Check it out guys, I registered for classes today!
Interterm:
SOC 410 - Victimless Crimes
I've never been more excited for a class that fills both my major and my minor requirements!
Spring:
POSC 110 02 - Intro to American Politics - MWF 11-11:50
SOC 210 01 - Social Research Design - MWF 12-12:50
SOC 305 01 - Social Theory - TTh 1-2:15
SOC 320 01 - Sociology of Death - T 4-6:50
SOC 332 01 - Crime, Justice and Globalization - W 7-9:50
Starting up my politics minor with Intro to American Politics (it also fills a random GE I don't have covered!), Social Research Design and Social Theory are both required classes for my major, so I'm finally getting some work done for that, Sociology of Death is taught by McGrane, who was AWESOME when I took him for social psych, and Crime, Justice and Globalization goes into subjects that I've both learned about on SAS and are subjects I want to focus on for my career!
So that's that. Anyone going to be hangin out with me at school at these times? :) I can't believe I'm starting classes so late in the day! :O
Also, the ship threw a screening of the Rocky Horror Picture Show. Only me and one other girl were loud in knowing a diversity of the callbacks! But I had a lovely time wearing far too much makeup. Things shall be good.
Monday, November 29, 2010
November 28 2010 / MV Explorer
Friday, November 26, 2010
November 20 2010 / Kyoto, Japan
So I got up in the morning, all packed and ready to go out and adventure into Japan with Julie for the next couple of days. The big trick was that she had a SAS trip that she was going on that would take her into Kyoto to see some of the temples and gardens there, and I was going to try to hop onto the trip as well in order to not have to take a train by myself from Kobe to Kyoto. After breakfast we went out into the terminal and I signed up and was able to snag a ticket insidethey had two buses instead of just one, and they must have correctly anticipated the rush because there were about twenty people or so who hopped onto the trip with me.
Our trip guide was named Hiroko, which is kind of the most adorable name Ive ever heard. I kind of love Japanese namesthey mean such beautiful things, like Hiroko means broad-minded. Also, how cute would it be to call a little girl Hiro for short? Anyway, she talked a little bit about Kyoto while I napped on the busKyoto was about an hour away by bus.
When I woke up we were driving through the streets of Kyoto. I was initially pretty shocked by the city, because it seemed so huge and modern, while I was expected a quiet, small city that was very old fashioned with the wooden Japanese-style buildings with sweeping roofs and temples sprouted up everywhere. I guess that was silly to think that Kyoto would have never changed for hundreds of years. Still, when we got to our first temple, we were excited to get inside. This temple was Sanjusangen-do, and the unique thing about it is that its main hall is filled with 1,001 Senju Kannon-zo, which are golden statues of thousand-handed goddesses of mercy. Standing in front of these statues were these absolutely incredible statues of 28 guardians, which included the wind god, the thunder god, and things like that. They were done in the greatest art stylealmost cartoon, but all were very fearsome. They were great. In the center of the hall was Senju Kannon-zazo, a giant seated version of Kannon. I wish we could have taken more pictures, but we werent allowed tostill, it was a magical and almost eerie experience, and made me want to write about gods and dragons and all sorts of things! At the gift shop I bought a tiny fortune that had a little god charm inside, and the one I pulled at random was the god of fishing and good travelssounds like a Semester at Sea god if I ever heard one!
Next we were off to Nijo Castle, which is a castle protected by a moat that includes the Ninomaru Palace and also the ruins of the Honmaru Palace, which we got to see. Here Julie and I didnt really stick with our tour group and prowled around the Ninomaru castle by ourselves, having a grand adventure with the beautiful walls that were painted. I especially loved the nightingale floors which we designed to be squeaky so that no one could assassinate the shogun successfully by nightfall. We ate our most terrible box lunch in one of the rooms outside of the castle that was an indoor picnic-souvenir shop room. Then we went out and explored Honmaru and looked at the gardens that were around, as well as climbing up to one of the corner turrets to see out into Kyoto. It was pretty neatwe also saw the most horrifying gigantic bee that ever could exist. It was a good thick three inches long with red sparkly eyes. D: Julie and I have discovered that it was a Japanese Giant Hornet, nicknamed the Sparrow Hornet in Japanese, and are the most venomous bee on earth per sting. D: D: D:
Off we went then to Ryoan-Ji, which was built in 1450. It is a famous dry zen garden, with a large area of small rocks/sand, and fifteen rocks in this garden. There are lots of interpretations you can take to view itsome people think that that the sand is an ocean and the rocks are islands, others think it is a river with tigers swimming in it. My favorite interpretation is that the sand are clouds and the rocks are the mountain peaks that are poking out of the clouds. We sat and looked at the garden for a while, but to be completely honest I found that kind of boring. I walked over to the other side of the temple and instead looked at this little shrine under some maple trees, where the ground was covered in moss. It was a lot more pretty to me. :D
Lastly on our list was Kinkaku-ji, which of course contains the famous Golden Pavilion through a strolling garden. I practically had to beat people out of the way in order to get a good picture, it was so crowded, but it was incredibly beautiful to seethe sun was going down at that point and it was glinting off the pavilion, which was really cool. We threw coins to the roofs of little shrines for good luck and did a little bit of meditation.
