What is this blog about?

Hi there. I'm Liz. Come read about my adventures studying China, the Chinese language, Chinese cooking and all things Chinese. This blog is a collection of anecdotes from my recent or recently-passed experiences - my thoughts, feelings, and conclusions regarding my attempt to become Chinese. Or sort of.

This will also serve as my travel blog, so when I am in places that are NOT China, you'll get to hear about those as well.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Job and Other Fun Stuff

Well, I suppose you can say that I'm finally back to blogging. Sort of. Sorry for the long delay - getting situation in my new job has been pretty hectic.

I guess the last time I posted was almost 2 months ago now. How time flies!

So what am I doing exactly (I still ask myself that sometimes)? I am a market analyst for a Chinese company that tracks and evaluates metal commodities. I track metals and spend all day speaking with people in the Americas (my part of the world to cover) and speaking in English and Spanish about prices and trends for different metals. Then, the analysts at my company write articles about the market and they get published on our web site, to which companies subscribe for the market intelligence. That's it in a nutshell.

My schedule is fairly erratic, and I am almost never home before 6:30. 6 if I'm lucky. I have been in the office until 8:00 p.m. however. Those days suck. And, of course, I am still in Pittsburgh. There are definitely worse places to be, but after all of those applications for graduate school and jobs in DC, New York and California, I find it to be a little more than ironic.

Anyhow, I'm thinking about subsequent posts and wondering what readers might enjoy next. I don't want to talk about my job - frankly, I spend all day here in the office thinking about metals and my blog was designed for the sole purpose of having fun. So, no shop talk here.

Any suggestions from cyberspace? Any and all are welcome!

And finally, we have had such amazing weather lately! It's about 75 today, cool breeze, low humidity, and the bright blue sky is populated with adorable popcorn clouds and a fantastic sun. I love days like these, except I hate that I have to spend them mostly indoors. I did go for an extended walk today on my lunch break, but that's hardly enough when the summer is almost at an end and I have had very few typical summer pleasures so far. Oh well, I suppose that's life and that's all there is to it. It is depressing, however, to constantly want more, more experiences, more fun more excitement, and you are bottled up in the office or in the confines of your own home where cleaning is the top priority. I suppose I have entered that parallel university they call.. Reality.

God, save me.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Job Prospectives #2

So, I'm going to officially say THANK YOU to all of you who gave me good ju-ju!

IT WORKED!

I start tomorrow in my new position, as an International Markets Research Analyst with Asian Metal (http://www.asianmetal.com/).

Defintiely excited, but sad to be leaving the University of Pittsburgh. These people have made my first two years in the work force wonderful, flexible, happy, and with lots of time off. I cannot thank them enough for helping me to really enjoy my first two years (with minor exceptions).

But, alas, it's time to try and put my degree to use. I'll be calling companies in South America and doing research on the metals industry in South America, which means utilizing my Spanish. Which is awesome.
Plus, it's Chinese company, which does lots of conferences in China, so there should be ample opportunity to travel back to China! I am particularly excited about that. And, while most people wouldn't think the metals industry is very interesting, think about where the metal comes from that it in your car. Computer. Cell phone. Jewelry. Cook-ware. The list goes on and on.

And the metals industry is incredibly important to the development of both China and Latin America, insofar as the mining and refinery industries create jobs, and trade brings in money. So it's a great industry for my areas of research.

I suppose we'll see how interesting the iron ore/steel/scrap metal industry is.. That's my field of research..

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Job Prospectives

So, yeah. I'm not going to lie. It's been a while since my last post. Eh.. *nervous laugh* Hehe.. Yeeeaaah.. Sorry about that..

I've decided I want to become a travel writer.

Yes yes, I know, go on and have a big laugh. It sounds a bit like kids who want to grow up and become astronauts, right? *Poignant stare* Well, some of those kids actually do become astronauts. *Arrogant sniff, crosses arms over chest* So there!

On amore serious note, this is not something I am crazy enough to attempt all willy-nilly-like. I will do it on the side, providing I am lucky enough to score a job that will offer plenty of travel to various parts of the world.

And I may have a chance to score such a job in the next 2-3 weeks. I don't want to say too much, lest I jinx anything, but I had a great interview for a "dream" job last week, and will know the outcome in hopefully 2-3 weeks (I use the term in quotes because the actual job isn't the most amazing thing ever, but lots of wonderful benefits with travel prospectives and a chance to use both my Spanish and Chinese skills).

So, SEND ME ALL OF YOUR GOOD JU-JU!

Because if I don't get this job, it means significantly less posts for you, with topics gradually declining in their interest. This = no fun for all of us.

