Saturday, August 23, 2008
MMMM...
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
On the road...
On an empty or uncrowded street as they are coming up on or passing me in their car/truck honking their horn repeatedly until I look up and then laughing.
Though I generally like to think of myself as a relatively peaceful person, its times like these that I contemplate the merits of beating a man unconcious.
Further Reading
Here is a really excellent article about a movie that should be coming out soon in the US. Though the focus goes even deeper than just the movie and gives an in depth and, I feel, very accurate portrayal of an aspect of the Chinese psyche that has made relations with foreign nations more difficult. Also very respectfully written, check it out.
This article is very accurate to the situation, though I am not a big fan of its wording. Too often these "unbiased" articles use wording that make it seem as though the Chinese people are being forced to plow through unimaginably miserable conditions, alluding to the fact that it is the opposite to the US whose citizens eat candy everyday and have no worries, just love and freedom. I can just see so many people reading the article and thinking "The things we take for granted.." which drives me crazy. But the fact remains that as I had mentioned before, athletes don't get to see their families regularly while training, and then after seeing Phelps' mom in the stands approximately 174 times over the first week of the Olympics, I then would watch news highlights where CCTV would interview the parents of the gold medalists, none of whom were in Beijing viewing the games, and almost all of whom were obviously quite poor. What is interesting is that this is common knowledge around here and accepted as the way it is. The article also through talking about the farmers life mentions so many important things to life in rural China. The fact that Chen is not married at 30 is a huge deal around here. Not to mention the article does illustrates the huge gap between rich and poor in this country.
Both of these articles I stole from this blog, done by a professional with much more skill than me
Monday, August 18, 2008
The Power of a Word
I have no idea who any of these guys are, but all of them did not hesitate to scream hello at me from a comfortable distance.
I am always thinking as I walk down the street how I wish that I were a spy, and that my glasses, instead of being scratched and not cool looking, had a spy camera inside of them. Then I could record all of the reactions that I get as I walk down the street in a day. This would be the only way to get a grip on the weirdness of the situation, because stories can't do it justice. Lets make this clear, when I say people are saying hello to me, it is not as though I am buying a newspaper and a man looks me in the eye, smiles and says, "hello." No, this is Hotboys with Sonic the hedgehog haircuts pointing and laughing as they scream hello at me from a quarter of a mile away. It would be like if you were with your friends and saw a man looking to be of Latino origin walking down the street in your neighborhood and you nudged your friends and yelled "hola!" at him and then everyone laughed together.
I will walk by a store selling plumbing equipment and hear rumbling out from the depths of the store a "hello?" yelled out more as if they were asking a question than greeting me. Middle aged men will be standing outside a restaurant talking, and as I walk by one will say "Laowai" (Foreigner) right in front of me, while staring at me, then all will fall silent and look me up and down from head to toe like they are checking me out and then begin talking about foreigners or guessing what country I'm from (I'm always hoping for DeGuo, or Germany) joking one should say hello to me. As I ride my bike down a narrow road a small van with darkened windows will wiz by me at about 50 MPH with a strange voice screaming out the window "Hello!" scaring the living S%#! out of me and nearly causing me to loose control into on coming traffic. Grandmothers walking their grandchildren will point me out and say in Chinese, "that is a foreigner, you see them you can say 'Ha lou'," and the seed is planted.
And the children, oh the children! I honestly fear children while I live here. Why? Because they are totally innocent of what they do, yet are the most brutal in their actions. A group of 8-12 year old boys to me is like a pack of wild jackals (is that a fearsome animal, it sounds good, what with that Bruce Willis movie and all) and I will go to great lengths to avoid interactions with them, making me officially the biggest wuss on the planet. They will run after me screaming hello and laughing, and drawing laughter from the crowd around also, who will either be embarrassed but not say anything, or think that it is cute to see the kids practicing their English. Some of the more daring boys have even gone behind me and boxed with my shadow thinking I couldn't see, or pretended to fire an imagined machine gun at me like I was their enemy. This is all very disturbing. Children are a reflection of society since they haven't yet learned that actions like these aren't appropriate. One has to wonder what is going on in the minds of the older men that are looking me up and down as I pass by. The fact that children at that age not only instantly recognize me as a foreigner but then also have these sort of reactions merits reflection for sure.
