July 2014’s posts

The Bigger They Are, The Harder They Fall

4/7/2014

Rising from the sheets late on the Saturday seemed to be a theme for all our foreign teacher colleagues.  Dehydrated, mouth parched, Nikki and I met Birgitte and headed for the number 5 bus.  Our aim, A-One Shoes, a new plaza built especially for shoes and the sales of soled things.  On arrival, we jumped off the bus a short stroll away.  On closing in, the enormous metal and glass vessel of a building loomed into view.  It half resembled a craft from Star Wars and further looked like the cast of a huge uncompleted cruise liner.  In all actuality it was abandoned, uncompleted and required many further touches.  A ghost shopping village lay next door, a long lost empty and discarded neighbour.  Disappointed we wandered back to a bus stop, not before seeing a man on a motorbike hit a car.  The biker, without helmet and inadequate clothing for such a vehicle flew over the bonnet, landed out of view, a flip flop landing feet from us.  Bits of bike shattered outwards, the sound of plastic and metal meeting unintentionally joined with screeching tyres.  The air filled with burning rubber and tension.  Out dived the driver, his first reaction was to light a cigarette.  Nikki, Birgitte and I hesitantly looked at each other, our first instincts to help met with a conversation based on logic.  In eyesight nearby, there was half a dozen policemen, the driver had a phone out and we knew not enough Mandarin to assist.  The motor bike driver appeared to be sat up, no visible head injury and just a trailing leg that looked knackered, possibly broken.  The driver of the car’s full attention was now on his own vehicle.  The nearby policemen never left their shaded posts.  We walked away.  No other cars stopped, life carried on.

In the evening food was had a restaurant on road in Liaoxia.  Liam, Esben, Bryony, Nikki and I tucked into the several dishes we ordered with gusto.  Becky and Birgitte did not join us as their parents had arrived for a few days.  James stayed in, with a stomach problem requiring numerous uses of the squat-hole Chinese toilets.  Whilst James had no pleasure, the quality of food from this restaurant gave great contentment.  As the gannets circled the central plates, remains became less and less.  An egg dish resembling omelette was so good, it was re-ordered.  The egg and tomato dish; the creamy egg noodles with pork; a gingery spicy beef dish and some bread all vanished sharply.  So did my seat.  Without warning, I was upended.  The plastic legs gave way and many passers-by stopped to look at the giant westerner sat on a half broken chair in shock.  An older lady at the restaurant, likely the owner’s grandma came over and started laughing.  Thankfully I was not injured!  It was funny though.  A new chair followed.  Everyone bid farewell after food around 9pm.  Esben, Nikki and I reconvened at midnight and headed to Snow Bar, where John (the bar owner, he is Chinese and his name is very hard to understand in Mandarin!) welcomed us.  Esben and I tucked into a tower of beer for 48RMB.  Nikki was offered a free Samurai Juice by the owner John.  The Brazil versus Chile game was projected onto the outside wall of Tesco’s.  During the time there I tried some meat and a really amazing aubergine cooked chockfull of spices.  After full time, and as the game entered extra time, I was left all alone.  James had later joined us briefly but felt unwell and scattered with Esben and Nikki homeward bound.  I remained, drinking my way through th best part of the second beer tower.  I witnessed an off-duty policeman go to his car, change and drive away – whilst heavily drunk.  Drink driving here is very obvious.  After the penalty shoot-out, the bar area emptied of the 20 or so souls, and so did the car park.  I then bid farewell to my namesake and owner of the pavement mounted outdoor drinking establishment.

Walking back would have been uneventful normally, a few scurrying rats and the odd sleeping local on benches here or there.  However, I witnessed  a 30 metre section of power cable glowing bright red.  Within seconds two local men stopped alongside me, in awe of what we could see.  The wire casing ignited.  Plastic dripped around us.  A local policeman (sober) turned up.  He just watched.  Nothing was done.  Then another policeman arrived.  He just watched too.  Eventually the wire burst into life, fire and molten plastic reigning down from 3 metres above several cars and alongside an empty looking built up area.  The policemen were joined by at least 5 more contemporaries as the first car window started to kindle.  The policeman became full of action and eventually advised me and the locals to go away.  So off I went, home and in bed for 3am-ish.

Sunday, up in good time, Nikki and I jumped on bus number 5 to Shuilian Mountain Park.  This time not to scale the peaks, more to wander around the reservoir and nearby butterfly house.  The butterfly house’s gardens happened to have many butterflies fluttering by.  The buildings housed galleries, bird displays and even a lonely ferret.  Many tarantulas, scorpions and lizards happened to have minimal enclosure security – meaning any local could open the enclosure, prod and tease the animals into a perfect photography pose – and then leave them be.  We decided to skip going on a boat in the baking heat, headed back via the number 10 bus (and I say via, via Dongguan, due to a minor clerical error on our part) and then the number L1 bus.  A massive 5RMB added to the expected 4RMB journey.  Surprisingly, that evening we were shattered by the extra distance journey through inner-city Dongguan and back.

Monday for me, meant Cherry class, Banana class and Peach class in K2 (aged 4-5).  Lychee class (K1, aged 3-4) slotted in there for good effect.  The day flew by, and seemed to have a cohesion to it, that has been lacking in my magical kindergarten teaching experience to date.  In the evening, Esben, departing Houjie the following morning, acquired beverages of the alcoholic variety for James, Liam, Nikki and I – at the top of Houjie International’s rotating restaurant.  Esben is game over.

The Rickshaw Man

8/7/2014

Classic title time.

Tuesday came, a return to the market for food in the evening and classes as functional as can be expected from kindergarten kids hyper on anything stronger than water.  Wednesday drifted in, a meal at Boton Restaurant in the centre of Houjie followed a short rickshaw ride.  Cod and steak, with noodles and scallops coated in cheese made for a very western themed meal.  The quiz at Irene’s Bar that evening was very well orchestrated by Bryony and Becky.  Varied questions of tough and easy made for good fun.  A team was formed with Birgitte (to mark her final night in Houjie) with Nikki, James, Liam and I.  Birgitte’s parents and their two friends from Norway also appended to our team.  Victory was had, and thankfully not too many Disney questions – as anticipated.  Well done to the quizmasters, for taking flak, handing back wit and banter – and for a fun quiz.  Marcus, Irene’s other half, gave his thanks and a mild applause followed.  Many moons agao, Marcus said he admired that our group of foreign teachers don’t just drink at Irene’s Bar every night, and explore so many other places locally – and further afield.  I think this makes that particular foreign bar much more welcoming.  CHAMPIONS.

Thursday, a nightmare day at school, one late class (Apple, N1 level, aged 2-3) was cancelled without anyone telling me.  In the school there are many teachers, only Yuki, Kitty and Winnie have enough confidence to speak with me – and I suspect they’re the only few who speak English fluently enough.  Not that I am allowed to use any pigeon-Chinese to try and help, one of the big rules for foreign teachers is “Only speak English.”  The earlier classes followed very little cohesion due to unruly and excitable children.  When a class is interrupted by a delivery of plates, knife and forks with a cuddly banana by a local children’s centre promoter it doesn’t bode well for the day ahead.  That and the teacher, who was observing, leant through a window nattering with two passing teachers.  Strewth, how can I win with these rules reminiscent of playing at Old Trafford?

Friday arrived, the day surpassed previous days for levels of chaos.  Firstly, Kitty and Winnie had deserved days off at the seaside.  Secondly, it being Friday, the kids are understandably bouncing off the walls excited by the freedom of the weekend ahead.  Firstly, Apple Class tested my wits, but only for 10 minutes, as two new teachers were introduced to them.  Afterwards classes passed with only two headbutts to the leg and one punch to the testicles.  Talk about putting yourself in the line of fire.

To mark the imminent departure of James and Liam, the terrible two joined Becky, Bryony, Nikki and I for food at Boton restaurant.  For around 615RMB, we all enjoyed drinks, at least 2 courses and a platter of sides to share.  Afterwards we caught a rickshaw to Irene’s Bar, after one drink Bryony went home and soon after, full on several rum and cokes, Nikki went home.  Both had to be in school for 2 hours on Saturday.  After which Liam, James, Becky and I plodded (by rickshaw) to Houjie’s Jiŭbā Jiē (bar street).  We entered the unbecomingly named Party Bar.  A few staff members wangled around, and we played the most popular dice game in the world (chuīniú – bluff or bullshit).  You should play it.  After a few games and during half-time of the Germany versus France game, we rolled over the road to the newly opened H.One Bar, a nightclub/cabaret style bar with a stage that rises up for the staged dancing, singing and other oddity interludes.  For the peculiarity of China, see http://www.chinasmack.com/ or http://www.chinahush.com/.

During the night I think all four of us were accosted for dancing in circles (like I never left kindergarten), “have a drink” with me, drink and talk… etc etc… oooh blue champagne… tastes of bubblegum.  Back massage in the toilet by the toilet attendant?  That is novel.  Ouch, and rough.  The night fizzled out with a drink in Iron Bar as James rolled home, sleeping in the taxi as he left, before Liam, Becky and I shared a rickshaw back soon after.  The two seater rickshaw gave rise to a form of gymnastics I like to call, inebriated.  And into bed for 5am.

Saturday, was surprisingly relaxed, Liam, James, Bryony, Nikki and I went for lunch – at Boton, three times in one week.  The 36°C heat combined with humidity made us all flee to indoors for shelter.  It was too hot for comfort.  Sweat should not roll in some places.  That evening Liam departed to the U.K. via Beijing for a few days.  The market was a stopping point for food with Nikki and Bryony followed by Snow Bar to watch the Argentina against Belgium game.  Nikki and Bryony mixed Samurai Juice (Blueberry based) with Morgan’s Spiced rum.  James arrived soon after, and departed at full time, for a late night McDonald’s (located around 2-3km away).  We bid farewell, James was to head to Shenzen, Beijing and then west Lancashire soon after.  Good luck to James at the University College of Dublin.  He won’t need it, the smart git.  And then there were three.

RULES OF ENGAGEMENT

10/7/2014

There is no doubt whatsoever, kindergarten is full of characters.  There are the odd shy and silent types that barely compete with others.  There has only been one wee tot who has cried so far.  Most are easy to be distracted.  Some don’t pay attention (full stop).  Each class has at least a couple super-contestants – likely to be very talkative.  The energetic wing of the class usually features one or two naughty brats.  Their attention is not available to you, no matter how much you endeavour.

Points to consider every day:

  • Rules, rules, rules, repeat.  Stop.  Try again.  Reinforce.  There is light at the end of the tunnel.  Eyes on me, eyes on you.  Be quiet.  Listen to Teacher John.
  • To control a class, you need the Chinese English Teachers or Class Teachers on hand.  Each class should be treated differently and best laid lesson plans will be destroyed with ease.  Children do that.  Never work with animals or children learning English and not entirely fluent on their native tongue.
  • Songs, games, activities that are simple – and feature an eye-catching video always help.  Repeat if passion is shown by the students, bend the song to fit to game or roleplay activity.
  • Flashcards have to be durable otherwise they will litter the classroom floor.  Forget paper.  Laminate, encase in plastic, entomb in steel – and you may still have flashcards after class.
  • You must be clear with your instructions, don’t stop mid-flow and certainly use good body language – vivid and expressive – to win the students’ attention.  Without this, they will eat you alive.
  • Keep it interesting.  You are competing with passing spiders, light shining on shiny things, teachers passing by, other students – the list goes on and on, and on… and on…
  • Group competition is a great idea, if you can keep the groups separate.  Boys versus girls is easy, unless your class is massively imbalanced on the male to female ratio.  This is not unusual.
  • Role play is great, but don’t lose the class with long examples.  Let a fair few people try.
  • Sentence practicing is relatively easy, I say relative, it is like pissing into the wind on a freezing cold day with Siberian gusts and many loose branches flying by… but that is the easy part of the day.
  • Never introduce more than 3-6 words, depending on the age range of the class.

Of course it is easy to stereotype kindergarten students, they are much more dynamic in their behaviours.  The monster yesterday, could be today’s angel and tomorrow’s disinterested student.  Chinese people work around 50 hours each week, often including Saturdays or Sundays – with overtime pay mostly unheard of.  Students seem to have it the same way.  Long weeks, long hours – and exhaustion mentally or physically common.  Teachers in China are very highly respected, often seen as the second parents to the children students, and their bond with the resident teachers is heartening and pleasant to see.  Respect on the whole follows as standard.  In spite of this, the foreign teacher is seen as a play thing.  And duly so, we work nowhere near as hard as our local contemporaries.

The Education Bureau of China finances state schools from kindergarten to high school.  The state education focal point is school discipline strictly.  State education is getting more advanced but conversely private schools, training centres, and company executives that need teachers are also evolving and improving drastically.  As such, parents and those with financial interest in education want to see results.  To improve your results means you must also evolve, adapt and improve your skills.

That said, nothing prepares you for being assaulted by a group of 6/7 children from K2 Banana Class.

Walk, amble, march, saunter, stroll, stride, pace, toddle, totter, move, tread, pace and gait

14/7/2014

Today, July 14th is St Stithian’s Show, in Stithians, Kernow (Cornwall), UK.  I hope the day is a massive success for all those involved, those visiting and the community locally and regionally.  Nikki and I wish we were there.

On the previous Sunday (July 6th) we wandered around the Dongguan Botanical gardens where perhaps the biggest kite I have ever seen flew with relative ease.  I said to Nikki and Bryony that this giant dirty red kite shaped like a stingray would not take off.  It pretty much did instantly, the thermals good, and the kite-flyer clearly vastly experienced in smooth take offs.  The kite’s 100metre plus tail dragged along clumsily but up, up, up it went.  En route to the park in the 36°C sunshine the rusty bus number 5 stopped by Oxford Kingdom International school, oblivious to our location, whilst nattering away, it became clear many more eyes than usual were set upon us.  Words flung back at us like a wall of sound.  The driver thought we wanted to dive off at that stop.  “Bù, xièxiè” we shouted back – and off continued the tarnished old bus.

Monday through to Friday was largely uneventful.  School was 90% chaos with a smidgen of what the flip and two whole pounds of “holy mackerel Batman”.  Wednesday evening saw Irene’s Bar mix it up a little.  Marcus allowed us to draw numbers from a pint glass to designate which team we would sit upon.  Nikki, Bryony and Becky drew number 2.  I got number 3 and joined Axel (from Germany), a loud but fun Aussie lady, Cody from USA, a British lady who knows her Sir Christopher Wren facts well.  In the end our team won.  Surprisingly we did very well, considering we did not answer the biggest tea producing country in the world (China, but we put Sri Lanka) and coffee producer (Brazil, we put Columbia).  Still, we ended with a rendition of We Are The Champions by Queen.  Champions!  See my review of Irene’s Bar online now:  http://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attraction_Review-g297412-d6558560-Reviews-Irene_s_Bar-Dongguan_Guangdong.html

Earlier in the week we watched Transformers – Age of Extinction in the Xingx International Cinema – after a heavy meal in Pengs restaurant at the local Wanda Plaza.  The pasta dish was far too peppery, the chicken dish just right, and the curry was tasty.  I also had a lovely Tuna salad.  We ordered too much between us.  After a heavy meal, what better way than to watch a CGI-loaded dizzying film to keep you alert.  The film was actually very good and hearing the local Chinese audience purr at some of the action scenes was quite funny.  Every time a Chinese product appeared on screen, there was excitement in the auditorium.  Cheers too.  C’est bon is French for its good or something to that effect – here in China it is a leading brand of water.  Product placement present pretty much in every scene.  I won’t be buying a Chevrolet (they sponsor some tinpot team).  Guangzhou and Hong Kong featured in the film too.  Some landmarks were instantly recognised, others had to be looked up later – and disappointedly Hollywood had fibbed a few landscape scenes from northern China into Hong Kong scenes.  Boo on you!

This weekend passed with a trip to Guangzhou, starting on the Friday night.  A short coach journey to the big city was followed by a quick underground metro ride to our stop by the Baiyun Mountain Park.  A lengthy stroll, we should have got a taxi, progressed us to the gates of the Oriental Resort.  The entrance is a kind of a curved European design leading to a long snaking road into the heart of the resort.  At reception we presented our passports, paid the deposit (to include the 796RMB two night double room fee) and went to our rooms.  We then headed straight for the restaurant and had noodles, a spicy stuffed chilli pepper dish and some shredded pork that was very juicy.  We looked at the closing outdoor pool afterwards before heading to bed via our first bath since we arrived in China.

The next day, after a Chinese buffet breakfast and a swim in the outdoor pool, I made Nikki walk, amble, march, saunter, stroll, stride, pace, toddle, totter, move, tread, pace and gait a fair distance.  We walked from the hotel to the South Gate of the park (4km), jumped on a cable cart up the mountain side, had a wander around the top, ate some grub and then explored.  We started at a bird park, headed for Moxingling (the highest peak), fed Koi fish at Taohuajian, walked along the Yunshan North Road and departed the Baiyunshan (Cloud Mountain) West Gate before strolling back to the hotel (around 13km).  So in total about 17km (or 10.5 miles) – and plenty of mosquito bites, sweat rash and sore toes to show for it.

That evening food was greatly appreciated in the restaurant.  After that we watched the supermoon whilst swimming in the outdoor pool.  Moonlit, bats flying overhead and a fine steam mist rising off the water.  There will also be another supermoon on August 10 and a third on September 9 in most parts of the world.  Give it a look!

Any given Sunday bloody Sunday

21/7/14

[written yesterday (20/7/14) ,posted today]

Last Sunday we spent wandering the streets of Guangzhou, shopping is the term most people use.  I use wandering.  For when I shop with Nikki, I lead her off the shop-fronted straights and into the twisted alcove terraces of the shabby ginnels (one for you Asa) or alleyways.  Here you find real China – the animals enjoying their last breaths before the blade arrives; the piles, like mounds of rice, of medicine strong in stench and colours reminiscent of 1970’s English curtains; the ground is littered with by-products of the makeshift assembly workshops lining the close propinquity-based doorways and windows; cats and kittens clamber across canopies and rooftops.  Real China gives you perspective, culturally we in the west are so different, yet the same.  There is much more community here.

Families work long and hard to provide for each other.  Retirement is but a dream or a myth to most.  The old sacrifice time, health and freedom for the young often.  It is evident some companies, state-ran areas, private schools and the odd rich person pay into pension scheme equivalents, but for most it is out of reach.  Most working life starts on leaving school, assuming the person attended school, until near death.  5am is a good time to get up – and midnight is habitually the time to hit the sack.  Anyone working 9-5 shifts is lucky, this is something seen as rare, and retained for Westerners, who have yet to adapt.  Working days vary everywhere, and to any observations are generalised but very close to the absolute precision of actuality.  There is almost always a breakfast at work or school; a lunchtime break; an afternoon snack and regularly an evening meal.  The evening meal is rare in kindergarten or lower grades at primary/junior schools, the younger ones aren’t expected to be up so late – however, being out at night in Houjie, the wee ones always appear to be out!  When do they sleep?

I have, since arriving here, asked many Chinese people, “What do you do in your free time?”  To which the standard response has been, “sleep.”  On asking the question in different forms, the answer either remains the same, or “What free time?”  Some families enjoy long summer trips to their home provinces, but only on account they have saved enough during the school year in order to do so.  Even then, most will work part time or travel locally to earn their bread and butter (or rice and noodles).

This week at kindergarten, I have had some good days, some manic moments and overall reasons to be cheerful.  The last day was quite sweet, lessons were cancelled and sweets/candy was devoured in a way that local dentists will not lose trade for years to come.  Cakes, chocolate and seaweed accompanied.  That and milk-based drinks too vile to be consumed by a sane adult.  The kindergarten kids ate with zest, passion visible by their sugary grins.  I started that day in Apple, N1, the youngest class, essentially babies (aged 2-3).  We played games outside in the kindergarten park (where UK health and safety would have condemned the slide and swings long ago), danced and smiled lots.  Afterwards, Strawberry class (K2, aged 4-5) had a party, looked at photographs of the year gone by and we generally played – and had merriment.  Lunchtime slipped in after Lychee class (K1, aged 3-4) where we started a short class of songs, played with Duplo (chunky Lego) and other plastic based construction toys.

In the afternoon, I joined Cherry class (K2) for a further party, had umpteen sweets forced upon me, and an apple, and a banana… and then the Aunty (a domestic who helps prepare foods, clean up after the wee brats etc) forced me to eat massive purple grapes that tasted like gooseberries.  Life can be so abrasive at times.  From here I went to Banana class (K2).  Banana class are 90% misbehaving and 8% uninterested; the 2% venom.  One kid is pure evil, he even looks like a notorious wartime leader of a state in Europe that recently won some world cup in sport I am familiar with.  He can be nice to talk with, but if you talk to other kids, protect the groin, protect the face.  Brace for impact.  By 4.15pm it was all over, 4 weeks of discordant, blaring, raucous, jangly, pleasant, enjoyable, amiable, cheeriness all over.

That is, until next week, assignment number three arrives.  On Monday, I start my second kindergarten position.  This time, for the same group of schools, at Oxford Kingdom Flying Kindergarten.  I have no idea where the word flying comes from.  I can only assume that the pilots of China Southern Airlines all passed through the ranks of Oxford Kingdom Flying Kindergarten.  That or I am to teach parrots.  My latest role involves a class of K1 students (with one K3 student slotted in for good measure) aged roughly 3-4 years old.  I have 10 classes totalling 30 minutes each, alongside other interaction, outdoor play, and morning exercises.  This role lasts 5 weeks (less the week beginning 4th of August).

In other news…

The recent Supertyphoon Rammasun (Siamese for Thunder God) brought cooling winds/breezes to our local area.  Nothing more thankfully.  The local media has covered the deaths and destruction it brought to some of our province (eastern area), Guangxi and Hainan Island.

 

In the week, we came 2nd in the quiz at Irene’s Pub.  We joined a team and missed the first round.  Our punctuality problem stemmed from a late meal at Boton restaurant on Bar Street in Houjie, some distance from our area of Liaoxia.  Our local magazine for foreigners, Here Dongguan, has published a guide to our fair town of Houjie.  Go visit it at:  http://heredg.com/2014/07/town-guide-houjie/ I didn’t know Houjie translates roughly as Thick Street.

On August the 2nd, we may visit Zhuhai to see The GAC Trumpchi Zhuhai International Lovers Tandem Cycling Race.  Well we couldn’t see the Tour De France in Yorkshire!

So, our week off, we aim for either Zhangjiajie or Guilin.  Guilin is about 538km (334 miles) away by road, roughly the same distance as Manchester to Redruth (Cornwall).  Zhāngjiājiè is just a tad further north in Hunan Province.  Both look stunning, however, Zhāngjiājiè is much harder to get to.  We may have to fly CAN or SZX to KWL (around 1 hour) or go by train (around 9-10 hours) from Guangzhou.  Buses are not an option at 17 hours or so!

Then late August sees the 6th China International Animation Copyright Fair.  It is a kind of  cartoon carnival, cosplay competition and performance event.

Today, we ate at a lovely restaurant.  I say we, I mean Becky, Nikki and I.  Bryony bailed on us yesterday, flying back to the UK via Thailand.  Bryony will be back in around 5 weeks.  Becky flees midweek to the UK via Beijing.

In closing, Happy Birthday to Alexander the Great and Claudio Reyna, Macedonian king.

Semester One: The official summary (by Nikki)

24/7/14

From February 2014 to July 2014, I taught English at the Oxford Kingdom International Kindergarten in Houjie, Dongguan. I taught 4 classes comprising of 64 students; 2 K3 (giraffe and elephant class); 1 K1 (Zebra class); and a baby class. For baby class I had a book called ‘Tiny talk’ to teach. This book just had simple words and sentences to teach, like lunchtime, bedtime, family, weather and much more. For K1 and K3 there were many different English lessons including, audio visual, reading, craft, conversation, song and phonics. For audio visual, phonics and conversation I was given books and DVD’s to follow and use in lessons, which helped a lot!

Students in my all my classes behaved very well, sometimes they would get very excited over the activities I use in class, and all want to try. Baby class enjoyed learning songs with actions, so after teaching the vocab I would play a few videos. Towards the end of the semester the children would ask me to play certain songs, and could sing the songs without the videos. K1 were hard to control to begin with, but after a month or so myself and the Chinese/English teacher worked together as a team, and controlled the children. Some children in K1 were quiet to begin with, but by the end of the semester they were talking a lot more in English. One of my K1’s, Sunny  who is very smart, would always ask ‘What’s this?’, to different objects, which is an excellent way to learn, and others picked up on this question and asked me as well. Both of my K3 classes were very smart and learnt words and sentences very quickly. There were always a few children in giraffe class that would not be listening, so I always made sure to get them to join in with activities at the front of class, so I could check on them. Children in both K3 classes would regularly talk to me in English asking questions about me, and using the vocab learnt in lessons.

