Thursday, November 29, 2007
yeah, ummm
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
China and the gender divide
So anyway, in many ways this makes girls more precious. Or, at least, finding a girlfriend, downright impossible. This leads to situations like the following:
1. A LOT of prostitution. At least one prostitute, and I think several, work my hotel. She left cards under my door when I was in a single room. Now, she calls up, and usually hangs up the phone when a female voice answers. The other night though, she asked me if I wanted a "mah-sahhh-gee" - a meaningful and intentional mispronounciation of massage. Also, she will come knock lightly on the doors one by one late at night. Don't answer that late-night knock. Anyway, I've heard the theory that one of the reasons it is so big in an unexpected place like China is because it's in high demand for a society with so few women. Men just can't go around unsatisfied all the time. I'm not sure that can be totally accurate, but interesting nonetheless...
2. I heard last night about a woman who had planned her wedding and honeymoon, in their entirety, for next year. Doesn't have a boyfriend. She'll go find him now. I guess that she has some time since all of the wedding plans are straight. Compare this to the U.S., where a girl won't buy a dress for the prom before she has a date. Wow.
I think the women in China have a lot of implicit power in their relationships because of this. Much more needy, demanding, and princess-like. But that's only based on some anecdotal evidence...
Chinese Transportation Etiquette: 10 Commandments
2. Don't allow people to exit a subway car or elevator before you attempt to board. Two streams of traffic going in opposite directions at a door is desirable, and slows everyone down.
3. Don't get off of a train or elevator, no matter how crowded, to create space for someone else attempting to de-board. Doing this gives the person getting off the liberty to shove and push everyone in their way as they see if they can get out before the doors close. Sometimes they don't get out in time, which is perfectly amusing, unless it's you.
4. Don't wait until your light turns green before crossing the street. This allows you to progressively cross the street in stages. First, you cross the right hand turn lane. You can stand in the middle of this lane. Then you cross the traffic going in one direction, getting to the median. Finally, you can cross the traffic going the other direction. Piecewise-street-crossing is the best way to get where you're going.
5. Do not give up an open seat. In fact, you should move as quickly as possible, as an open seat shouldn't be open for more than 0.5 seconds. Also, if the seat opens up, say, on the right of you, and your friend is standing to your left, you should move over to the right seat, blocking others from getting the seat you're vacating, and leaving it open to your friend on your left. If there are old people on the train, it doesn't matter. Tough cookies.
6. You can always find more room for more people on the train.
7. If the transit workers in the subway station make you line up to wait for the train, this line means absolutely zero when the train pulls in. Push. Shove. GET ON THAT TRAIN.
8. If a train is pulling into the station as you walk up or down the steps to the platform, don't run for the train. Continue at the same pace, blocking everyone behind you.
9. Your subway "transfer" may or may not involve walking out of one station, outside, around the block, through cattle grates, inside, down to one platform, through that platform, and finally to your destination platform.
10. You can always get out of the bus/subway/rat race and take a taxi for $1.25.
The virtues of chinese line and transportation etiquette: violence in entering and exiting, selfishness in taking seats, shameless, stupid bravery in crossing streets, stoicism in tolerating the conditions.
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Chinese birthdays
Friday, November 23, 2007
An American in Beijing
Saturday, November 10, 2007
fashion
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
mongolia
In China there seems to be very little violent crime. A fair amount of pickpocketing, etc, but not so much of the other stuff. So I headed to Mongolia this past weekend for some raping and pillaging as I didn't want my carnal instincts to go totally dull. I took Air Pillage from Beijing to Ulaanbaatar where Ben picked me up from the airport, and upon seeing him I instantly became jealous of his $15 super warm coat. But actually the weekend was much less cold and drafty than I expected. The people in Mongolia are still people and still require respite from the cold, so it was really ok. As long as I had long underwear on...