Then it was time for Julie and I to head out on our adventure! The bus was so kind as to drive us out as close as we could get to the Kyoto train station and then we, as well as a couple other people who were also going to be traveling independently. We passed through a sleepy neighborhood filled with gardens until we finally got to the train station, where the Kyoto tower loomed above us. Julie and I encountered then some problems when we went up to the Welcome Inn, a hotel reservation serviceevery room in Kyoto was full! Julie said that there was no waythere was one room available and it was for us. We were looking at internet cafes nearbymany internet cafes allow you to sleep inside the café for the night for only twenty dollars or sowhen another woman came running up to tell us that ONE ROOM had just opened up in a ryokana minimalistic hotel that was only about a two minutes walk away! Needless to say, we jumped on the opportunity. We also booked a capsule hotel for our time in Tokyo and were very excited that we were all going to have everything all arranged!
We walked over to our hotel, the Ryokan White Hotel, which was kind of down a shady alley. We went inside and it was a small little building. We slipped off our shoes, checked in, and went up to our room on the fourth floor. It was a small little room with a little desk, a TV, a little stand, and two beds that were mats on the floor, Japanese-style. We were really excited and flopped all over the place on our mat beds. The bathroom was even tinier than the SAS bathroomsjust a toilet, sink, and shower that was hooked up to the sink. I banged my elbows several times.
Then we decided to head out again! We went into the Kyoto train station because we were starved at this point and wanted to eat some food, and we found a Chinese place that had lots of vegetarian options. I got delicious fried noodles and pot stickers, as well as a beer, and had a fun time just people-watching for a little while. After a while we hopped on bus 206 to go to the Gion district, which is the old district of Kyoto where the Geisha are said to frequent. We got off the bus at Kiyomizu-Dera, which was a temple that was lit up at night for the autumn festivals. We followed a HUGE crowd of Japanese people walking up a hill until we saw ita beam of light jutting out of the sky, a pavilion towering over Kyoto on the top of the hill. We walked all the way up and began to explore all of the different temple buildings. There was a sacred water well that we drank from, and another thing that was like a very sword-in-the-stone esque thing where you picked up these metal bars from the ground and then settled them down again. It was pretty funny because these tiny Japanese girls would struggle to pick them up while me and Julie just dominatedsome guy was even like WHAAAAO! It was pretty silly. :) There was also a nighttime viewing of the maple leaves, which was a BIG DEAL for all the Japanese people. I love those maples but Id already seen about twenty thousand of them already, so I didnt need to see them too much.
So that was pretty neat and it felt pretty authentic to be part of this festival with all the locals, even though we didnt know a lot of what was going on. :) After that we decided to walk down the road because the Gion district was bound to be around there somewhere. We walked for what seemed like forever, but had a pretty good time just looking around us (we found a menu that said English menu avairable and I laughed for ten thousand years). We went down a sketch alleyway that looked potentially Gion-y, and we saw all these fancy bar areas that had a lot of Japanese business men around and also these beautiful women in long ballgowns. We were considering the fact that maybe the look of the Geisha has changed, but then again, it might have just been in the area that we were in. We did see lots of wooden houses that were really old-fashioned and looked very Meiji, so we felt pretty successful even though we didnt see a traditional Geisha.
By the time we hopped back on the bus, we were exhausted and because it was the end of the bus line we had to go aaaaall the way around again before we got back to our ryokan. So that was like an hour but we ended up getting back to the train station not long after midnight, and we went back to our ryokan and just totally crashed out, sleeping very well. Hilarious story of the night was when we went back and asked for a wake up call at 7:30. 7:20, the hotel desk guy responded.
Sure, we said.
Friday, November 19, 2010
November 19 2010 / Kobe, Japan
ASKJKDSF JAPAN! We watched Spirited Away in my room last night in a cuddle pile with Ellie, Jared and Julie and I, which was awesome to get in the mood for JAPAAAAN! I woke up early and was able to spring out of bed right away, to my surprise. For some reason I woke up with extremely intense free-floating axiety that I just couldnt shakeI wasnt sure why it had hit me and why it wasnt going away, because I wasnt too worried about getting through Japan, even though Im doing it independently with minimal plans. But anyway I went to breakfast and sat with Julie and Jared and talked a little bit. There was a band outside serenading us. People at ports who greet us are so adorable! Aegean Sea was called up first for once, which was kind of nice but is not so nice considering were getting off the boat second to last in San Diego. :|
But anyway we went up and I realized belatedly that Id forgotten my quarantine card, so I had to hustle downstairs to grab it. Japan is super overprotective over who it allows to go into Japan, so you have to get shot with a thermal-evaluation-laser-thing in order to be sure youre not feverish. As I got up back up there, this guy I was next to started walking really jerkily. At first I thought he was going to be seasick, because he kneeled down. I asked if he was okay, and he said yes, but he was shaking so violently. All of a sudden he straight up fell over, blacked out cold. It scared the hell out of me. I was just frozen as people were calling for the medical team. He wasnt out long, but it was so incredibly strange and I just felt so freaked out. Im really not over the Andre thing. So I started sweating and trembling because this didnt help my nerves at all. I passed the thermal test anyway and then went down and had me a nap, because I was ready to restart the dayfelt far too stressed out.