The school has looked after me from the beginning, and I get along with all of the staff. All of the teachers have been super, assisting me when I need it. Sofia has always been a great, and she will often ask me for ideas for displays at the front of school, which I also help make. I really enjoy teaching at the school and look forward to next semester.

Semester One: The official licensed summary (by John)

24/7/14

Dao Ming Foreign Language School (Houjie, Dongguan):

  • A slightly dated but very pleasant cramped school with many classrooms and not enough grounds.
  • The teachers and management are very welcoming, there is an ethos of try harder and you can succeed.  Belief is engrained on the school’s fabric.

 

Job role:

  • To assist with the teaching of oral English practice by way of lessons involving games, activities, computer-aided Powerpoint presentations.
  • To liaise with the school hierarchy and foreign teacher team in order to formulate different, fun, engaging and varied measures of teaching oral English.
  • To improve the English of my fellow teachers and the P.E. staff.

 

Classes:  701-704 (Grade 7) and 801-803 (Grade 8).  5th Grade VIP.  7th/8th Grade VIP.

 

Students’ behaviour:

  • This varied drastically between the age groups and classes.  80% of each class seemed to be engaged on the whole.  Several students in Grade 8 seemed to act up to get the attention of others; or simply down to their hormones.  That said, some lessons the same students would be the polar opposite and show absolute enthusiasm for the topic in hand.
  • Class 702 were as near perfect a class as anyone could wish for.  They had leaders within, who encouraged their fellow students often.  Their behaviour was exemplary.
  • Class 704 were great fun, and whilst their ability seemed a tad lower than the rest, they gathered strength and belief as the semester went on.
  • Class 701 always seemed to be a challenge, for the last class of Friday.  At least three students in this class could not be engaged and regular interruptions by their form teacher were needed – however, on the early day in the week, this class was very well behaved.
  • Grade 8 classes on the whole had many stand out students – and much more discipline.  The subjects were on the whole harder by a degree, but the desire to learn more seemed to up a notch too.
  • VIP Classes varied.  Grade 5 had far too many student changes initially and not enough classes in a row (competitions, rain, etc cancelled a few classes).  After the first 4 weeks or so, no Chinese English Teacher attended, causing problems with controlling around 16 students.  Grade 7 and 8 was challenging but on the whole rewarding.

 

Overall, I like it.  I want to do the best job possible and continuously improve.  I feel I owe it to everyone I work with, for and those I teach.

The Changjiang River waves behind drive the waves ahead.

28th July 2014.

Nín hǎo (if you’re old) / Nǐ hǎo (to everyone else).

Last night we arrived back, shattered from a weekend in Shenzhen.

Saturday, Nikki, had us onboard a pedal boat (designed for our shorter legged far eastern cousins) racing around an island looking at birds.  That and turtles.  And Chinese people taking photographs of the foreigners on their lake.  Lychee Park is stunningly arranged, a large boating lake, moon bridges, expansive green fields and tree-lined pathways.  Flowers, water lilies, frog filled ponds, beehive displays, dancing by young and old alike.  China might be riddled with development, overbuilding, habitat loss for wildlife, but here stands tranquillity.  Beyond the fencing and outer hedgerows sits a bustling City.  Inside, you’d hardly know it.

 

Here you may whip the camera out at this juncture, gaze at this, observe that, people spot, what a magnificent refuge for life’s need to unwind.  All the green colours and flowers bleed into one kaleidoscope offering no yearning to flee the open space.  Step on in, stay.  There is nothing middling here.

In the evening we walked an endless walk around for food before settling on the sight of our previous evening’s repast.  On the Friday night, I settled for barbecued sausages with peppers and thin sliced pork, resembling soft bacon with courgette.  This was topped off with Potato Tornado (spud on a stick) with spices.  DongMen BuXingJie (DongMen ZhongLu) has some amazing places to eat.  Here you can find fantastic food hidden away up here and there; grab something as a gift; walk and see the shops.  Big names, lesser brands, local and knock off sit side by side.  Bargain, barter and beware.  This was a great place to wander, but like all busy places, it pays to keep an eye on everything you hold dear.

 

On Sunday, we checked out, headed to the central bus and train station area.  Our bags were to sit in a locker for 20 RMB whilst we explored more of the city.  Hopping onto the Metro transit underground subway system is easy, and it was.  Lianhuashan Park was reached by arriving at The Children’s Palace station.  Here a patisserie can be found amongst all the restaurants and cold drink cafes.  The main building from the Metro station has 4 levels.  The top being the footpath into the park.  Outside you can cross a forecourt to admire the impressive Children’s Palace architecture, think modern European style meets Chinese modern.  Intricate and convoluted in shape and gallant in size.  The Children’s Palace hosts an attention-grabbing science museum, 4D cinema and starlight exhibition to name but a few contents.  It’s for kids.

The park, Lianhuashun, has big green fields surround a verdant hillock with the best land-based views of the Cityscape below.  Hong Kong rises in the distance.  In the park there can be found some impressive sculptures and statues.  The landscaped style of the park convenes well for kiteflyers, runners and walkers alike.  We exited the park at Lianhua North Station.  Lianhua West Station was also an option but the path never led that way.  That’s life.

 

Last week, a week that hit 37°C, I started at Flying Kingdom Kindergarten, Houjie.  I expected to have a class of six students, one K3 level and five K1 level.  I boarded the school bus without legroom and fitted with seat lap-belts that could not fit around me.  On board was Winnie, from the Oxford Kingdom and one other teacher I recognised but knew not her name.  Four students boarded, of which it would later transpire only two were destined for my class.

Within ten minutes I arrivedat the huge five storey building of the kindergarten.  The main edifice is accompanied by an outdoor Astroturf play area (complete with a closed climbing frame, a closed sandpit and a closed paddling pool).

On entering the building, a familiar face (name unknown to date) shown me to my classroom.  In here, it was explained that a cover teacher would be present until the afternoon to assist me.  My first student, Justin, was on the bus with me.  He hails from Nikki’s Oxford International Kindergarten and is of Taiwanese or Tibetan pedigree, depending on who you ask.  He looks five or six years old.  His English skills are far more advanced than most in Grade 3 of Dao Ming Foreign Language School.  He is four years old.  He can converse near fluently.  The second student off the bus is a mini-Chinese early day’s Liam Gallagher lookalike.  He even has his attitude.  Tommy is funny, nevertheless I have since learned, has no attention span whatsoever.

 

Soon after Beautiful (her English name) and Doris (I have known only two other people/creatures named Doris in my life… my sister Astrid’s hamster and a teacher at Dao Ming Foreign Language School.  That particular teacher told her friend I’d work for them as a Sales Representative, even though I never agreed a thing.  Lost in translation.)  Beautiful is a chirpy little girl, bubbling away with words I do not understand and always full of smiles.  The same can be said for Doris, although Doris gets giddy far too easy and half-laughs, half-screeches.  My class is Tommy, Justin, Doris and Beautiful.  No more students are expected.  The other students in the summer school bring the total pupils to a whopping 16.  There were initially four classes, but since then, the other three classes have merged.  My class, the K1s, is an elite four students, also, the only students with English classes.  Although I am presently contracted to teach all week, I have 11 (eleven) thirty minute classes (story, performance, song, conversation, craft and phonics forming the core of the English oral topics).

The first day was mostly introductions:  “I am Teacher John.” / “What’s your name?” / “My name is…” / “How are you?” etc…  In the afternoon, Jonlin, arrived from mid to North China (roughly 21 hours away by train).  Jonlin is tiny.  Of all the teachers and staff here, only one is tall, and very leggy for that matter.  On the whole, I am a giant to everyone here, teachers and students alike.  The other teachers and the school Aunty (who cooks and cleans) are very accommodating.  Everyone welcomes me.  The language may be a barrier, but the bodily actions and gestures are international.  The school is large, five storeys, the lower storey has 7 classrooms, an area set out as a castle, an area for spacehoppers and a few other nooks and crannies.  Beyond the ground level is the offices, a medical room, an arts room, a small science room, a western toilet and an area full of fictitious fishing pools, shops and a hospital.  The next floor up has more than a dozen classrooms.  Floor four is a massive building length dance area with a music room adjoined.  The top floor is derelict, incomplete, unfinished, lacking content – dormant and waiting for a purpose.  Each classroom, including my own has a sleep area, like a mini-loft within the room, set high above the student’s eyeline, on a par with my own head-height.  Below that a raised stage, where should I dance, I will wallop my head.  The rest of the room is the standard shelf, table, chairs found in generally most schools globally, although in minuscule sizes.

 

The week progressed in various forms of game, craft and conversation basics.  Justin’s ability outshines the rest, and sometimes it is hard to balance the gap between him and his peers.  At lunchtime, the whole school (all sixteen students) convene in one classroom around 4 desks.  The teachers hang back around the rims of the room.  At the head of the room sits a trolley with the lunch.  Here is where a metal bowl and spoon becomes handy.  After the learners tuck in, teachers can fill their metal bowls.  Soon after eating, the students and teachers retire to the in-class sleeping quarters.  I head out for a walk – as sleeping forty winks is not my thing, not for two hours!  The two hours break is a good time to plan lessons, read or do some shopping in Houjie town centre.  A cold lemon and kumquat tea is always on the agenda.

Monday night, we had pizza at Jerry’s Wow with Becky for her last meal in Houjie before departing the following morning to the UK via Beijing.  Cue Arnie voice, “She’ll be back…” in around 5 weeks.

Wednesday night marked the first quiz Nikki and I entered without other foreign teachers.  We drafted in two regulars to our team and came second overall by a two point margin.  Too many twos.

 

This week gone, we tried a spot of badminton in the wind, and some football tennis (which gives the locals something to look at in bemusement).

Tomorrow is day 169 away from the U.K.  Is it getting easier or harder?  I haven’t thought too much about this.  I miss family, football and friends greatly – but I really love being here.  More to follow… The blog has hit over 40,000 words.  Mostly gibberish.  Gibberish certainly boosts the statistics.  Gibberish is good.

Bài bài la (bye bye – commonly used in Taiwan and locally).

June 2014’s posts

A week of 36°C heat

4th June 2014

MONDAY:

As heat builds, energy saps.  Standing on an open athletic field watching the flag raising ceremony at school seemed perpetual.  Make it end, please make it end.  Even wearing a cap, sunglasses and a thin shirt counts for little.  I feel sweat seep, run and drop from lower legs, it feels warm and sticky, bloodlike in texture.  The stifling heat bakes me, stood up, feet exhausted and my brow draining of anything resembling liquid.  To the left, in amongst the classes, a young girl, maybe only 8-9 years of age, heaves up her breakfast, collapsing with a lack of energy.  Two teachers dash to her, lift her limp body up and haul her away for a quick checkover.  It is inhumanely hot.  8am should not be 33°C.  The forecast says highs of 35°C today.  Oh dear.

TUESDAY:

VIP Class for grade 5 faced the chop today due to an impromptu poetry competition.  I say impromptu, I mean, nobody told me or the foreign teachers.  We at least had chance to practice on a stage bigger than the London Lyceum Theatre.  Yes, I heard an actual pin drop many miles away.  Stage nerves are to be added to by the thin steal plating and rickety nature of the ground beneath our feet.  I advise my peers, do not stamp.  I do not want to die in China.  The rehearsal went well, even if the early stages had been interrupted by an eight year old student from one of James’s classes.  His actions with a toy chainsaw left many bruises on Esben’s and Liam’s abdomens.  On a lighter note, the student (who nobody seems to know his name) is calling me John rather than James (the standard greeting he shouts to anyone white).  It hit 36°C today.

WEDNESDAY:

My sunburn is receding into a form of peeling dry skin.

Today, we are supposed to record the Singing On The Rain song for our show this Friday.  This was supposed to happen at lunch time but did not due to James and Liam being kate by twenty minutes at lunchtime.  From 13:30hrs to 14:00hrs is a quiet period at the school.  Nap time, flumoxed kids by the midday heat and teachers equally dazed gives near tranquility.  Noises drift from outside of school such as hooting of horns, construction and general loudness, typical of this neck of industrial China.  Because Liam had only just set up the lap top for 13:55hrs, we have had to abandon the recording until the evening, after everybody has no more classes.  This is assuming the microphone works okay.  Again it hit 36°C today.

Liam and James could join us for the quiz in the evening.  They were running it!  Team “Trim The Fat” (we’d shed several pounds of Liam and James) won with just Esben, Nikki, Becky, Tim (from New Zealand) and I.  A staggering 2.5 points seen us over the finish line, despite dropping a massive amount of points on the final round.  Result.  Next week I am the quizmaster.  I’ll keep my quiz under lock and key until then.  Next week I cannot be on the team of Champions.

THURSDAY:

One quick show infront of the principal and his panel of judges later, and we had conformation that around 8am tomorrow we shall be in the Children’s Day Show.  Arghhhhh!  Earlier in the day 36°C was recorded, later on a storm cooled things off briefly, but later on it rose again to 36°C.

FRIDAY:

Dear diary, I hate mornings.  I hate being on stage.  I hate acting.  I’m not even sure I like Chinese food, children or being at school.  After we improvised facepaints using ground-up blue chalk, donned a very homemade and whimsical outfit each, our audience awaited and then action.  To follow ancient Chinese musical productions and displays of sheer obidient organisation was going to take soemthing.  Order, structure, organisation, professionalism, stability and neatness look better when shattered by a splattering of pandemonium, disarray, disorder and confusion.  I thank you.  That said we did provide a wealth of proper belly laughs from the audience, something I had not heard from the previous four acts and the 12 or so that followed.  The hours that followed the performance allowed me to teach class 701-704 without hitch.  My foreign teacher peers all had no classes, Children’s Day applies to children up to Grade 6 only.  Afterwards, I strolled around with James and Liam, enoyed masses of watermelon and was gifted more sugar based treats than should be legal (to which I passed them all to my Grade 7 students later).  The day itself was beautiful, like a friendly, welcoming version of Christmas slapped into summer, without all the religious pomposity and bullshit.  It also looked like the lower grades of school had done some proper crafts with their decorated rooms, costumes, hats and enthusiastic smiles galore.  Britain needs a Children’s Day, but the first rule would be – no commercialism.  And it Britain it will not be 36°C.

In the evening Birgitte and Esben flew separate ways to Shaghai and Guilin respectively.  The remainder of our clan went for pizza, before heading to Irene’s Bar to drink the quiz prize and buy a bottle of single malt whisky (sadly not Penderyn single malt whisky – remember Irish and Americans spell it whiskey or whiskeys, both are wrong).  On the way back Becky spotted a toad kissing a cockroach on the road.  This is very normal for Becky (who we would later find out, randomly that her dad does not eat cheese).

SATURDAY:

Nikki and I boarded the number 310 bus, crammed in, but breathable, headed to Daojiao.  We looked around the food festival (complete with water fight arena) and sidecourse of dragon boat racing.  Some blueberry liquor was purchased and lots of things tried, some foods so pungent that the nose was tested to the extreme.  We headed home early evening as the 36°C heat was far too much to brunt.

In the evening we met Tim and the foreign teachers and played Ring of Fire on the 9th storey roof of their apartment, complete with plantpots for Tim to add to the compost.  Tim also decorated the pavement below.  Báijiǔ (rice based spirit) does have that effect.  Especially mixed with Chinese brandy and other oddities.  Try tomato based alcopops.  Fantastic roof party, without music.

SUNDAY:

After waking up, doing some work, popping my head outside and realising that the weather was far too hot, I decided to lounge around.  Pretty much all day.  Nikki went back to Daojiao food festival with some of the foreign teachers.  In the evening we started watching a film with James, Liam, Bryony and Becky but could not finish it, a combination of lack of proper sleep, heat exhaustion and giggles killed the mood.  The Sunday high was 36°C.  Grrrr.

The horde on the embankment

4th June 2014

Dragonboat festival day and Monday being a day that school was closed allowed us chance to explore.  Liam, Bryony, Becky and James joined Nikki and I in a trip to Wàngniúdūn, a lesser known part of Dongguan.  Most people pass by this town on the nearby G4 Beijing–Hong Kong–Macau Expressway blissfully unaware of a very traditional area beneath them.  From Houjie we caught the 310 bus to Daojiao packed to the gunwales.  James and I stood somehow between the driver’s seat and one of the doors.  I’m fairly certain one of the foreign teachers had an unwelcome face full of Chinese lady armpit.  From Daojiao we negotiated through pigeon Chinese and Becky’s dragon articulations two taxies to Wàngniúdūn.  Becky, Liam and I split off from the others.  After driving for a while we agreed the taxi driver’s licence picture was certainly not the driver.  Unaware that Nikki, James and Bryony also having an unlicensed taxi driver.  Their driver was an older woman, the picture being of a younger man.  Still it was cheap and safe.  This is very normal for this neck of the world.

On arrival, at two different times, having had each taxi travel two different directions, we meandered towards the main river and presumably the race area.  I spotted a solitary dragon boat, untenanted to my left.  On wandering down one of the embankment roads to either side of the canal channel, distant drumming sounds rode up the water.  Two dragonboats drew closer.  Drums banging, chanting and filled to the brim with red baseball cap wearing, sportswear clad Chinese versions of Scousers on holiday.  Their smiles, and shouts of “ní hǎo” welcoming our band of foreigners curious by their customs.

Nikki and I abandoned the children (Becky, Bryony, James and Liam – it was hot, they were tired and grouchy) finding an alleyway through an impoverished estate with houses built from anything spare – the closest thing to slums I have witnessed to date.  On reaching the end, maybe a kilometre or so along, an elderly gentlemen gestured us to turn right, I bid him, “xiè xiè” to which he responded, “bù kè qi.”  We tottered on by a shop, and an English Major student spoke scarily good English as we grabbed two bottles of much needed corporation pop.  Next stop, the river bank and Liaoxia North bridge, both in view.  Up the bridge we strolled, the sun baking down from above and the clamour from a huge throng was instantly heard.

The crowd lined the river along the kilometre race section.  In the middle of a wide section of river lay five boat lanes colourfully marked with buoys and on a slight bend, the start line position was hidden.  We stood at the business end of the dragonboat race lanes.  After the other parts of our temporary expat clan caught up, we sauntered to the west shore (the shadier side, shady as in sun, not underhand).  A very zany and odd local individual seemed to admiring our camera and unswervingly talking to us, in Mandarin, to which I understand nothing.  He seemed sweet… and unthreatening.  Maybe he was just excited foreign people were there to see the boats.  If a load of Chinese folk came to watch Manchester City, I’d say hello too.  They should have a banner placed up with “Welcome to Wàngniúdūn.”  Instead of Carlos Tevez, perhaps place an image of Chéng Lóng.

After a few races, we wandered ever deeper along the horde on the embankment.  Photogrpahs of the white folk were captured and my ears destroyed by a chain of firecrackers comparable with placing one’s head into a roaring tornado.  It was ear-splitting, piercing strident but at the same token amusing.  After seeing several races, the Champion teams paraded their trophies on the water.  The heat had gotten to us all – the other foreign teachers had snared sunshine on their shoulders and other peripheral bits.  Food was needed and shade.  We all scattered to the four winds, homeward bound without the cat or dogs.  An exceptionally pleasant day was had.

Conragtulations on your engagement

4th June 2014

To my best buddy Daniel Lee Ridyard and Vanessa ‘vanTrouble’ Dreuter – and all within your tribe. I love you loads, and congratulate you wholeheartedly on your engagement, may your two beautiful boys, the cats and your tribe be happy forever. Thank you for always being there for me Dan and here’s to your family, past, present and future. Now I’ve been sensible and sensitive, stop reading and pop on some Star Trek.

It’s about time someone else wrote on this blog!

6/6/2014

Hello to all. Sorry for not writing much, I’m really not much of a writer plus I’m just not as entertaining as my husband. I’ve not much to say seen as John has told you about everything we have seen and done.

Really enjoying work and exploring locally. Last week was especially good as it was nice to see some Dragon boat races. The South of China is the place to be, however actual races are declining due to village/town budgets. Just read this in our monthly magazine ‘Here Dongguan’. So most places now only plan to race every 3 years or so, however the place where we went and another place will still continue with yearly races. Dragon boat races have now turned into Dragon boat parades in most places.

Last weekend was also Children’s Day as John has already mentioned. His school had a big celebration on the Friday morning and I managed to see the foreign teacher’s act, along with a few other acts, including a weird western style interpretation of the hokey pokey. My school decided that we teach most of the day but have fun from 10.30-11.30. Fun in the sense the kids are practicing what they have learnt in phonics classes. All kids had a book and had to get 3 stamps in it to get a ticket to the school teacher’s show. Stamps were given for correct answers – so K1 had to say what the picture on the flashcard was all stuff learnt in class like tiger, umbrella, dog, cat etc. K2 did the same as K1 but also had to fill in the missing letter of a picture e.g. f_sh, K3 had to spell words like box, pot, hop etc and also put words into sentences that have been taught from their conversation books. Even though the kids had to work they loved it running around the school to different classrooms to get their stamps. Me well I was the ‘Help Station’, so if a child didn’t know word etc they would come to me. I’m pleased to say none of my K3’s came for help so my English/Chinese teachers have done a fab job. I just had a few K2’s with missing letters, which they knew as soon as they asked me as I made the sounds of the letters. I also had a few K1’s visit and again if I did the start of the word like ‘um’ they would then go ‘brella’, so they just needed only a little help. This went on for 20mins or so and then it was the show, which all teachers were involved with, including me. All acts were of groups of 3 and the first act was a group of Chinese teachers acting as animals, then it was me and 2 Chinese/English teachers Amy from my K1 class, and Crystal from K2. We decided to act and sing the song, which all my classes know and love, ‘Walking in the Jungle’. It was a lot of fun and we chose 4 kids to pretend to be the animals in the songs which they loved! Next was the next group of Chinese teacher doing a mini drama, looked great just wish I could of understood it all. Then my K3 and baby Chinese/English teacher did a song with kids singing with them. All in all a great little show and at the end the children got given alarm clocks, which they couldn’t stop showing me. Boys got green frogs and girls got pink rabbits. TBH after lunch and naptime I didn’t teach much, instead for my K1 class I put on Despicable me 2 on TV, and actually another class came in to join us too!

Other news with my school is the fact that the other foreign teacher called Simon, just up and left. He didn’t tell the school and I found out just before he flew out. So not a nice way to leave the children he taught, but they have been told he has left and many kids now don’t ask about him.

This semester is flying by I have only 6 weeks of teaching left, finishing on the 18th July. My K3 are learning an English poem and song to sing at their graduation, which I chose. We practice every lesson and my teachers are getting the kids to practice in their lessons too! Both of my K3 classes have a different poem and song to learn, both are doing really well, it is going to be really sad to say goodbye soon.

Well that’s all folks I’m sure I’ll write again soon, well maybe in a months time!

The Fēng Shuǐ Masters

9th June 2014

Called off.  Wednesday night I was supposed to run the pub quiz, the problem was only two teams turned up.  The quiz was called off due to a waterlogged pitch around 9pm.  No lightning strikes meant the game was not delayed.  The following day, my co-worker at Worlda, advised me my last working day at Dao Ming Foreign Language School is to be June the 20th.  Although since then, the 19th of June and 18th of June have been mentioned.  Either way, it isn’t long off.  Yesterday (Sunday), I was advised at which point I move to the sister school, Oxford Kingdom International.  That is a kindergarten (nursery and reception school to us “stiff-ass Brits”).

Happens to be that since the fallout of Nikki’s colleague Simon left his role midterm, things have been bumpy.  Whilst Simon enjoys a new job in Sognefjellet, Norway (Northern Europe’s highest mountain pass) Bryony has had to transfer from the Oxford Kingdom International kindergarten to the Junior Kingdom kindergarten that Nikki works in.  In the meantime our company Worlda has supplied Taneisha for 2 weeks to the Oxford Kingdom International.  As it stands I will be going to Oxford Kingdom International after my role here, but as is apparent Bryony is slightly miffed and wants to return there.  However, this would result in me working with Nikki in the Junior Kingdom kindergarten – something our company does not want to happen, nor do I.  Too many working hours and too few feet between us could create unnecessary stresses.  Ah well, I’ll do as I am told.

Anyway, Sat’day was a chilled out day, I went shoe shopping with Nikki – for me!  I found size 14 (EUR 50) a few times in Uggs, Crocs, basketball shoes with football studs/blades affixed (very odd and I bet they never ever sell) and a few walking boots.  The shop I spotted some decent walking boots in had sold out of my size but did have 15,16 and 17.  Good luck selling them in China!  After which I sent Nikki back to relax, prepare to go to Irene’s Bar to watch the rugby (England v All Blacks).  I then tottered a tad further, found a pair of walking boots that looked solid, of sound quality – and asked for the price.  800 RMB (bābǎi), ouch.  I decided to negotiate.  Before I’d even thought about it, my mouth just opened, it just left, I don’t know why I said it, or even started off with, “èrbǎi.”  I might as well of said, “bú yàoliǎn” (the worst insult here, it translates as “doesn’t want face” – shame or “face” is important in Chinese culture.  Surprisingly I got one of the shoes.  The left shoe hit my shoulder with a clunk.  Maybe I’ll not be giving them customer feedback.

