Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Fairy Hill
Judge for yourself--Xian Nu Shan has been dubbed Fairy Hill National Park, the "Switzerland of the East," with snow-capped peaks ringing around grasslands and green forests. This was the destination last weekend for a baker's dozen of us "waiguoren," or foreigners, all of whom teach at Southwest University in Beibei. "Frank," our watchful and helpful university "waiban," cooked up the plan, made the arrangements, and plied us with one Chinese feast after another. I understand that it is possible to sit in front of a huge lazy Susan laden with ten or fifteen Chinese dishes and not eat five times more than necessary, but I haven't any earthly idea how to do it.
Over half of our crew are twenty-somethings with ties to St. Johns University, a liberal arts college in Minnesota and also a sister school with our Chinese university in Beibei, Southwest. The rest of us are no longer twenty-something and hail from such places as Belgium, Russia, Bosnia--and my Missouri corner of the USA.
As different as my Missouri hometown is in most respects from Xian Nu Shan, my hometown happens to be situated in a belt of karst limestone, full of caves and crevices and natural bridges. In Xian Nu, a limestone bluff here, a natural bridge there would remind me of home.
As pleasant as the scenery was, other things often caught my attention, including the very short skirts and very high heels of many of the female hikers. How can they walk? How long will their shoes last? What will their backs be like in a few years? It's all a mystery to me. The people who had difficulty weren't usually those wearing high heels--they tended to be older and took rides in little chairs carried by human porters.
Among the things we could buy along the way was meat--think whole animal, everything but the fur. If a dog or a cat, you could make out the skull, the body, the tail, everything.
Also interesting was the bus ride from this southeastern part of Chongqing back home across the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang) to our college town in northern Chongqing. A traffic accident on a mountain road backed up mountain traffic for ages, it seemed.
Eventually, we rolled on, through green terraced countryside that occasionally erupted with new building projects on a massive scale. We rolled past Fuling, the town where Peter Hessler (author of River Town and former resident of Columbia, Missouri) lived while serving in the Peace Corps.
. . .and finally home to our own mountain city, Beibei, not pictured here.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Have a date with you?
-->
English is so hard! The student who emailed this request
(Have a date with you?) was not entertaining any strange ideas. We met and had
a delightful conversation, part of which focused on the difference between
asking to “have a date” and “make an appointment.”
My seniors are wicked smart and can follow complex
discussions in English about theory, language, and literature. Their vocabularies are astounding, even if
their phrasing is occasionally amusing. My sophomores, too, are smart, but
radically innocent and sweet. Following are some of their comments. I have
hundreds more.
“I’m a sunshine and open-minded girl”
A Mongolian student writes, “In a nutshell, the first
impression of English is amazing. It is much better than Chinese calligraphy
writing. Pronunciation also very beautiful. It toned ups and downs, not like
Chinese each sentence is flat. I find it very interesting. So in the new
semester I’ll work harder to recover the time wasted.”
"Liu
and Jiao chemistried with each other at first sight"
"Niulang crushed on the pretty girl when he first saw
her."
"One day, Jerusha was told a piece of shocked news that she
had a chance to go to college."
“Since then, a lot of kinds of books have been read by me. I
like reading some stories and novels most, which are very interesting, aren’t
they?”
“I am an outgoing boy! In my free time, I’d like to travel
some places and playing with my friends. I think it is very interesting.”
“As you all known, through those books [Rebecca and Proud and
Prejudice], I’m not only gained so much knowledge, but also wide my
eyesight of the whole world.”
“It spend my many years learn well Chinese, when graduated
from primary school.”
“She was envied of the beauty of
Snow White and tried her best to kill her.
So one day, the queen just employed a person to kill Snow White in the
woods and took her cardiac to the queen.”
“Xi Xian and Bai Suzhen fall in
love at their first sight experienced 81 difficulties.”
“In front of his house standed two big mountains blocked traffic
badly and brought much inconvenience for his family.”
