About Me :)
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Back in the US
Switching back entirely to English is interesting. The environment makes it a smooth transition, because of course I have grown up speaking only English in this area, around the same people, so it's simply picking up where I left off; I can simply think and speak, instead of think, translate, and speak. I'm concerned for my spoken Chinese though -- my difficulty with learning Chinese has been largely due to my rare actual usage of it. As I saw in Tianjin, what you learn in a classroom and from a textbook isn't necessarily what you use in day-to-day conversation. I'll have to really try to stay in tune with Chinese news, podcasts, tv/movies, and other media to at least keep my listening comprehension in practice.
Things I miss about China:
the prices,
our Nankai teachers (language, tai chi, etc.), and our new friend Zhao!,
being outside every day (you can get away with staying inside virtually all day here),
the crowds of people,
the ridiculous extravagance of the KTV industry,
"gangster clubs,"
E-mart,
taxi rides (hair-raising but fun and convenient, esp when the drivers are chatty!)
Things I do NOT miss about China:
the lack of toilet paper in public facilities,
the standards of "sanitation" in public facilities,
spitting,
risking my life in traffic on foot or inside a bus/taxi,
the option of only Chinese or "American" food,
the lack of diversity within the population,
mosquitoes, (although I tried doing tai chi in the backyard the other day, and my ankles were definitely bitten by other equally-enthusiastic insects)
the laundry facilities (I love dryers like I love sandwiches)
It's great to see friends and family again, and now that I've been back, my trip to China feels like it was months ago. The purpose of the trip was to expose us to as much of the different parts of China as possible, which it did. From here on, it's up to me to individually start to pursue the rest of it.
Thanks for reading, those of you who've kept up with my blogs! Stay tuned...who knows, maybe there will be a RobynInChina2009.com!!
再见!!
Thursday, July 17, 2008
I was Shanghai'd!

Aside from the skyscrapers everywhere, I actually was not as blown away as I thought I would have been. Shanghai is featured in hundreds of films, travel reviews, novels, etc. as this exotic hub of Asia that is the epitome of style and modernity, but I couldn't help feeling underwhelmed. It definitely had a more modern feel to it than the other cities we visited this trip, but I suppose I was expecting an environment similar to Tokyo or Hong Kong (the Tsim Sha Tsui district), and comparatively, I didn't feel it measured up.
The night scene is definitely a treat; these pictures were taken at The Bund (I'm still not sure what a "bund" is, but I'm guessing it's a strip of vendors next to a river) around 9:30, 10 at night. Every five minutes a different ferry sails by, and many buildings have intricate electric light designs rotating through the various patterns. The real sight that evening was the memorial commemorating the Chinese civil war between the Kuo Ming Tang and the Communists:
This one is from the front, at the base -->
Granted, we weren't able to spend a considerable amount of time in Shanghai, so perhaps my perceptions are skewed, and the city is actually everything I have heard it is. That's definitely possible, and I do know there is no way you can accurately grasp the concept and magnitude of any city in two days. Every city has so many aspects to it that many people who themselves live there never see everything there is to see. I'll just have to go back and do my own investigating :)
Outside the city, we visited an international school, and were able to sit in on a few elementary and middle school-level classes. One part of the student population is made up of Chinese children taking English classes for the summer, the other part is comprised of non-Chinese children learning Chinese (many students' parents have moved to China for work/business). All the children learn in classroom environments, and have a full day of Chinese (for all children), art, math, English (for the Chinese children), and sports. I think we all learned something new just sitting in on the Chinese classes!
During the weekend, we were also lucky enough to see a temple in Shanghai (although it started raining halfway through), a river cruise with some gorgeous scenery and fish ponds, and Dr. Chen's brother's factory in neighboring Hangzhou.
Another whirlwind weekend, so much to see and do, but we managed to fit in one last kareoke night!!

Monday, July 7, 2008
Terracotta Soldiers!!
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Beijing Opera!