Me and my shadow set off again, plodding, back to a shop I had spotted many big work shoes and walking boots.  I managed to get a pair for 220 RMB but oddly their size (UK: 13; EUR 47) was bigger than the bigger labelled UK 14s.  Not to worry.  After this I decided a round hat I have fancied buying was needed, I negotiated the sale from 80 RMB to 40 RMB.  All I need now is a new belt and some trainers.  After which I went to join Nikki at Irene’s Bar.  A few of our fellow foreign teachers turned up in drips and drabs (James definitely the latter, having been drunk the night before – with possible food poisoning turned up last, pale as a ghost).  After the main game, Irene’s husband, a cheery Maori called Marcus brought out dishes of pork belly, loin and ribs – alongside salad and bread sticks.  It was the first time since February that I had tasted mustard.  Mustard being up there with Vanilla Slices, Manchester Tarts, Bakewell Tarts and other such homely tastes.  That evening Nikki and I returned home and watched The Lego Movie on DVD.  The film is well worth a look, it reminded me very much of my childhood.  During the war…

Plenty of sunshine was seen this weekend. On Sunday, Nikki went with Birgitte to the world’s largest shopping centre/mall.  The South China Mall is 99% unoccupied, some of which looks and sounds severely derelict.

No. of stores and services: 47 (20 planned) (Total spaces: 2350, Unoccupied: 2303)

In the mall there are seven zones modeled on international cities, nations and regions, including Amsterdam, Paris, Rome, Venice, Egypt, the Caribbean, and California.  Features include a 25 metres (82 ft) replica of the Arc de Triomphe, a replica of Venice’s St Mark’s bell tower, a 2.1 kilometres (1.3 mile) canal with gondolas, and a 553-meter indoor-outdoor roller coaster.  Nikki’s words were, it is interesting but very much a building site with lots of closed areas and construction workers still living on site.  See also Chenggong District and Ordos City (the latter looks stunning).

Often things like shopping can tire me out – but I wasn’t there, so afterwards Nikki and Birgitte later explored a few other historical areas of Dongguan.  I simply spent the day on my bicycle de-cluttering the mind of dust and cobwebs.  That and the floor needed mopping, some finances needed checking and I had to finish two lesson powerpoint displays.

New developments this week concluded with an evening arrival of our co-worker Casey and new colleague Taneisha from Guangzhou.  Taneisha is an American lady, very plain accented and confident in character.  We all met her briefly in our first week’s training in Guangzhou.  She has been teaching in that city but finished her role last week.  Like me, she moves from teaching middle school (secondary school) level to kindergarten.  After re-introductions we shown off the market barbecue facilities and range of available foods before nipping to Tesco for provisions.  It sounds so British until you get there and smell Durian fruit, see fish being slaughtered freshly and note the distinct lack of queuing systems and order.  Chinese men have fantastic poker faces and will happily stare you in the eye before slowly sliding in front of you at the cashier’s desk.  If you stay still, you become part of the map, and that means fair game to overtake, undertake and clamber over, barge past or fight to get to the cashier.  I recommend you be polite but not too polite, as you will never escape a shop ever again by being too polite.  Etiquette means nothing; China is too big; the people are too busy, you are not important to their family centric social lifestyles.  You’re always made to feel welcome, just don’t get in the way!

Seriously where does time go?  Today is Monday, I have class 801 soon.  I am a wee bit tired, during the night the Gods decided to move all the furniture several times over.  Honestly, their fēng shuǐ (it means wind-water) is well and truly out.  The Chinese English Teacher said she won’t be attending – so can I run the class without her, “you never need me anyway.”  I take that as positive feedback to couple with Casey’s, “You’re a good leader” comment yesterday.  To think, the first week here, I wanted to scatter.

Loves Got The World In Motion

2014-06-11 02:26:23.0

I’m on the outside looking in.  BBC Football is my starting point.  Here I can locate the fixtures and fittings of the 2014 World Cup held across Brazil.  From here I can head to the Manchester Evening News sports webpage, MCFC.co.uk for key World Cup links to my Champion team, and afar into the cosmos of illusory information.

World Cup fever has not hit Houjie, a few loosley flagged footballers in shop windows, the odd advert on TV for Harbin Beer (sponsors of the competition) and the odd mention at bars for foreigners.  Some bars will not open locally for any games, some may if the games are on in their regular hours.  Most of the foreign teachers here don’t care much for football, Bryony wants to see a few games, as does Liam.  Becky likes Edinson Roberto Cavani Gómez‘s cheekbones.  He put three past City in the 2011/12 season Champions League, whilst I rate his quality, his character at the time struck me as being a bit of a knobhead (no affection included in this term).  That said Uruguay play in a decent colour.

Image:  Between the group of foreign teachers we did manage to draw 4 teams each – the winner will take the stake (yet to be determined).  Some got a decent set of teams, others like Birgitte and James did not.

Put aside the lack of long-term legacy for this contest; wash away the negative news of fragmentary stadia and facilities; pack away the political white washes and the common man being crapped on from above; this summer is all about football.  The beautiful game.  Money may rule the roost off the field but on it, eleven souls face eleven souls who want the same thing, to win* (*unless they play for a draw like a Mark Hughes squad).

In previous finals, I could watch the game on television, at fan-parks in Manchester or at a public house or two.  Here in China, my options are limited.  Time difference, enemy of the football fan.  Brazil is -3 hours on the UK, China is +7 on the UK.  I started writing this at Rio de Janeiro time of Wednesday 03:34 AM – it is Wednesday 02:34 PM here in southern China.  Then you factor in games held at Manaus & Cuiabá are an hour further behind…  Here I am 11 or 12 hours ahead of the host nation.  My attention has been brought to fake sick notes for the tourney – but I shall pass on that!  The World Cup kick off times are ”inhumane” for players, say some, to some TV spectators globally, they are just plain inconvenient.  Based on this website, for games you can see that are convenient to your timezone, I may catch around 9 games from 48.

Which players from City can inspire their national squad to excel at this World Cup?  Yaya Toure should do well with Ivory Coast, but they have never excelled at the World Cup – I think they’ll go one better than Round 1 though – 3rd time lucky; England’s number one bears the weight of the U.K.’s cut-throat media and has the support of “There’s only one Jimmy Milner” but England’s group will be very tough.  They could finish third in the group stages.  A lot of attention has been rightly directed at the hosts and with Fernandinho – and ex-City star Jo on hand, why not?  Brazil will gets to the semi-finals.  For me Argentina have strength in depth – they’ll make the final, Demichelis ended the season on form, Aguero is a proven striker of massive quality and Pablo Zabaleta will run every second of the game like it is his last.  Are Belgium in good Kompany?  Yes, he is brilliant and they have a very strong outfit at the finals, they’ll make the quarter finals.  Edin Dzeko’s Bosnia and Herzegovina may well be debutants but I think they are more than capable of a quarter final berth.  I fancy David Silva’s Spain to win it overall and end the no European team has ever won a World Cup in (four finals held there) South America streak.  That said, I’d love Ghana, Cameroon or Iran to win it.  It’s all about the underdog.  The Netherlands, Germany and Italy have reached 16 finals between them, so again, they could be there come that fateful last kick-off.  6 of the 19 finals have been won by host nations.  The only thing undeniable is not a soul considers that blasted Lightning Seeds song anymore as being achievable.

I so want to see the opening ceremony and first game but I have school the next day.  The timezone/referee is a… (at least the Tour De France finishes before bedtime!)

Nikki and Bridget’s adventure

2014-06-11

Firstly let’s get where I work correct. In John’s blog a few days ago he mentioned I worked at the Junior Kingdom Kindergarten. This is wrong as far as I’m aware I work at the Oxford Kingdom International Kindergarten to set things straight.

 

Anyways Sunday last week was nice. It was great being with Bridget nice to chat lots and just enjoy the day exploring at out leisure. the mall is a building site only the front end is open. Currently it does not feel like the world’s largest mall. Who knows what they are building to the side of it, but builders were busy at work. Getting there was the first fun part of the day though. Firstly John said to get the bus opposite Tesco. We stayed there for 15mins and saw no buses with the correct numbers. So I called John and asked if he put the starting address as our apartment. The answer was ‘no!’ So after searching from ours we knew we had to go to the main road. We could get the 66, 67, 217 or 219. 66 arrive first we managed to stop it and hop on! I showed the lady who took our money the mall address. It sounded like they didn’t go there so we just decided to stay on the bus and see where we end up. I used my map app on my phone to see if we were going in the general direction. It did stop at the Nancheng bus station, where we have been before, we weren’t sure if this was the end of the line so we waited to see if everyone got off. Luckily many stayed on and so did we. We then went over a few bridges and turned off down a street and then suddenly we were at the main bus station, directly opposite the mall. We did a little cheer to celebrate that we had made it!

 

After looking around the mall we decided to take a walk to the Jin’aozhou tower which wasn’t far. We walked along the river which was nice, as it was quiet and we got good views of the tower as we were walking. The river was a lovely brownish colour however there were people swimming (or rather floating with rubber rings) in it, as well as people fishing and washing clothes. It was free to walk around the tower and its gardens, gates stopped anyone from going inside the tower though.

After having a look around we then carried onto head to the People’s park across the river. First though we followed the river path to a square just after the tower. On this square a big golden dragon. This is where Dragon boat races end in Dongguan. We found this out at the tower as there was a small museum with pictures of races.

We then continued through some gardens, which had an Egyptian feel to it with a few carvings on the walls. We then crossed over 2 bridges and arrived at the People’s park. This was stunning and well worth a look and very peaceful. There were a few large ponds with koi in and also there were black swans, ducks and geese swimming around.

There were also some building’s which we could look around. After enjoying the park we decided to head back to the mall for food, however we were hot and hungry so decided to take a bus back. Just as we left the park via the main entrance we kinda realised you had to pay to go in. We hadn’t as we came in via another entrance which had no gates, kiosk of guards, so one to remember when I visit again. Bridget asked a couple at the stop which bus to take as we had no idea with all the symbols on the timetable. Another cheer for making it back to the mall. We then grabbed a quick bite to eat, and then walked back to the bus station. We got on a 66 back to Houjie and managed to stop the bus where we wanted to get off. So another cheer deserved!

Irene’s Pub Quiz (Round 1)

Round 1: At the movies [13 points]
#Question
2000
Who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his fine performance in the movie Traffic? [1 point]
Benicio del Toro
2005
The Stylish film Sin City is shot in black & white with little tints of colour here and there. One man in particular even goes by the name of a certain colour, he is called? [1 point]
Yellow Bastard
2007
The Oscar winning movie No Country for Old Men, is set in which US state? [1 point]
Texas.
2008
A Pixar’s WALL-E see the little robot go on a journey to where? [1 point]
B Where did the name WALL-E originate from? [1 point]
A Space.
B The name “WALL-E” is a tip of the hat to Walter Elias Disney. /WALL-E stands for: Waste Allocation Load Lifter earth class.

2009
A In the sci-fi film Moon, who voices the robotic assistant GERTY? [1 point]
B Who is the director’s Dad? [1 point]
A Kevin Spacey. B David Bowie
2005-2013
Put the Legendary Pictures films in order of release date.
a Superman Returns, b Inception, c Watchmen, d Batman Begins, e 10,000BC, f The Hangover, g 300, h Pacific Rim
[2 points for the full order, 0 for out else]
d (2005), a (2006), g (2007), e (2008), f/c (2009), b (2010), h (2013)
2010
In 2010, Leslie Neilsen died. A How old was he? [1 point]
B What was the name of the TV series that preceded the Naked Gun film trilogy? [1 point]
A 84. B Police Squad.
19??-2014
a) In what year was the first Godzilla (Gojira) film released? [1 point]
b) How many official films have Toho, Tristar, and Legendary/Warner brothers franchises created based upon the character Godzilla? [1 point]
c) True or false. Godzilla has a star on Hollywood’s walk of fame. [1 point]
1954. 30 (28 by Toho). True.

 

Irene’s pub quiz (Round 2)

Round 2: Tag, you’re it. [16 points]
Match the Movie Taglines [1 point for each]
Life is in their hands. Death is on their minds. 12 Angry Men (1957)

The ultimate trip. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

…and remember, the next scream you hear may be your own! Birds, The (1963)

Earth. It was fun while it lasted. Armageddon (1998)

He’s a man of peace in a savage land…Suburbia. ‘Burbs, The (1989)

Her life was in their hands. Now her toe is in the mail. Big Lebowski, The (1998)

Buy the ticket, take the ride. Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas (1998)

For three men the Civil War wasn’t hell. It was practice. Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The (1966)

You’ve never been scared until you’ve been scared in 3-D. House of Wax (1953)

Earth. Take a good look. It might be your last. Independence Day (1996)

A disgrace to criminals everywhere. Lock, Stock, & Two Smoking Barrels (1998)

From the brother of the director of Ghost. Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult (1994)

Great trilogies come in threes. Scary Movie 3 (2003)

It’s not like they didn’t warn us. Signs (2002)

The future is history. Twelve Monkeys (1995)

Trust a few. Fear the rest. X-Men (2000)

Irene’s Bar pub quiz round 3

Round 3: No cheating [17 points]
# Question
Weaver
A How many Tour De France wins did the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) strike off Lance Armstrong? [1 point]
B What two films has the above mentioned cyclist made cameos in? [1 point]
C He is now known as a cheat, but can you tell me one of his two nicknames? [1 point]
7 (1999-2005). DodgeBall: A True Underdog Story; You, Me and Dupree. Le Boss; Big Tex.
Crooks
To the nearest 10 years, when was the first recorded case of drugs use in competitive cycling? [1 point]
In 1886/1896 (was confirmed later on), Arthur Linton from Aberdare in Wales died aged 24 of ‘exhaustion and typhoid fever’ a few weeks after finishing second in the Bordeaux–Paris race
Edghill
In Major League Baseball what was the longest ban for drugs cheating? (15 games being the shortest ban length) [2 points for the exact figure, 1 point for within 5 numbers]
Ramón A. Castro, Washington Nationals, missed 105 games from July 1, 2005
Wiekens
Which recent World Cup (28th May 2014) warm-up game/friendly is being investigated following a serious error by a goalkeeper? [1 point]
Scotland 2-2 Nigeria
Morrison
I copied this question. What does the Latin word plagiaries literally translate as? [1 point]
Kidnapper.
Horlock
Which essayist, publisher, playwright, literary and social critic said the following? [1 point]
“Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal. Bad poets deface what they take.”
Thomas Stearns Eliot
Brown
What is Cryptomnesia? [1 point]
Cryptomnesia occurs when a forgotten memory returns without it being recognized as such by the subject, who believes it is something new and original
Whitley
Jeff Rovin, Raymond Benson, David Michaels, Mark Greaney, Peter Telep, Grant Blackwood, Jerome Preisler are all ghost-writers, co-writers or pseudonyms for which writer? [1 point]
Tom Clancy

Dickov /Goater/Cooke/Taylor
A Ioseb Besarionis Dze Jugashvili is known by what other name? [1 point]
B Robert LeRoy Parker is known by what other name? [1 point]
C Florence Nightingale Graham is known by what other name? [1 point]
D Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu is known by what other name? [1 point]
Joseph Stalin. Butch Cassidy. Elizabeth Arden. Mother Teresa.
Bishop
What is the Capgras delusion? [1 point]
A disorder in which a person holds a delusion that a friend, spouse, parent, or other close family member has been replaced by an identical-looking impostor.
Vaughan
The names on the left hand column reflect the 1999 Football League Second Division playoff final between Manchester City and Gillingham. Which current Premier League team is managed by the manager of Gillingham from that day? [1 point]
Crystal Palace, Tony Pulis

Irene’s Bar Pub Quiz Round 4

#Question
400
What movie title is linked by a Madonna song on the 1998 album Ray of Light; a 1997 released film by Wang Xiaoshuai; and a 2004 stage play by Bryony Lavery? [1 point]
Frozen
441
In World War I, why did tens of thousands of ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand Army Corp) end up in Weymouth (England)? [1 point or 2 if you state the reason]
It was an ideal site for their recuperation – due to the seaside climate.
484
In 1794, British troops capture Port-au-Prince in Haiti; 1913 – Emily Davison, a suffragette, runs out in front of King George V’s horse, Anmer, at the Epsom Derby. She is trampled, never regains consciousness and dies a few days later; 1917 – The first Pulitzer Prizes are awarded; 1940 – World War II: The Dunkirk evacuation ends – British forces complete evacuation of 338,000 troops from Dunkirk in France. To rally the morale of the country, Winston Churchill delivers his famous “We shall fight on the beaches” speech; 1975 – Angelina Jolie was born. What was the day and month? [1 point]
4th June
529
How many days remain from today until the end of the Gregorian calendar year? [1 point]
210.
576
Aside from the hosts, which team becomes the first team to qualify for the FIFA World Cup (Brazil 2014) on this day in 2013? [1 point]
Japan 1–1 Australia
625
What name links a Greek goddess (one of the Horae); a daughter of Poseidon; a wife of Byzantine Emperor Leo IV and empress regnant; a town in South Dakota (and also smaller towns in Texas and West Virginia); and the names of several Hurricanes/tropical storms? [1 point]
Irene
676
A traditional method of paying in a drinking establishment; a type of musical composition; a ritual in medical education and inpatient care; a planetary cycle of reincarnation in Theosophy all can share which other word as a name? [1 point]
Round
729
As of the 3rd of June 2014, how many English Language Wikipedia pages was listed… was it A: 4,527,242 B: 5,527,242 C: 6,527,242 D: 527,242?
[1 point]
4,527,242
784
Name the year that…
The Commodore 64 8-bit home computer is launched by Commodore.
The first computer virus, the Elk Cloner, written by 15-year old Rich Skrenta, is found in the wild.
The DeLorean Motor Company Car Factory (in Europe) is put into receivership.
Cal Ripken, Jr. plays the first of what eventually becomes his record-breaking streak of 2,632 consecutive Major League Baseball games.
In Hong Kong, health warnings on cigarette packets are made statutory.
The first compact discs (CDs) are released to the public in Germany.
In Orlando, Florida, Walt Disney World opens the EPCOT Center, to the public for the first time.
The population of the People’s Republic of China alone exceeds 1 billion making China the first nation to have a population of more the 1 billion.
[1 point for a year either side; 2 points for the exact year]
1982.
841
What is significant about the question numbers within this round?
[1 point]
They are all square numbers (202-302)
900
What is significant about the numbers 199, 211, 223, 227, 229, 233, 239, 241, 251, and 257? [1 point]
They are all prime numbers (45th-55th prime numbers to be precise)

Irene’s Bar Pub Quiz – Penultimate Round

Who’s behind the anagram?

FILTH LOADER
A RACIST LORD ONION
MOBILE UNIONISTS
MOILED BANANAS
OLD WEST ACTION
NIGEL, FETCH AN IRON LEG
SCREEN IS A STORM
Read, Shun Islam
A Crap Trek Twist
Nerd amid late TV
He bugs Gore

Answers in the same order:

ADOLF HITLER
CRISTIANO RONALDO
BENITO MUSSOLINI
OSAMA BIN LADEN
CLINT EASTWOOD
FLORENCE NIGHTINGAL
MARTIN SCORSESE
Salman Rushdie
Patrick Stewart
David Letterman
George Bush

Irene’s Bar Pub Quiz – Final Round

A table was created to add the following World Cup Host (12pts) / Mascot (13pts) / Golden Boot Holder (12pts) from 1966 to 2014.

Hosts: Argentina, England, France, Italy, Mexico, Mexico, Germany, West Germany, Spain, South Korea/Japan, South Africa, USA
Mascots: Ciao, Footix, Fuleco, Gauchito, Goleo VI & Pille, Juanito, Naranjito, Pique, Sreiker, Tip and Tap, The Spheriks, World Cup Willie, Zakumi
Golden boot holders: Gerd Müller (West Germany) 10; Eusébio (Portugal) 9; Ronaldo (Brazil) 8; Grzegorz Lato (Poland) 7; Mario Kempes (Argentina) 6; Paolo Rossi (Italy) 6; Gary Lineker (England) 6; Salvatore Schillaci (Italy) 6; Davor Šuker (Croatia) 6; Miroslav Klose (Germany) 5; Oleg Salenko(Russia) & Hristo Stoichkov (Bulgaria) 5; Thomas Müller (Germany) 5 {NB: David Villa (Spain), Wesley Sneijder and Diego Forlán scored the same too}

The Man with One Blue Shoe

16th June 2014

Today’s title is a reference to a lesser celebrated Tom Hanks film.

Last week was a peculiar one.  Friday was no exception.  All four classes faced the axe, students instead had a fun day, with games and activities spread across grades 7 and 8.  At lunchtime Taneisha had me hunting a cockroach in her apartment, I found a shedding but no actual cockroach.  Taneisha or Tanny to the students departed back to Guangzhou for the weekend – hopefully with no unwanted guests.  Bryony and Nikki watched on, one for support and one to screech when anything resembling an insect was unearthed.  On Friday morning, Esben asked me to record a class lesson, which did not go well, his camera decided to stop functioning after 28 minutes.  Still, following that he has around 12 minutes of footage.

On Thursday as I can call it, so can you for that matter saw an eclectic diversity in classes, my reasonably sane 704 class bounced off the walls with energy; 801 decided that without a teacher they’d say much more than usual (I hope the teacher fleeted by the classroom during the notorious, “What does f**k you mean?”  In the last month or so the students, particularly Grade 8, have been looking for offensive English words, words they can trick a teacher into saying.  I do tell them that the words are naughty, offensive and not to be used sparingly, but for meanings they should consult their form teacher.  This usually quells any curiosity.  They’ll see them in 1 of 34 foreign language films permitted to show at Chinese cinemas each year anyway!

Wednesday, was as The Sun or some other bad taste newspaper would it coin it, “Quizgate.”  I ran the weekly quiz at Irene’s Bar, usually there are 4 or 5 large teams.  This time round there were four very small teams.  Fractions in the foreign teacher camp caused Bryony to side with Birgitte and Taneisha.  Esben slotted off to take photographs of the evening.  James, Liam and Becky segmented with Nikki.  My aim of the quiz was to make it hard, but hard enough a team could only get 50% or so.  In the end, Nikki’s team scored 38 from 107.  They won.  The other teams dipped below 20 points.  Needless to say it never went down to well.  One American, who I will call Mr Mustard The Nemesis (he wears a mustard shirt, is always accusing other teams of cheating and seems to be a social butterfly through choice, not his) arrived in the last round.  Within milliseconds the abuse levels shot up from banter to downright bullying.  I wouldn’t mind but he missed the earlier round on cheating, included just for him!  After a few moments I went to collect the final round scores, and he took charge of his new team, ripped up and screwed up the answer sheet and threw it at me.  He also called me a word associated with the phrase, “see you next Tuesday.”  I don’t usually get angry, it takes a lot for me to see fire.  I have a younger siblings after all and regard myself as tolerant.  I avoid fights.  Right then I really wanted to lash out.  I turned on my right heal, walked out the bar, started jogging and left it all behind.  I pounded the streets in my walking boots.  A good run burns anger, a sprint here, a dart there, burning adrenaline and anger.  The hot night, the exhaustion of a long working day, the notion of arrogance from Mr Mustard The Nemesis.  It evaporated.  I soon relaxed.  My body and mind became at peace.  I started to notice the bats I crave to relax my mind.  Their fascinating fluttering flight patterns, their dynamic mould, their hunting.  Hunting to survive.  Just like I had done, I had hunted silence.

In my escape frogs bounded over one side street from a small patch of food growth to another patch of rubble.  Those who fear night, do not fear it here.  Houjie after dark is loud yet peaceful.  The hard workers of the day eat and drink at street restaurants, sit outside shops, play pool on rickety old tables, they digest their long days and await the next same old, same old.  The stares at a westerner wandering the streets alone double at night, but curiosity is the only emotion conveyed.  The odd “ní hǎo” or “hello” is heard.  Some trying to welcome you in for food and to bring further customers, curiosity breeds curiosity.

Soon after my toes rewarded themselves with a sit down.  Nikki and the others knew I needed to escape and soon after Nikki walked back to meet me with Liam and James.  It is quite odd seeing the boys of the group be responsible – especially since one confesses to early morning power naps on building sites!  I won’t say who, Liam.

Friday night of last James disappeared on a magic taxi journey (more to follow); Liam, Bryony and Becky went to empty a bottle of vodka at Irene’s Bar; Birgitte was ill and stayed in; Esben, Nikki and I watched a movie.  I personally experienced some odd floated drunken sensation without touching a drop.  Rather than carry on outside, inside with the prospect of a nearby bed seemed more sensible.

