Arrived at PEK last night at about 11:10 PM and found out that apparently no one eats after 11 PM. After wandering for a good 30 minutes
I finally found a 24 hour McDonald’s, thank god. I was so hungry after missing dinner and getting a miniature snack on the plane. I may have slept about 3 hours last night, but hopefully I can sleep more on this flight from PEK to ICN . I’ll be meeting up with my high school friends Cody and Dan in Seoul for, what I can only predict as, an “interesting” weekend. Check back soon.
Enroute to SoKo
June 3rd, 2010 by Shane 2 comments »How to survive China as a foreigner
May 18th, 2010 by Shane 2 comments »This post was written by Chris Biddle at his website, but I liked it so I’m reposting it here for my readers.
Bring your own deodorant. Bring your own coffee. Get used to the smell of urine. Smile, a lot. Learn how to say where your from. Understand that it’s not rude if someone asks how much money you make. Listen to music. Read. Be patient. Don’t drink tap water. Try everything at least once, especially the stuff that grosses you out, it will make for a better story. Get out there and do stuff, try not to use the train of thought “Well, I deserve this,” too often. If you’re a man, carry a pack of cigarettes with you and offer them to any man you meet. They will most likely not take one, even if they do smoke, but they will appreciate the sentiment.
Try not to think in terms of right or wrong, rude or polite, dirty or clean. Ask as many questions as you can. Don’t talk about politics. Eat lots of noodles. Eat lots of fruit, but always clean them before hand. Don’t be shy. Go to karaoke. Don’t talk about Japan. If you like basketball play a pick up game with some strangers. Despite the fact that they don’t, look both ways before crossing the street. Bring your own ear plugs. Bring your own dental floss. Never pay full price. Don’t expect to get laid. Don’t do anything that could land you in jail. Find out what can and can’t land you in jail, you’ll be surprised.
Don’t freak out when someone invades your personal space. Try not to eat Western food, it’s expensive and often times unsatisfying. Visit the Great Wall, the Terra Cotta Warriors, the Summer Palace, but don’t linger. Get off the beaten path. Get lost. Take your time. Man zou. Walk slowly. Learn how to use chopsticks. Buy or rent a bike. Weaving in and out of traffic, dodging taxis and donkey pulled carts, and ringing your bell at pedestrians in your way will make you feel like you’re one of them. Don’t go in the water. Get used to sleeping on a rock hard bed.
Try not to reserve “thank you” for times when people really do help you, and try to reserve “I’m sorry,” for times when you’ve truly inconvenienced someone. It will only make them laugh if you over use it. If you learn to read any characters, learn foods first. Don’t worry about table manors. Talk with your mouth full of food. Burp. Slurp your tea as loud as you can. Go to a teahouse and try as many different kinds as you want.
You’ll want to buy a lot of crap, but by the end of your journey you’ll realize that most of it just that, crap. Reserve days for doing nothing. Make lots of jokes. Don’t sleep in too often, Chinese people are early risers and you might miss a lot of the action. Don’t go to many temples. You’ve seen one, you’ve seen them all.
Keep your eyes open. Don’t get discouraged. It will be hard, but try not to think about home. Remind yourself that every day you’ve somehow ended up on the other side of the world, in the oldest civilization in the world. Ask yourself unanswerable questions and find satisfaction in this. Go fly a kite. It’s not just for kids.
Frustrations
May 17th, 2010 by Shane 3 comments »After a semester and a half of teaching oral English, I think I’ve discovered a few flaws in the system. No doubt they’ve been “discovered” by others as well, but I’m still going to outline them for my own benefit and to vent a bit. You see, last week, only a handful of my class of 32 students actually did their homework. It wasn’t even difficult, it could literally be completed in 5 minutes if they were lazy, and yet so many just didn’t do it. At first I thought it was my fault, perhaps I hadn’t explained well enough, perhaps there was a miscommunication. But if a handful could do it correctly, I must’ve communicated to them (unless they’re mind readers)! Nope, it was simply out of laziness that they didn’t do their homework. But why should they? There’s a laundry list full of reasons why it’s not important to do your homework, or attend classes.
Singing Sensation
April 17th, 2010 by Shane 1 comment »I am a singing sensation! Well, that might actually be exaggerating a little bit. I’m really not much of a singer and despite that my students are always wanting me to sing. I don’t know if they’re so used to bad singing because they go to KTVs all the time, or if their ears are warped so much they think I’m just that good. How did I get talked into this? Well, after my April Fools Day joke went off so well I needed to make sure the classes didn’t tell each other. So I just asked them really nicely to not tell anyone else until the end of the week. I wasn’t expecting it, but Gee, one of the girls in my first class asked, “What are you going to do for us?”. I guess I hadn’t thought about that.
“Sing us a song…. in Chinese!”
I was reluctant to do so, but what the heck, I might as well give it a try. This is how it turned out.
Click read more for a song breakdown
April Fools & Easter
April 8th, 2010 by Shane 2 comments »Last week was April Fool’s day (愚人节), or for me rather, April Fool’s week. Unfortunately I didn’t actually have class on April 1, but that didn’t stop me from playing a trick on each one of my classes. The trick went simply like this; I told them that the school leaders wanted me to give more quizzes, these quizzes would be pop-quizzes so they didn’t know there were coming. Our first one is today. This sent them into a panic. They were so worried about doing well on this quiz that they would do whatever it said. Lucky me. Knowing that students don’t always read directions so well I gave them each a quiz like the one below. As you can see, the instructions say to read the entire quiz first before doing anythere. Well, students often don’t read directions, so this leads them to do every question on the quiz before they get to the bottom and realize they’ve been tricked. All the while I was taking a video of them doing some pretty silly things. Check out the videos after the jump.
Things I Didn’t Post: Oh Shit, Google -Edition
March 23rd, 2010 by Shane No comments »There’ve been quite a few things going on here in China, and in Xi’an for that matter that seem perhaps trivial for their own spell-binding post, but put them all together and I guess we’ve got something. So let’s get started.
Shoes
The shoes I brought here are starting to get rather worn out with all the walking I do nearly every day. So I decided I’d look into buying a new pair of shoes, the Chinese
brands I’ve seen like Li-Ning, and Erke looked like they had some cool stuff. No dice. I wear size 12-13 depending on brand, which equates to 46-47 in Chinese (Euro sizes), and the Chinese brands don’t carry or even make anything larger than size 44. So I started looking at all the shoe stores, turns out, I’m a freak of nature. I really began to feel the pain my good friend Chris endures finding his size 15 shoes. Most of the shoe stores didn’t just have the shoes sitting out in boxes so I’d have to ask if they had my size, which was almost universally no. Pretty soon you just get tired of asking, and think “just show me what you DO have in 46 and let me pick from those!”. Long story short, I managed to find a pair of New Balance shoes in size 45 that must’ve ran big, because they fit nicely. Green, ¥327? Sold.
Twitter
LinkedIn
Facebook
Buzz