The fact is that words and language are a very powerful thing. Living abroad allows a person to feel this very acutely, as it is mainly language that keeps you on the outside of the society in which you are living. Hello, one word that should have a positive connotation, has the power to annoy, embarrass, and even alienate a person. It's something that is important to remember when interacting with anyone anywhere. Something that I wish would be taken more seriously in this place and not shrugged off as something to be ignored and endured.
The Fall of an Icon



Monday, August 11, 2008
For Your Viewing Pleasure
http://v.ku6.com/show/9h-i6lZBOI1B8cHy.html
I am serious that that all of the adds and songs included on that video are legitimate and played on a regular basis on television stations leading up to the Olympics. One has to wonder if any native English speakers were brought in for consultation on that one. My favorite part of the "One World One Dream" video is when the hotboy superstar (Huang Xiao Ming for those craving more hits) stares down the camera at the end, snickers and then walks off into the sunset like he just absolutely blew your mind.
On another note, check out this commercial for a Chinese shoe company name Anta. It stars Luis Scola, and is wonderful:
http://www.tudou.com/programs/view/duGIeKrow18/
So next time you are looking for just the right pick up line to get things going, I vote "I'm Scola!"
This highlight reel in the commercial so accurately depicts Scola's moves. Team USA is gonna have to watch out for his moderately quick spin move followed by an awkwardly unstoppable finger roll that looks like it belongs more in a pick up game among forty year old teachers with bad backs than in the Olympics or NBA. Moves like that followed by the irresistible call of "I'm Scola;" it's little wonder why Luis has soared into the airwaves with shoe-making giants, Anta.
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Olympic Fascination

Friday, August 8, 2008
8/8/08 has Arrived!
I live in a small city in the East of China called Zaozhuang. This city is one of the poorer cities of an extremely overpopulated province called Shandong Province. Zaozhuang is situated right in between Beijing and Shanghai for those hoping for a clearer image of where it is. Zaozhuang is a city of about 800,000 people or so( which is pretty small by Chinese standards) and I am one of about 10 foreigners that I know about that live in this city, and one of only 4 white people that I know of who reside here. When you add to that the particular historical elements that have led to mainland China being largely closed off to the western world until about 30 years ago, and the general ignorance levels that both of those factors combine produce, it is easy to see where much of the material for this blog will be derived.
In this first post I feel it necessary to add a bit of a disclaimer though I do hope that as the blog develops that I will be able to communicate myself fluently enough that this will become unnecessary. This blog is simply explaining events that happen to me on a daily basis. Some of the material contained within will seem to be complaints about life in China, or the way that I am treated here. This should not be mistakenly taken to say that these problems are exclusive to this place or that China is a bad place to live. Problems of discrimination or miscommunication are common affairs in every country in the world, one just has to change the ethnic or minority group that accepts the brunt of it, and China is a lovely country of which I am truly fond of. My experience here has been an interesting one in that it has allowed me, as a white protestant American male, to see many forms of easily dismissed prejudice quite clearly, and has helped me to have an important perspective shift in my life.
It's also important to remember that most of the interesting situations that I am put into here are benign and somewhat humorous, though sometimes frustrating. Unlike many of the victims of prejudice or majority rule, being a White American living abroad can be quite easy. Most of the problems that I experience either come from people wanting to make and/or use a foreign acquaintance, for their own knowledge or business purposes. While annoying not out and out harmful. Some problems come from an acquired disdain certain people have for caucasian people due to a history of imperial powers from Europe and America coming to foreign lands and abusing and disrespecting the people there. This, while extremely hard to deal with, is at least somewhat understandable. So by no means is my situation even comparable to that of a majority of people on the planet who truly suffer discrimination. I do however believe that some of my experiences here can help to illuminate some of the subtle problems that discrimination and ignorance produce in all of our lives, problems that should be avoidable with a little bit of sensitive living.
There's the disclaimer and some serious preliminary stuff out of the way. The vast majority of my time here is remarkably enjoyable as shown by this...