Thoughts and Photos from China

I'm sure there is nothing new to say about China. I really just want to post our mailing address for friends to copy.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

It's December 22, so eat your dumplings!

In our last post we mentioned the pervasive Chinese health-consciousness.  Many Americans are also focused on a healthy lifestyle, but the Chinese concern seems different in at least two ways.  First, many of the specific ideas about healthy living are different—and I am still far from understanding them.  But second, is the widespread acceptance of their views of healthiness.  In the west we know we should eat our vegetables and avoid junk food; the difference in China is they actually do these things!  Here are some examples.
Eat your vegetables.  The Chinese really do this.  They may bypass sweets and meats for a good plate of vegetables.  Some of their favorite vegetables are familiar to us, like carrots and broccoli, but many are new to our western tastebuds, like lotus root or numerous kinds of greens.  In general, these are all tasty—though the abundant use of garlic or hot pepper can make them harder for us to enjoy.  One pleasant surprise is the common use of sweet peppers (bell peppers).  They are so expensive in the States and so cheap and plentiful here.  What America needs is a good five-cent bell pepper!



One unpleasing aspect of the local diet is the pervasive use of red beans as a flavoring.  Red beans show up in many dishes, but also in snacks and desserts, like moon cakes (similar to western fruit cakes) flavored potato chips, red bean flavored croissants, and red bean flavored ice cream.  Because I love ice cream, I had to try the red bean variety.  Because I love ice cream, I don’t plan to try it again.  Somehow, mixing vegetables and desserts violates a basic culinary principle of the universe!


                                            Red bean ice cream

You are what you eat.  If you want to improve your eyesight, eat eyes.  If you want to strengthen your heart, eat heart.  Thus the whole animal gets consumed here.  We have a few similar ideas in our western diets, but this sort of thought seems very common in China.  A related belief is that it improves your digestion to drink the broth leftover from the cooking of your meat. 
Dress warm.  The Chinese attitude toward dressing warm is seemingly universal, but difficult for a westerner to understand.  On a certain day of the autumn, all the students show up for class in long sleeve shirts and sweaters—even if it is still hot outside.  On a later date, everyone puts their coats on, and rebukes us westerners who are still in short  sleeves because we are comfortable that way.  Once donned, the coats remain on inside and out—due to the poor heating in many buildings (and no heat in some poorer homes!)  I’m told that the coats stay on long in the spring as well. Some westerners have tried to explain the Chinese idea of slipping gently into the changes of seasons.  Don’t fight the elements, adapt.  It probably is healthier to live closer to the natural temperatures than our western practice of overheating our homes in winter and overcooling them in summer.  It is certainly healthier for the environment not to use so much fuel fighting nature!  Our western mindset seems driven by a high value on personal comfort—so I check the weather forecast everyday to decide what clothes to wear.  The Chinese mindset seems to be based on the calendar not the thermometer, dressing according to the season.

Of course, Chinese college students are not always consistent in how they dress.  While the girls regularly wear hats or ear muffs in the winter, guys usually don’t.  It’s just not cool. As in the west, fashion can trump common sense.  

Eat your dumplings.  Some of their beliefs seem superstitious.  Yesterday, two of our students invited us to go out for dumplings on Thursday December 22.  The belief is that this is the coldest day of the winter and so you should eat dumplings.  We have heard two explanations: either it is to be strong or to keep your ears from freezing.  I don’t know how seriously our Chinese friends hold to this belief, but we plan to enjoy of the dumplings and maybe our ears won’t freeze as a result.  To be fair, many of our western beliefs about food are superstitious as well: for example, eating carrots improves your eyesight, or “an apple a day keeps the doctor away” (the Chinese would change that to “a pear a day”).

An unexpected local custom designed to enhance health is the use of pebbles as a paving material for sidewalks.  We are told that the pebbles are supposed to massage your feet as you walk and thus stimulate blood flow which encourages general healthiness.  A similar reason is given for wearing flip flops with bumpy soles.



At the heart of the Chinese thinking may be the concept of a personal qi (chi)—a spiritual force within each person that if kept in balance produces a general healthiness.  Chinese traditional medicine, including acupuncture, is designed to restore health by restoring balance to one’s chi.  There are clinics that practice traditional and clinics that practice western style medicine here.  Fortunately, our health has been good enough so that we have not had to visit either since we have been here.

Tai chi is an exercise program of slow movements intended to bring balance to one’s qi.  It is popular with the elderly in China.  It is becoming popular in the west as a yoga-ish exercise intended for stress relief.  In China tai chi is also one of the martial arts.  I asked a mature Chinese believer what he thinks of tai chi.  He replied that he sees no problem with it as an exercise program, but he would not approve of using it as a spiritual practice based on the idea of adjusting one’s personal spirit.



This idea of balance is at the heart of a Chinese worldview.  The concept of the complementary pair of forces: yin and yang, is one of many expressions of this ideal of balance.   Balance is also a fundamental ideal in interpersonal relationships: social harmony is very important.  I am still very far from understanding the ideal of balance, but I am sure that it is the basis for many aspects of Chinese thought and life—including health.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

23,000 Doctors

Can you imagine getting medical advice from 23,000 doctors?  That's what it seems like at Sias University when you get a cold.  Every student has a remedy and tells you about it.  Nian Ci (Jean) is currently suffering through her third cold of the fall.  The worst part, or so it seems to us, is the open invitation sickness provides to anyone to offer free advice.  And they expect you to follow it.