So, send me good ju-ju, pray, visit the local Santeria shaman, pick your poison! Just SEND ME GOOD VIBES PEOPLE!

- Liz

Friday, March 4, 2011

There Are More Things in Heaven and Earth Than Dreamt of in Your Philosophy... (or) What the Hell is it She Likes About China?!

(A special thanks to Adam Nelson, some of whose phrases I ably stole and reiterated in the case to make my point on China.) 

One of my best friends and I have known each other for almost 21 years now. Growing up, we were inseparable. One of our favorite pastimes was to visit her grandparents, who lived between us, only two or three blocks away from each of us. I remember evenings with her family there - her grandmother would cook spaghetti and invite me to stay for dinner. Gladly I would do so, not thinking that I would ever get older, that things would change.
It had been a long time since I had seen Pap-pap. A few months ago, him looking pretty much the same as ever, I approached him and hugged him, surprised that he seemed to remember me, despite the fact that I was taller, thinner, and my hair was 12 inches shorter.
My friend has been updating me on him since, telling me when he asks about me and the funny things that he says. When my friend reminded him that I had studied abroad in China and was studying China as an academic subject, he frankly asked,
"What the hell is it she likes about China?!"
Thanks, Pap-pap.
Little did he know that I had absolutely no answer for that question.
It's been almost three years now since I returned from Beijing. When I was about to leave, I couldn't wait. I was excited to return home and vowed that, while I might visit, I would never again spend 6 months in China.  I hated it. My expectations were nothing akin to what it was that I truly experienced. I had expected wise men wandering the streets, full of advice for anyone who would listen, middle-aged men sitting on the street playing Chinese chess, temples, Confucianism, and the Great Wall. I had expected to see the nation with the world's strongest maritime fleets in history, that "discovered" America before Columbus, that invented gunpowder, fireworks, paper, and the compass, and whose history dates back over four thousand years.
All these things I found, but not in the way that I had expected. Mere glimpses of this particular past are all that remain, in most cases. Since then, I have worked a full-time job, been in a committed relationship, and am looking forward to graduate school. And now, I can't wait to return to China.
When other students travel to Spain or Germany or Japan and they are faced with the question, "How was (insert name of country here)?" the response I often hear is, "It was awesome!" When I am faced with the question, "How was China?" I often find that I haven't any idea what to say.
Since returning, I have had career crises, identity crises, you name it. As a performer, always having been involved in acting, singing and dancing, seeing China's lack of interest in the arts was particularly difficult for me to bear. There was a period of about a month when I thought I had ruined my life by studying China and wished I had chosen Japan instead, the font of cultural creativity.
In my quest to find just exactly what the hell is was that I liked about China, I started reading many books, watching documentaries, and talking to people about their interest in the country. And I became hooked. I have heard it said that "what you realize, being abroad, are all the things you love and miss when they’re gone. What you realize, coming back, are all the things you’ve left behind." Nothing could be truer.
To this day, I can't tell you what it is that fascinates me about this place. Maybe I never will be able to articulate it. It is a crazy place, unlike anything you've ever seen or experienced - a country caught between tradition and modernization, both of which they simultaneously reject and embrace. A nation still on the birth of what we Westerners deem as "modernization", one leg rooted firmly in the past and one just barely crossing the line into the here and now. It is a country with ideals and theories fraught with contradictions.
Simultaneously, this country is a font of natural beauty not to be found anywhere else on the planet. A typical mountain scene painted in the traditional Chinese style of brush painting leads many people to believe that these natural scenes of astounding beauty are a thing from the past, that existed in another lifetime far removed from today’s day and age. I can tell you they are not. They still exist. You simply have to seek them out. The grandeur will astonish you. 

I can't tell you anything about China. I can't even speak about it.
There are more things in Heaven and Earth, Horatio, then dreamt of in your philosophy.
You simply have to see it to believe it.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

A Chance Meting on the Great Wall


It’s strange and funny, in a way, how people change when they are outside of their comfort zone, outside of their home country. Studying abroad in Beijing, China did not only teach me about Chinese culture and language, it taught me about people, other Americans and foreigners from all over the world, and how open, accepting and kind they can be. When we meet someone with whom we feel a special connection, we normally make an effort to stay in touch with them, to keep them in our lives, for they offer something that we enjoy and, sometimes, need. However, if you are the sort of person that often travels, you know that many wonderful and memorable encounters with other travelers often results in never seeing each other again. Sad from one standpoint, however, we must still enjoy and remember those moments that we share with them that enrich our lives and teach us about the world, humanity, and ourselves.