The weekend was judged to be too hot to travel.  I woke up feeling okay Saturday, cycled a fair distance to Dongcheng in around 32-36°C heat.  I cycled past a lake, a B&Q DIY warehouse, numerous oddities – a man selling brushes in the middle of an eight laned highway; a rollerskating tournament; and a tower reflecting so much light it was melting the tarmac below.  Upon arriving there I had a tomato quiche and a drop of peppermint tea at Alan’s World Of Cornish Pasties & Devon CiderNikki was jealous when I told her later.  I did bring back apple pie.  In Dongguan I visited an abandoned football stadium, mostly converted into a police station.

Later that day I arrived back (much later due to a double puncture, always on the mould of the inner tube).  Slightly shattered and seriously worn out, I went to join Nikki, Bryony and Becky at Irene’s Bar.  They had been there watched England versus New Zealand in rugby.  Marcus was also holding his birthday party.  Esben met me on the way.  On arriving Esben emptied the remaining piles of meat onto his plate and tucked in like he was at home.  I looked on, thankfully not hungry.  Later Irene and Marcus gave us all some birthday cake, it turns out Marcus is 53, he looks much younger than this.  After a couple of drinks and birthday wishes the strange sensation of dizziness or nervous fatigue of sorts came back.  Nikki and I went home, just as James and Liam arrived.  It transpired James had been into the centre of Houjie on Friday evening, tried to get a taxi back to Liaoxia (around 2km at most) but ended up in some random place.  He trekked back and decided to stay in Iron Bar.

Yesterday (Sunday), Becky and Bryony called around at 6am for England’s defeat to England.  Why always Balotelli?  After the game we went to KFC for an egg and bacon muffin.  Later Nikki and I finished watching series 2 of Dexter and I stayed in for the most with a very bad belly (probably KFC-related).  In the evening I ate a few crisp butties and some aubergine later at the market.  An early night was had.

Today, I feel hungry but better.  The customary morning flag raising ceremony was a tad dramatic.  I had to lift teacher Kate (lower grade teacher) up from the parade square/athletics track to the cooler confines of the administration office.  The Chinese teachers here were lifting her by really odd parts of her body, feet, lower arms and even the groin!  On dropping her (I didn’t drop her) at the office, the accompanying 4 or 5 teachers insisted she lay on a wooden settee char, with a dip.  I needed to place her down and keep her breathing, her breathing was laboured, gasping at dry hot air.  I compromised –the floors here really are not safe – and placed her down in the recovery position whilst holding her head straight so she could breathe.  The other teachers seemed to be stroking and manipulating her hands, feet and legs to keep the blood flowing.  It really was quite odd.  I managed to push a few away from her head so she could breathe.  I told James to pop the ceiling fans on, who on arriving late, had assisted me.  After a few minutes Kate came around, her eyes focusing and her breathing back to normal.  Within minutes, student after student followed in similar fashion.  The heat, possibly combined with slight underlying illnesses caused at least 25 students to collapse.  Needless to say the flag-raising ceremony curtailed ten minutes earlier than usual.  Afterwards I wandered by the administration office to see if Kate had been taken to hospital or a nurse had been called for.  She was sat up okay, smiling – surrounded by a class of collapsed children – all okay.

In the last week Nikki and I have been running or trying to kick a ball around several times.  It is so hot on the evening but we must keep being active. Every now and then a few boarding students join in.

This last week has seen one pair of trousers lose a button (not through weightgain, it got caught on the belt and pinged off… down a toilet); my watch strap lost a link pin so needs repairing; a pair of work shoes split (the humidity here is my prime suspect); my new walking boots detached from their soles (it seems they were a tad crap); and my mobile phone is on the blinkers occasionally (the screen is cracked, humidity is seeping through).  I can afford to sort these out, but one thing at a time.  Tonight, I shall attempt to go to a shoe repairers – before buying a new belt.

As I finish writing this Jane, a PE teacher has dropped me a pile of Lychees off.  Yummy!  Very juicy indeed.  It is lychee season now.  On my cycle ride every roadside corner seemed to be accompanied by a lychee seller or two.

Anyway, be more noble

 

The obligatory caramelised aubergine

23/6/14

Last week we came 2nd in the pub quiz.  It was a toughie.  We lost by 7 clear points – and a new team turned up and won on their debut, good on ’em.  Time to sack Becky as the manager and bring in David Moyes.  On Thursday evening we returned to Jerry’s Wow for pizza and lovely gratis cake.  Taniesha’s last day being Friday and her impending coach journey back meant we had to go on Thursday.  It was most enjoyable, followed by a naff film at our place.

Day 133 is Monday 23rd June 2014.  133 days since leaving Manchester International Airport.  Most people would mark 100 days, or 125 days.  I’m unconventional.  We should no longer dispense with the unadventurous and start afresh in a brave new world.  I’m not inebriated – sometimes you just have to rip up the strategy and edge from a starting scratch.  Today marked my first day at Kindergarten.  Like my first day at Dao Ming, I was and remain nervous and apprehensive, “We’re gonna need a bigger boat.”

On Saturday (Shaun Goater Day) Nikki and I had a lazy day.  Something to do with going to bed around 4am the night before and rising from the sheets long after noon.  Nikki did not want to see the football, so I tagged along with Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum (Liam and James).  The Friday evening started early at Irene’s Bar with James, Liam, Bryony and Becky.  This was followed by a meal at a lovely Chinese coffee shop/café opposite the bar.  They do a lovely Thai Grass bread with eggs and an amazing chicken dish containing nothing actually labelled in the title, barely any chicken too.  After this we made the journey (100 metres at most) back to Irene’s Bar to natter some more.  We watched, or attempted to understand Australian Rules Football.  Not the foggiest.  Soon after everyone became knackered, so I tagged along with the boys.  Off we went to Iron Bar, a night club of sorts.  Part seedy, part European styled and part Chinese, this really is East meets West, doesn’t know if East and West should talk, but sits down and invites West in for a cuppa before smearing West all over the walls, general apparel and engages in full blown relations whilst trying to appear local, international and hip all in one go.  Any venue that intersperses dance music with a solo saxophonist or a traditional dance or a live singer or two followed by some random draw from boxes for prizes only described as your very own servant for the night wins my vote.  The down side of the venue being the seedy prostitution in the undergrowth, around the unisex toilets and the overpriced beer.  That said, a wall sized television to watch Costa Rica win over Italy wasn’t bad.  After watching Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum get jiggy with it on a stage, I managed a wee blether with the D.J., a fellow giant, from Jordan.  It turns out he obtained his trainers in Beijing.

Esben and Birgitte had been away to Guangzhou (James joined them later) in yet another reunion with their fellow trainee interns from Beijing.  It seems they reunite every second weekend.  Soon enough, within weeks our new found friends will start to scatter.  They’ll fledge the nest shortly.  New foreign teachers will soon arrive.

Full time arrived, like my last day in Dao Ming Foreign Language School and off we ambled to Pink Lady/V-Bar.  The boys have always raved on about this venue.  Prior to entering we had a roof-beer.  It was essentially a beer on a roof.  The view was good.  In the distance the flashes of lightning slinked around the town of Houjie, appearing to inch closer but actually hit the town.  Into the club we stepped.  Talk about dead.  It was closer to a morgue than a club.  There were some big tunes playing, mostly European popular dance hits slapped together with gnarly rap.  The night churned over and around 4am a taxi ride back was had.  That paid the price of Saturday.  So, the remainder of Sat’day was spent trainer shopping.  No joy.  I have a belt though.  My watch strap cannot be repaired or replaced.  Sekonda is a British watch brand (originally Soviet but now manufactured in Asia, but not likely China, and marketed to Brits).  Great scott!  During the evening food was had at the market barbecue – some lovely garlic-drenched oysters and meats accompanied by vegetables including the obligatory caramelised aubergine.

I hope my mother had a wonderful birthday (Shēngrì kuàilè) on Friday.  I’m still unsure if the present voucher has arrived in her emails – due to the fact I sent it to the .co.uk and not .com version of her email, and the company have yet to respond this week!!!  Email number three has been sent today.

After watching Argentina’s late victory over Iran (football not war) I managed to get up before noon on Sunday.  Nikki and I went to Dongcheng (东城区), just outside Dongguan (东莞市).  Whilst we want to see more Chinese culture, the pursuit for some Yeti-sized shoes goes on.  On arrival Nikki led me to One For The Road, where we had our first roast dinner since February in Blighty!  It was delicious, beef with proper English mustard and gravy.  The potatoes weren’t bad.  It came with sweetcorn, swiftly shipped off to Nikki’s plate.

Afterwards we wandered, and wandered, and wandered, and carried on wandering through ghost shopping centres and malls barely filled with shops and streets with endless restaurants, shops and cafés.  No big barge-footed trainers to be had anywhere.  I treated Nikki to a Devon cider and apple pie at Alan’s in Dongcheng before we made our way home.  It had cost us 6RMB each to get to Dongcheng by bus (4RMB on the number L1 and 2RMB on the C1) – so around 60p.  On the return we missed the last L1 bus back to Houjie (厚街), so our 2RMB journey needed an additional 50RMB taxi… still not bad, but hardly cheap for local travel (even if it is a 15km route taking around 30 minutes).  The day’s high point was the purchasing of Weetabix.  A 48 pack to be precise.  A massive 116RMB (or around £11.00) was exchanged for said rarity.  It is a habit I cannot kick.  Addictions, ey!?

Yesterday, Mum and the tribe were back in Blighty at a garden party for the deserving Dr Kershaw’s Hospice where my late Gran passed away earlier this year.  My thoughts wandered throughout the day, all happy ones.

This week marks the first week without Mandarin lessons.  I look forward to sitting down at some point and practicing the limited phrase book I have to date and really knuckling down with the learning processes of this wonderful language.

Today, kindergarten, has been different – massively poles apart from teaching Grade 5, 7, and 8.  Firstly, I woke up to texts from my co-worker saying she would not attend today and introduce me to the staff.  I walked into a hornet’s nest knowing only Yuki (from an introduction by Bryony.  Yuki is petite, even for the Chinese, and very smiley) and blindly asking for Mrs Jian.  On meeting Mrs Jian, I was introduced to someone else who in turn introduced me to someone else, “oh and get the flashcards from Winnie.”  “Here is the computer.”  “You’ll need this video.”  “Print out your songs here.”  “Class Lychee is here, here is class Banana…” and so on… A whirl of information, in a blip.  This, capped off with a sore gullet and croaky voice did not formulate a virtuous day.  To quote Meat Loaf, “And some days it don’t come easy. And some days it don’t come hard. Some days it don’t come at all. And these are the days that never end.”

Class Cherry (Say and do); Class Lychee (Sentence Pattern), Class Banana (Sentence Pattern) and Class Peach (Say and do) came and went…

Oddly, the day ended sooner than expected.  The ear-marked Interaction Class gave way to an early 1530hrs finish.  I did question this.  However, a welcome escape was appreciated and greeted with a get home and convalesce response.  I didn’t even have lunch today, I wasn’t hungry.  I am now.

Zài jiàn!

Hǎo, huài, Chǒu.

25/6/2014

Today marks the passing of Eli Wallach (known for his role as “Ugly” (Chǒu)).

Tuesday was a write off, up early, ready to go, but my stomach was tighter than my dad’s wallet at a convention for stereotypical Jewish spending habits.  [Caution:  graphic descriptions follow] I managed a bowl of four Weetabix, walked to school with Nikki, about turned in her neighbouring school, waddled back and proceeded to decorate the apartment’s gardens with a weetabix-cum-last night’s tea mixture I like to term disgorge.  I advised my co-worker Casey of my illness whilst downloading into the porcelain pot, so to speak.  Hereon the graphicness ends.  The previous evening I had to pound the pavements rapidly from a shopping trip with a cold drink outside Tesco at a drink’s stall.  I bid farewell to Esben (who popped along with us, undoubtedly to release his words of upset following his break-up with Stephanie at the weekend in Guangzhou – long distances never help) and shuffled back with an intestinal pain causing as much discomfort as humanly possible.  This was all bad (huài).

A day in bed, and I mean properly out asleep, numb, dead to the world around me, was followed by a trip to the doctors.  The doctor, with assistance from Bright at my school, advised me what to take and what to avoid.  Pretty much everything resembling cold food, foods with flavour or grub with spice was noted – fairly simple choices remained.  Porridge or noodles with nowt.  The doctor gave me a combination of 4 medicines, one being Montmorillonite (clay-type stuff) and another being Lactobacillus Complex Capsules (for adjustment of my intestinal flora).  The other two medicines are white and yellow – and entirely dubbed in Chinese Mandarin scripts.  Not a clue.

Today, I woke up feeling better, hungry, drained of energy – devoid of alertness but on the whole better.  Today’s classes with K2 Banana (say and do); K2 Peach (Song and chant); K2 Cherry (Song and chant) followed after lunch by K2 Strawberry (Say and do) went reasonably well.  In the classes marked say and do, I said and did with Kitty.  Kitty is a soft-voiced Chinese teacher from the region of Guangxi.  She has been most welcoming and has assisted me in this kindergarten pool of female only teachers. There are around 10 different classes in the school, and at least 30 different teachers or staff member zipping around.  By zipping I mean head down, not paying too much attention, the teachers appearing exceedingly stressed out owing to an inspection taking place on Thursday and Friday.  For these two days I am expected to hide in Dao Ming Foreign Language with several classes and mostly run games or activities.  This could be a very long end of week run-in!

Anyway back to classes today, Banana class are like monkeys, clambering all over their new found English climbing frame with buckets of fervour.  Despite warnings that this class are sheer agony to control, they weren’t too bad.  Following that class Peach seemed placid but attentive and assiduous in their renditions of “If you’re happy and you know it…”  Cherry class proceeded lunchtime and you can always tell a hungry class, especially when you teach them the phrase “I am hungry.”  That said all classes had some wonderful examples of dramatisation of “I am angry.”  Enough to make the heart warm on the wintry day with a cold snap to the heart.

And now I am properly hungry – again.  This is good (Hǎo).  This leaves me with a wee quandary, something caused my sudden ill spat.  Now, here, germs are everywhere.  It is tropical so bacteria, fungi etc grows well.  One drop of bad water, one handshake too many, a missed spek of dirt by handgel… anything can carry it.  Now I feel better, now I carry on as normal.  I might go for a bite of Chiellini, Ivanović and Bakkal.

(I’ll never forgive Luis Suarez for the injustice when Suárez blocked Dominic Adiyiah’s goal-bound effort on the line in the 2010 World Cup quarter-final against Ghana)

FEED THE SUAREZ, LET HIM KNOW IT IS BREAKFAST TIME…

Today’s weather has been mild – only 28°C.  Whilst I have felt warm, I have hardly experienced heat today.

Zài jiàn!

the international icebreaker – namely Sun Jihai

30/6/2014

The weekly Wednesday quiz was entered by James, Nikki and I.  Our breakaway team “Baldilocks and Co” from Bryony, Becky, Birgitte, and Liam did us well.  Esben scattered and joined another team entirely – one including my quiz nemesis, Mustard Shirt Man.  With expectations low, knowledge limited and trepidation the battle began.  Like Manchester City we came out on top.  Champions.

Thursday marked the exodus of my kindergarten to the neighbouring Dao Ming Foreign Language School’s art and music rooms.  The music room is a hall, very large and typical in polished wooden flooring, matt white walls and several pianos coupled with a random drum kit.  A lone triangle hangs on the wall.  Not a cowbell could be found.  The roof of the hall is flat.  The sun baked down.  The room was hotter inside than the outside walkway in direct sunlight.  This room, after one botched class with my N1 students of Apple class (aged 2-3) became dormant soon after.  It was too hot for everyone – and not healthy.  Initially the day started in a makeshift canteen under a giant plastic roofed garden area.  Kindergarten kids from the four grades seemed to sprinkle with the neighbouring grade 1 and grade 2 Dao Ming.  The adjacent toilets heaved with extra capacity and an odour akin to an animal farm spread over the site.  The bordering grade 7 and 8 students frequently came over to say hello and ask when I would return to their classes.  Then, they’d testify truthfully that the toilets tang terribly.

The afternoon was so hot, the waking students had an extra long afternoon nap.  The mercury tapped 36°C.  Bryony came back to say hello to her students, and as we entered the sleeping area of the dance room – reminiscent of a refugee camp – it became apparent that classes would not start shortly.  The teachers informed me, there was to be no classes, “please go home and rest.”  So I asked a dozen times, if they were sure, and then made my escape.  And no one’s gonna stop me now, I’m gonna make my escape.

For the final Thursday night as a group of foreign teachers, Bright gathered us at a restaurant near to school.  The restaurant is owned by the family of a school bus driver and had several students inside.  However, upstairs a booth dining area was set aside for us.  Here we dispersed around a circular table with a rotating central piece to assist with sharing multiple dishes.  Eight different plates arrived, with food as varied as Sìchuān cài (food from the Sìchuān region) fish doused in spicy , pork with noodles; chicken with bones in peppers; sizzling potatoes in spices; some deep fried meat parcels; and more.  After stuffing our faces, we exited stage right (or through the very centralised glass doors), had a photograph, wished each other good luck (and went our separate ways for the night).  The low point of the night was finding out that Bright, our supportive and intelligent mentor, point of absolute reliability and contact has not got a place in University at Shanghai.  Their loss.  He did mention he’ll try for Beijing’s Normal University.  Good luck to him.  It isn’t easy in China, and he deserves to succeed.  There aren’t enough people like Bright.  He is as his name says, vivid, dazzling, happy and light, brainy, smart, cheerful, optimistic and positive. 

Friday came, I arrived early and joined the breakfast tables of the exiled students of kindergarten.  Their exile imposed the day before as a result of an inspection at the two kindergarten schools (I believe they are technically registered as one, although I cannot be certain).  The wee blighters bounced around gleefully, shouting out “teacher John” at frequencies parallel to that of a crowd at the Etihad Stadium crying, “City, City…”  As the day progressed I managed three classes, The Wheels On The Bus; Heads, Shoulders, Knees and Toes, and a few other random classics being sweated as much as sang out loud.  In the late part of the afternoon the green light of play was passed to all students.  I chose some ground, sat down, constructed with some plastic toys and talked (as best possible) with the students.  The responses to questions like, “Did you see the football?” or “What do you think of the rumour about De Jong going to Man U?” weren’t deep or meaningful, but never the less I now know how to count to 100 or identify the colours of anything within sight.

That evening was designated, a drinking leaving do evening.  Vanetia and Peter joined us from a different school.  We started at the other teachers’ apartment, hit the market for some grub, then Irene’s Bar, (where else?), before arriving at Rubik’s KTV in Houjie around 2300hrs.  Surprisingly, they had Blue Moon, it said by Frank Sinatra – but it turned out to be a homemade version from what sounded like a regular drinker of morning visits to Wetherspoons.  After a few too many Dewars and cokes with ice we all left on Saturday morning at exactly 0230hrs (the last song ends then, mid-flow).  Immediately after we strolled to Pink Lady/V-Bar and ordered a rum and coke, on entering.  Some dancing by Birgitte “I’m not dancing”; Esben “the music is rubbish”; and t’others was observed within nanoseconds of passing the raised dance stage.  I slinked away to enjoy my drink at a table with Peter and James.  Soon after, the saying if you can’t beat them, join ‘em phrase was put into practice.  All the while Nikki seemed to be enjoying the fragrant dancing aromas of China in the dead of night.  At some stage several Chinese men grabbed Liam and I as we passed their table.  A cold Budweiser was thrusted into my hand, and we chatted football – the international icebreaker – namely Sun Jihai.  The beautiful game at its best.

On exiting the club around 0430hrs, we sauntered to the Chinese equivalent of the Kebab House, the western golden consonant of capitalism tinted with bullion colouring.  The night ended after a taxi journey back and a much needed air-conditioned late night of slumber.

May 2014’s posts

Honk Kong & How to avoid huge ships

4 May 2014

The title is in homage to this link.

Wednesday, as always, means Irene’s Pub Quiz.  With impeccable discipline driven on by Becky (the foreign teacher equivalent of Alex Ferguson) we romped to victory.  There was no real choice, Becky would have killed us should we have been first loser or below.  It is the taking part that counts?  Not with Becky.  3 wins in 5 attempts isn’t too bad though.  As Thursday was a national holiday we could drink our winnings, the vodka tasted vile so we allowed James and Liam to do as they please with the liquid sentence of duress.

For the national holiday, Nikki and I hopped on a CTS coach from the Sheraton Hotel (Houjie) to the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China.  For the national holiday (Labour Day, May 1st) we were allowed Friday and Saturday off work, meaning Sunday we would have to return to the grindstone (and a latent sluggish six day week).  So, with our bags packed with dreams, toothbrushes and mosquito-repellent the coach tore down the highways of China towards Shenzen and the border crossing.  The journey took around three hours, of which half was spent at the border crossings.  Note the plural.  The first section, China stamp you out, check your visa and then you hop on another CTS coach for less than two minutes.  Here you take note of the next bus stop you need to seek.  You fill in an arrival card for Hong Kong, show your passport, get a little print-out advising when you must leave Hong Kong, oddly mine said by no later than October 28th 2014 (my birthday!).  After this, you leg it to te next bus stop and the world changes.  Not massively, but enough to notice.

Hong Kong, being an ex-British colony, drive on the left.  There is order.  Traffic lights work.  Traffic stops at them.  There is a significant amount of street cleanliness, better than Blighty too!  Rare double decker buses patrol the streets for lost souls at every turn.  The roads follow clear and easy formats, bilingual signage adorns everything.  Europe and the Western world meets the East.  Guangzhou was big, Dongguan and Shenzen a multidirectional sprawl of urbanisation, and Hong Kong, well, massive.  Proper massive, like the old Maine Road floodlights.

The colossal roads and bridges open onto Kowloon island, looking out at Hong Kong island with ceaseless towering towers looming and soaring skyscrapers climbing the mountain sides like stalagmites creeping from a great lake to the heavens.  The lush peaks lined with dense foliage splintered repeatedly by lumps of leviathan Lego.  Sometimes, just sometimes, you look at a human creation and gaze in absolute wonder.  Hong Kong is one of those amazing wonders, a panorama of artificial textile over a topography twisted by time.

After departing the coach at Wan Chai, we exchanged our Chinese RMB (Monopoly money) for Hong Kong Dollars (special edition Monopoly money).  The Harbourview hotel was easy to locate and check-in was uncomplicated.  The room had a spectacular view of the strait between Hong Kong island and Kowloon island.  Soon after our feet began to pound the pavements, level and smooth, established and clean around the local vicinity.  Nikki and I decided upon a Turkey burger and a Canton Pulled Pork burger respectively, both filling our bellies with great ease.  Exhaustion and the overwhelming nature of H.K. (as the locals refer to it) led to the need to get some much needed shut eye.

Friday arrived, and waking up with a dramatic vista of the city once named after a fragrant harbour.  Numerous Black Eared Kites glide effortlessly on thermals overhead, amongst the skyscrapers and over the sea channels.  Egrets wander the seashore as ships sail serenely by.  Nikki and I head to a Swiss bakery, wander to the Hong Kong Park to see the aviary and explore the Tai Chi gardens.  Here beauty and relaxation surround you, grip you by the arm and drag you away from the city.  The very large aviary with a pathway raised above the trees envelopes your senses whilst many birds make their varied sounds, beneath water flows and fish swim.  Outside the enclosure Yellow Crested Cockatoos (introduced species) perch, flight and battle for their patch of sky.  In 1941, the then Hong Kong Governor Sir Mark Aitchison Young freed the Government House’s bird collection just before yielding Hong Kong to Japanese invaders.  They have bred a fair bit since.  After the serenity of the park, the bafflement of a two hour queue for the eight minute journey up to The Peak made for a polar experience.  The old engine house and equipment being from Bradford, Manchester (think Eastlands, Etihad Campus way) came as a pleasant surprise.  The ride up, with too much anticipation time, was worthy of the wait.  Up flew the train, at angles akin to that of the Harrier jumpjet.

The view at the top of the Pearl of the Orient is the impressive.  As far as the eye can see, islands, mountains, littered with buildings, tower after tower for businesses and accommodation, a patchwork of humanity.  Each building with many different diverse shapes, curved, straight, triangles, coated in seemingly impossible amounts of plastics, wood, metals and concrete or rock.

The Peak circular walk (around 2 miles) was pleasant enough, plenty of views of the city below, the islands afar and the many straits beleaguered with ships and ferries.  Birds flew by, insects roamed in numbers and mosquitoes attacked with rancour.  We stopped to talk to a local Chinese man who shown us his amazing images of juvenile mantises.  He helped us snap some!  Soon after we stumbled on some beautiful leaf and stick insects, I say stumbled, I mean spotted.  The wander ended with some wonderful frozen yogurt at about £10 for two cornets (H.K. is not cheap in any sense).  That evening, we met up with Chris, one of Nikki’s bootcamp mates from back in Essex.  Chris is in I.T. and has been sent to work in H.K. for a few weeks.  There are worse offices, globally.