"Ruoul
wasn't sort of people who was behaved."
"When Zhu heard this news, she choose to suicide"
But guess what—their English is fabulous compared to my Putonghua.
In fact, there’s no comparison.
Friday, October 19, 2012
Journey to JinDao Gorge
Where might I go that would combine some of my favorite memories of home (Rock Bridge Park and the spectacular limestone caves and crevices there), the New Zealand Hollyford trek (with waterfalls sprouting out everywhere through lush mountainside vegetation), and even the Khumbu valley in the shadow of Mount Everest (where mountainside dwellings have some similar architecture and sherpas carry heavily laden baskets on their backs)? Maybe the JinDao Gorge, also cutting deeply and spectacularly through karst landforms, only a two hour bus ride away from Beibei. My photographs simply do not do justice to the scale or to the colors. Last Sunday, my Peace Corps Volunteer friend Martha joined me on the trek, where we met up with several Chinese students from a university in Chongqing who decided to be our guides.
Friday, October 12, 2012
Alternative Dream - Big Time
I don’t always agree with NYT columnist Thomas Friedman, but
something he said about dreams a few days ago resonated with me. He speculated
that the “American Dream” would not make a smooth jump across the Pacific to
China—the dream of a big house, two cars, and more. Friedman was sort of
wagging his finger, warning China that its emerging materialism and rising
consumption of valuable resources, including water, could be disastrous, not
only for China, but also for the rest of the world.
Now, I am a baby boomer who would be exceedingly hypocritical if I didn't admit that I have benefited from material well-being and many other aspects of "the American dream," and I have no ground to point fingers. Still, that doesn't stop me from warming to Friedman's argument.
Friedman cites Peggy Liu, who says that China recognizes the problems stemming from an unbridled pursuit of "the American dream" and has an alternative, sustainable dream, one that, as Friedman paraphrases Liu, "merges traditional Chinese values, like balance, respect and flow, with its modern urban reality."
If so, scale may be both the problem and solution. Obviously, China is not the only country with mounting consumption—of water, gas, other resources--but it may be the only country entertaining this consumption on such a grand scale. It’s hard for me to get a grip on the magnitude of just about everything in this huge and ancient country that is home to more than one in five people on the planet. So, again, the scale that characterizes China's problems may be the scale that characterizes its dreams and potential solutions.
I find it exciting to contemplate that China's alternative dream might include some elements of a market economy without sacrificing all protections of the common good and without sacrificing such healthy habits as walking to work, buying vegetables from vendors on the street, eating slowly, putting on another sweater rather than turning up the heat, and carrying your own bags.
I find it exciting to contemplate that this sustainable alternative dream, one that balances the public good with a market economy, could come to fruition on a gigantic scale.
It's an alternative dream that not only has political and environmental consequences, but also has, to my way of thinking, sensory and aesthetic consequences. I, for one, simply enjoy the richness of what I see, hear, and smell when I live as lightly as I can upon the earth, wherever I am--here, home, wherever.
Without as many cars per capita, we live more closely together, which, for me, means that I can hear the splat of diced vegetables hitting the oil in woks in several adjacent buildings. We can smell each other's onions and lajiao. The windows and balcony doors are open--we see each other's hand-washed laundry hanging well above our potted plants to dry. I hear the man on the fourth floor across the way vigorously chopping his ingredients. Someone is learning to play the trombone and isn't terribly good yet, but there are several exceptionally good pianists nearby. A woman with a basket on her back strolls the walkways, chinking together two pieces of metal to announce that she is there, should anyone need to recycle anything. Another peddler outfitted with a basket on his back calls out over and over, as if he is trying to find someone, but he is simply advertising his goods. Music drifts up from a small park below where the ladies are doing Tai Chi--and there are trees and benches there and everywhere because people need these small parks when they turn out of their apartments to play mahjong or dance or talk or wait to pick up little schoolchildren. The parks and public squares are used, all the time by people of all ages. Without as many cars per capita, people must share the common spaces and do--there is community.