While studying abroad in Beijing, China, a few friends of mine and I did a 4-hour hike from the Simatai portion to the JingShanLing section (well, it was supposed to take 4 hours according to various web sites and people, but I don't know ANYONE who could do that hike in 4 hours!). The Simatai section was constructed in the 1500s under the supervision of Qi Jiguang, a famous general in the Ming Dynasty, and is the only part of the Great Wall that still had the original appearance of the Ming Dynasty. However, a major restoration project began on the Simatai portion of the wall in 2010 and is expected to take 2 years.

 

Somehow, someone in our group managed to find information on the transportation from Beijing to Miyun by bus. So we took the bus. After about an hour, the bus dropped us off in a tiny parking lot where, upon getting off, we were rushed by three or for older Chinese men who all offered to take us to the Great Wall for the cheapest price. Our group had five or six people, so naturally the minivan seemed the most logical – but way too expensive. After playing two drivers off of each other for the lowest price, all six of us crammed into a tiny, two-door Honda and off we went, for another hour ride to the Great Wall.

Carrying large camping packs on our back, we climbed portions of the wall that were almost vertical in their scale.  I've never used all four limbs to walk up stairs before, but this is one place where the faint-of-heart or slightly-out-of-shape better just take the cable car. Two of the members of our group were over six feet tall. Me being barely 5’4”, I had an incredibly difficult time keeping up with these men who had camped all over the United States and Europe and who routinely made incredible acts of insane physical exertion part of their daily life. Needless to say, I had to stop and break several times to catch my breath and was usually at the back of the group – which didn’t bother me because I was busy taking pictures.
 
This is all that was left of one of the guard towers we passed through.. ---->

We hiked for several hours and finally set up camp that evening. A heavy mist set in, covering the mountains and the wall, which we watched as we ate fruit and dried goods and pitched our tents. The sun began to set, and what little light from the setting sun and the rising moon that might have been was drowned in the damp, Chinese mist of the warm evening. The realization hit me that I should probably head to the “washroom” before bedtime, or else risk waking up in the middle of the night with no flash light, which I stupidly neglected to bring. As it was already getting dark, I set out immediately to find an appropriate place off of the wall (there are no Port-A-Potties). At the next guard tower, about a five-minute walk away, I heard lots of commotion, so I headed on over to check out the scene. A group of about fifteen people, in the process of unrolling their sleeping bags, was sitting around with flashlights and munching on some food. Upon seeing me, they introduced themselves – they were a group of young people, about my age, that were on a mission trip in China and had decided to camp on the Great Wall for a night, just like us. They were a wonderful group, welcoming and hospitable, and I enjoyed the half hour to forty minutes I spent in their presence. Finally, when it was so dark that I could barely see, I said my goodbyes and stood up to cautiously trek back to my guard tower where we had set up camp. 
“Hey, don’t you have a flashlight or something?”

“No,” I replied, “but I’ve walked this stretch of the wall several times today looking for a good camping spot, so I think I’ll be okay. I know where all the bad spots are.”

“If you’re going back to your guard tower, you really should have a flashlight. It’s too dangerous to wander around in the dark here.” And this young man to whom I was speaking pulled a tiny, silver LED flashlight from his bag and handed it to me.

“Are you sure? Don’t you need it?”

“No, I brought extra!”

I thanked him and headed off on my way. When I awoke the next morning, promptly at 4:30, they had already packed their things and were heading off in the opposite direction. I would never forget our meeting of crazy, random happenstance that took place that evening, nor how kind they were. Two ships passing in the darkness…their positive attitude, outlook on life, their generosity and their willingness to allow me to share in their experiences has forever left a great impression on me. Even in the simplest of ways, human beings  leave lasting impressions, to part on their separate ways and never be seen again. I find this, all at once, confounding and strangely wonderful.

By 5:30 my friends and I were packed, the sun was high in the sky, and we ate breakfast.  We set out around 6:30, finished the rest of our hike around 9:00 a.m. when I snapped what was to become my favorite picture of the wall, just as we climbed off – a silhouette of the Great Wall extending for miles, shrouded in mist.

After six months in China, I could not wait to return home. Now, after reflecting on my time abroad, I cannot wait to return to China and all of the things I left behind there.

The tiny, silver flashlight still sits on my bookshelf to this day.


Thursday, February 10, 2011

Kangxi Grasslands Story - PART II

Well, this is the Kangxi Grasslands PART II! I know, I know - you've all been waiting with bated breath to hear how this story ends. Well, you're in for a ride! Haha. That.. That's a joke. I realize it was entirely wasted on you because, most likely, you haven't read the story yet but, trust me, in hindsight, that will be funny.

*Ahem* So, back to the point. This picks up directly where Part I left off. If you need a refresher.. I'm not giving you one. Go read the end of Part I. :D Enjoy!