After the Star Ferry crossed the strait, with magnificent views all around, we made a pilgrimage to the Avenue of Stars (Hong Kong movie and TV stars), took a snap of Bruce Lee’s statue and drank Asahi (Japanese lager) at a local bar.  At this stage it was agreed we would seek steak, on the suggestion of Chris.  On the way back we watched the breathtaking light show that is the Symphony of Lights (H.K. must have a big electric bill), set against awful music.  So, steak we sought and La Taverna (since 1969 located in H.K., ran by some Italians) was average – at best.  And overpriced.  Then we wandered around the hustling, bustling markets before stopping at a Spanish themed bar until 3am, where a taxi ride through the tunnel was required (the ferries stopping at 0130hrs).

Chris failed to mention that it was his birthday that day!  So, shēngrì kuàilè Chris!

Saturday, Nikki and I arose from our slumber late on.  We decided to meet Chris for breakfast (around lunchtime) before going our separate ways (Chris was off to Macau to jump off the world’s biggest bungee jump and we had to get a coach back mid-afternoon.  We hopped on an old H.K. tram, explored some more of the city areas before catching the coach back over the border to the hooters of Houjie.

Today is Sunday and we were both working.  I am shattered!

曼城 Màn chéng (Manchester City) / Yīng Chāo (Premier League) / Guàn jūn (Champion)

13/5/2014 lunchtime.

  1. 曼城 Màn chéng (Manchester City) / Yīng Chāo (Premier League) / Guàn jūn (Champion)
  2. A six day working week is normal for many Chinese teachers.  I can substantiate to you that working one additional day was far from natural.  Firstly, Thursday is my busy day, and with that I have 6 periods, so Sunday’s classes mimicked that of the Thursday.  Class 704, in effect, having one more class than the remainder of grade 7.  On top of this brutal Sunday school, I had to host one extra class for the Chinese middle school teachers of English.  The subject being a comparison of U.K. and Chinese culture.  Needless to say, a log could not have developed a better style of sleeping than I did that night.  Nikki looked equally shattered.
  3. Up dashed Monday morning, the customary 40 minute flag- hoisting ritual.  Three grade 8 lessons later and an early night.  The subsequent day and the haze of a three-day weekend (not quite on a weekend) lifted.  VIP class for grade 5 fell at the hurdle due to a writing competition.  It seems warnings of cancelled classes never arrive before the class starts.
  4. Wednesday morning waltzed in, cancelling an English lesson for the P.E. teachers who had to oversee an interschool basketball game.  Hereon, the day progressed progressively with some progressing progress.  We came second in the pub quiz at Irene’s Bar.
  5. During what seemed like an elongated week, nothing is better than to have two Thursday class schedules.  VIP class for grade 5 again was cancelled, this time an art competition, held outdoors pulled the plug.  Then it rained, just to ensure it could not be completed.  In the evening grade 7 and 8’s VIP class was a flashy affair.  The monsoon outside developing into a tropical storm.  Most of my class hiding their faces as soon as minute long rumble shook the roof.
  6. Friday stuttered along like a McVities advert for a cold loving aquatic-feeding bird.  The evening comprised of food at the market, mainly shāo kǎo (barbecue).  That evening Nikki and I retired to the apartment, shattered but awake enough to watch the remake of Oldboy.  Pretty light watching before bedtime.  I prefer the original.
  7. Saturday, Esben and I went to the bike shop to swap my pedals around and generally confuse the staff within Giant’s local branch.  The lady behind the counter wanted a photograph with me, being a giant in Giant.  Esben photo-bombed it (for the elderly out there, Photobombing is the act of purposely putting oneself into the view of a photograph when not invited to).  We then popped to our favourite DVD store, exchanged numbers with some of the staff, spoke limited English to some schoolgirls who kept following us around.  Their giggling and screeching altering a staff member to tell us, “they want to try English with you.”  This is not an unusual request or occurrence, it is pretty much the norm.  Anyway, the TV series Dexter is now on the to do list/pile of things for a rainy evening/day.
  8. The evening started at the shìchǎng (market), proceeded to Anchor Bar and then Blue Orleans bar.  Blue Orleans is ran by Luther, a loveable Chicago ex-pat who teaches English too.  He is closing his bar today.  The lack of business, the lack of customers, the lack of regulars giving him rise to sell up, start a language school near Shanghai with his wife.  Good on him, I wish him all the best with his healthier venture.  Somehow, I did manage to get around 40 mosquito bites on my arms and face that evening, not good.
  9. Sunday, a write off of a day if ever there was one, we ate, watched bad movies (Four Lions & Con Air) and avoided the monsoon enveloping our lives.  The whole of our foreign teacher circle came over and shared their smelly feet, damp jacket aromas and fridge contents.  I count Liam as eating 87.4% of all crisps we have ever purchased in China.  Esben and I braved the rain, headed to the market, made a bulk purchase of chǎo miàn (fried noodles) and Jiǎozi (dumplings) alongside some Bǐng (flat pancakes) and jī (chicken).  Jīròu means muscle and after walking back in that heavy rain, my muscles strained and one whole pot of chǎo miàn and Jiǎozi entered my belly.  I was bloomin’ ‘ungry.  After everybody had departed Ian Cheesman and The Goat popped on the internet radio, GDTV’s coverage of City v WHU was firmly switched to on – and the game was enjoyed.  Champions of England, once again.  The Premier League is a marathon not a sprint.  We didn’t limp over the line, we deserved to tear the finishing line.  I spotted my mate Nick, Nat, Dean and Frank on the telebox coverage.  Ed, who flies from Mallorca every game was clearly visible too.  To see everyone at the fulltime whistle fill the green pitch in blue, just shows what football means to Our City.  Forget the finances, the sponsorship, the lack of English players – Manchester simply welcomes all, and discards nationality, we’re people after all.  The future is bright for City and the massive Etihad Campus will bring us forward.
  10. Monday, or Champion Hangover day, as it should be known, felt tiring.  Two lessons with a projector seemed steady, I asked the teacher in class 801 why the students are so reserved at speaking out in front of their peers, “they’re too concerned by their face; you’re doing a good job.  Don’t worry.”  I don’t worry, I just strive for better, and class 801 speak so well in groups or when I go around checking them individually.  The final class being with a broken projector meant use of the old fashioned chalk and duster on the chalkboard.  It didn’t go smooth, but a roughly filed sharp spike is better than an atom bomb.
  11. Today is Tuesday, it is very humid.  All foreigners here are sweating moisture in amounts comparable to the contents of a bucket.  I was going to observe Esben but he has no lessons.  The teachers have taken away his lessons for Open Lessons (parents may observe).  This is odd because Liam, James and Birgitte all have Open Lessons.  Instead I have my three classes and have observed a class taught by James.  I may observe one or two of the other classes later.  Tonight is Mandarin class and Blue Orleans closes, for good.  I don’t think I’ll go to Blue Orleans.

The Walking Puddle of Houjie

13/5/2014 1545hrs.

Until today I did not believe air could be so humid.  Yes, you see humid tropical rainforests on television, people so sweaty their proverbial bits of dropped off, but now I believe the U.K. has the finest air in the world.  The sweat is pouring off my body like the collective Horseshoe Falls, American Falls and Bridal Veil Falls.  [Nikki’s Mum and Dad should know their name]  Outside classes on the open-plan corridors students are sliding, taking risks up and down every slippery staircase to sanctuary.  The walls are damp.  Paper softens with every sap of soggy air that passes over.  The thermometre reads as 30°C, it feels warmer.

My back is clammy, my brow soaked.  My legs restricted by the dampened trousers encasing them.  Soggy pockets hold my increasingly sodden passport entombed in a waterproof wallet.  My arms are sticky and rest on the desk, sticking occasionally and gasping for fresh air.  Every breath taken brings with it heavy air, not choking but heaving and testing the boundaries of my breathing.  My core temperature has risen, ice or a pool of crisp fresh water would be my Elysium.  I desire coolness, the air conditioner and ceiling fan battle heat, losing.  Nausea is my blanket, my stomach coated with water, unable to take more.  My concentration in Esben’s class I observe drops, I see this from the students’ view.  Tired.  Too hot.  Why bother?

Rain comes in short swathes, a storm is wanted, a quick blast of cooler air, break the humidity, this clamminess is a tortuous unwanted moisture.  The forecast is the same for many a day.  Why isn’t there a demand for English teaching in Antarctica?

Singing In The Rain II (*with script*)

3 days ago

Barely a day passes without the questions, “do you have children?” or “will you have children?”  The Chinese are a vastly curious folk and no level of personal question is kept secret.  “How much do you earn?” is easy to defend, because contractually, and to the letter of the local laws, we are not allowed to discuss.  This is because a Chinese teacher will work harder than us, longer than us and earn less than us.  Some teachers work all week, some have one day off, some have the odd weekend off.  Invariably, they habitually work relentlessly.

On Wednesday, I asked the question, “How many days of continuous high humidity do you usually get?”  The response from a younger, much more petite Chinese teacher was, “Until a big storm.  This could be three or four days.  What will you do after China?”  For every question I ask, a finer further probing query arises.  The cultural difference of displaying uncertainty as to that next step clearly fascinates the Chinese teachers, but they accept nonetheless.

The Chinese rarely move occupation or change employers in comparison with us British.  They may move school or college, have a company taken over or be laid off and enter a similar company as a result – or their business may scrape by, but people rarely change jobs.  Even when a baby comes along, the little blighter is popped out, homeschooled for as little as possible and packaged off to kindergarten to learn in great detail.  Forget reception and nursery, kids start school in their first year of life.

Whilst most adolescents in China are surprised by my number of siblings, to mention cousins, uncles, aunts and their jaws hit the deck.  The recent revolution from a one child policy is apparent.  After school you see many younger children (up to 8 years old) alongside their babyish siblings.  Bumps on local women indicate winter was cold, maybe as low as 10°C.  This bodes well for kindergartens but maybe not so well for a population spike.

“When a man and a woman exercise together, they have a baby.  How?”  This is the second occasion and similar phraseology utilised to ask that all important question.  The standard response has always and will always be, ask your class teacher.  Each class has a dedicated teacher, there for most subjects or pottering around when I half-inch their desks.

Last night, “Team Floppy Birthday” in honour of Liam’s 19th birthday won the pub quiz, we had been 2nd or 3rd until the last round, but we crept across the concluding line comparable to commendable Champions.  Prior to that I almost cycled over a dozen chickens in the mean backstreets of Houjie.

Today, like yesterday, has been incredibly hot, a furnace of a day.  Around 14:45hrs a light shower passed over, a few distant rumbles of thunder and all the students holding their hands out to the light rain, welcoming the coolness of every drop.  It did look rather bizarre.

My students refer to me as Teacher John or Teacher, never sir or miss.  Today, a dozen or so of my students had the opportunity to watch the foreign teacher’s enforced audition (yes, we had no choice) for the Children’s Day Show on 30th May 2014.  To date, we have had 6 rehearsals (without props and effects), but alongside good old Gene Kelly (perhaps the greatest name for a football stand ever).  I give to you the “Singing In The Rain II (or That Play What We Tried To Write)” script.

Singing In The Rain II

(That Play What We Tried To Write)

Act 1:

The scene is a building site.

LIAM:  “I’m working 9 to 5…” [starts humming]

ESBEN:  “I’m so happy, oh so happy…” [hums and dances, with a power stapler in his hand]

BREE:  “I’m happy because I don’t have to watch The Lion King.” [whilst using a trowel to apply make-up on ESBEN]

LIAM:  “To me.” [Liam throws James something)

JAMES:  “To you.”

LIAM:  “To me.” [Liam throws James something)

JAMES:  “To you.”

[Enter] JOHN:  “Good morning workers.”  [John walks towards James] “What is your name?”

LIAM:  “Don’t tell him your name James!”

(a phone rings) SOUND EFFECT: NOKIA RINGTONE

[ESBEN answers a giant phone] “HELLO… I’M BUILDING AT A SCHOOL… I CAN’T HEAR YOU…. GOODBYE”

JOHN:  “James, have you fed the parrot?”

JAMES walks over to a parrot in a cage, the parrot is stuffed.

JAMES:  “Yes, but he hasn’t eaten.”

JOHN:  “Let me have a quick look at him.”  [the parrot is examined, hit across the side of something] “This parrot is dead!”

JAMES:  “He’s not dead.  He’s just having a sleep.”

JOHN:  “He very much is dead!”

JAMES:  “”You stunned him, just as he was wakin’ up! Norwegian Blues stun easily.”

As this happens… the argument fades away… LIAM lifts up a plank of wood, walks by JAMES, turns and hits JAMES on the head.  He then turns another way hitting ESBEN’s head before passing BREE who ducks to avoid being hit.  LIAM then ponders, realises he forgot something heads back hitting ESBEN’s and JAMES’s head again.  BREE dives out of the away with a big reluctant smile, “Phew!”

JOHN walks on reaches into his pocket, pulls out a paper bag, opens it, pulls out an imaginary ball, shows the audience, throws it in the air, catches it.  BREE looks at this in envy, tries to copy it, throws a ball in the air nothing lands.  JOHN snatches the bag back and catches the imaginary ball.

JAMES:  “What do you think of the show so far?”

LIAM:  “Rubbish!”

BREE:  “Today is sunny, I hope it doesn’t rain…”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Act 2:

[Music starts to play:  Singing in the Rain, by …]

Duration Actions Lyrics Flashcard
0:00 Singer emerges from door, holding hand out checking for rain.  FALL GUY watches.  Singer opens umbrella. Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo

Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo

Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo

Doo-dloo-doo-doo-doo-doo…

UMBRELLA
0:17 FALL GUY:  look of confusion; eyes follow the singing/dancing person & the runner by covering their head.  I’m singing in the rain

Just singing in the rain

What a glorious feelin’

I’m happy again

HAPPY
0:34 Singer with umbrella spins around a fixed object, lamppost? I’m laughing at clouds

So dark up above

The sun’s in my heart

And I’m ready for love

HEART
0:46

 

*0:55

Singer throws umbrella and does not catch it.

 

*water from a drainpipe onto FALL GUY.

Let the stormy clouds chase

Everyone from the place

Come on with the rain

I’ve a smile on my face

SMILE
0:58

 

 

 

 

*1:11

 

Singer folds up umbrella, skips side to side.

FALL GUY moves to right about 1 metre.

*water from another drainpipe onto FALL GUY, who takes off hat, scratches head.

I walk down the lane

With a happy refrain

Just singin’,

Singin’ in the rain

SINGING
1:15

 

*1:25

Singer dances forwards and backwards.  FALL GUY walks side to side following singer’s movements.

 

*Bucket of water thrown onto FALL GUY.

Dancin’ in the rain

Dee-ah dee-ah dee-ah

Dee-ah dee-ah dee-ah

*I’m happy again!

I’m singin’ and dancin’ in the rain!

I’m dancin’ and singin’ in the rain…

DANCING
1:33

 

*1:39

Singer pushes a canopy hung up above.  The canopy empties water onto the FALL GUY. I’m singin’ and dancin’ in the rain!

I’m dancin’ and singin’ in the rain…

MUSICAL PIECE.

FALL GUY, “I’m wet through!” protests to the singer.

FALL GUY snatches the umbrella, singer shrugs shoulders, walks away. FALL GUY tells the audience, “I’m wet through!”

FALL GUY soaks himself… in / by ???

I’m singin’ and dancin’ in the rain!

I’m dancin’ and singin’ in the rain…

Why is each new task

A trifle to do?

Because I am living

A life full of you.

The BBC TV recreation featured Ernie exactly copying Gene Kelly’s dance routine, on a set which exactly copied the set used in the movie, and Eric performed the role of the policeman. The difference from the original was that in the Morecambe and Wise version, there is no water, except for some downpours onto Eric’s head (through a drain, or dumped out of a window, etc.).   John Robert Acton-Brown’s recreation was written hastily, mostly copied and edited in homage to the original – not for profit, but to introduce others to Morecambe and Wise.

“Our hands may be active, but our consciences are at rest.”

7 seconds ago

Today’s title comes from The Churchill Centre.  Not even remotely Chinese in origin, but it does make good bedtime reading.

Thursday evening passed by without eventualities worthy of note.  The lack of local internet access at school and home proving costly to the process of doing lesson plans and materials for the following week.

Friday could have easily passed as an audition into a boiling underworld, a cauldron of a netherworld, the road to perdition, or an inferno within the abyss.  Houjie had a power-cut of biblical proportions, which someone did not affect our apartment blocks, but everywhere else was not spared.  In hindsight I am exaggerating but in reality it was brutal agony.  Firstly, all foreign teachers were asked to turn up at 07:30hrs for photographs with Grade 6 students.  This eventually started by 08:15hrs, as is the way locally.  After a few random snaps, it was apparent the power would not return to the town (and school) anytime soon.  Goodbye powerpoint.  Secondly, water coolers and ceiling fans depend wholeheartedly on a constant supply of electricity.  Some local shops had generators, but not many.  Dehumidifiers dotted around the school’s larger buildings resembled colossal paperweights.  By the time 10:20hrs arrived, I had observed a lesson by Birgitte by means of chalk and chalkboard.  My class started ten minutes later.  704 are a very good class but you could see the heat draining their eyes, their many pleads of teach outside (in the raw sunshine) falling on my deaf ears.  We soldiered onwards; it was enjoyable and seemed to allow them to speak a great deal.  My back had drained and my stomach full of water warmed by the thermal nature of the air.  Class 703 arrived and the teacher from this form elected to cancel my class and just practice reading.  Her protest of “They won’t listen, they are too warm” being enough for my agreement.  “Go and rest, cool down” she told me, the moving mere of Manchester.  So, I went to observe a class by Liam and further repeat the dehydrate/rehydrate cycle. Lunchtime staggered in, a storm blasted through, I was utterly drenched, but relieved of too much heat.  The air heavier with humidity but far more welcoming than the intensity of the morning high temperature.  I ran back to empty the freezer in our apartment of a pot of luxury strawberry ice cream.  Nikki lay there is the air conditioned room basking.  Her neighbouring kindergarten where Briony works had been sending students home, having roasted the wee ones right through.

The afternoon rain faded within the hour, classes resumed, powerless, class 702 embraced my impromptu activities well but their polar opposite class 701 had burned out long ago.  Interest was not present, respect was distant and concentration so titrated it could easily have passed as a homeopathic lesson.  The afternoons on Friday start early and end at the usual 16:40hrs.  The storm began again after I impulsively observed Liam’s final class of the day.  His grade one students have buckets of enthusiasm, and whilst sweating like athletes after a full day’s training, the little blighters were still bouncing off the walls.  Straight after class, the heavens opened up, the downpour flooding the lower pathways of the school enough to merit tiptoed walkways between buildings.  I met Liam and Birgitte at their office.  Soon after James arrived.  We wandered up the building to the penultimate floor of five levels.  We looked across the vista at the low cloud, heavy deluge, lightning strikes and listened to the cracks, claps and din of thunder.  The inundation of rain dizzying the senses by the sheer magnitude of the cloudburst.  Every now and then a strike of lightning would crest a building nearby and the rumble would seem dangerously close.  Having seen a hasty lightning probe zap from above our roof over the courtyard below onto a neighbouring school building we scattered to the sanctuary of the office again.  Birgitte advised the teachers had moved desks because the lights above sparked around the time the building was struck.  Monsoon season is never boring.

In the evening, Liam, James, Birgitte, Esben and I ate at a steak house (which did not sell steak).  Nikki was out with her kindergarten staff for a meal at the posh Hyatt Garden Hotel and then KTV that evening.  I chose chicken in tomato sauce, on a bed of rice.  Out came chicken, in a white sauce on a bed of spaghetti.  Nobody seemed to get what they ordered.  We politely ate up, paid and vanished.  The food was so insipid and so trivial that it merited a pizza practically straight after.  The pizza shop (one we have not tried before), being of very good quality and orange juice was only 1¥.  The workers there even chucked an additional drink in gratis for everyone!

Soon after we retired to Irene’s Bar to drink the Champions of the Pub Quiz vodka bottle and other various drinks.  Much later Nikki joined us, alongside Briony, Becky and teachers from Briony’s school (with such exotic names as Yukky).  The intentions of an early night scampered, Nikki and I went home around midnight; Esben retired much earlier; and the rest of the clan went to Pink Lady for further licentiousness.

And then one Saturday morning, a bus took Birgitte, Briony, Becky, Nikki and I to Guangzhou.  The weekend involved a trip to the dark ages (I mean zoo), a meal in the evening at Perry’s Bar and overnight accommodation at Lazy Gaga’s.  Some of the zoo was okay, some was awful.  Saturday night, Sunday morning (Esben’s birthday) was spent playing Poohhead card game with Chairman Mao Zedong style playing cards.  Sunday, the monsoon swept through Guangzhou limiting tourist opportunities outdoors to visiting shopping streets, playing hide and seek in the city, and exploring many shopping malls/centres/precincts.  Esben, back with his beard, received a “I love beards” waterbottle from our group.

I started work today at 07:00hrs, not bad for someone who hates the morning almost as much as sweetcorn.  After reverberation, replication, recurrence, reappearance, repetition, and reiteration of the phrase “Good Morning,” I was released to relax at 07:40hrs.  The 07:55hrs flag raising ceremony appeared to be rained off.  Take two arrive twenty minutes later, as did the rain.  The initial marching with flag was okay, then the first attempt at raising the flag failed, the flag floundering as it was not fastened up correctly.  The national anthem being cut short on the parade ground, and soon after the ceremony became defunct.  Next door, Nikki’s nursery played over the loudspeaker a tune to make all westerners laugh, “Ole, Ole, Ole, we are the Champs… we are the Champs…”  Well it is a World Cup year I suppose.

MCFC, HKFC Citibank International Soccer Sevens Champions.

7 seconds ago

Anyone of the group of ten from Brandon Barker, Charlie Albinson, Pablo Maffeo, Kean Bryan, Thierry Ambrose, Ashley Smith-Brown, James Horsfield, Angelino, Nathaniel Oseni and Denzeil Boadu will give Manuel Pelligrini something to look at and hopefully a selection headache.  In 32-35C heat, with the sun overhead, City looked as professional as ever.  The famous sky blue kits and the two away variants being worn with pride for each battle.

Throughout the tournament the Hong Kong Manchester City Supporters belted out chants and did the odd Poznan.  They clapped the opposition and cheered equally for very goal.  Typical City fans.

On Sunday, City U-18’s fought out a hard victory over Hong Kong U-23’s.  Their opposition had won 2 and drawn one (against Newcastle Utd 0-0) of their group games.  The 3-1 win in the quarter finals, seeing a Thierry Ambrose double and a Kean Bryan wondershot.

City earned a semi-final meeting with Sunderland (who came 2nd in their group behind Kitchee) and the Black Cats seemed stronger in the air and much bigger in build.  City patiently got the ball onto the deck, worked it around before Pablo Maffeo drew City level.  His half pitch sprint and dive onto Jason Wilcox acted as a prime example of the team’s belief in their gaffer.  The entire squad soon piled on.  Sudden death extra time arrived, meaning four against four football.  City shed their keeper, looked to gain and retain possession.  Angelino popped on his gloves, passed the ball patiently with the other three blues before rifling a shot hard into the onion bag.  City followed Kitchee’s tactics in an earlier game of fielding an outfielder player and working the ball around towards the net.  Angelino’s superb strike being one of confidence and a worthy winner.

The group stages on Saturday gave light to City’s spirit in the squad.  City never looked like losing to Singapore Cricket Club (a 4-0 romp), Rangers (a well battled 1-1 draw) or a very well organised (and undefeated in 2013) BC Rangers (drew 2-2).  The final results in the group meant City topped the league closely followed by Rangers.  BC Rangers also finished the group on 5 points but goal difference sent them to the minor competition.

The final was a match up between Group C winners City and Group B winners Kitchee.  Hong Kong’s dominant club and won the 2013/14 First Division.  City’s age difference, the build difference and overall underdog appearance against a side more acclimatised to the weather conditions on the back of their successful season did not stifle the young Citizens.  City battled valiantly and earned the win.  Sadly, I could not stay for the final as I had to catch the last bus to Houjie (China) at 1900hrs.  Well done to the lads, the highlights on TV looked great!  Here is a team who can battle form behind, fight to the end and refuse to be beaten.  Champions.

Indiana John & The Rickshaw Ride of Houjie

9 seconds ago

Monday, May the 19th’s classes last week seemed improved upon previous Monday classes.  Class 801 actually talked a lot when required, 802 delivered their required demonstration and 803, as always allowed for banter and hard work.  Not a bad day.  Tuesday rolled up and a solitary lesson with class 703 flew by without a great deal of fuss or commotion.  Sometimes classes feel smooth.  The students engaged, the work flowed.

Just when you want to go riding or running, Wednesday threw a torrent of rain at us.  The probability of rain increases as time draws closer to 16:00hrs.  The evening we celebrated Bryony’s 23rd birthday with a slap-up meal at the market followed by the pub quiz (we came 2nd) at Irene’s Bar.  The competitive teams often shout cheat, despite all phones being firmly away and it being obvious their teams are using their phones!  Some of the ex-pats here are a tad bitter towards other foreigners, this strikes me as very odd.  They are nice as pie face to face, but in their clicks, they can be right (excuse the Mancunian) “knobheads”.