I woke up when the ship was cleared, which was around 10am. Julie and I were going to go out exploring together, so we headed out together. We had to wait in this HUGE line to go through immigration and customs, which didnt bother me too much because I was too excited to be in Japan, and was skimming through my travel guide. :B When we finally got through there was a hospitality desk, and one of the ladies there directed me as to how I would get to the Miyazaki Museum in Tokyo, as well as how to buy tickets in advancewe would have to find a drugstore called Lawsons that would sell the tickets. Also, nothing is more hilarious than a Japanese woman looking at you in confusion when you say Miyazki, and then shouting TOTORO! with a look of triumph spread across her face. Im pretty sure the hospitality desk thought we were the most hilariously geeky Americans ever.
SO ANYWAY. Out we went to adventure into Kobe! Kobe is a rockin port city thats about a mile from the southern ocean to the northern mountains, but stretches a huge distance from west to east. Julie and I walked towards the city, which actually was razed by a huge earthquake in 1990. Its incredible how fast everything was built back again. One of the first signs that had a picture of food on it, we latched onto, going downstairs into this little
not really a business food court, nor a mall, but a little underground area that had lots of small restaurants inside it. Julie and I wandered around, a bit confusedthere were bento boxes sitting outside, but did we just take one? What was the nicety for that? So eventually we steeled ourselves to sit down inside one of the little areas at a table. It was a tiny room, with maybe ten small tables inside, and a kitchen against the wall. Was it just me, or did everyone go quiet when we came inside? Everyone was A Japanese Business Man. When the waitress came over, she looked at us strangely and pointed to the little stand-up menu on the tableall Japanese, no pictures. Julie ran outside, took pictures of the little display lunch sets, and I shuffled through them until I found one I wanted and pointed at it. She kind of laughed but I thought it was pretty ingenious.
Lunch for me was a bowl of soup with yakisoba noodles and a piece of shrimp tempura floating around in it, with a side of this truly incredible glutinous rice, that had a little bit of soy sauce and egg and it was just amazing. Oh gosh it was an incredible meal, even if it was simple. On the side were these orange slices I didnt recognize until Julie said it was pickled mangoit was SO GOOD, but we kind of laughed at how shy we were. Its funny how weve been traveling so long but we still get embarrassed at not knowing how to do the right things.
We went inside a big building to look around at things people buy, and I was SO EXCITED to find a row of cheap pokemon action figures! If youve been in my room at college I have a little collection, so I was so glad to get another little guy to add to the group of friends. :D
Then we went off to find a Lawsons and the Shinto-Kobe station, since I would have to catch a train from there to Kyoto if I couldnt get onto Julies SAS trip, which Im really hoping for. We found it and the information desk directed us to a Lawsons, which is a kind of 7-11esque convenience store. We had no idea what to do. So we stumbled through broken Japanese and singing the Totoro theme song to infer what we wanted to a very kind confused woman, who took us to the vending machine for the tickets and pushed the buttons for us, as she didnt speak any English. Ultimately, we got two tickets for the Tokyo museum at 10am on the 23rd (or so we hope
I dont read Japanese)! Energized by our success, we charged away for our next destination, which was a picturesque waterfall called Nunobiki Falls. We walked north until we reached the mountains, and then I saw the cable cars that I wanted to go up on to the Peak of Mouth Rokko, which gives an incredible view of the Kobe skyline. Upon buying tickets in the building, I happened to look out the window and what do I see but two huge hairy boars wandering leisurely back to their forest! It was the strangest thing and it cracked me up.
The cable car ride up the mountain was incredible. The trees below us were changing color, so most were green but there were also yellow and red and brown. It was so beautiful. We passed right over the waterfall, and attempted to take many picturesunfortunately for us, it was that kind of day where the light just sucks for picture taking. When we got to the top, we decided to walk down, so went through the Nunobiki Herb Garden, which also had us pass through a spice room, a greenhouse, and flower gardensit was pretty fun and oh so Japan! The city before us started turning on its lights, which was dazzling and I loved how the city just stretched to the left and right but was foiled by the ocean. :) As we walked down the mountain, it grew darker and darker and a lump settled in my stomach as I realized I would never walk down a strange mountain in the twilight at home. We walked right beneath the crashing of the waterfall, and Julie scared the hell out of me by screaming when a mouse or something ran by her. It was not as well lit as we would have hoped. Fear not, this adventure is not a sign of things to comewe will not decide to get some exercise when it starts getting dark outside when were traveling!
