was sort of weird compared to the nice big habitats all the others got to run around in.

Mom paid the big bucks to get in the enclosure with this two-year-old panda, Yuan Yuan, so I could take pictures. We had to wear booties and Mom had thin plastic gloves on to keep from spreading our nasty germs to these delicate bamboo muncher. She said Yuan Yuan was warm and bristly.

The rest of our time in Chengdu was spent going to temples and a monastery and an art gallery that was showing Picasso sketches and engravings. Some were nice but some looked like they were just roughing something out, that he would never have intended to put in a museum. But Sichuan takes what it can get I suppose.

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