Thursday, dragged by, rain and heat does that.  Oh and the six classes.  At lunch Liam, James, Esben and I went for pizza in town.  Esben and I returned via rickshaw, and survived.  My VIP class with the grade 5 students resembled and outtake from Gremlins.  A video of the rickshaw ride is here.

Friday, a lunchtime audition for our show on Children’s Day passed well, probably the best we have performed as a group.  Although I had to explain to Esben to duck from the plank or place his hands over his head and let the plank strike against his hands to create a loud slap.  His forehead having a little abrasion for his troubles.  Liam and James behaved too, this is rare in any rehearsals.  I’ll put it down to the heat and exhaustion.  Birgitte is professional.  I am not very confident in my performing skills (or lack of).  I need to perfect the Eric Morecambe paper-bag trick.   I was more annoyed it cut my class for 702 into half a class.

Nikki and I spent Friday evening on a bus to Hong Kong, queuing for very little time at the cross-border passport points.  The coach from the Sheraton Hotel in Houjie changed to a luxury people carrier for 5, due to lack of customers.  I for one was not complaining, top quality air conditioning and comfy leather seats beat a coach journey.  We checked into the Ovolo Hotel in Aberdeen (easy to get to from Wan Chai/Hong Kong central) and enjoyed the free minibar (two Tsing Tao beers, several soft drinks and a snack pack).

On Saturday morning, Nikki and I swept through the breakfast buffet like a plague of locusts.  After which we headed to Hong Kong Football Club for the football.  In the afternoon we explored Mongkok after taking the Star Ferry across from Central.  Soon after we wandered every market in the area (well it seemed that way), soaked up the views and bright lights.  Three polo shirts (for school), experience bargaining for a laptop fan (with built in light), a City towel, a traditional fan, an embroidered picture and a few random other bits later we finally had food (Mexican in Wan Chai) before heading off to dreamland.

On Sunday, Nikki went off exploring whilst I topped up my sunburn in Hong Kong Football Club.  We headed back very late on and went bed soon after.  Shattered.  Sunburnt.

April 2014’s posts

Now the drugs don’t work…

2 Apr 2014

Don’t worry the title is based on Verve lyrics.

Last night Nikki typed on the blog for around one hour – before opening a photograph in Firefox, without saving the blog draft.  There are many words lost, please return to Nikki if found.  Nikki worked really hard on it, I was pleased to see her write so much.  It made me proud.  I hope she will re-write the lost words, I want to read them too!

Today, a student shown me a picture of something I thought was so space-aged it had to be Chinese.  The student had shown me because www.bing.com had this as the landing page image.  It was in fact the Falkirk Wheel.  Like an up to date Anderton boat lift.  I had to explain the purpose of canals and why we had them and still use them.  The student in question wants to visit the U.K. to see canals.  Don’t thank me Visit England!

Last week I thought I ended the flu.  Since then I have had a sore throat (occasionally), coughing fits late at night and keep losing my voice.  I have also been bitten a fair bit this last week or so.  Last night, and the night before, it has taken me around two hours to get to sleep.  I cannee lay down laddy.  A dilemma arrived for me today…

Option 1:  Chinese Medicine.  I’ll give that a very wide berth.  The scientist and carer of all things horned, tusked and stripy indicate I should back the flip away from this line of placebo healthcare.

Option2:  The Doctors.  Enter the least inviting medical practice ever.  The doors and walls remind me of a derelict building I one stepped foot in.  Greyed, scaled with smears of who knows what and grime from many decades of neglect.

Option 3:  K.B.O.  Sir Winston Churchill said, “Keep buggering on.”  The problem is that he probably was used to lack of sleep and parliament aside, he didn’t have to teach classes of 40 children, cooped in by recent torrential thunderstorms.

I have exited the doctors with 4 different prescriptions for a 3 days course.  The doctor told me (via Bright) I have late flu symptoms caused by flu.

One medication is the Lian Hua Qing Wen Capsule and Flu Prevention Tea used locally to battle the H1N1 Flu Virus.  It has very little English on the box other than:  “It has the function for cough; phlegm and adjusting the immune system, strongly improving the symptoms of cold fear; headache; high fever; muscle pain; fatigue.   It can kill a wide range of virus and bacteria.”  The Food and Drug Administration of U.S.A. has banned it, but what do they know, they ban life-saving drugs all the time.

One medication is Ribavirin is a broad scope antiviral drug, mainly for viral hemorrhagic fevers and hepatitis C.  The NHS use it for severe flu symptoms.

Qingre Xiaoyanning Jiaonang is written on one box.  The leaflet inside says, “Alleviates fever the disintoxicating, the sterilization stops pain, relaxes the muscles and joints and stimulate blood circulation.”  It appears purely herbal.  http://cmctasly.shenzhou.nl/products/en/patents/23161

One of the medication types has no English label but like the others it carries professional packing, holograms, proper seals and Bright (my superior at school) says are safe to use.

I have been told to avoid spicy food (hard to do), drink only hot water, and avoid tea or coffee for the next three days.

I wonder what is on the menu later…

A long weekend

7 Apr 2014

Well I’m going to try again, but not write as much.

The last post described about the weekend before, which I’ll now do in short. Saturday was a chilled out afternoon in Houjie after the evening before was spend at KTV. It was just myself, John, Esban and James in Houjie. We went for food and suceeded in finding the best place ever, an Italian pizza restaurant. The guy there was amazing and loved us for coming in that he gave us a free greek salad with feta cheese, and some italian bread like stuff. the evening was a DVD evening with the girls while John was out drinking with the boys.

 

Sunday I went to Dongguan with the girls shopping. We ended up at a very western style mall that had zara, h&m and even a clarks shoe shop. It was great to find clothes that fit and we all bought something. Shopping aside the weather was terrible just one big massive thunderstorm for hours. Getting back from shopping was interesting due to the weather as many roads were flooded, plus we got soaked trying to get a taxi, but we got back safe just took longer than normal. John stayed in and enjoyed the thunderstorm from the dry seeing the lightening hit the cranes nearby. Highlight of the day was an English pub where I had bangers, mash, beans, onions and gravy. Going back for sunday roast at some point.

 

This weekend we have had Monday off as well, this is due to to Tombs sweeping day http://www.travelchinaguide.com/essential/holidays/qingming.htm. However with the uncertainty of the weather with thunderstorms and rain most of the week, we all decided to stay nearby and explore further afield when the weather gets better. Friday we went out for food us and 6 other foreign teachers in Houjie and we ended up at the pizza place. this time we got a free cake for afters and a shot of rum each. This is going to be a place we visit a few times during our time here! We then went to bar street for a few drinks and then to a different KTV which was really good and it sold rum, so I was very happy!

 

Saturday was a beautiful sunny day and me and the girls went to the temple nearby. It was packed, but nice to see in the daylight. Lots of people were taking our photos, which to me is the normal now. John went to Irene’s bar to watch rugby with Tim a Kiwi who we have meet a few times and has just come back from Japan. The evening we watched DVD’s bought from the cheap DVD shop in Houjie. We watched Frozen which is great and Saving Mr Banks also great.

 

Sunday was a rainy day so me and girls went shopping in Houjie, they introduced me to some good clothes shops, where I bought a dress, and a cheap jewelry shop where I bought a new watch for £3. good to know I can get stuff close by when I need it. John wasn’t up for girly time, but did try and notice the word try and go on a bike ride. However his pedals fell off! Luckily he was only down the road when it happened. I do hope he can go on a bike ride soon.

 

Monday (today) its been a me and John day. We decided to head to the local sports park, complete with a football/building site pitch, olympic sized swimmimng pool and kiddies pool, badmington and basketball courts, a full 400m track and an outdoor gym. Think we may go back and soon in our exercise gear. We then walked to the top end of Houjie to what we thought was a temple, but a pavilion and a park. It was nice and we will go back to explore the woodlands around it another day. So now its the evening we are chilling with a random movie and I’m finally writing on the blog. This time I will save and then add my picture.

What is the fear of crushing a smaller person?

13 Apr 2014

People of wherever, this weeks 20 years since Supersonic by Oasis, their first single.  I am feeling Supersonic…

Last Tuesday (back to school after a 3 day weekend) was pretty damn hard but flew by.

On Wednesday, our co-worker (supervisor) came from Guangzhou to observe two of my lessons and two of Nikki’s lessons.  This time she appeared with a video camera in tow.  I hate being recorded so sweated doubly as much in the 30°C heat (the fans above doing absolutely nothing to break the thick humid air).  My first class that day was to teach the PE teachers key terms for their lessons.  That and they always conspire to get me to act out the odd gymnastic or dance move.  It is good fun, but hard work.  I really like the PE Teachers, Jan is now renamed as Star and one of the other teachers is named Moon.  So I teach Sun, Moon, Star, Winnie (as in the Pooh), Nicole, Jane, Vivvy, and Fabulous – and occasionally one other teacher drops in to join in.  Their Chinese names are so much more interesting but I could not type them other than Feng Shu Lei (AKA Moon).  In the evening, around 1730hrs, I went running, in baking 26°C heat.  I did break it up with a kick around with two Chinese teachers and a student.  We kicked a ball around, not each other.  I went in net for a bit, most shots hitting the neighbouring badminton court, security building and occasionally being so far off target they went out for a throw in.  Never-the-less great fun!  The evening concluded with Team Liam Has E.D. winning the pub quiz at Irene’s Bar by a single point.

Thursday arrived, my busiest day:  6 classes, a foreign teacher meeting and workshop.  Today, the teachers from Grade 7 asked me to delay doing the next topic/module of the text book for two weeks.  I asked the Grade 8 teachers if they also wanted a delay on the next chapter.  They also wish for this.  So next week, I am teaching greetings and the theme of Easter holidays.  The following week I’ll introduce the U.K. culture and differences between China and the U.K.  There are many, many differences.  Some odd, some simplistic and some baffling beyond belief.  That evening, as is typical of the school, my final class was cancelled with just 5 minutes notice.

After school on Friday, the Chinese teachers who lacked skill in football, invited me to play basketball.  The boot was on the other foot.  I have not played a competitive basketball game since year 11 in Reddish Vale Technology School.  I only made 2 fouls, about average for each teacher in the 3-on-3 half court version of the game.  We played two games, I scored a few hoops, and was on the winning side twice.  Not bad, and I am bobbins in comparison with these technically sound Chinese players.  They like height and strength but have buckets of drive.  Oh and bar one player, all were in their early twenties.  Stay still.  Sinophobia is the fear of the Chinese or Chinese culture;  Stasibasiphobia is the fear of standing or walking.  Is there a name for fear of crushing a Chinese person?  Speaking of fear, I want to go here.

To conclude the day an evening using the pub quiz prize of a bottle of vodka (and a few beers on top) wasn’t a bad night out.

On Saturday it was settled that all foreign teachers would assemble at 1000hrs for breakfast.  Following this we would jump on the number 5 bus destined for Shuilian Mountain Park.  By half past ten most of us were taking in a delectable light breakfast and drinking a peculiar milk and oat based tea, up there with glugging dishwater.  James soon arrived very leisurely and relayed to the tribe that Liam was still very much in the land of dreams following the previous night’s drinking.

One stuffy, cramped, but cheap (2 RMB or about 20p) bus journey of around 30 minutes later we arrive at the Shuilian Mountain Forest Park, Dongguan, Guangdong, China.  The highest point is 378 metres high (1240 feet; shy of Bodmin Moor’s highest point).  We took the path of steep steps, humid, hot (easily around 30°C and no sign of cooling).  Two litres of water later and a fair few leg stretches, stops en route we reached the summit.  Here greeted us another temple, complete with more steps.  Up we went.  Up I returned swiftly.  The wasps up there were bloody big, hopefully not too closely related to the deadly Asian giant hornet.  Panic over, time for an ice cream.  Oh, one has just flown past me.  Care to wear my ice cream?  In actual fact I started walking down the other path away from the temple and ice cream shop.  I will do anything to minimise the subsequent panic of me sharing airspace with wasps.  Risk analysis at its best.

The descent of the mountain-hill was pretty, lots of hidden temples, shrines and mini-waterfalls – and photo requests with Chinese folk.  We eventually arrived at the lake by the main entrance, passed on the peddle boats, the 200 Yuan deposit being a problem, as collectively 7 foreign teachers and Birgitte’s sister could not fit onto one swan-themed craft (seating for two) – and carrying large amounts of money is discouraged.  Here we decided to have an ice cream again, a light snack and head home for a shower (how much sweat was sweated makes me sweat thinking about the sweaty sweat).

Last night we returned to Jerry’s Wow.  James and I are veterans now, having called by 4 times in 3 weeks.  Pizza was had, a cracking Greek salad and some hard earned feet up and natter time.  Liam nattered about his love of spotting phalluses in Disney cartoons, much earning his puppy in a pack status.  Esben, Birgitte, her brother and sister compared their Danish and Norwegian dialects.  Nikki looked tired but content with the Pizza Vulcano.  My option being the bell pepper topped Pizza Diavola.  Don’t think we eat Western that often, this is very rare – and it is only because the place is so welcoming.  The staff split a bottle of Bacardi between us, complimentary, gratis, free, appreciated.  Afterwards we stopped at Top 85, a rip-off Starbucks comparable with U.K. prices but very, very good in quality.

Today’s plans involve surprising Birgitte later this evening with a birthday cake – she has not mentioned it is her birthday to any of us!  Her older brother and sister are over from Norway for a week or so here (Norwegians are mega-rich, so treat globetrotting like a walk to their local park).  Straight after that the Scousers versus City shall be popped on the television – and live commentary via BBC Manchester’s The Goat and Cheesey.  Oh and we have to go shopping for provisions.

  • Has it really been 9 weeks since we arrived here?

Zài jiàn!

“Teacher, Teacher, let me try”

21 Apr 2014

  • What’s different?  What’s the same?  So many differences, so many similarities.  Above all we’re all human, just.  The sense of euphoria that everything was new at first is starting to fade.  Things seem normal.  There is yearning to see family and friends but not at a painful and unmanageable level.  I do miss football madly, that was expected too.  The 3 Fs rank very high in my life priorities.  New foods, new cultural traits and habits, new oddities, new temples or sculptures, landmarks and parks are still everywhere still.  China is like a game of top trumps, something always steps up to the plate and throws the last shock into the shadows.
  • Last Thursday, I held a few egg and spoon races at school, proving a chuckle and then some.  Explaining Easter with as little religion as possible (we cannot preach or promote beliefs) was actually quite easy.  Friday’s egg and spoon race took a few hits early on, with students opting to eat their eggs prior to the event.  The pupils do arrive at 6.30am, have breakfast at 7.30am and lunch at 12pm so yes, I can see why the eggs were gobbled early on.
  • Friday’s lunchtime was entertaining, in essence a photo of the foreign teachers with the primary school was required.  It took some time to be done.  The weather was hot, we were exposed to the rays of the sun for far too long.  That and I had to wear red.  I almost got out of wearing red – as their largest size (Large) was too small, until a reasonably large teacher from a different part of the school let me use his shirt. Grrrrr.  I hate red.  I keep reading about and being warned about culture shock, and the sudden crash when you realise things are very different.  So far the two fingers of defiance are placed firmly up.  I am far too relaxed about this shock of shocks.  I know there are ups, there are downs and there are plateaus.  All is good on that front.  Just go for it, go with the flow.  I won’t wear red with a smile.
  • The media here is great, because I don’t understand it.  No scaremongering.  As far as I am concerned, life is going on.  Peacefully.  Oh, Crimea, North Korea etc you hear in the news, but not muggings, etc.  In some ways ignorance is bliss.  I love reading the news, I love hearing things globally but I hate the repetitive nature that the media churns over, quotes Twitter, shows the most indistinguishable cameraphone footage of what appears to be something doing summat by that thing, you know.
  • Before leaving, Nikki and I took a few small pieces of home.  We did our research, looked around at sights and places to visit.  I also believe in the mentality that I am not Chinese, I am just a working tourist.  I will act professional and try to deliver above and beyond, but I’m here to see a culture different to my own.  We definitely no longer need a map.  We are venturing further afield, into the bits between the streets we’ve perused and scoping out the new.  Work, colleagues, students, the locals, the foreign teachers and other expats working in the area are making for a good community here.
  • So, teaching, what is like?  Well they stick you front and centre of 30-45 adolescents and make you sweat.  Think of the guy at the open mic comedy night that evidently had too much lemonade and made a comprehensive posterior of his self.  Yes, it is always a man.  We are unsurpassed on this front.  In the bright classroom lights and by the overhead powerpoint projector rays you can burn.  There will be moments when you wish the ground will realign itself in some sort of new fault line, swallow you whole and spit you back out in Elysium.  There will be times so tense, a pin dropping will be as quiet as an Old Trafford end of season party for the 2013/14 season.  But do not panic.  Do not worry.  You are the weapon of choice.  Use banter, bottle it, spray it, and deploy in massive payloads.
  • If banter fails, have a Plan B, try bribery.  Chocolates, sweets (candy?  Back off Americans), points, prizes, money, A-stars… anything.  Positive reinforcement is a posh name for bribery.  Plan C is punishment, but beware, anything you tell a Chinese student will not strike the fear that the native teachers can instill to them.  You’re threats will be empty in comparison.  That said, we don’t do threatening, it isn’t pleasant.  I recommend Plan D, “I’m going to make a phone call to your parents.”  Result.  This is the last resort.  A sudden change of attitude shall be seen.
  • In class time can equally freeze or evaporate.  Some classes are similar, but others break the mould, smashing a well-established and successful lesson plan into something akin to the SwissMiniGun (look it up!).  The balance between dictating, activities and games, or open conversation needs to be timed, assessed and reviewed with precision.  The classes generally fit into several categories:
  1. dynamic, flowing and bursting with energy;
  2. rowdy and the whole class call or shout out answers, arms up, shouting “Teacher, Teacher, let me try”;
  3. the one or two kids who do not give other kids a chance;
  4. still, tired, devoid of energy, (usually sweating buckets after P.E.);
  5. Friday afternoon classes.  Pandemonium, hell in a hand basket, sheer agony.
  • Often classes have lulls, peaks, troughs, but on the whole my 8 different class groups are very good.  I observe the other foreign teachers in at least 4 classes each week – and am thankful I do not have grade 1 (straight out of nursery/kindergarten) or grade 2 (equally chaotic).  The grades between (3 to 6) are fantastic and angelic in many senses.  Grade 7 and 8 is where the teenage mode kicks in, is all about saving face.  The Chinese care a lot about their face (reputation and how they are perceived).
  • Friday night, we ate chicken (shaped like some sort of crucifixion) from sticks at Irene’s Bar with last Wednesday’s pub quiz prize.  Yes we won again, two wins on the bounce.  This time we won by a considerable margin, thanks to the round on 90s album names and artists.

 

  • Saturday night, we popped to Dongcheng (just outside Dongguan) for food with some of Briony and Becky’s training partners from Beijing.  We had Mexican.  It was okay.  My review of El Caliente is here.  Afterwards we popped into Beijing Bar, on Bar Street, a smart looking club laid out with precision and a massive DJ who looked a bit like a young Reg D. Hunter (comedian).  Everyone seemed to scatter, so me and Nikki decided to stay.  Then we tried a club across the road, Vita Bar, where the owner’s husband from Irene’s Bar (in Houjie, where we live) happened to be drinking.  His band came on and soon he was drumming.  Not bad, cover versions, but entertaining.  It then happened.
  • My stomach decided to make a noise similar to a bear dragging a bar stool through a wind turbine turning backwards into a headwind on a windy winter’s night.  Up went my feet, faster than any other boy I’ve ever known, in through the swing door.  THE FOLLOWING TEXT HAS BEEN REMOVED BECAUSE THE CONTENT IS DEEMED TOO SH!T FOR PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE.
  • The next day was okay.  I did not eat.  Nothing much happened.  I had another Milk Salt Black Tea (these really are wonderful, creamy, sweet and a drink to die for).

Tomorrow, our school is off to a zoo in Shenzen.  It may be this one.  I am half looking forward to it, half reserved and have very low expectations of the zoo.

How the mighty have fallen:  James and Liam, zonked.

On Wednesday, I winged two classes, due to a power outage.  The sodden ground next to my school block had flooded a wiring section.  Without the use of a projector, I soldiered on with chalk, blackboards (or chalkboards to the more politically correct amongst us, not that is matters, the boards are olive green), and dim lighting.  No ceiling fans helped me to sweat a morsel more too.

By Thursday morning power was restored, after the teachers and possibly one outside contractor later on, fixed the faulty power supply.  By Thursday evening, power had gone again, and with it two classes became cancelled (the classrooms can be very dark).  In the evening I finally Skyped my family back in Blighty, at long last!

The next day the power at my school had returned and the trench where the cable section was being repaired had a diverted power supply resembling that of a goalpost in the school garden.  Friday flew by, with highs of 28°C initiating an avalanche of aqua from my back.

I’ve got the power

26 Apr 2014

Shut down your browser with the listed timeline of Daily Mail shame, here is the next installment…

“We’re going to the zoo, zoo, zoo…” was not sung on the journey thankfully.  We had an entertainer/guide onboard prompting renditions of Chinese power-ballads from the students. The day started in both chaos, pandemonium and pure civil order equally.  Birgitte, Esben, James, Liam and I had been told to arrive for 07:30hrs.  We did as instructed.  Bright then ushered us away to the canteen for breakfast, most of us having eaten prior to arrival.  Sometime later, on popped the class marching music and out trooped the children to the parade square/football pitch/running track.

A hoard of blue and yellow shirted guides led each class to their own bus.  Of around 1800 children, teachers and support staff, coach number 34 was last to leave.  The coach for the principal, support staff and foreign teachers, alongside a grade 9 class.  Bright sat with Esben and soon after it transpired the entertainer/guide wanted us foreigners to sing a verse.  Off the cuff, I could think of nothing but football chants.  Esben chipped in and recovered our bacon (and he’s the Dane!) with a ditty about something in Danish.  Not an inkling.  James and Liam appeared to be in a state of slumber.  Convenient.  The rest of the journey was mostly lacklustre, with just the usual amount of honking, illegal road manoeuvres and near misses that every road journey in China commands.

Our arrival at Shenzen Zoo was much better than our departure from school.  The efficiency in which we parked, departed and shuffled into the zoo with instructions to be back for `15:00hrs was almost Germanic.  After looking at the map, the zoo was laid out in a huge loop.  There was one way inwards, one way outwards – albeit via a small amusement park.  The first enclosure had Gibbons in it, and as zoos go, it did not look too bad.  We tottered around, greeting groups of students left, right and centre, passing a lake containing some pretty lethal looking Storks.  Another Gibbon island was surrounded by visitors flinging the Chinese equivalent of Worther’s Originals into the expectant apes.  To the credit of the zoo, every enclosure had signs saying, “Do not feed”; “Do not tease or stir the animals” or something protective of their stock.

 

After spotting a solitary Rhino in a small paddock, an Elephant wandered by us on foot.  I’m glad it went by foot, a bicycle would have been stranger, although in China this would also be equally likely.  I decided to pass the elephant enclosures with great caution, the blatant circus style showing and trance music left my head uneasy.  Many enclosures and a wandering wander later (including a single Chimpanzee, a huge pit of Siamese Crocodiles and some students drinking vodka based drinks) we arrived for lunch… at Ocean World.  Think a big auditorium, a pool for three dolphins and sealions, and some foreign divers.  We sat in amongst the whole school group eating our chicken, rice, tofu and vegetable takeaway delivered in a truck – for every single teacher and student in attendance.  Whilst we ate the sealions did their thing, a mermaid swam by, and three dolphins performed.  I didn’t enjoy much of it, but the students lapped it up with vigour.

We departed after viewing the remainder of the zoo, energy zapped we did not display vim or gusto, so dozed on the journey back to school.  That evening we reconvened with Bright at the market and spent around 300 Yuan, paid for by the school, on a banquet of sorts: dried squid, barbequed fish, aubergine caramelised with garlic, fried dumplings, pancake bread and many meats.

The evening arrived, food at the market (stir-fry and fried dumplings) preceded a stop at a wonky floored bar for some Franziskaner Hefe-Weissbier, a break from the local produce.  This started a mini-pub crawl, somehow.  We all aimed for the new Anchor-brewery pop up bar outside Tesco.  We just did not envisage seeing four teachers there drinking, in school uniform.  They welcomed us, we joined two tables, played a dice game, emptied two 3-Litre beer towers, and a free jug of beer from the bar staff.  Soon after another teacher joined us, photographs snapped, we watched and stopped an unusual bar brawl/domestic, followed by a second tussle.  My PE Teacher colleague, Sun, being very useful (he also teaches Taekwondo).  Soon, the Chinese teachers lack of drinking ability gave rise to their departure.  We shuffled a whole 50 metres to the Snow Bar, where the owner gave us a 3 Litre tower to drink from, for free!  It really is odd at times, we tried to pay, but were told no!  We’ll have to go back sometime.  Robert, an Indian teacher, from a partnership school of our school called by, so we had a few drinks with him, his nephew and a friend Liam had met recently.  We then went to Irene’s Bar and chilled out.