After our Nunobiki adventures, we were hungry yet again! So we set about trying to find a restaurant on the way back to the ship. One of the restaurants we went in didnt speak English and actually told us that the entire restaurant was reserved so that we would leave. I believed them until Julie mentioned how weird that wasnow its kind of just hilarious. But it was a good thing we waited! We came across this tiny restaurant on the main street with red lanterns out front and walked inside. There was a kitchen with a bar wrapped around right there, where six Japanese Businessmen were getting their drink on. The bar had a cook behind it who was cooking KABOBS! So we sat down at a table and did our best to avoid the wood and cigarette smoke. :D IT WAS GREAT! They had an English menu and our waitress did her best. I got a beer and two chicken thighs with curry sauce, a baked potato, and grilled onions! My mouth waters just thinking about those onions. Afterwards I looked at the menu again and saw that they had fried rice balls with melted cheese on top, which seemed necessarybest decision of my life. It was covered in a sweet-sour sauce and was just delicious. Julie and I had a great time just eating, drinking, and people watching. The businessmen were getting pretty red-faced by the end, but everyone was having a good time and it almost seemed like a Usual Crowd dynamic. Pretty cool stuff!
Julie and I walked off our massively delicious meal back to the ship, stopping on the way in this AWESOME HAT STORE, which was great because wed just been talking about how we wanted to buy hats. I found the most lovely gray-gold knit hat with a flower on the side that is going to be so important in keeping my head warm in my travels! Im pretty excited. Julie got a beret I think, haha.
We got to the ship soon aftera wonderful first day in Kobe, and hopefully a good sign of many more great times in Japan to come! My plans are pretty simple: Tomorrow I want to hitch onto Julies SAS group that explores Kyotos zen gardens and some of its temples, and then break off and stay there the night. The next late morning we will take a train to Tokyo where we will visit the Harajuku District and hopefully a cat café, as well as the Pokemon Center! Yes Im aware that I am a child. No I do not care. We also want to hit up the electronics/anime/manga district. On the night of the 22nd were going to do a great tour called the Full Moon Aoyama Graveyard tour, which Im SO EXCITED FOR and is like the one thing weve reserved. Its a two hour night tour of the most haunted graveyard in Tokyo where they talk about these old ghost tales and things that have happened. Somewhere in there, there will be karaoke, and the Miyazaki Museum is the morning of the 23rd before we go to Yokohama!
So obviously Ill be out of contact for the next couple of days while Julie and I go off to explore Japan! If you email me do it to my stephaniemech comcast account, as its the only one Ill be able to check. :)
Love you guys!
Sunday, November 14, 2010
November 14th 2010 / Beijing, China
I didn't go out last night but ended up staying up late talking to my roommate and her friend anyway. We talked about Andre and that whole thing, which was great because I hadn't really talked about it with anyone yet and I have lots of feelings. So that was therapeutic, if a little depressing.
So today we got our wakeup call, which was much appreciated, and I got a nice surprise when I went downstairs for breakfast and saw that Martha was down there! The Xi'an trip had finally come to Beijing and were staying at our Holiday Inn. Apparently the Terra Cotta warriors were super cool, but I didn't feel too bad—I had a great time in that first day in Hong Kong and on this trip, too. So after we finished a breakfast of pancakes covered in syrup and chocolate and pot stickers (BREAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS) we headed out to the Beijing International Kung Fu school, which is actually where they shot some of the new Karate Kid movie (at the rival school). So this was awesome. We headed into the same hall as in the movie and sat down in these rows of chairs, facing the stage.
Music began playing. There were I think nine men on the stage, all in silky red, yellow, or blue uniforms. And then they did CRAZY MAGICAL THINGS. The first "act" was just showing off their physical prowess—one by one they would toss themselves through the air like rag dolls, spinning and flipping, doing backflips and summersaults and cartwheels. They also did the worm and lots of backbends. It was the coolest thing EVER. I couldn't even believe that they were human! I definitely leaned over at one point and was like "Is this real life?"
The second act was done with WEAPONS. There were swords (single and double), scimitars, chains, and my favorite, a BROOM. The swords and metal things were too bendy to do real harm, but they were whipping them around so quickly it looked just… absolutely crazy. Kind of like those movies with the villain extras that are going really quick and crazy (but who also tend to be cut down by the hero really quickly, because they just look so uncontrollable). I wasn't sure how controlled they were and would have maybe liked to see something slowed down to prove how controlled they were, but I was too busy basically jaw-dropping to think too much of it.
The third and final act was the most epic. Basically, one or two guys would come out and start to do poses very slowly. You could see their muscles trembling as they slowly moved from position to position as they "charged up." Then another person would come around with something—a piece of metal, a wooden pole, etc. And they would do different things to break them! Two guys smashed metal sheets with their head, another broke a bowl with just two fingers. One man held out his arms and leaned over to show his back while another broke wooden poles on it. Another stabbed a needle through a pane of glass to pop a balloon—way whack. My favorite one was this older guy who came out—he was not wearing the same uniforms. I couldn't tell what his rank was. But there was this long, curvy hook. Four men were holding one end of it and he held the other end. He twisted the metal all the way around his neck as they held the other end, showed us, and then bent it back. It was horrifically cool, because I was freaking out the entire time because he bent a metal bar around his neck arghasdhfgh. There were a couple more dance moves and then they finished and bowed, and we were able to go up and get a couple pictures. I was in my kung-fu panda hat!
