One week
down in Beijing, and so far it has been very good. I got through the airport with no hassle
except for the fact that the lines in the airport to get through immigration
were pretty long (no pictures, unfortunately), but after that it was a quick ride
on the automated train, waiting for bags, and then it was through customs and
off to catch a ride to the university. The
driver took a different route to the university, and I was able to see how far
away we were from the city’s center, and thus in more of a suburban area. After getting on campus, I was able to
quickly find the foreign students dormitory and move into my room. The room itself was interesting as it resembled a very small apartment.
While the beds both caused the room to seem more like a hotel (along with the flat screen TV on the wall opposite the beds, to the left in the picture), the two desks, along with the small kitchen and bathroom (seen below) and lack of hotel amenities like complimentary chocolates (or toothbrush, toothpaste, soap, and slippers from my last Chinese hotel experience) made the room seem more like a regular dorm room.
The rest of the day was uneventful other than
meeting a few fellow students from Mexico and eating lunch with them while finding
out about life at BISU and what sort of stuff happened during the weekends, how
classes were, and what was around campus.
Following this, I took a trip to the market across the street and
purchased a few things for the room before returning. Intending to take a nap, I ended up sleeping
until 11:00 pm and, after realizing what time it was, went back to sleep.
Tuesday (August 28)
Tuesday was relatively uneventful aside from buying a phone and having some
communication problems which took at least an hour to get sorted out before I
was able to get a SIM card. As a
learning experience, the fact that my Chinese listening skills are under par
was greatly realized, although, as I am here to learn Chinese I am sure with
time it will get better.
Wednesday
(August 29)
The
following day went by very quickly, with the excitement coming in the evening
when I caught the bus down to Worker’s Stadium (工人体育场;Gongren Tiyuchang) to visit
and have dinner with my American friend Ken Magnum and his family. Although shrouded by the Beijing smog, not
only was the ride on the have a few amazing views but the view from the
Magnum’s apartment was equally amazing, offering a look at the lights of
Worker’s Stadium as well as views of the towers and skyscrapers of the Central
Business District (CBD).
The reason the Magnum’s were residing in Beijing was so that their son, Andre, could pursue his studies of Chinese Martial Arts (中国武术;Zhongguo Wushu), as he had trained at Shaolin Monastery (少林寺;Shaolinsi; Young Forest Monastery) for some time before moving to Beijing – where he and his father have lived for three years now – to study wushu at a sports high school there. After living in China for three years, Ken told me it was apparent that he would be living there long-term, and so his wife Margo had recently joined him and Dre in their new apartment. The family is pictured below.
During my stay I was able to talk with Ken about my goals in learning Chinese as well as what I wanted to do while in China (especially in regards to studying wushu) and in regards to international relations. Following dinner, Ken showed me around his neighborhood, which was not only close to the CBD but also near to Sanlitun (三里屯), also known as Sanlitun Village or Sanlitun Bar Street. As Ken showed me around, I not only noticed that Sanlitun was an area for drinking – with various night clubs, stip clubs, and outdoor restaurants filled with foreigners and Chinese hipsters throughout – but it was also a good area to indulge in Western dining such as New York style pizza, hamburgers and Coldstone ice cream. I definitely plan to return in the near future, once the cravings for Western food and drink reveal themselves.
The reason the Magnum’s were residing in Beijing was so that their son, Andre, could pursue his studies of Chinese Martial Arts (中国武术;Zhongguo Wushu), as he had trained at Shaolin Monastery (少林寺;Shaolinsi; Young Forest Monastery) for some time before moving to Beijing – where he and his father have lived for three years now – to study wushu at a sports high school there. After living in China for three years, Ken told me it was apparent that he would be living there long-term, and so his wife Margo had recently joined him and Dre in their new apartment. The family is pictured below.
During my stay I was able to talk with Ken about my goals in learning Chinese as well as what I wanted to do while in China (especially in regards to studying wushu) and in regards to international relations. Following dinner, Ken showed me around his neighborhood, which was not only close to the CBD but also near to Sanlitun (三里屯), also known as Sanlitun Village or Sanlitun Bar Street. As Ken showed me around, I not only noticed that Sanlitun was an area for drinking – with various night clubs, stip clubs, and outdoor restaurants filled with foreigners and Chinese hipsters throughout – but it was also a good area to indulge in Western dining such as New York style pizza, hamburgers and Coldstone ice cream. I definitely plan to return in the near future, once the cravings for Western food and drink reveal themselves.