Irene’s Bar had that day held a ceremony for expats to remember Anzac Day.  The national day of remembrance that broadly commemorates all Australians and New Zealanders who served and died in all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations.  Nikki and I stayed in the bar as the more spritely members of our group (Liam, Esben, James) cajoled others into a trip to Pink Lady (a massive nightclub/seedy bar).  We chatted with Troy, the nephew of the bar owner, who is in Houjie on business, shoes.  Dongguan is renowned for shoes, leather goods, furniture and prostitution, so you can usually work out somebody’s trade within minutes of saying hello.  Anyway, Troy knows his shoes, and this Sunday he is going to show us some shoe shops that make big shoes.

Ta’ra,

John

March 2014’s posts

Last bus from Guangzhou

3 Mar 2014

Last Wednesday, it was all lesson plans in and feet up around ten p.m.

After school on Thursday I had to teach the Chinese English teachers some English.  We discussed the difference in UK working/study hours compared to China.  I can safely say they were shocked.  I also explained on my old school, Reddish Vale, we had a a farm, and no animals were ever slaughtered for food.  They did not understand.  I did stress on the whole in the UK we have a cuddly attitude to animals in general.  I avoided the badger debate.

Later that day, we joined a group of foreign teachers to play (and I use this word loosely) basketball and football.  Suddenly, our status in the community went from being strange western folk to rock and roll stars.  The locals at the quaint square showed us how to play basketball – and we in turn played piggy-in-the-middle with a football.  Some badminton occured but on the whole not much to pass comment upon.

Friday night arrived and we had some grub at the local market with Briony, Becky and Birgetta.  Esben, James, Simon and Liam weren’t allowed as their names do not begin with the letter b.  I’m unsure how we managed to get an invite on that basis.  They did stop by briefly before getting a taxi elsewhere.  The food was akin to Chinese meets Tapas.  We each grabbed some grub (around 50 Yuan, enough for 5 people) and added our own beers (6 Yuan per 600ml bottle).

On the Sat’day, we popped over to Guangzhou by bus (38 Yuan) with Esben and Birgetta.  It took just over 1.5 hours from Houjie bus station (via Dongguan).  The journey wasn’t too bad, with plenty to see, including Baiyun‘s cable car.  We then popped on the busiest underground railway I have experienced to Shamian Island.  Here there is a pretty green gardens full of statues showing old and modern life in the this once colonial settlement.  Oh and birdsong throughout!  This is something I have noticed in Guangzhou and Dongguan so far, there is so little nature!   The whole region has many river basins, tributaries and streams.  You will not see any ducks.  You’ll barely see any birds.

After the little island hop, we wandered though the main market area and eyed the varied spices, dried dead things, funghi, caged birds and plants (loads of Bonsai trees and cacti etc) before settling down for a late lunch at… Pizza Hut.  Think UK Pizza Hut but smaller portion pizzas, regular is tiny.  Oh and they do rice, noodles, Chinese teas, Chinese food too.  Compared to other places, cost wise this equated to 330 Yuan for 4 people.  Massive difference to any local foods.

Once the bill had been paid we headed to the banks of the Pearl River, strolled along and enjoyed the bright lights, hid our distaste of the hook-a-duck style game for bunny rabbits, turtles and little caged birds… delighted at seeing a wild terrapin swimming, only for someone to scoop it up and put it in a box (food or pet?).  In the distance we could see the Canton Tower, very far away.  It is massive, China’s 2nd tallest building – and globally number 5 on the freestanding structure front.  This is one place we shall explore soon!

Our feet grew heavy, so we departed via bus  (30 Yuan each) – changing at Dongguan for a taxi (60 Yuan between 4 of us).  The last bus from Guangzhou to Houjie departs at 1830hrs – and we left at 2120hrs.

And last night I watched Manchester City win the League Cup on Chinese TV, on a sofa.  Armchair fan.

Timetables do not exist

4 Mar 2014

Nín hǎo!

So, today I asked what time do the buses run to Guangzhou and where can I find a bus timetable.  The response gained was simply, “They run diffferently every day and change often, even on the day.”  So if you travel by bus, pray one is there to be journeyed upon.  On Thursday we both have to travel to Guangzhou, to arrive by 1430hrs, by bus.  We leave our workplaces at 1130hrs.  The journey can take anywhere between one to two hours.

Oh and as to timetables, today I had not one, not two but three massive school lesson timetable changes.  Life here is so fast.  People here work hard, things filter through bit by bit.  But on the whole, you’ll not hear me rumbling, life is good here.

Nikki has just wandered in off the streets having been out drinking with foreigners from another school.

Now I shall pop on some Morecambe and Wise* before bed (it is 2210hrs now).  Feel free to email me videos to download etc – and anything you think I can share with my students.  There is a great website here called Tudou which has reasonable streams of recent movies.

zai jian

(*something to get the locals into)

Well Nikki writes a post!

7 Mar 2014

Hello everyone!

Well I finally got the link and password for the blog, so now you get to hear some bits from me. Well week 3 is over can;t wait for the lie in tomorrow. It’s not just me but all the teachers feel tired once we get to Friday. I’m fine teaching the kids as they keep me on my toes, but as soon as I get home thats it I shut down. Really enjoying it here its a great community there isn;t a day that goes by without someone saying hello. I’ve not done any running as yet, but do have trainers for when I start just been busy preparing for the 15 lessons I teach each week. Now I know what I’m doing (kinda) I can start Nikki’s Chinese Bootcamp in the next week or so.

Really enjoying teaching the kids always make me smile. I teach K3 (5-6years old), K1 (3-4) and baby (2-3). K3 is fun as they are really smart and can understand most of what I’m saying/teaching. There are a few kids that constantly speak to me in Chinese so I just keep smiling and saying yes, but I love that they want me to be part of their class. K1 is hard work as they are very playful, but they are my favourite class as I get lots of hugs from these kids (plus I know all of their names as only 12 kids), just need to think of ways of controlling them. Baby they are cute they have no idea of English so its down to me. Now they know my name everytime I walk by their classroom they say ‘Teacher Nikki’, this always makes me smile. I even stay and have lunch at the school with one of my K3 classes, food is better than the free food in the canteen where John eats. They even celebrate birthdays of the kids during the month by having all classes together, we all sing Happy Birthday,play games and then we all get cake! I have already helped redecorate the school with kids crafts/drawings, craft is defo my favourite lesson the kids love it,and during it they are quiet and well behaved.

We hope to explore the area over the coming weeks/months just need to get an idea of how to get to some of these places.

I have chatted to some of you on skype however if you are on skype and have not got my address it is little_nikkinz@hotmail.com would love to hear from you all.

Take care and I’ll write again soon 🙂

In memory of Gran

2014-03-09 08:19:57.0

We’ve just sponsored Family of Ivy Freeman. You can help them raise money for Dr. Kershaw’s Hospice too by donating at www.virginmoneygiving.com/team/IVYFREEMANFAMILY

John & Nikki x

The Cliff Richard fan club

9 Mar 2014

Nín hǎo!

On Wednesday, one of my colleagues, Birgitta had her bag snatched on the way to school.  The culprits sped away on scooters with a bag containing Birgitta’s passport, laptop and purse.  Since then the school community, the local Police and foreign teachers community has really pulled toghether.  Thankfully she wasn’t hurt and has responded positively, despite what was clearly a tough ordeal.

On Thursday we went to Guangzhou to apply for residency, a process pretty painless, save for a reasonable sized queue and the local government office taking our passport/foreign expert certificates off us for about 2-3 weeks.  we have photocopies until they are returned.

Today we went for a wander, looking at some shops and the town centre of Houjie, where we found the first DVD shop I have seen in China (that isn’t found on the back of a wheelbarrow).  We got Muse live at Wembley and an Elbow DVD for 15 Yuan each (about £1.50).  There are recent releases for similar figures too.  There were around 20 shelves of DVDs from the west, but one was wholly set aside for Cliff Richard!  Afterwards we spotted some impressive cacti for sale, alongside goldfish, rabbots and terrapins.  Nothing in China surprises me anymore.

This weekend has been grey and rainy, alike to that of Manchester.  The forecast is to quote the locals very poor (http://www.bbc.com/weather/1809858) – just hitting 20-24C next week.
Nikki wants some plimsole shoe things.  In Houjie, where we live, you cannot move for shoeshops.  Every second shop sells belts, sunglasses or accessories in some form.  Every building, be that shop or house seems to sell shoes.  This place caters for millipedes, with tiny feet.

This past week has been all about preparing lessons for the coming week – and activities for my Grade 5 (10-12 years old), Grade 7 (12/13/14) and Grade 8 (13/14/15) classes.  I have regular classes (around 40 students), VIP classes (8 to 14 students) and classes for PE teachers or English teachers to learn English better.

Tonight, we met several more foreign teachers, a Russian called Ginny, a lad from Cambridge called Adam and his partner Nicky from That London way.  They came with several Chinese teachers for grub at the market.  Nikki seemed to be enjoying hersefl, having shaken off a mild form of man flu manifested in a cough and general aches/pains.  Nowt serious thankfully.

Right time to watch Uncle, downloaded from BBC3 recently.

Zai Jian!

Rest assured it is centre not center

14 Mar 2014

Wǎnshàng hǎo!  Good evening!

“Teacher, you have spelled kilometre wrong!”  Back off American spellings?  No, I had to explain the difference between USA American English and proper English from proper England.  I even avoided a debate on oven bottoms, muffins and barmcakes (cobs etc) – I think here, just calling a bread roll, a bread roll is enough food for though (pun intended).

This week I have succumbed to using a VPN service (roughly £5.70/month) as access to a proper search engine is needed.  BBC iPlayer, Facebook and Twitter is a bonus, that said I won’t spend too much time on them.  A bigger bonus being that I can change the Internet Protocol address to other countries and watch their TV online… good bye free time, hello TV.  Scrap that, TV is not something I am missing that much.  It is good to watch some comedy on every now and then, but it is not essential.  Tonight, a group of us foreigners are off to a Korean BBQ place.  It doesn’t specify if the food is of south of north decent, I assume Korea is unifed it’s love for grub and hate of ostrich meat (topical… but where?).

This week has flown by, work is busy but very, very laid back.  Today, in one class a Chinese English teacher was asleep, in her custom made deck chair.  I wanted to take a photograph but didn’t want the students to notice… oh and no phones are allowed in class… so I didn’t.  It isn’t the first class this teacher has kipped in.  On a sidenote all students sleep from 1245hrs to 1330hrs daily in their classrooms, and most teachers follow suit.  Not me, too much to do.  I have to practice my ping-pong skills (or lack of).

Oh and the PE teachers thought I was scared of a giant spider in my office.  I was trying to catch it to take photos!!!  It was as big as my hand, grey (or gray, sicne 1825 AD in US of A) and quite flat looking, but immensely fast.

This May I have my eyes set on a trip to Hong Kong FC to see MCFC Under-21’s.  Fancy going?

Have a good weekend!

Gàobié / Goodbye!

John & Nikki

The oddity of scale

19 Mar 2014

G’day!

So many people, left, right, centre, behind, infront, all over.  1,363,370,000… and rising by 0.46% per year (ranked globally as 155th on the CIA World Factbook.  The U.K. is growing faster percentage-wise and ranks at 147.  China has 19.1% of the Earth’s people.  China’s official government bureau dedicated to statistics even has its own clock to show the ups and downs.  China has around 141 people per square kilometre, compared to the UK’s 262 people per square kilometre.  So why does it alway feel busy?

Welcome to MegaCity One (one for the graphic novel geeks).  711,820,000 people in China live in large towns, conurbations and cities.  In the U.K., 79.6% of people live in an urban environment.  In China, it equates to around 50% (and rising).  The percentage of arable land set free for farming here is much higher than the UK, as such, 943 people are sustained on each km squares of arable land to the U.K.’s 1077.   China has lots of ghost cities, towns, shopping centres and sparse unpopulated built up areas.  Of the 16 gargantuan apartment blocks I live in, the vast majority stand dormant, dust-ridden and bidding for new occupiers.  One such example was on TV recently here (and after searching online via a very colourful search engine), I have read more into Ordos.  Have a gander, loads of opportunities there.

Anyway, last night I joined Nikki, Bryony, Becky and Bri with the lads (Liam, James, Esben) at the square.  Life here never seems to stop.  At 5pm the roads and public areas are busy, the same at 7pm, 8pm, 9pm etc.  The girls danced in a local version of China’s Got Talent (a big square full of couples and kids, cheap disco lights provided by rollerskate-clad kids zooming by and Chinese music of the disco kind).  Meanwhile us lads (less Esben who fell over in a recent shower accident and gashed his feet – this is his second such fall in as many months) played football with the local children.  I say football, I mean, I’ll pass, James’ll half-pass, Liam will pass, then the local kid smashes the ball at… a) a fellow local kid; b) an innocent passer by; c) in the mush of one of our group’s face.  Proper good clean fun.  Last night we even had a local man join us and show us his silky skills.  There is always a real sense of community and welcoming here.  And dust…

Dust, more dust and dirt.  There is no three second rule.  Chinese people squat to talk or sit somewhere clean.  The floor has no seat,  bags are held onto and not placed down, and anything dropped is pretty much discarded.  Streets have order on the whole, litter is few and far between, there is always a hand road-sweeper to erm… hand.  There is more dust than I care to imagine.  Houjie is under the process of building a major shopping area, new hotel area and railway line.  On top of that every second block has some form of minor re-construction or other building work.  Esben, Liam, James, Bri, Becky and Bryony all live in a block for interns.  On Saturday, they were kept hostage by building work.  The 7-storey building adjacent was occupied last Thursday.  By Friday it was empty.  The top floor relocated to the floor below.  On Saturday morning, the builders blocked the interns into their apartment.  Gravity and physics brought all remaining blocks to the road – blocking the interns’ front door (until around 6pm).  Things just happen here.  No warning signs, no roadblocks, nothing to indicate health and safety.  If Rosie (Health and Safety) at Aviva could see this, she’d be flabbergasted!

That night we went to KTV (Karaoke).  The Chinese love it.  We met the interns, Randy, Armstrong, Vanetia, another Nikki and Mike from a different school at the market for food, crossed the road around 9pm, paid 98 Yuan [around £9.80] (for all 13 of us, including snacks, and 6 drinks to be shared) – it being about 4 Yuan a drink thereafter (about 40p).  In KTV you get a booth/private room (with ensuite Chinese toilet, nowt to shout about), a TV and Karaoke computer ad 2 microphones.  You then murder every song possible.  The selection methods are odd but many western classics are on there.  Each is butchered accordingly.  13 people, 13 lots of differing tastes and a considerable mess later we head home.  For marriage reasons I cannot mention Nikki as being on the porcelain blower to God that night, but to be fair, she had been on the local brandy, and had lager.  Cider and rum being nowhere to be seen.  Ford the record, I sang a couple of songs, badly.  Your rain is on me.

Yesterday, I was bitten on my left cheek (face not bottom) by a mosquito.  Bite number 3 of the Chinese adventure.  I’m fairly certain Nikki has not been preyed upon by the airborne biting fraternity.

Thought of t’ day:  0.83% of Chinese people speak English.  Welcome to job security and demand to all English Teachers.

Local forecast:  (Imperial measurements) (metric methods)

Who’ve we got out here then?

  • Becky, early 20s, from Birmingham/Sutton Coldfield area.  Softly spoken, mean sense of humour when her partner in crime Bryony allows her chance to speak.  You never see Becky or Bryony separately.  They are not Siamese.  Becky is often seen in dresses, she suits them a lot.  Becky teachers in a Kindergarten linked to the school but approximately 10 minutes away by bicycle.  I believe Becky is from the mental health profession originally.  How admirable.
  • Birgitte, AKA Bri, Bree etc, mid-to-early 20s, Norwegian.  Her accent is American.  She looks American.  There is an apple tattooed on one of her wrists, she lived in New York for a while.  Norwegians appear blonder and certainly more fair-skinned.  Bree is going on to teaching at University after this TEFL placement.
  • Bryony, early 20s, from Scarborough/Whitby way, British.  At first I thought Bryony was mouthy, loud and possibly obnoxious.  I could not have been more wrong.  She is just loud.  Brighter than she makes out, a good conversationalist and passionate about teaching the wee ones in Kindergarten.  Her eyes are steel-willed and intense, I will not pick an argument with her at any stage soon.  I think Bryony is pretty down to Earth, a proper Yorkshire type.
  • Esben, from Denmark, around 21.  Dippy, clumsy, accident prone, naive but generally very friendly.  His sense of humour is different.  Still a puppy that is well travelled and needs to relax and stop trying hard to be popular.  Esben loves his hair and beard too much.  Vanity issues.  I think he is the youngest of a few brothers.  He seems to like drinking and living up to a Viking stereotype.  I’ll keep him away from the villages…
  • James, below 20, from Ramsbottom or Rawtenstall, East Lancashire way.  If James was any more laid back he would devolve or become Mork from Mork & Mindy.  He is very giddy over things like dinosaurs and politics but means well.  He can sleep in the average nightclub, with all speakers blazing Justin Bieber or some god awful racket about the fox’s choice of speech.
  • Liam, acts 12, is 18, from Weymouth, Dorset, U.K.  A little boy, but bright, competitive but non-threatening.  He’s different because he is from Southern England, Bath is Barrrtttthhhhfff. He isn’t one of them hoity-toity types.  He seems to be like peas in a pod with James, they’ll miss each other after China.  They may even get married to each other.
  • Simon, early 20s, Swedish.  Stereotype lived up to.  Rarely seen with other foreign teachers, he regards himself as a “token white person.”  He does openly admit to being here for inter-racial relations with the locals.

Not a bad bunch here, very little character clashes so far and certainly no backstabbing or bitching – unless I’m the topic of conversation (unlikely as I am boring).  If you are one of the above and you feel my descriptions have been less than satisfactory, you know where you can recycle the letters and write your own prose or elegy.

That’s all folks!

Something flu by

2014-03-20 03:54:41.0

Dear diary… dear friend… dear John… etc

Sat’day afternoon I was feeling groggy, but nowt major.  Sunday, I seemed to perk up but occasionally had a bout of dizziness.  Monday, my voice, came and went several times over.  I had three classes, it was a managable day.  Tuesday, three classes later and I felt awful.  Along popped Wednesday and cold sweats, hot flushes and every part of me ached.  For two days I have been to bed early.  Today, I feel worse, yet yesterday I seemed to get better as the day went on.  Today, I ache.  Have I been to the gym?  This morning, Bright, the head of department informed us foreign teachers, the sudden change from cool to hot temperatures brings a seasonal flu. That may explain the numbers of sneezing, coughing and spluttering students that are in classes.  There is the odd empty seat as students are off for vaccinations etc too.

Oh and spitting is massively normal and accepted in China.  Hock one up, the bigger the better and gob it out, walls and floors are acceptable.  I won’t be joining this habit!  Yuck.  Great way to control flu…

In the U.K., I pretty much would not have gone to work like this.  Here it is expected, deathbed or doctors before you consider a day off.  It hasn’t been an easy day.  I have not finished my powerpoint presentations or games & activities for next week.  I have done my lesson plans for the 18 classes.  Maybe tonight I will finish, if I stay awake.  Today’s classes have felt like a strain, a burst of enthusiasm seems out of reach.  My Grade 5 students bounced around happily and I just managed to keep them on the right side of anarchy.  Meanwhile my Grade 8 students were half asleep, tired by a combination of hot weather, P.E. classes and flu symptoms.  A half-inert teacher did not inspire them greatly!  The four-in-a-row and racing car games got their attention, mind you!

For lunch we had an option of beef (mostly fat), seaweed and chillis (do not eat when ill or dehydrated) or fishheads (whole) in chilli with green leaves or finally soup.  There is always lots of white rice.  Always.  So rice and beef was today’s lunch time choice for me.  Nikki can eat in my school canteen but opts to eat at her school (they get way more choice, noodles, dumplings etc).  Most foreign teachers avoid “fish-head Thursday.”  I have tried it, but there isn’t much meat on a noggin of any fish.  The eyes taste horrid too.  The brain isn’t that bad.  I’d recommend that.

Anyway off for dinner (evening meal or tea) now.

Ta’ra!

John (Nikki will write soon!)

Maintain lane discipline

2014-03-23 02:47:16.0

Yesterday, we fancied a wander.  In this neck of Houjie, there is the odd park, a river and some sports parks to explore but nowt major to shout about.  So, we set off around noon, the temperature a mild 23C, from our gaff to Nancheng (between here and Dongguan centre).  Two and a smidgen hours later (via a food place that was playing Christmas songs in English) we arrived in Dongguan city centre.  Along the S256 Guantai Road, we deiced we’d head for Dongguan city centre.  13.7km later we arrived at a welcoming park with a half-drained pond, some sort of Chinese talent show stage and a concrete screen of animals you can no longer see as they have been eaten.

Dongguan is massive, but not as big as Guangzhou or London.  It does have some pretty big open spaces in the centre.  The parklands stretch up through the cityscape like a snake descending a tree.  Dongguan markets itself on being green, it isn’t far off.  With our Here Dongguan map and monthly magazine we wandered around aimlessly.  The odd English poster was to be found adorned the odd shop window about ex-pat activities.  Dongguan appeared very new, international but lacking of old buildings and traditional Chinese decor.

The park wasn’t bad, then we had a gander in a shop and Nikki now has some more minions… and I have a bottle of Captain Morgan’s spiced rum for 元91.  Yey!  We had a wrap with something carrot and bread based in, very light indeed

On the way back we grabbed a taxi (after walking from Dongguan centre to Nancheng bus station – nowhere near the city centre!  It is worth noting the other bus station by the South China Mall is much further away too!) and it cost a massive 元23 (or £2.30) for a 20 minute ride back.  Taxi rides, coach journeys and other trips along the road are interesting.  There appears to be very few rules on the road.  Generally cars switch lanes like some wild version of roulette and lanes are optional at the best of times.  Cycles, mopeds, scooters, or three wheeled taxi bike efforts can use pavements, roads (regardless of direction of the lane) head on, alongside, through red lights – with no hint of regulation, and if the Police are present, there is again no rules.  Maybe I should get them to consider cycle helmets.

This week I am mostly trying to learn numbers in Mandarin… and they have a smidgen of logic… but are damn hard to understand.

〇           líng 0

一           yī 1

二           èr 2

三           sān 3

四           sì 4

五           wǔ 5

六           lìu 6

七           qī 7

八           bā 8

九           jiǔ 9

十           shí 10

十一     shíyī  11

十九     shíjiǔ 19

二十     èrshí  20

二十一  èrshíyī   21

二十八  èrshíbā 28

三十     sānshí 30

三十二   sānshíèr 32

四十     sìshí  40

五十     wǔshí  50

六十     lìushí  60

七十     qīshí  70

八十     bāshí 80

九十     jiǔshí  90

一百     yībǎi  100

And, to close please visit http://acton28.wix.com/a28 to see photographs on the tab marked Spring In China.

Ta’ra!

Tasty little things

30 Mar 2014

Tuesday came, Tuesday went – and with it high humidity for the best part of the day.  Somewhere between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning my body had become an all-you-eat buffet for mosquitoes.  My left arm has gained two prize winning bites; my right hand was not spared a nibble; the left forearm had a bite; my lower back had two lumps of feeding frenzy and my ankle (right on the sockline) copped for one too.  So yesterday, I was a tad itchy but resisted – and still each bite falred up like a dod displaying it’s breeding lipstick (too graphic?  Tough, my bites are bigger than the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral).  Today (Friday), I find another additional chomp mark by my left eye.  So, how do you avoid mosquitoes?  Nuclear war seems the only viable option.  That, and tonight I shall stock up on coils of mosquito repellent at tesco (or our other local supermarket).  The mosquito net (in our otherwise mosquito free apartment shall be put up, just in case).  Deet and the alternatives are at hand.  Not so I can avoid being bitten, moreso to avoid canine penial metaphors.  It could be worse Briony has a massive 28 bites from one evening.  From nowehere came the winged terrors.

Good news is here.  On Thursday, I invested in a bicycle (the seat stem had Giant Butted written on it, a selling point of ever there was one).  Bad news is equally here.  Last night I suffered my first punctured tyre.  The roads here are littered with bits of metal, glass and shards of the wastes of life.  I have a pump.  I own a helmet (practically the only bike helmet in China – and one that fits too).  I also have a rear bike light.  Bikes here (scooters and motorbikes too) rarely have lights.  Cars often never use them too.  I’ve seen artics travelling poorly lit streets in our area with what i can only describe as two Tesco value torches fastened to the front.  Anyway, tonight I shall buy lubricant and a puncture repair kit for my bike.  Nikki hasn’t got a bike yet.  That is something we shall sort this week.