A couple of the guys then wanted to teach us a routine, so we were pretty excited about that. I was terribly bad at it, because I have a hard enough time after weeks of learning choreography during the musicals in high school for dances, I couldn't learn a full routine in the span of twenty minutes. But I still learned a great couple of poses, which was pretty awesome. :D
After that we went off to lunch, driving a ways away to the "Friendship Store." It was half restaurant, half gigantic tourist store, and it was toooootally a commission store, which kind of made me grumpy, but I guess you have to make money where you can so I tried to make the best of it. The lunch was kind of eh, but shopping afterwards was really fun. The Christmas ornaments I looked at were waaaay too expensive (the only difference between the ones that were there (180 yuan) and the ones on the street (50 yuan) was that these weren't dusty), but I found the medicine bell balls that were beautiful and the same price that you could get them on the street. I've always wanted some, so I got them and have been using them on the bus. I like little stress toys. I also caved—I've been wanting a stamp to do seals for forever, and I saw a couple of people getting it done, so I too got my name (just my last name, oh so professional) phonetically translated into Chinese characters and carved into the bottom of the stamp. I didn't buy the ink because it was outrageous, but I love my little stamp. It's stone and has a horse carved into the top, and is like blondish white rock.
When we went back outside we had the best surprise EVER. It was SNOWING! I caught a few snowflakes on my tongue and was far too excited for everyone else to handle. I love snow when it can't last long enough to be a sludgy mess, and the snows of China are just so exciting. :) Then we were off again—we drove another hour through the countryside to finally get to our big name destination of the day—the Great Wall of China. We were going to the Mutianyu part of the wall, which is far away from the center of Beijing but is also far less crowded and only Chinese locals really go there. The trees were all brown and soon we were driving up into the mountains. Finally, we pulled into a parking lot, where we all bundled up against the cold and got out. We could see the wall at the top of the mountains, far away, and began to start our climb up. We walked through a narrow street lined with TONS of shops—I definitely got a I <3 Beijing shirt. I love haggling. I also found a lovely bracelet. But anyway, we walked up until we got to a cable car. Me and a four other people got into the orange cable car #1, and we began to climb up the hill. It was so cool. I wish I could explain how the foliage looked, because we don't really have anything like it in California (mostly because we don't have seasons). Just scarce and brown and yellow grass. I loved it.
Anyway, we got to the top. I got a pack of Oreos and a green tea (others were getting beer) and finally, finally, set foot on the Great Wall of China.
It was everything I wanted it to be and more. There weren't very many people around because it was near the end of the day and the setting sun was lighting everything up orange, so my pictures all came out amazing. The wall stretched up and down mountains, turning this way and that with little turrets in between. In the turrets were little stone pathways with windows. I didn't envy the people who were doing the Hiking on the Great Wall trip, because it was freezing up there, but I was having such an amazing time running up and down the 3 inch to 3 foot stairs that I forgot all about being cold. I looked out and wanted to fall off the wall into Mongolia, but I think the country border is further back now. :( Rats.
All of a sudden it was over all too fast, and we had walked along the wall to the second cable cars. We were up there for a good hour, admiring the way the sun glazed over the Chinese countryside and reflecting off the towns below. And finally, we had our very last adventure—we were going to toboggan down the mountain. There was a steel track that snaked around trees and over valleys all the way back down to the bottom.
The group ahead of me took all the sleds, so I waited a while for one to come up. And then I had the ride of a lifetime. I raced to the bottom, with tears leaking out of my eyes due to the wind and cold and laughing hysterically. One man shouted something at me in Chinese, undoubtedly to slow down, but there was just no way. It was one of the most joyous moments of my entire trip. At the bottom, slowing to a stop with tears streaming down my face and a huge grin, I must have looked like quite a sight.
After doing a little more bargaining with the shop owners, we took off to go back to central Beijing. An hour and a half later we got to our destination—the Flying Acrobats Show, which was in this little theater. I bought some popcorn that said "American' Popcorn" on it and an apple juice. THE POPCORN TASTED LIKE FRUIT LOOPS. Everyone I gave it to said the same, so I ended up putting it down and getting an ice cream bar to get the taste out of my mouth—I know, I'm a fatty. But the weirdest part was that other people with the same bag of popcorn had a different tasting popcorn! Chinese foods are strange.
Anyway, the acrobatics show. Basically, all of today has taught me that Chinese people are superhuman immortals who can do crazy amazing things, from the awesome kung fu to the acrobatics. It was an INCREDIBLE show. First of all I wish all my theater tech friends had been there to see how epic the lights were—there were lasers and it was set to music and it was just put together in such a dramatic, epic way. There was no storyline, not really, but just were all these awesome scenes. There were warlords spring boarding off a plank and doing flips in the air, women dressed like swans who could balance on one hand after having climbed to the top of two other people, a woman who created a very Jenga-like stack of chairs that she then balanced on—it was pretty nuts. Eight people fit onto this bicycle and did tricks on it with fans, so it looked like a flaming phoenix at the end. My favorite was this hug contraption that came down from the ceiling that almost looked like a zipper ride—two man-sized hamster wheels on a spinning circuit, and they would do tricks while making it spin, like jump rope or walk outside the wheels onto the actual contraption. It was so incredibly amazing. During this entire performance I would gasp and then start laughing. I'm sure I must be a real joy to sit next to. ALSO THERE WERE CHINESE YOYO TRICKS.