The first day we checked out some stuff in UB, and it immediately became apparent to me how much more Soviet than Chinese the city is. The language, the traditional dress, the big square in the middle of the city...all very Soviet...I guess it's just that the people appear more Chinese than Russian that made me expect more of a Chinese city. Anyway, we checked out the statue of the (evidently enormously obese) Chinggis Khaan. I recited the 26-page Wikipedia article I'd read on the man, nay legend, on the plane to Ben and informed him that 0.5% of men worldwide are related to Genghis the gang banger, and about 8% of Asian males. We went to a Buddhist temple, which was cool because I'd actually never been to a Buddhist temple before. Ben bought a trance khoomi CD (khoomi is throat singing, and doesn't sound a bit like it's coming out of a human), and it was awesome to hear Happy Birthday with a khoomi singer set to a trance beat. I love old meets new. At the last minute we heard about a traditional Mongolian instruments orchestra concert from one of Ben's friends. The concert was 100% Mongolian instruments, so mainly the horse-head fiddle and then other instruments I can't name. There was a khoomi singer and other soloists as well. They were all dressed in traditional clothing, which I would call "costumes" but Ben says they wear it on a regular basis. Check out the picture.
The next day we headed out to the country, driving through the ger districts of UB. 60% of the city population lives in gers, and kindly their coal heating produces a nice layer of smog over the city, which, let's be honest, doesn't compare to Beijing's (at least Beijing on a bad day). We kept going out to Terelj National Park, and were picked up by a herder driving an ox cart. We forded the river (never caulk the wagon), Ben got cholera, and now when you pass the spot in future games there's an RIP Ben headstone. We reached the herder's ger, and went in for tea. The Mongolians are huge fans of milk tea, just a combination of regular tea with some milk and (usually) salt. It was great the first time I had it. But after my 20th bowl (every family we went to see insisted on us having some...they're big on hospitality, by which I mean, force-feeding), I was really sick of it. I also think that the milk tea may have given me food poisoning that appeared at 10 PM the night I was leaving. That country milk was definitely not pasteurized (also unhomogenized, raw, in a recylable container)... ;)
The travel between ger/herder families was again via ox cart, which was great because travelling so slowly (~3 mi/hr) you can really absorb the silence and the beauty around you. Also, it was important to notice that the gers were, practically speaking, extremely far apart, which you wouldn't have noticed had you zipped in a car between them. We arrived at the next ger family, who had a very good looking son, what can I say, I have it for men in deels. The father, appropriately known as Bold (who knows how you spell that in Mongolian), was famous in the area for how much he could eat. The first family told me "He can eat 40 buuz! (dumplings)." Actually, it was communicated as flashing 10 fingers four times, pointing to a buuz, and telling Ben in Mongolian, "the next herder." We had some tea, then some more tea, then we helped milk the cow, blah blah, had dinner, and then played ankle bones, which is a game using pig ankle bones as dice, which made me feel like a fortune teller as we played it around a candle in a hut sitting on the floor.
The next day we woke up to the cow I had dubbed "Maggie" the night before as an ex-cow. I guess there was a reason she was being kept in the fenced area around the ger. Watching her being taken apart was somewhat horrifying. Also horrifying was watching them dismember her not only without gloves (and the son cut his hands on a rib at one point, giving him all the diseases Maggie had), but just wearing the same old deel they wear for everything else. Awesome.
We did some archery, went to another ger (oh, did I mention they insulate their barns and gers with cow poop?), ate some horse meat (didn't know it was horse meat at the time, thought it was beef) and then headed to a nice lodge where we lived in luxury for an evening and the next morning. We also rode horses the next morning, which was frustrating because the horses wouldn't listen to us. Headed back to UB, got dinner with Kyle Jaros, was sick all night from food poisoning, flew back to Beijing. Ben said being sick was retribution for my trip to Mongolia being too "easy." Evidently the cold was not as bad as it normally is. But don't worry, it was enough for a temperature-sensitive poser Californian like me.
So Mongolia was definitely one of the most different places I've been. It really was like being in a different era. One without electricity (though sometimes with cell phones that can be charged via a battery pack), where three generations live in a single room, and where traditional dress is not synonymous with out-of-the-ordinary.