Thursday (August 30)
Like Tuesday, Thursday was
also rather uneventful as I only made the mistake of misjudging the distance to
a spot on Google Maps (I needed to go to the Bank of China to cash travelers
cheques needed for registration) and walking for thirty minutes to get there
and then walking back when I could not find the bank and when other banks there
told me I had to go to Bank of China to cash the cheques. When returning to the university and asking
at the Foreign Students’ Office where the bank was, they told me it was in the
spot where I had looked, and that I could have taken the Rapid Bus (a bus line
located in the center of the roads of major streets that traveled faster than
busses with routes on the sides of the streets) for three stops to get
there. One good thing that happened that
day was that I was able to get in touch with an American expatriate who had
been studying Baguazhang (八卦掌;Eight Trigram Palm) under a local master for some
time, and whom invited me to partake in a class the coming Sunday. Also notable, the fact that while I could not
fully understand the meaning of what the aids at the banks told me when I
talked with them, I understood the meaning when thinking it through, which was
a good start on the listening route.
Friday (August 31)
Today was the day that I
finally was able to get to the bank (much faster this time having learned of
the bus route) and was able to cash the cheques with ease. Upon returning to the university I was surprised
to find Erwai covered with new students, returning students and their parents
wandering the campus and browsing around the booths (that had been put up the
day before) in what I guess was the equivalent to opening weeks and move in
days at American universities. It was
while wondering about this event that I ran into a Chinese student who was
studying English. I was able to have
lunch with this new acquaintance, whose English name was Harry, and to meet his
German friend Chris. After having lunch
in the first floor of 第三食堂 (Di San Shir Tang; Cafeteria No. 3), we went to help Chris move out of the dormitory and into
an apartment across from the South Gate of the university. During the excursion I met his English friend
Sri, who was an Indian Englishman who, like myself, was studying International
Relations and Chinese – only at Westminster University in London. After the move in and talking about Chinese
in this considerably large apartment (larger, I mean, than those in Suzhou,
with various bedrooms and a large dining room with separate kitchen, among
other things). After lounging around in
the apartment for a bit, we went to the street west of the Communications
University of China (the university right next too, and west, of Erwai) to
procure a dinner of spicy eggplant, cooked rice, frog meat, chicken and
beef. Although there were no pictures
from this adventure, there will be more returns to this street with its many
stores, shops and restaurants hustling and bustling in the night -- sometimes with patrons flowing onto sidewalk seating to eat their food – and its many
street vendors and the occasional honking car or tuk tuk, as it was quite the
place.
Saturday (September 1)
Today was a quiet day for
the most part, with the only action taking place in the morning when I had
breakfast with Harry and his two Chinese friends in a surprisingly nice
restaurant on the second floor of the first canteen.
Following this, we went to an area in central campus where there were some benches so I could help them practice English and they could help my practice their Chinese. While it was difficult at first, I was able to get the hang of some of the new phrases I was learning (such as “Long time no see” which is: “很久不见了[hen jiu bu jien luh]” in Chinese). Following my studies – during which I received some homework to go over during the next week – we returned to the canteen and had lunch before parting ways. While the rest of the day was slightly boring, I was able to eat dinner with the British student I had met the other day in the second floor of 第三食堂 and to talk about learning Chinese and some of the differences between schooling in the UK and the US (for instance, he told me he usually only had to study seven hours per week in order to do well in his courses, along with studying on the side to better his Chinese). Also during this meal, I could not help but notice that the chicken and rice dish I had ordered (below) was pretty darn good, and that the second floor of the cafeteria, unlike the first floor, had a wide selection of dishes ranging from a 四川菜 (Si Chuan Ts'ai; Sichuan Province Cuisine) place in the far corner (the right background in the picture below) as well as a chocolate fondue fountain and a Korean restaurant (and, according to the student handbook, a Muslim and in the premise as well.
Following this, we went to an area in central campus where there were some benches so I could help them practice English and they could help my practice their Chinese. While it was difficult at first, I was able to get the hang of some of the new phrases I was learning (such as “Long time no see” which is: “很久不见了[hen jiu bu jien luh]” in Chinese). Following my studies – during which I received some homework to go over during the next week – we returned to the canteen and had lunch before parting ways. While the rest of the day was slightly boring, I was able to eat dinner with the British student I had met the other day in the second floor of 第三食堂 and to talk about learning Chinese and some of the differences between schooling in the UK and the US (for instance, he told me he usually only had to study seven hours per week in order to do well in his courses, along with studying on the side to better his Chinese). Also during this meal, I could not help but notice that the chicken and rice dish I had ordered (below) was pretty darn good, and that the second floor of the cafeteria, unlike the first floor, had a wide selection of dishes ranging from a 四川菜 (Si Chuan Ts'ai; Sichuan Province Cuisine) place in the far corner (the right background in the picture below) as well as a chocolate fondue fountain and a Korean restaurant (and, according to the student handbook, a Muslim and in the premise as well.
Above: Cafeteria No. 3, 2nd Floor... its even better than the first floor!
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