I can't even describe all the great acts there were. I didn't get the DVD at the store, but I did get the CD because it was pretty cheap and I loved every song they had up there—it was some epic power music to write too! We definitely had a lot to talk about when we went to dinner later.
Dinner was a few blocks away and was the most amazing Chinese food we've had on this trip so far—I'm not gonna lie, we haven't had the best Chinese food of my life on this trip, which kind of surprises me. But still, everything about this place was awesome. Egg drop soup, garlic eggplant, kung-pao chicken, white rice, fried beef, beef and cucumber—it was all just amazing. We talked a little about what had been going on the past few days, as I'm kind of freaking out over the fact that my partner for my paper and debate in CSI just left the ship to go back home, so I don't know what I'm going to do. We also talked about how much we've changed over our time on SAS—how we'd scoffed at the idea of the ship being our "beacon of hope" and how true it was now!
Now we're just back in our Holiday Inn. I just killed a gigantic spiky cockroach, which is now belly-up under a coffee mug near the TV. Hopefully there are none in my bag. Aside from that, epic times today. I will never forget my Great Wall experience!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
November 13 2010 / Beijing, China
We parked near where I think was the north end of the Forbidden City, which is great because the city faces south and most people come in from that way, so in the morning our exploration was almost quiet. The Forbidden City is considered to be the biggest museum in the world, with apparently 9,999.5 rooms and stretches across 170 acres. A wide moat surrounds it. The architecture inside is so incredibly beautiful—I took about a hundred pictures of just different shots of the temple spires. We learned about a few traditions—there are open doorway arches in the courtyards that connect the courtyards, and they're in a square, meaning that there is a short wall on the ground, too. Women have to step over this with their right foot and men with their left. If you step on it, the spirits come and take you away, being quite bothered by this. I would feel grumpy if someone stepped on me too.
Basically as opposed to Versailles or a castle or something like that, exploring the Forbidden City was done almost entirely outside, exploring the courtyards, wandering through hallways and up steps, admiring statues and gardens. The ground was ingrained with rocks, which people would walk across barefoot to get a foot reflexology massage, which I thought was awesome. There was even a stone bat in the ground, that if you jumped on gave you good luck! Occasionally we would go inside to see little museum-type displays about how the concubines lived and things like that, which I'm happy to bring back to my WIHC class. Man, I can't even really describe how it was out there. We were there for three hours and we only saw about 20% of the palace (though granted some of the palace is still off-limits to common people). But the central court area was so incredibly massive. I loved being able to find places to take pictures from—I think in this case pictures really are going to be worth a thousand words.
Exiting through the south, I turned around at one point to see my good friend Chairman Mao looking sternly southward. I hadn't expected that to be part of the temple, so I kind of didn't believe it was "the real deal" at first. But then as I looked around, I realized that across the street there was a MASSIVE open square—the largest public square in the world, Tiananmen Square. We took a group picture, in front of the temple, but I didn't really want to spend 15 bucks on it—I think I'll try to get someone to scan it for me. :P But what I DID get was THE MOST INCREDIBLE THING EVER—a PANDA HAT. EVERYONE was wearing them inside and I was excited to go and haggle with a vendor for them, while of course pretending to not be interested at all. :B I'm going to be so put out being in the United States and having fixed prices on things. =/ So I ran around Tiananmen Square for a while in my panda hat and imagined being Tank Guy for a while.
We didn't get to stay very long, which I was sad about, but at this point we were pretty hungry so we walked a ways off to the buses. We ran across the China Guide independent group, of which there are 200 students in, so that was kind of neat.
Lunch was in the Silk Market building!!! I was so freaking excited. Someone had said in CSI that you can barter things down to about a fifth of their normal price there, so I was STOAKED. Of course we didn't have any time to do any shopping—only an hour for lunch. But I was ready to inhale it, and so I did. Lunch was hilariously enough pizza, except it was pizza in the sense that there was also some spaghetti and the rest of the buffet dishes were chicken and eggrolls and things of that nature. I have gotten kind of pro using chopsticks so I inhaled things within about fifteen minutes and then sprinted out the door!
The Silk Market was a big, tall rectangular building. We ate on the 6th floor but it definitely was at least 8. But first we went down to the jewelry floors, where my magpie tendencies towards shiny things started going in FULL FORM. Imagine—columns of tables and jewelry cases, all with approximately the same things, some differences, with sunglasses and electric appliances on the perimeter. Downstairs are kid's toys, and clothing below that. I didn't even really get through the jewelry and kid's stuff before I had to go! But I was browsing around and found this really great leopard ring that I bargained down to a fourth of what it had been, and I really like it so no regrets :B I was also browsing around in this cool tea store. I really want a tea set, but I know that I shouldn't buy one in Beijing so I decided to not get anything. I also saw thes great 3 in 1 tea cups, that have a lid, strainer (for loose tea) and cup that were beautiful. However, as I was holding one of them up, the lid slipped out of my hand and smashed against the tile floor. Good thing I was holding a cheap one, less than 4 USD—I bought it, of course, and the lady working there had the niceness to not look too happy about it.