After that, it was still very early (only about 10:30 or 11 a.m.) so Alex and I decided not to waste the entire day. 
We rented a dune buggy for a little over an hour.  That was awesome and almost made up for that awful horse experience.  We raced over hills, rocks, trees, flowers, brush, everything!  The air was clear and the sky was a gorgeous blue, and we were completely surrounded by mountains.  I took the chance to snag a few nice pictures.

<-- That's Alex driving the dune buggy.


Then it happened - Alex, who happened to be driving at the time, flew over an embankment ... ... and we landed in about seven inches of mud and water.  We were stuck in a marsh.  The tires did nothing but spin, digging us deeper and deeper into the mud.  So, we got out in our tennis shoes and jeans, standing in this tadpole-filled water and mud, and proceeded to drag the dune buggy (which must have weighed a hundred pounds, maybe 2) out of the mud.  We were absolutely disgustingly dirty.

And it was awesome.


This is the marsh in which we got stuck.  ---->


So we continued on our way.  About a half hour later, Alex was taking out some trees and we were riding through some thick brush when we heard an awful sound and the dune buggy sputtered to a stop.
We cut the engine to discover that the chain that connected the drive shaft to the rear wheels had come off.  So out we got, and laid under the buggy for about fifteen minutes until we discovered how to fix the chain.

Again, off we went!

... And not ten minutes later, the chain came off again.


<---This is Alex. Fixing the chain.

Seeing that this was going to happen until we got back to the dirt road, I told Alex we just had to push it the 75 feet (or so) back to the road.  So, with Alex in front pulling and steering, and me behind pushing with all of my might (and us switching and taking turns), we moved it back to the dirt road. 
After that, we steered clear of any thick underbrush and finished our time in the dune buggy.  Then, we caught a bus back to Beijing, and had dinner at 5 p.m. after having nothing to eat since 7 a.m.
In that regard, it was a fun day.  The dune buggy was definitely the best experience I've had so far in Beijing, even with the dragging and pushing.  Which, in truth, added to the experience.  My shoes are still muddy.
Ah, memory building.  At least I have a great story to tell now! 

Well, that's it. The almost-famous story of the Kangxi Grasslands. Hope you enjoyed this issue! Actually, what I really hope is that someone, somewhere is actually reading this blog. But, in the mean time, it gives me something to do and a place to record my memories and stories.

HAPPY CHINESE NEW YEAR OF THE RABBIT, BY THE WAY!!!

- Liz

Friday, January 14, 2011

Inside-Snuff-Bottle Painting - A Chinese World Heritage Icon

In the Chinese class that I took last semester, we had to give short (3-5 minute) presentations in Chinese on a topic of our choice. I chose to argue that inside-bottle-painting is China's most iconic and important traditional art form, because it incorporates many of other traditional art forms, and for other reasons. If you have never been introduced to it, this is an inside-painted snuff bottle. Yes, the image is painted on the inside of the bottle:



Historians believe that inside-snuff-bottle painting began in the early 1800s. While I didn't delve much into the ancient history of this intriguing art, I did find out some other interesting facts. The snuff bottle was originally used for storing tobacco or snuff (which had particular medicinal properties in Chinese medicine). Some other traditional or ancient forms of Chinese arts include poetry, calligraphy, ceramics and pottery (think Ming dynasty china, with its distinctive blue and white lacquers), engraving or carving (carved jade), glassware, and others. Many snuff bottles incorporate these arts in forms of using poetry in the bottles, the artful painting of characters inside the bottle, porcelain bottles that have been carved, glass bottles, and even bottles made from jade, quartz, agate, and other materials.

At some point, I had a wonderful, glorious vision of how this post was going to turn into a glowing shrine dedicated to the singular and exquisite art of snuff bottle painting. Since then, I feel I've given all of the information you might ever need on snuff bottle painting and feel it adequate to move in for the sake of actually posting this post.

While in China, I found a painting that I bought specifically for .. Well, he-who-shall-not-be-named. After buying this painting for HWSNBN, I was incredibly reluctant to give it away. Bad-news bears, Liz. I had already told this person all about this painting in my unbridled reign of excitement. So, I took the painting to an inside-bottle-painter in Beijing and asked him if he could reproduce it on the inside of a bottle. This was the painting:



And this was the bottle...




I know.. Right?!?!?

He put this painting on the back, designed specifically for me..


Well, that's about it. I had some sort of dream about making this like, the best post ever, and now I just want to post something for fear that I might never post again if I don't.

I'm off on vacation to Puerto Rico with the Boy and won't be back (posting) until the first week of February.

Until then..

Happy trails!

- Liz