Tuesday 14 February 2017

Post #118 14 February 2017

Memories of China
(All dollars are US$ )

What are our main take-aways after 6 years living and teaching in China (one year in Dongying, 5 years in Qingdao)? 

It’s actually surprisingly hard to put into words.  This is an extraordinary country – first we were overwhelmed by everything and then slowly absorbed by the new environment.

I believe that we were always on the periphery of society, never really part of it.  To really integrate is difficult and at the very minimum needs fluency in reading, writing and speaking the language.  Vera became quite proficient in speaking Mandarin and that enabled her to get closer to locals and their way of life than I did.

I have tried to list those things we will miss, and those things we won’t miss – see below – as a way to describing our feelings.

(1) What we will miss

The challenge & excitement of teaching and the rewards of seeing progress

Students reading/reciting aloud in corridors and class rooms

Students respectful and polite; good-looking, healthy, eager kids

Students calling out greetings (particularly Vera in Dongying)

No tipping

Bus fare $0.15 across town; $0.60 for a large bottle of beer; $2 for a haircut

Cheap meals ($2 max) in campus canteens, and also outside; delicious food

Going out for dinner on Sunday night with colleagues & friends

‘Monday night @ the movies’ in our apartment with Vera’s cooking, to watch Better call Saul and Game of Thrones

Friendly people, little violence

Apartment – easy living; great view of Tang Dao Wan Bay; biking around the Bay

The China Daily newspaper, my ‘window on China’

Friends: teaching colleagues, other staff, some students, others.

(2) What we will NOT miss

Cold wind in winter (the wind chill factor can bring the temperature down to minus 20 or lower)

Pollution: air and water

Crowds everywhere, especially during holidays

Lack of discipline/courtesy by drivers

Littering; smoking; spitting

Smelly toilets / squat toilets

Cheating in exams

Questions about age and salary

No queuing, always trying to push in

No access to English language TV

People speaking loudly on their mobile phones.

Differences China – Australia

The cultures are hugely different in almost every aspect.  Here are some which spring to mind:

Food. Chinese LOVE food; eat out a lot; always take photos of the food they are eating; normally eat early and go to bed early; use chopsticks; love pork; drink hot water/tea

Workers: work hard, long hours; competitive environment; construction workers work in all conditions and seven days; finish projects quickly; have few holidays; banks open on Saturdays and even Sundays

Students: respectful and keen to learn; want top marks; lots of lectures; all live on campus; conform – very little individuality but they are all different; love long, hot showers once or twice a week; gyms becoming popular (fit, healthy bodies); girls wear short-shorts in summer; girls with long black hair; everyone has a smart-phone; boys love computer games and watching NBA basketball; singing (choirs) popular; studying Marxism is compulsory but disliked (“boring”);

Alcohol:  love to drink, especially men (and smoke, although that is declining); they seem to be happy drunks; there is little violence in Chinese society;

History: very much part of every-day living, they know all the famous historical figures; seem to have a much stronger sense of history than young Australians; strong family ties

Buildings: almost everyone lives in high-rise apartment buildings; buildings usually face South to utilise the sun; most buildings have solar panels on the roof;  

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Well, that's it for this post.  I know there is much much more to say about China, but my brain refuses to do more tonight.

Tomorrow we start driving north, to Brisbane (about 1,300 km) to visit our daughter and her family.   I'll try to do some posts on our European holiday last July - August, but not sure if I'll have the time or the inclination. Let's see.  

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Best wishes, stay healthy and keep smiling.

Alex & Vera Olah
Canberra, Australia
14 February 2017  




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