This weekend, starting Friday, I intend to go to the pub ran by the wife of Marcus (a Maori bloke).  We had a pub quiz there last Wednesday night.  Our team came second but with the team name “Liam’s Mum’s Tribute” as the least imaginative team name going, we didn’t deserve first place.  The team that came first had and average age of 55.  Our team’s mean average age was closer to 25.  The round on US aircraft threw us out a bit but we still came 2nd that round but we lost many points in the music introduction round.  It turns out Otis Redding and Elvis Presley are not our collective strong point.  Next time we’ll win!

On Tuesday, we wandered to a local temple, (see the map for our location by Liosha Road/Liaoxia).  It was very pretty, and had some good views.  Photos will follow at some point.

At school this week I have had two very quiet days, Wednesday and Thursday being month end exams for my grade 7 and 8 students.  So with that, 8 classes were cancelled.  Feet up?  I think not.  I was asked if I’d like to teach kindergarten (Nikki teaches them).  It turns out the two kindergarten schools located next to my school are linked with my school and another.  Nikki’s kindergarten shares facilities but not graduating students.  So, James, Birgitte (referred to as Bri), Briony (known as Amy due to kindergarten students not being able to say Briony), Kelly (another foreign teacher from a local kindergarten) joined forces to prepare for Friday’s demo/recruitment class.

This morning started with weather (sunny, cloudy, rainy, and windy – complete with actions), the days of the week, a body parts song (heads, shoulders… knees and toes) before moving onto a song based on fingers and clapping.  Twenty minutes later, a bucket of sweat (we were outdoors in 28C) we sat down and watched the entire school (less grade 1, 7 and 8) perform a dance routine.  Not as bad day, but not something I am keen to repeat.  As great and as enthusiastic as nursery/kindergarten schoolm children are, they’re too tiny.

This Sunday I am tempted by the Science Museum in Dongguan (for the dinosaur exhibition etc).  We have to pass on the local comedy night due to our not-too-impressive-lack-of-Mandarin.

One for next month?   This looks ace!!!!  We’re expecting a long weekend too (so this is on our radar).

**written on Friday, published Sunday early hours**

Happy Mothering Sunday…

30 Mar 2014

…to my mum, mother-in-law, all the wonderful mothers around the world, and the mothers no longer with us.  You make us, you shape us, you support us x

Video

February 2014’s posts

The opening of the blog

27 Jan 2014

Today, we have created this blog.  I say created, I mean, we fiddled with the settings, spliced open the internet and slapped some colours all over the show.  We have argued, battled and bid upon purples and blues.  It will change eventually, in line with our domestic disagreements.  But, now we are unemployed, soon to be homeless hobos and travel the land of Great Britain until stepping foot on an aeroplane bound for China (via Doha, Qatar).  Farewell Aviva, farewell Colchester Zoo, farewell Essex Boot Camp, farewell Merida T3 Speeder… and so on.  Over and out, Nikki & John. x

We’re not really here…

2 Feb 2014

…oh yes we are, oh no we are not, is this Punch & Judy?  The title on the main webpage is updated and running.  The links about to be passed around our family, friends and public domain (Base in the place London…).  We’ve spent today watching Wales beat Italy in Rugby Union Six Nations.  Now England are on against France, and we have a house party/rave in Cornwall.  The last week has been fastpaced with fairwell drinks in Norwich, Colchester, meeting our kid Asa and Steph down sunny Cam, Gloucestershire… bumping into Jen and Kerry around Brizzle, then meeting Nikki’s cousins for Chinese in Gloucester.  Nikki’s car just about got us to Cornwall, and I never broken the handbrake.  Honest.  Now let’s upload the blog and website – and publish.  Live.

Granny Ivy Freeman 1925-2014.

8 Feb 2014

Rest in peace.

Yawns, planes and automobiles

12 Feb 2014

How do,

So, on Monday we flew from Manchester.  We arrived in Doha around 7 hours later, before a swift changeover flight to Guangzhou.  7 hours later we arrived.  Our luggage appeared to take an extra hour on Generation Game-style carousel.  A water bottle, a ripped up pouch and a cellophane-wrapped box went round and round.  Several British folk from the original Manc flight enquired as to the whereabouts of our cargo.  We advised simply of our waiting of said gear.  Eventually our two rucksacks appeared.  Much joy broke out.  Fireworks, party poppers… are prohibited so a sky high fist did the job.

Prior to departure the check in desk staff spotted that I am of the bandy-legged persuasion.  Within 5 minutes, the outbound flight and connective flight bookings now had extra legroom (previously not available online).

In flight, Nikki watched Pacific Rim (on my recommendation), Gravity and Elysium (Matt Damon…).  I gave a look in to The Wolverine and World’s End on the basis, I could not concentrate.  The inflight grub was plentiful and very good indeed, like a posh Meals-On-Wheels.  It did the job.  Aside from the release of a thousand guffs, and a lack of sleep (the man to my left snored and I was sandwiched between him and Nikki).  I think Nikki managed a couple of hours, I’m unsure if I did, it did not feel like it.

With our luggage we proceeded beyond “Nowt to Declare” and Passport Control.  This was very efficient.  Onwards we pushed our trolley full of luggage, passing a plethora of cards with names, mostly of the local tongue and “Welcome home” before arriving at the end of the swarmed masses.  Nobody had our name.  Where was Jane from Worlda?  Before, we had chance to ask one another this question, out popped Jane in a yellow bubble jacket holding a post-it note with our names.  A friendly welcome followed before we were bundled into a bus to the city centre.  At the city centre we changed into a Taxi (not like Transformers, mind you).  From here, we were dropped at a hotel, Hua Cheng Inn.  We have looked this hotel up on Bing Google is restricted here.  The room is spacious, well ventilated and has a lovely (low) shower.  There is a TV showing hundreds and thousands (there is about 30, really) channels in Chinese.  No BBC.  No repeats.  Yey.  Overall, the room is more than functional.  Especially, with jet-lag which hit immediately at 6pm (local time), and today at 6pm (we have napped until around 10pm local time now).  Last night, we had something akin to Pot Noodles.  They were very tangy indeed.

Be careful crossing the road.

Today… well in a moment, I’ll type about today.

Ta’ra chucks!

John (&Nikki)

“And why do we fall, Bruce?”

14 Feb 2014

Nǐmén hǎo!  (rough pronunciation as: nee-mehn haOW)

Yes, we’re going with Mandarin, apparently Cantonese is similar but regarded a tad like Welsh is to the English.  However, it is the original local regional dialect.  Mandarin is dominant.  As for learning written words, there are around 106,230 Chinese characters.  New characters are invented often, these logograms or Hanzi look grand and pretty mind.

For me, today, has been a mentally tough day.  I started off feeling very pessimistic.  Things just didn’t seem to be clicking the way the moulds seemed to be fixing for other folk.  That and my tummy felt a tad off after lunch.  However, positive mental thinking, a supportive Wife-i, clear training and guidance from Casey at Worlda has assisted.  So, from 2pm today, with feelings of, “Why am I here?” / “What have I done wrong?” / “Can I meet the challenge?” to this evening with thoughts of “I can do this” / “Stand back, freight train of effort en route“, etc, my mind is more determined.  Hence, the Batman Begins quote.

So, since last time I wrote (Nikki has not written yet, despite my asking) jet lag kicked in, a lot.  Today, I feel 80% in line with local sleeping hours.  Water (bottled, distilled, clean) is being drank at an alarming rate.  Tea is pretty much the norm here, no Earl Grey or Tetley folk in sight.

Temperature wise, we arrived, it was on a par with Blighty, mild, chilly at times.  Then it got chillier, then damper, like we’d brought the rain with us.  I thought we left that at Uncle Ed’s and Aunty Chris’s.  The hotel we are living in, for the moment, is chilly.  The cleaner keeps leaving the windows open.  We keep closing them and whacking the air-conditioner/heater combo on to full blast.  Today’s high was 12°C, but night temperatures have been pretty much 0°C.  That is preferable to the 4°C on our first day here.  Monday is expected to hit 19°C.  Sub-tropical Spring is on the way.

The usual fast food chains are dotted around and most deliver by bicycle, even the golden-M sort and Jabba-the-Pizza Hutt.  Whilst useful, there is a superabundance of local restaurants and eating establishments.  However, few and far between where you can enter, point and self serve.  An intern at Worlda, Alec assisted with our medical examination for immigration purposes and the opening of a bank account with SPD.  Alec took us for a meal at a local restaurant-cum-café.  It wasn’t bad at all.  Our trainer/colleague, Casey, introduced us to a similar eating place yesterday – and we returned today.  Rice served at first instance.  Point at meat.  Dish.  Point at vegetables.  Laugh at baked beans as you pass them.  Buy. ~ 18 RMB per person.  NB: Casey is Chinese and does not eat rice.  This should be passed by no judgement.  It is the Chinese way not to bat an eyelid at anything us foreigners consider unusual or against the norm.  I like that attitude.

Meals ate with chopsticks (where supplied):  100% success rate.  Nikki, has managed a 66% rate.  It isn’t all that bad.  Not easy, but not difficult.  I have impressed myself.

That said, Crocs are okay.  Any footwear that has no back is frowned upon and considered dirty, unhygienic and you may be labelled a hobo.  No tomb-stoning chopsticks by the way, lay them flat across the dish and not stood up!

RMB, ¥CNY; also CN¥, and CNis very odd.  It resembles the worst features of using money in an Eastern European state, playing Monopoly and listening to parent’s talk of schillings and halfpennies.  110 yuan to 100 yuan notes, and the odd lower denomination coin, lighter than air.

Anyway, time to dash, so much to type, write and relay… but I have homework.  Lesson Plan 1 (J1 and J2 levels) need tweeking.  Lesson Plan 2 needs creating!  Today is also Valentine’s Day, I wish to track down chicken feet to feed to the Wife-i.

I hope all is well.

Zài jiàn.

John (& Nikki)

A difficult day

15 Feb 2014

Boo!

To be told, you cannot do something only to later to be told you can (but you need more and more practice, where time does not permit) is a tad confusing.  Oh, and by the way, you shall be a team leader.  So you can lead, but not teach.  To be fair, I have had three tiring days (and long hours by UK standards) to prepare.  Lesson plans have been written for Junior 1 and Junior 2, as well as Primary grade 4… Nikki gets Kindergarten (in British, Nursery school and Reception).  Anyway, today from 9am to 7.30pm has been a tad stressful.  At one stage, around noon, Nikki and I had the option of switching school years.  Oh, and we have to relocate from Guangzhou to Dong Guan, still in the Guangzhou province, but slightly south of here, and north of Hong Kong.  The Pearl River flows to the west and ferries float every which way necessary.

We may have to visit the world’s largest shopping centre/mall, New South China Mall.  I’m told it is mostly empty.  Bit like the average UK high street then.  Dong Guan means smiling east.  So, we best smile.  Dongguan is just south of the Tropic of Cancer.  Best take my shorts!

Anyway, we have to check out before 9am, go to training and prepare 4 lesson plans tomorrow… then travel in the afternoon to temporary lodgings before starting work on Monday morning in Dong Guan.  So, I best stop putting off the packing of the rucksacks that is being put off by me typing the word put off in an effort to put it off further.  Am I put off by today?  No.  Until next time.

Oh, and to put things off further, we haven’t taken any photographs because we’ve only wandered around the city of Guangzhou briefly at night!

Ta’ra!

 

John (& Nikki)

Last Sunday

22 Feb 2014

Saturday night:  “You’re both going to a school in Dongguan.”

Sunday morning:  Pack.  Check out.  Practice a lesson plan?  No time, we spend most of our time resolving admin matters in Worlda’s headquarters, yey!  We set off to the coach station via taxi.  Casey, our co-worker gets us to the railway station.  A lengthy stroll with around 50 kilograms of luggage later, and we’re at Guangzhou’s bus station.  It doesn’t look much, like a throwback to Eastern European bus trips, but as long as a ship.  We join a queue for Hòujiē Zhèn, next to the queue for Dongguan.  At this stage, I have serious doubts about Casey’s navigation skills.  Ditzy is the word I shall use.  Casey is very clever, very well-intentioned and helpful, but she is to directions as ships are to falling off the planet’s edge.  She is an ex-Teacher and works something closer to 70 hours a week!!!

Sunday afternoon:  We boarded a coach, one with just 3 empty seats left.  The coach conductor moved a man (who didn’t seem too happy) from the front seat after I sat next to him.  Next thing, Nikki was plonked next to me.  We did not mind sitting apart!  Casey sat somewhere to the back of the coach.  The journey went quickly, a very straight forward journey down the 3 lane motorway where indicating is rare and undertaking could easily have two meanings.  As we left the city of Guangzhou the landscape of the Pearl River delta appeared flat as skyscrapers shrunk away and smaller buildings, farmland and regular river tributaries drew closer into view.

The coach passed a Tesco, we got excited.  We arrived in a square and grabbed our stowed luggage before popping into a taxi.  The taxi dropped us outside a school, at that stage we did not know if the school was Nikki’s or mine.  After a short wait, Casey introduced us to Bright, the head of foreign languages at the school, Dao Ming.  We had food in the school canteen before being shown around the school briefly.

My contracted hours are 35 per week, at present I am in line to do roughly 18-22 hours of teaching.  I shall not complain, we get paid 35 regardless.  So if one week, I do more, it makes very little difference.  I have to stay in the office (my own office) to assist PE Teachers as they learn English.

Not long after we had a short stroll to our temporary apartment provided by our school.  The room was one of three on the fourth floor.  It was very basic with a small double bed, fridge, wardrobe and desk in one cold room.  Outside is a tiny balcony with a washing machine and tiny bathroom outside.  The bathroom has a Chinese toilet (like a Turkish toilet, but Chinese).  We met our neighbours and the landlady.  Casey left us to go to her hotel.  To be continued…

Blue Monday

23 Feb 2014

Nín hǎo!

 

 

The Sunday night previous, we had also located the nearest supermarket, oddly a Tesco.  Not quite what you see in the UK, but close enough to recognise.  We have a VIP card (Tesco points).  The supermarket has a live food section (fish) and shedloads of Western foods.

Up and ready after a warm shower in a cold room, a quick snack and a small deposit into a Chinese toilet later…

Nikki popped off to her kindergarten class in the neighbouring school.

I was invited to attend the opening of the school ceremony.  The vibrant school colours of red and grey (or gray) covered an athletics track’s inner green full of children, from nursery (kindergarten) age to mid-teens.  The kids marched on the spot, keeping warm as much as keeping order.  Music thundered over the tannoy, not quite Boys In Blue, but equally full of trombones and heavily-priced instruments.  I felt privileged to be able to experience this.  The flag and national anthem followed, before several awards for star students.  And then as soon as it began, they scattered.

My first lesson was at 11:20 with Junior 2, level 2 (aged 13-14).  I had a few hours to run through my plan, powerpoint presentation and calm my heavy nerves.  Had the students not depended on me, and had I been in the UK, my nerves were so strong, I would have legged it.  I was proper uncomfortable.  Anyway the introduction was okay, the kids’ passion for studying and curiosity carried me through the first ten minutes.  Then my laptop and the school’s projector fell out.  I wished the ground would swallow me.  I wanted to bolt.  A rabbit in headlights.  Normal service resumed, well it seemed like a lifetime later, and the condensed lesson (with a very sweaty and panicky teacher) closed at noon.  Sink before you swim.

Lunch at the canteen was rice, something, summat and other bits.  Pak choi (Chinese cabbage), peppers and bits of meat were recognisable.

My second class (students of the same age and level) was a polar opposite to the first, sadly, I only had the Chinese teacher in the room and no head of department, principal or Casey from Worlda to see how well it went.  And then the third class (students of the same age and level), with exactly the same outcome.  Positive ending.

In the evening, we met several interns James (Manchester), Esben (Denmark), Liam (Weymouth), Bridgette (Stavanger, Norway) and others who work with Nikki.

As part of the job, breakfast (breads, light rice dish), lunch (rice, two mains, and vegetables) and dinner (like lunch) are included for both of us.  It is greasy but adequate.  All teachers eat together, so whilst our lack of Chinese is a hindrance, the local teachers lack of English is made up for by their desire to try even just a basic phrase or two.

My role includes teaching PE Teachers a spot of English and western culture/sport.  Football is not big here.  Basketball is huge.  Surprisingly, very few people here have heard of Manchester, let alone my football team (or even the dirty red lot from outside Manc).

Oh, and we cannot see comments on here.

Today, there are a few photographs added to the main website.

Until next time… zài jiàn!

Wednesday, Thursday, Friday…

23 Feb 2014

Late Monday night was spent looking at apartments.  On arrival to Guangzhou we had the option of a set pay with apartments included or a slightly higher payband with no apartment included.  We figured out that based on local prices we’d be better off paying for this out of our own pocket (we’d get a better take home pay).

Two places in one block later and we decided the 2000 Yuan/month apartment, a massive 200 metres from the school gates was perfect.  It has cable TV (with 1 or 2 English language channels), a fridge/freezer.

For Tuesday, one lesson scheduled, Junior 2, level 1.  So, 12-13 year olds.  Lots of time to lesson plan and internet access at work.  Or rather no access, as the wireless router was down.  Grrrr.  The lesson went reasonably well.

PE Teacher training was scheduled for every Wednesday as of next week.  A meeting with foreign teachers and Bright was pencilled in weekly from this Thursday.  After work we went looking for HSBC and thankfully Dongguan has a branch in our area of Houjiezhen.  Admittedly, I walked a fair while there and back in my Dr. Martens and blistered my feet up pretty badly.  We needed the money for a deposit, pay the first month’s rent and to get bedding for a larger bed the landlady had agreed to fit (the following Tuesday).  Later that evening, we moved into our new apartment.  Esben and Bridgette kindly helped us carry our bags – thanks to both!

The next day, I had 2 lessons, both went reasonably well, although Chinese kids on the whole are damn bright, hardworking and focused, there is 10% of the class switched off, hard to interest and generally sat like naughty kids.  Their Chinese teachers sit in my lessons, and aren’t impartial to a good ear clobbering to get their focus.  However, on the whole, manners and obedience is present mostly.

The Wednesday evening Nikki and I joined all the foreign teachers we know (there are around a half dozen in the two schools) and watched some local opera and music on the square opposite the school.

By Thursday our apartment (at a cost of 1100 yuan per year) had internet and wi-fi installed.  My first team meeting with fellow foreign language teachers took place.  Worlda, had given me the role of Team Leader to help the interns, review and offer feedback whilst at the school, Dongguan Daoming Foreign Language School (often referred to as Oxford Kingdom).

Then Friday arrived and a release of energy in the evening.  That day, I was unaware that Friday operates on a different timetable than Monday to Thursday.  Easy mistake, which will be sorted.  4 lessons done.  Lesson plans for the following week all submitted.  Time for a well deserved beer.

Friday night lights

23 Feb 2014

Friday evening, we joined teachers from another part of the city.  Nikki’s colleagues Briony and Becky had met another group.  So we joined Peter from Birmingham, Robert from India, Peter from Denmark, Randy from China, and someone nicknamed Stretch Armstrong from China.  We did try to go to a Korean BBQ buffet, but surprisingly there wasn’t space for 14 folk.  So, Randy shouted that he knew somewhere else.  We crossed 10 lanes of traffic on foot (like you do), popped down a side road where Robert explained that the local entertainment industry (KTV, Kareoke bars etc) had all been shut down due to corruption and police raids on brothels and the like.  Someone piped up that Dongguan is seedier than Thailand and Amsterdam.  Not that it mattered, I just wanted good grub and a beer.

Within minutes we passed the first Western-style public house (it looked more like a holiday resort bar).  After our meal, we had a drink there, at 40 yuan a drink!  Most bars serving Tsing Tao were much, much cheaper!  The meal we had at “Rough-looking street eatery of the year” was cracking.  It would not be a place I would choose to eat.  Ever.  Randy and Stretch (I’m sorry, I never got his actual name) ordered us beef hotpot, some fish meal with fisheggs and noodles, and some rib based meal.  Alongside this we had shots of Budweiser (the glasses being big enough to gulp one and a half times).

Now, hygiene in food eateries is different to the UK, but every place gives you clean and sealed bowls, cups, chopsticks and there is no such thing a a three second rule here.  Food drops.  It never gets back on the bowl (plates are very rare), it should never pass your mouth!  So far, no ill effects.  We have eaten at the market twice this weekend, the food is fresh, cooked before your eyes and served well.  It isn’t quite perfect but it is authentic and the locals eat here often.  As a rule, if it is busy, there should be no need for extra loo rolls.  You do adapt pretty fast to the Chinese mentally of, eat anything.  We saw a pig being chopped up on a street corner.  Live food has mostly been restricted to fish so far.

So after that grub, we wandered some miles looking for a KTV Kareoke bar.  To our surprise, it was closed.  Police enforced.  So, we drank and played dice in a local bar, where the locals took photos with the girls and Simon (from Sweden) who dressed in a suit.  We snacked on some deep-fried fish and some other bits of meat.  Then half the group went by rickshaw and three of us by taxi to Robert’s humble abode.  His place, it turned out, was only a mile or so from our digs.  Robert made us most welcome and his balcony has a fantastic night sky view.  There is a temple in the distance we shall have to explore.  Some time later, we went home and Saturday was our first lay in since arriving.

The people of Dongguan are being influenced by the west and have more and more pets.  Mainly tiny yappy dogs.  Roosters on rooftops is normal.  The odd chirpy Myna bird on a balcony adds to the urban ambience.  In the evenings, fluttering bats add to the surreal sense that dusk and relaxed family walks is the norm.

Last night, we gathered several westerners at our digs to watch The Life of Brian and natter away.  Drink responsibly.

Today, we have looked at the neighbouring 14 apartment blocks (all secured by entry gates manned by guards) and grounds.  There is a swimming pool, basketball court and outdoor gym area.

 

Boomtown Rats got it right

24 Feb 2014

Lesson one, 75% okay.  Lesson two: pants.  Lesson three:  better, but still a car crash.

After work we handed over passport photographs for the local Police registration, but there is still no sign of our actual passports, sent by courier by Worlda from Guangzhou on Friday.  Arghhhhh!  Panic.  And in other news, Nikki is helping me loads and that is why I married her.  It will get better.

End.

News travels at a different pace

25 Feb 2014

So, some news was on the TV today from the west, and I am glad to see it is something I can relate to.  John Shepherd-Barron invented the ATM, and here in China they sometimes work, but often decline you due to their internet connections to the western servers.  HSBC is very far to walk.  Bank of China is everywhere but equally useless.  I will praise the banks here for having booths that you may enter and exit, keeping your transaction and safety in hand.  Then I looked at the date of the passing of the ATM inventor, it was some 4 years ago… news?  Also, this morning they were showing City v Barca on CCTV5.  Only a few days late.

Lesson one today had 10 observers, 6 Chinese teachers and 4 foreign teachers.  That kept the class well-behaved, too well-behaved.  They were too quiet and less reactive to questions.  I can’t wait for the feedback from Bright, the head of foreign languages.  I have great admiration for him and his management skills.  As for the lesson itself, it ran smoothly.

After lesson one I observed Esben in his lesson to 9/10 year olds.  There is a huge difference in ability and what you can teach, and how!  Older kids have more face and want respect, but don’t generally show off.

Nikki seems to be settling well with her Kindergarten Crew.  Her click of Chinese and foreign teachers always seem to be first at lunch.  Lunch is from noon until 1340hrs and involves grub, a blast of energy (basketball or running around) followed by a nap.  It really is bizarre for us westerners to see.  That said students are here early and away later than any UK 9-5 job!

So, the second piece of televised news was the passing of Egon Spengler.  Harold Ramis, director of the great Groundhog Day (a film that seems to never be off UK television during winter), star of Ghostbusters and the sequel, writer of Caddyshack and Animal House died of autoimmune inflammatory vasculitis at 69 years old.  Having in recent years been tested for a form of inflammatory vasculitis of the nose, I wouldn’t want to be diganosed with that.  Grimness aside, I hope to introduce a few kids here to the joys of Ghostbusters!  Now can someone get me a copy with Chinese subtitles?

There is so little censorship as to what kids watch here, I entered a class as they ended watching some horror effort with Sean Bean, Silent Hill: Revelation.  In the UK, this was an 18 on release.  In the US, R-rated.  There were a few grimaces and downtrodden reactions by the class watching this, but on the whole, it was accepted as not being real.  Compared with the next set of 13/14 year olds watching Shrek, this was not expected.

Oh, and internet search engines annoy me.  I miss google (Google.hk is bobbins here).  I really do.  Baidu (in Chinese), Bing China is odd (see suggested subjects, I was looking for a photo of dancing), Ask (didn’t even know it still existed), toudou is like youtube but damn hard to fathom out, but is littered with piracy.

So, today, I say farewell, but wish Nikki and I luck for our first Mandarin class!