After exploring a couple of lower floors I sprinted out the door to the bus, and got inside five minutes before we left to this school we were visiting. It was an hour drive through Beijing and out into the outskirts area, so I kind of curled up and dozed in the bus—not a lot of recharge time for a day of running around. When we got there, it felt like fall in Seattle, kind of—nippy air, beautiful trees with yellowing leaves, everyone bundled up.
The school, which is kind of like an school for homeless children, is called Shi Qinghau. About 100 boys and girls live there and play there. When we arrived, they were clapping and singing and we gave them all high-fives. Then we explored the area. The girl's rooms were tiny—there was more than one big room, but eight girls fit onto four beds in one room—that's rough. Me and four other girls also had to use the bathroom, which created the Worst Squatty Potty Experience Ever. The girl's bathroom was awful—8 toilets in a room with no barriers, all of them overflowing with urine, shit, and sometimes blood. No toilet paper. Also, there were windows to the outside—dirty ones, but you could definitely see inside. After awkwarding around, we finally settled on guarding the door while going inside one by one—it was the only way we could get around it. I was really D: about the conditions, but I guess it's all they have.
Anyway, the buildings were all brick, a little old, with courtyards all around. There was broken glass embedded into the brick fences, which was a little contradictory next to the murals. All the kids wore army camouflage and red jackets. After that nice bit of awkward, we went out and played Tug o' War with the kids. At first many people were saying "oh, we should let them win, durp dur" and I was like NO WAY GUYS LOOK AT THEM THEY ARE TERRIFYING. And they were!!! They beat us twice. During that time a girl from my poetry class told me that on the day I was late to World Poetry, my professor said that my poems marked me as an "established poet" or something like that, was her words. THIS MAKES ME GLOW INSIDE. I love that class and have spent hours on these poems so I'm really glad my work is showing. :)
Then we went to the wall where they had outlined the beginning of a great mural on this wall, that had LOVE and robots and panda bears and a boy and a girl dancing with a cat. It was pretty Asian and pretty great, and we helped paint it! I worked on the bird before noticing how enthusiastic the kids were getting with the paint, so I fled to talk to some other folks. When we were leaving, the kids lined up and chanted, or something that sounded like that, it might have been singing—I was too busy being distracted by the line formation and the army clothes. It was very military status.
Then we were off again. I did enjoy my time there, but mostly I wish I had been told we would be painting so I could have dressed accordingly. :< I kind of looked outside at the Saturday traffic and buildings that went by. After an hour and a half or so, we arrived at the Roast Duck Restaurant—a restaurant on the 4th story of a building. We sat at circular tables, had free beer but no water (which sort of cancel each other out) and ate lots of stuff. There was this weird gelatinous meat bar things that I was like NO DAY BUT TODAY to, which was a mistake. Jellymeat never goes down well, even in China. But other things were good—there was lemon tart chicken (it almost was candylike, it was so strange), an egg and beef mixture, some kung-pao chicken, fried rice, beef meatballs and finally peking duck, which was sliced and we ate it with little rice pancakes with plum sauce and onions. OM NOM NOM. I sat next to Ariel and this one girl whose name I always forget, and had a perfectly lovely time.
We eventually went back to the hotel. Lots of people, including me, were talking about going out later tonight to that fun bar district, but I'm so exhausted now and I have no idea what that district is called, let alone how to get there. Being as that tomorrow is another big day (GREAT WALL!) I think it might be better if I just get some sleep.
Having an amazing adventure. Love you guys!
Friday, November 12, 2010
November 12 2010 / Beijing, China
After a little while of being on the non-banned Facebook (Hong Kong is so different from the communist mainland, it's so strange), we finally hopped on the plane. Julie and I asked people if we could switch so we could sit together (both tour groups were on the same plane), so we did that and before taking off we finalized our Japan plans. I think it's just going to be us two travelling together, and I really like our game plan. Here it is:
Day I—Explore Kobe. Steph goes to Kyoto spend the night, Julie stays in Kobe.
Day II—Julie and Steph meet at Kyoto Dry Zen Gardens and later explore Kyoto. Spend night in Kyoto.
Day III—Travel to Osaka. Stay in Buddhist monastery Katelyn recommended for the night.
Day IV—Travel to Tokyo. Harujuku district, karaoke, anime, and whatever else. Meet up with Lorelei that night.
Day V—Finish up in Tokyo. End in Yokohama.
GLORIOUS. We really want to see the Miazaki Museum so hopefully that's en route, as well as a cat café in Tokyo. :B We'll see.
Anyway, so the plane ride was long and uneventful. It's three hours from Hong Kong to Beijing, so Julie and I just talked about psychology and sociology (as we were studying these while flying) and I wrote a good two pages of my paper, which needs to be 5 pages, so I'm feeling good. After three hours, we finally touched down in Beijing as the sun was beginning to set and the sky was glowing orange.