Without as many cars per capita, we walk more places, which, for me, means that I can see the moss covering the high stone wall along the path, I can see the azalea blooming in a neighbor's porcelain pot, I can see the gray trousers being pushed through the tailor's sewing machine and I can see the red high heeled shoe that the curbside cobbler is mending. I can see floating leaves interrupting the reflection of the willows around the little pond by the physics building.
Sleeping is good, usually, because of all this. I've typically walked many, many miles by the end of the day, and nights are now quite cool. Most people's windows are still open, although I have closed my little balcony doors now that it is dropping down to almost 50 degrees F at night. And, because so many of us live so close together, there is only so much space. With only so much space, I don't have more material goods than I can use. I don't buy much, and I don't throw away much.
If there were even more cars, there would need to be more ugly parking spaces, and the buildings would be spread out. Instead of taking five minutes to get to scores of closely-packed shops and noodle places, it'd take much longer. The umbrella covered vegetable stands on every corner would have to go. Nobody would stop me on the street to speak to me.
Again, this alternative dream of living lightly on the earth while enjoying some of the benefits of a market economy is not a new dream, not at all--and many have written more eloquently than I have here about it. The thing that has come home to me, though, while reflecting on Friedman's piece is that China not only has a history rich with sustainable practices well worth keeping, but also has the potential to shape our planet's dreams. If China pursues this alternative dream, it will be big time.
Without as many cars per capita, we live more closely together, which, for me, means that I can hear the splat of diced vegetables hitting the oil in woks in several adjacent buildings. We can smell each other's onions and lajiao. The windows and balcony doors are open--we see each other's hand-washed laundry hanging well above our potted plants to dry. I hear the man on the fourth floor across the way vigorously chopping his ingredients. Someone is learning to play the trombone and isn't terribly good yet, but there are several exceptionally good pianists nearby. A woman with a basket on her back strolls the walkways, chinking together two pieces of metal to announce that she is there, should anyone need to recycle anything. Another peddler outfitted with a basket on his back calls out over and over, as if he is trying to find someone, but he is simply advertising his goods. Music drifts up from a small park below where the ladies are doing Tai Chi--and there are trees and benches there and everywhere because people need these small parks when they turn out of their apartments to play mahjong or dance or talk or wait to pick up little schoolchildren. The parks and public squares are used, all the time by people of all ages. Without as many cars per capita, people must share the common spaces and do--there is community.
Without as many cars per capita, we walk more places, which, for me, means that I can see the moss covering the high stone wall along the path, I can see the azalea blooming in a neighbor's porcelain pot, I can see the gray trousers being pushed through the tailor's sewing machine and I can see the red high heeled shoe that the curbside cobbler is mending. I can see floating leaves interrupting the reflection of the willows around the little pond by the physics building.
Sleeping is good, usually, because of all this. I've typically walked many, many miles by the end of the day, and nights are now quite cool. Most people's windows are still open, although I have closed my little balcony doors now that it is dropping down to almost 50 degrees F at night. And, because so many of us live so close together, there is only so much space. With only so much space, I don't have more material goods than I can use. I don't buy much, and I don't throw away much.
If there were even more cars, there would need to be more ugly parking spaces, and the buildings would be spread out. Instead of taking five minutes to get to scores of closely-packed shops and noodle places, it'd take much longer. The umbrella covered vegetable stands on every corner would have to go. Nobody would stop me on the street to speak to me.
Again, this alternative dream of living lightly on the earth while enjoying some of the benefits of a market economy is not a new dream, not at all--and many have written more eloquently than I have here about it. The thing that has come home to me, though, while reflecting on Friedman's piece is that China not only has a history rich with sustainable practices well worth keeping, but also has the potential to shape our planet's dreams. If China pursues this alternative dream, it will be big time.
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Jasmine Bracelets and Moon Cakes
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)