The amount of preparation is really incredible, and there was an extremely efficient team. Makeup was used to create facial features that are actually exaggerated to the point of being artificial (see: my eyebrows.), all the hair you see consists of several pieces, all flowers and jewels around the front are added individually, and then the clothing is all puieced together by about three people. The downside was that
To the left is Li Laoshi, teaching us (or trying to, haha) to sing Beijing Opera.
Tomorrow it's off to Xi'an to see the Qin Emperor's terracotta army and a martial arts school!
I'll write later on, hi to everyone!!
Miss you!
~Robyn
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Welcome to Beijing! aka, "So, I climbed the Great Wall of China yesterday"
We passed through the main gate and then I found I was not to be let down. It opened up into a vast area of palaces and relics, and the first
The picture here doesn't do it justice, but imagine stepping into this site and thinking about the history behind it all. Trust me, it's pretty breathtaking.
We then left and went downtown for an evening of the famed Beijing Opera. I studied a little bit of Chinese opera at Maryland, in my ARTH 489 class, and I was loving it. I can understand it was probably not too interesting for some of the others, because many of the sounds are piercing and not in accordance with Western music tastes. It was great to see how it is still revered after so many years, and I'm glad we were able to see it live.
~Robyn
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Week Two - Part Two
I'm having some camera picture loading difficulties, so no pictures this time, but more will follow soon, I promise. :)
Yesterday was my class's day of final exams, so there aren't any classes for the rest of the summer. As a result, Nankai University has graciously had two teachers step forward to personally teach myself and my roomie Monica for the remainder of our stay, beginning this morning. Classes are from 8:30a-10:10a and 10:30a-12:10p as usual, only this time it's like having a private tutor. The classes are entirely in Chinese, and let me tell you, trying to explain things like "luckily" and "movie director" in Chinese to us is quite amusing. I have learned a lot today alone, so I'm definitely looking forward to seeing how much I can absorb during the rest of my stay. One thing that's interesting, for those of you with a penchant for linguistics, is how varied the pronounciation is within ONE dialect. For example, the Mandarin word for "who" is "shei," which I've always been taught was pronounced "shay." But here, people don't recognize what you're saying unless you say "shui," which sounds more like "shway." I know that probably doesn't interest 90% of you reading this, but it just earmarks what a tough time learning a foreign language can be, especially when literally billions of people speak it. I've had so many different teachers, I wonder what I sound like to a native speaker; probably extremely geographically confused with my myriad of accetns, if nothing else. (high school Spanish students, you know what I'm talking about - the "th" thing, lol)
As a result of having virftually one-on-one lessons, I will be having a hefty amount of homework each night. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but this is the time when I miss my instant internet access I was so accustomed to at home. No opening a laptop and having an immediate connection with the rest of the world. Also something I miss, my mom recently sent me an email about one of the best shows on American television these days, So You Think You Can Dance. I definitely miss my call-in-and-vote shows. (American Idol, see you next season!) :)
Today, I went and had my hair cut at a Kerastase salon (a well-respected international hair product and styling company, for those of you who prefer the $7 haircut and are unfamiliar with this particular line...ie Dad...lol). I had an AMAZING head massage, and they microscoped my scalp and hair (I could have done without that, you know I'm queasy with seeing my own cells), and then I showed them a picture in a magazine of the style I was looking for and...no. NOTHING like what the picture was. I'll have to post a pic next time, but let's just say, I'm as uber-stylish as the native Chinese girls here now. Which means I feel ridiculous with the result. Half of me feels extremely Chinese, the other half more like a 50s actress, with the volume and flips and rounded-to-the-side bangs. Short in front of my shoulders, long in back, my brother would definitely call this a not-so-distant relative of the mullet. I am undecided as to what to do right now...but it did cost me only about $10 US. Small price for all the hair they took off...I'm leaning more toward just keeping it completely tamed with clips and hair thingy's. To be continued...
Alright, that's all for now. Beijing Saturday!!
Zaijian!