The airport was HUGE. We walked through 2 thermo-detectors (as if you're sick they don't let you into the country) and we were just saying something like "Man, I thought Beijing was supposed to be crowded" when BOOM. We rounded a corner and there were thousands of people filling up this massive spot in front of Immigration Control in lines. Good. Lord. Lauren, Julie, and I got into a line, but as soon as a security guard waved some people to the "Chinese Nationals" line instead of the "Foreigners," we basically bullrushed the line. It still took a while to get to the desk though. No one thinks that I am the same woman as in my passport. They always look at it skeptically and go, "IS THIS YOU?" But eh.
So we were like the first people through. We hopped on another inter-airport train and were off to the exit, which was a long way away surprisingly. The Beijing airport must be absolutely huge. But we finally got there and found our guide, and I talked to my professor for a while, as well as her daughter. We both really liked our time in Cambodia and were also talking about white privilege and Chapman and California. It was awesome.
By six we had everyone and were able to pile into our buses. I said goodbye to Julie and was off. Once again I had my own seat, so I didn't mind much. :B We got onto the freeway, which was packed with people, but I didn't mind—I just loved looking around at all the scenery, which was mostly big buildings with Chinese lettering in red. Beijing is not as compact and tall as Hong Kong, but is smaller and more spread out—not every building is a skyscraper. :P But I still felt this intense love for the city already, and was just… in a constant state of disbelief. I am in China. I mean, wow.
We got to this district near a pool of water, surrounded by red Chinese lanterns. All around us were bars lit up with neon lights, some blasting music, some with live bands in them! It was the coolest little street I've ever seen, so alive! Yet there weren't too many folks around, as it was still so early. But then it was time for our little "drive" to a local family where we would be eating our meals—by trishaw! A trishaw is a two-person cart that's pulled by a man in a bicycle, and it was EPIC! We were freezing because the weather was so chilly, but he put a big blanket over me and Rebekah, and we were off. It was the coolest thing ever. I was getting really emotional, just looking around and being like, I'm in Beijing, I'm really here.
Finally we stopped behind those bars to quieter, more residential areas. We had split into three groups and we were eating at a little house where a woman welcomed us. The room had plastic tile floors and beautiful paintings on the wall. There were two tables, one of which I sat down at. She also had a yellow beagle that had a face just like Rover's—getting a little white, but still puppylike. :) The food she brought out was OUTSTANDING. There were chicken carrot, eggplant, tomato and egg, pepper and beef, mixed chopped vegetables, and white rice dishes. They were all delicious but devoured ours quickly. We actually got pretty grumpy at the other table because they left all their plates mostly full but wouldn't give them to us. Then the lady showed some of her husband's artwork to us. He won the 2007 National Painting award (or something like that) for this beautiful abstract picture of flowers. I wish that I had had the money on hand for it, because I knew my parents would love it. But I did buy a painting of this incredible autumn scene with birch trees and white cranes, and it was only a little over 30 dollars—totally worth it for the incredible twist of art styles and beauty of the piece.
Then we were saying goodbye and out the door again. Our trishaw guy got competitive on the way back and would cycle hard and fast to pass other people. He also was a dangerous driver—at one point the side of our cart hit the wall, and another time it ran into another cart! But none of us were hurt and we were just cackling madly the whole time. It was so great.
Then we had a nice half hour bus ride back to the hotel—a Holiday Inn, lol. However, this is the most ritzy Holiday Inn ever. I'm rooming with a sophomore named Amy who seems very nice. It's a small room with a "great view" (said Amy… when I opened the curtains, I saw a big air conditioning pipe in my face and a rooftop!) but it's so much bigger than the cabins on the ship that I absolutely love the size—both the beds are even against walls! :P Feels just like the ship, only without the rocking. I forgot my doxy pill this morning, so Amy kindly gave me a granola bar because doxy just destroys my stomach. I hate these dumb pills, but I'm sure I'd hate malaria even more.
Lots of folks are going out to a karaoke bar across the way, but I'm staying in tonight. That'll be for tomorrow night, when I have money from an ATM and don't want to rest. For now, I need to sleep, write, and dream of the Forbidden Palace and Tiananmen Square.
…Just kidding.
As I wrote the above, which was truly my intention, my roommate came back in and told me that she was going to a little mini-mart around the corner with a couple other folks. As a visit to the ATM was in order, I agreed! We walked around the block and walked into a tiny, sketchy shop with street food roasting outside. Inside were all sorts of snacks—there were white rabbit candies from elementary school! I bought them but they were stale. :( But still, pretty exciting to get them here. I also found one dollar HELLO KITTY bright green kid's mittens. They are awesome and no one can tell me otherwise. A bowl of spicy ramen is also mine for when I get hungry. All this stuff was less than four bucks, so I'm happy. There was a creepy guy kind of creepin' though, so it was kind of weird. He was kind of put off from hitting on my companions by the looming shaved head woman, though. I'm such a fan of this haircut! <3