January 24, 2012

thing I love (and hate) about China...

I'm sure this will get added to over the next few months...

Asking for directions:
I was in town looking for a specific area (where beauty treatments are done on the street).  I couldn't remember where exactly it was so I called my Chinese friend and stopped at a newspaper kiosk to ask for directions.  My friend spoke to the shop lady on the phone and then the lady locked up her kiosk and took me to the place, realizing I couldn't understand the directions she was giving me.

Eating in public:
Growing up we were often told to 'close your mouth whilst you are eating;.  I don't think the Chinese are told this.  It's quite disconcerting to sit in a restaurant (or with local colleagues at work) and to hear lips smacking all around you.

Smoking in restaurants:
The smoking in public places ban which seems to be in effect in most of the western world definitely has not hit China.  Every time I come home from a night out with smokey hair and clothes I'm reminded of how much I appreciate this law.

Tuk Tuk drivers:
One of the easiest way to get around is to use the '3-wheeled vehicles' (tuk tuks).  One of the things I like about them is that the drivers, who are often slightly disabled, are kept in employment and don't have to live off handouts.  I came home from the supermarket in one recently and when I got out and unloaded all my bags at the side of the road, the driver stayed around until I'd moved all my bags inside the secure compound where I live.  Then she drove off.  I thought it was nice that she was ensuring none of my stuff would get robbed.

Locals' intrigue of foreigners:
Nanning is not proficient in English speakers.  The people that do speak English are generally high school or university students, or young kids who obviously attend schools like mine.  Parents are often trying to get these kids to 'say hello to the foreigner' (this is said in Chinese, which by now I understand).  The older generation generally doesn't know any English, but this doesn't stop them from wanting to talk to us.  I've sat at a bus stop before and a lady came to sit next to me.  After a few minutes (of looking at me but not saying anything) she got up to leave.  I think she just wanted to sit with a foreigner!  There's also a man who runs a food shop near my house and whenever I pass it on the way to the bus he shouts out "I love you".  I think that's the only English he knows and he's not partial to women or men as I've heard him do it to my male friends too.

Toilet training the kids:
The 'asian' toilets involve you squatting down.  Little kids are taught this from a young age and their clothes accommodate this.  They have trousers which have a slit in the bum and whenever they need to 'go' they squat down and the trousers open up.  This is done anywhere, so it's not unusual to see a kid on the side of the road, with the parent hovering nearby.

1 comment:

  1. Leuk verhaal weer, het geeft een goede indruk van hoe het een buitenlander vergaat in een wereldstad zonder Engels.
    Ik verheug mij op het volgende nieuws.
    Keep smiling.
    Liefs,
    Ninky

    ReplyDelete