Since I moved to China, I haven't done much work on my Web pages and
other online projects, partly because I've given more priority to my
offline activities, and partly because I don't have access to Blogspot
any more. Now Geocities, where I had all my Web pages, has shut down.
I might put some of them back up somewhere else, maybe at Tripod.
I might not get back to my Internet projects for many more months. The
first one I might want to revive is reading people's blogs and
learning how to encourage and support them in whatever good they're
trying to do.
How's the food?
Must be a very interesting experience!
Cheers
Larry Rowe
One interesting experience for me has been trying to learn the Chinese
language. Another has been trying to figure out the bus system. I
learned to use the metro easily, but the buses are a different story.
Yanks are the same everywhere. Total cultural philistines!
W
It isn't that I don't like Chinese food. I just don't like the Chinese
food in China!
Shanghai.
Big and busy is right. I've seen dozens of places that look like Times
Square, and I haven't seen a tenth of it. The traffic is often
crawling, and sometimes completely stopped for five or ten minutes.
We've been in the west for a week or two, twice, south of Urumqi in
XinJiang. That's our son's wife is from, and where her mother and
father still live.
Then why go to China at all? The local food is part of the fabric of
the society you are visiting. If you were going to dine at Applebee's
and Starbucks, you should've stayed in America and not gone to China.
It is a cultural insult and a blatant display of ethnocentrism that
you go to China and then complain about the local food while going to
the establishments you already have in America. This is a classic case
of the same white-man Western missionary but now in a Bahai suit.
W
Our son moved here a few years ago, and he's been wanting us to come.
We had thought about coming after we retire, but then he found a job
for Patty, and we read some things about the importance of China that
made us want to come now. I'm very glad we came. Building a harmonious
society is an explicit goal of the Chinese government. Daniel's wife
is Chinese, and it means a lot to me to be part of a two-culture
family learning to live happily together, especially American and
Chinese, in view of the divisions between our two countries. This is a
perfect environment for me to work on all my ideas about community
service and development, with my family, and on the local, national
and international levels of community life.
What I said about feeling repelled by the food displays at the
restaurants was not to complain about the food. It was meant to say
more about me than about the food in China. I hadn't thought about how
insulting it might be to talk that way, regardless of my intentions.
Your point is well made.
I've always enjoyed the Chinese food we have at home, cooked by
Daniel's Chinese wife and by her Chinese mother. We've also enjoyed
many of the meals we've had with them in Chinese restaurants, here in
Shanghai, and in their home town in the west of China.