For example, the most common suggested cure for a cold is drinking lots of water-- hot water.  We heard that again today.  Or perhaps you should use the water to make soup using red sugar (we had no idea what red sugar is so the student went to the store and bought us a bag of brown sugar, labeled red sugar here).  Nian Ci learned from another student that there is a medicine with her name, Nian Ci, which is also a good treatment for the cold, but we never went to the pharmacy to pick it up.  Another common prescription, of course, is to dress warm.  One day when I greeted a student as I arrived at class and said that I had an upset stomach, she pointed at my short sleeved shirt and said, "No wonder!  Put more clothes on!"  (it was still warm outside!)  Other bits of advice have included changing my custom of drinking a cup of coffee upon awakening; "You shouldn't have coffee on an empty stomach."  Finally, my favorite prescription is to eat more pears.  A "pear" is not the fruit we call a pear but a "papple"-- a pear-apple hybrid that is common here.  Eating lots of pears, it seems, is the cure for the common cold.  While Nian Ci has had frequent colds so far this year, I have only had one.  Or rather, I felt one coming on.  So that night at supper I ate a pear.  The next day the cold was gone!  Now I'm a believer.
Does some of this advice remind you of the remedies your mom forced you to take when you were young?  Many foreign teachers have exclaimed to their student- doctors that "You remind me of my mother!", to which they smile appreciatively.  There is no higher compliment than to be compared to a mother.
In my next blog entry I will continue the topic of being healthy in a Chinese culture-- a fascinating study.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Our Chinese Names

Perhaps you are wondering how we became Gao Fei and Nian Ci.  Here are the Chinese characters, Gao Fei on top.

高飞

念慈
At the beginning of the semester, Greg decided to have a contest for the 235 students in his classes to give us Chinese names.  Names have meaning in China and the selection of the right name is important.  We promised the winners would get an American meal with us, and we took them out for pizza.  If students wanted to enter, they had to turn in a suggested name and an explanation why they thought it was a suitable name. 
We got over 100 entries!  Some picked Chinese names that sounded similar to our English names-- this is similar to the way many of their English names were chosen: they sounded like their Chinese names.  Some picked names because they thought they would be easy for us to pronounce-- that was thoughful!  Some named us after national heroes or respected family members.  Some gave us their own family name-- an honor!  One suggested name for Greg was a student's grandfather-- that was a real honor!  One even suggested the Chinese word yeye with means "grandfather" for Greg-- that was a little too honorable!  Many students gave us complimentary names-- like intelligent or lucky.  For both of us, the final selection was challenging. 
The name that was runner-up for Greg was wei zhixing which is both the name of a noted educator and an educational concept meaning thought + action  I liked that.  But in the end I chose Gao Fei, a common Chinese name which means "fly high".  On the first day of classes I had introduced myself to my students by saying that my parents had given me "more wings than roots."  Because our family moved frequently due to my father's job, I never had one place I considered "home" but I developed a love for travel-- more wings than roots.  The winning students picked up on this idea and named me Fly High.  (On our recent trip to Xi'an I saw a restaurant called Fly High Pizza Inn --Gao Fei Pizza Inn.  Maybe my name is not as meaningful as I had thought.)
Meanwhile Jean also had a delightful challenge choosing among the many suggestions for her name.  The runner-up was "American Friend of China", a very meaningful name.  But in the end she chose Nian Ci which is a beautiful sounding name meaning "kindhearted".  We have since learned that it is the name of a popular movie star, a character in a classic Chinese story, a name applied to the Buddha, and a local medicine used to treat colds.  The main downside of Nian Ci is that it is difficult to pronounce.  Jean may choose to change it next semester for that reason.
So that is how we became Gao Fei and Nian Ci.  The selection process was both fun, touching as we experienced the warmth of our students, and a good way to get to know the few winners in a more personal way.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Our Xi'an Trip


Can you imagine building and burying an entire life-size army of replica soldiers as part of your funeral arrangements?  If you are not an ancient Chinese emperor, you probably cannot imagine it.  But Qinshinhuang, the first emperor of a unified China, was sure he would need an army in the afterlife. So 2200 years ago his workers made this amazing army to serve him after his death. We visited the excavation site in Xi'an, his capital city.  If you can barely see the terracotta warriors in the picture above because of the heads in the way, then you are getting the full experience as we had it-- shoving and peering around countless spectators (including one very cute redhead-- also from the Qin dynasty I am sure-- but she won't reveal her age)! 

To see the 8th wonder of the world it was worth the crowds.

If it seems excessive to bury an entire life size army with each emporer-- evidently the Chinese came to agree.  A few hundred years later they were still buring entire armies with their deceased emperors but they had reduced the size to about 18 inches tall.  We visited a second tomb and saw the mini-terracotta warriors as well.  They are all missing arms because the arms were made of wood and did not survive the centuries.  They were buried in full sets of clothing but that also did not survive.

In the next photo we are enjoying a delicious meal at one of the best dumpling restaurants in Xi'an.  The food in my chopsticks is lotus, not dumpling.  It is also quite tasty.  The meal was accompanied by a traditional Chinese music and dance show-- fantastic!


We also went to the largest mosque in China.  It uses a pagoda for a minaret.


The Xi'an trip took 4 days during the week long school break for the national holiday (sort of like the American 4th of July), the first week of October.  Our tour group consisted of 40 foreign teachers from Sias University. Here are a few of us taking a walk on the 600 year old Xi'an city wall. 

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

OUR MAILING ADDRESS-- CHRISTMAS CARDS ARE WELCOME

Peter Hall, Sias International University, 168 Renmin Road, Xinzheng, Henan, China 451150
or
Peter Hall, 中国河南省新郑市人民路168号西亚斯国际学院, 451150   CHINA

Use our American names in the address-- not our Chinese names.