~Robyn
Monday, June 23, 2008
Getting Into Week 2...
Alright, so this post is infinitely more comfortable as I've discovered the computer lab on campus, and no longer have to sit in an environment of greasy keyboards, obsessed gamers, cigarette smoke (it's apparently fine to spit and throw cigarettes out on the floor), and generally suspect activities. It's raining very heavily outside, and three classmates and I swam our way over here after a dinner of fried pork and pineapple, and pork and seafood dumplings. I've never had so much pork in my life since being in China, by the way. My earlier thoughts of considering being a vegetarian have been put on hold for this month, as it would be virtually impossible to stay fed here were I to not eat meat.
The rain is welcome, as it's usually quite muggy and humid, and it is actually causing the smog to disperse temporarily. This is a picture of one of the bridges into Tianjin. Two things to notice: first, the sculpture is in the style of Western art, but maintains Chinese physical features, and second, the hazy slightly brown air is actually accurate of what we see every day.
As an aside, during the same bus ride we went over that bridge, we came across several amusing signs like this, warning against drunk driving (there is a car inside a wine glass, with various alcoholic beverage containers flying out the windows).
This past weekend we went to Tai An, the hometown of Confucius, or Kongzi. We were able to view the Kong graveyard, which currently contains 74 generations, from Kongzi himself, his son, grandson, and so on.
The area has become quite comericalized, with countless vendors selling the same things - personalized name "chops" and fans, fake jade jewelry, small figurines of Confucius and Mao, etc. We ran into hundreds of other tourists, all of them Asian. Aside from the historical sites, our group seemed like the main attraction everywhere we went. After leaving Confucius's town, we visited a site that had been erected in honor of the achievements and contributions of another great Chinese philosopher, Mencius. This was a much quieter and less busy area, and non-Chinese are rare here. The elderly and children especially would stop walking/biking/playing and just stand and stare as we walked by, with expressions as if saying "they really do exist!" These reactions have become the norm for our group, and the following day, Sunday, when we ascended Mount Tai (Tai Shan), a child asked us if we would take a photograph with him. It doesn't bother me, and I always wonder what runs through people's minds when they are one of those with the incredulous looks on their faces. I wonder what kind of international exposure children receive in different areas of China. It's interesting to contrast with my own life; one of my groupmates Mike commented that for us in the U.S. to have such a reaction it would take something extremely exotic, or perhaps a celebrity. Even then, living in the Washington, D.C. area, celebrity sightings are not so rare.
The weekend was amazing, so many historically significant and culturally filled sites, I feel honored to have had the chance to see one of them, let alone all of them. This coming weekend were are headed to Beijing and the Forbidden Palace and Great Wall, and the following weekend is what I am really looking forward to, Xi'an and the terracotta soldiers of the ruthless Qin emperor Shi Huang.
I have found Chinese class to be tough to keep up with, both in class content and the actual class itself! This morning after t'ai ch'i and breakfast, I headed for class as usual, only to find for the second time that no one was there. Class schedules are highly dependant upon the teacher's schedule, and we somehow were not on the same page with the frequent changes. It turns out class had been moved to 1:00-4:40, instead of 8:30-12:10, so my roommate Monica and I took advantage of the free morning to go to the ever-reliable E-Mart (Yi Mai De) for some grocery
Thanks for your comments! It's time to get down to homework and then bed; tomorrow we have 7am t'ai chi as usual, and then our second round of wushu in the afternoon following classes and lunch. Sleep tonight is crucial, as last week's intro to wushu on Tuesday sent all of us into a week of pain and strained muscles! I'm looking forward to it though, I miss martial arts and getting a taste of it once more has convinced me to take it back up when I return to the U.S.
Hope you all are well, I miss all of you!
Zaijian!
~Robyn
Thursday, June 19, 2008
China!! Week One.
I arrived at Nankai University around 2am Monday morning, after a turbulent flight from DC to Minneapolis, a long and cramped flight to Tokyo (Tokyo's airport is amazing, so cheerful and technologically advanced), a smooth flight to Beijing, and a hair-raising 2hr bus ride to Tianjin.
Traffic here was the first thing I noticed - there are 8-lane freeways mostly, some with lane lines and some without (there's constant construction here, and our route didn't always consist of fully-completed highways). In town, there is a constant flow of vehicles, pedestrians, and bicycles. Traffic lights seem optional, and I would guess the average speed is about 30-40mph. Honking and bike bells are the communication used on a VERY frequent basis, but to alert other vehicles of your presence, not as an expression of road rage like the U.S. All mesh with each other on a dangerously fluid system, and I'm always amazed there aren't more collisions and deaths than there are.
Aside from the traffic, the pollution here is not as bad as I expected, but enough so that I am coughing at night, and walking in brown air during the day. The joke here is that there is never a sunny day in Tianjin because the sunshine hardly ever makes it through the constant artifically overcast air.
We as Americans stick out pretty obviously here, and the locals have no qualms about staring you in the face until you pass by. Interactions have all been very friendly, and very few people speak English. My Chinese is not at a functional every-day level, but the people of Tianjin are more than willing to help me get by with my "Chinglish."
I ventured to "Yi Mai De" aka E-Mart today by myself, armed with a shopping list of fruits, a calling card, and laundry detergent, and my limited knowledge of Mandarin, and made it there and back in one piece. The cash registers are stationed by two employees, not one; one does everything the one employee at grocery stores at home would do, and the other stands next to him/her and simply checks to see the items on the belt are properly on the belt. Maybe they do more; I haven't seen them do anything else yet. E-mart is this amazing business that is the equivalent of a Wal-Mart (but they have a real Wal-Mart here too, next to KFC and McDonald's and Starbucks, or "Xing Ba Ke Kafei"), but more upscale and with much friendlier personnel. As I was checking out, I noticed the Tesco logo, a United Kingdom chain, so I'm guessing they are partners or perhaps E-Mart is a subdivision.
Nutrition here is an active pursuit. Meals offered here are rich in carbohydrates, salt, and oil, with the occasional vegetable and meat, which I am not always in the mood for. It's mostly chicken and beef, noodles, rice, and tofu with some beef concoction on top. Dumplings made-to-order are abundant, and by far the best tasting dish on campus (so far). Breakfast is mostly different forms of bread, although omelettes were served once too. To get fruit and water isn't impossible, it is simply a separate action. No fruit is offered anywhere in restaurants; you have to go to grocery stores or outdoor markets and haggle for them. I was always diet-conscious at home, but it was generally satisfied by making differentiating decisions from within the refrigerator, not "what vitamins and minerals are now totally absent from my diet that I need to make a separate trip for?"
My time at the internet cafe built into the concrete wall under a freeway a block from the university is about up, so I will post again as soon as I can.
Hello to everyone from home, hope you all are doing well!
Zaijian!
~Robyn
Thursday, June 5, 2008
T minus 12...
As it's so close to go-time, I of course should be packed and set to go. Those of you who know me know that of course, there is not a single thing in the two empty suitcases I have sitting outside my bedroom. There ARE however two loads of laundry going, and all the necessary documents have been organized and photocopied, so that's a bit of progress. Or so I am trying to convince myself...
It's around 8:30pm right now, so since we're all meeting at 8:45am tomorrow, I guess I should get to work. I'll probably post again tonight, once everything's (fingers crossed) sorted and stored. Until later!
PS ~ Thanks for dropping by and reading! I'll try to make my blogs as closely entertaining and informative as the trip will undoubtedly be for me in "real life." :)
Monday, May 19, 2008
Getting Set Up
Welcome to my blog, where I will be posting my thoughts, observations, pictures, etc. before, during, and after my trip to Tianjin, China via Nankai University. Feel free to leave me a comment on any of the blog postings. :)
Hope you enjoy my trip to China!
~Robyn






