National Day

30 09 2009

Being away from somewhere you know well and love is an odd experience. Truly, it makes one grow fonder of those moments you enjoy and remember from home. However, I’ve happily started making some of those moments here in Hong Kong, where I’ve been here long enough to replay in my mind funny or otherwise memorable moments. Here are some that constantly are in my mind from Minneapolis, DC, and Hong Kong.

For some unknown reason I keep mentally refering to a soccer game my cousin Nikki was playing in. It was a damp, fairly miserable Minnesota night. The lawnchairs were all unfolded, the women laced up for play and my Goddaughter Avy and her twin Annika were anxious to leave their mothers arm. I vividly remember chasing them with Adam and Kramer on the southside of the field, watching them run and eventually crash into one another with giggles. I was about to leave for DC and start both my sophomore year and my first internship at the Joint Economic Committee. Crystal’s excitement for me was palpable, and I will always remember her encouragement.

The crunch of the ancient earth beneath my feet was hardly noticeable under all our heavy breathing. We continued to climb, but all I can recount exactly who was on the same set of steps as I, as words of encouragement were passed from one practical stranger to another. Suddenly, Molly and Amanda, our fit ROTC girls shouted from ahead that we were close. Sighs of excitement rang up in our small band, we had finally made it to the base of the Great Wall. The first view was the most memorable.

Alexa is a crazy bitch. As we walk down 19th street she keeps telling me phrases in Chinese, in hope of my learning survival tactics before I arrive. She keeps confusing English, Arabic, Chinese, and German. No wonder we make fun of her for her languages. We first pass the most clearly marked World Bank building, crossing Pennsylvania Ave just blocks from the White House. I turn and see my freshman dorm. Beyond more World Bank buildings is the hill that we will struggle with on the return after our delicious burritos. It’s just after dark and mid-March, my favorite weather. Light jacket and jeans.

Our little band of misfits is yelling at the top of our lungs. Its the second night of an unfortunately bitterly cold Spring Break, but we’re braving the wind on the third story porch in Waves. Over the sand dunes, the sound of the ocean is barely noticable above the laughter at my attempt at the tree yoga pose, on a stool nonetheless. Hooka is being taken in, and Matt and Bekah are deep in conversation. Melanie and I are in matching George Washington University sweatshirts, but our relative size difference makes it easy to differentiate us, or so we were told.

So many other memories, but now I’m off to watch the celebrations of China’s National Day. Beijing is basically closed down due to parades, celebrations, etc and Hong Kong is supposed to have a firework show tonight. Citizens gather up to 4 hours before hand to get good spots though, so I don’t know how close we’ll get.





Wild Berry Margaritas

28 09 2009

Friday was another awesome day in the life of Evan the Lame. Sidenote: I just read a chapter in my Chinese history book about a young man named Tamerlane, or Tamur the Lame in his native language, who raped and pillaged every town from northern Turkey to southern India, so “lame” isn’t so bad. Apparently he was a cripple, which I am not. Anyway,  I had two God awful classes and then came back and took the first nap I’ve taken in Hong Kong. I woke just in time to see half my program and all my friends off to some marathon cooking class they had signed up with awhile back. I didn’t come here to play Top Chef, so I skipped that. What I did do was get lost in the chaos of Mong Kok and Yau Ma Tei, the neighborhoods around where I love.

The pedestrian traffic at night on many of these streets is so heavy that cars wont even try to get through. I put my iPod to “Where the Streets Have No Name” and walked it out all the way down with only my camera in tow. It was a blast. I loved just walking down the streets with my music in, among the crowds I felt alone. My friend Melanie once said that loneliness can breed contentment and I completely agree. I was alone because of choice and seeing Hong Kong on my terms.

Saturday was definitely not on my terms, as I was required to attend a school fieldtrip. It was a flashback to that third grade trip to a farm that everyone in suburbia takes. It’s supposed to awaken us to the hard life of a farmer, but I just thought it stank and wondered why we needed cows for milk. Isn’t this the 21st century? Where’s my instant food maker? Nonetheless, the 11 of us and my favorite professor, Prof. Hase, struck out towards the HK Museum of History. Professor Hase is a stocky older man who has to sit the length of our two hour lectures on Thursday and Friday. He majored in Ancient English Ecclesiastical Studies, but somehow found enough brain space to store an incredible amount of Chinese historical knowledge. He’s brilliant, and he reminds me of Prof. Slughorn from Harry Potter to boot, accent and all. The museum was great, especially with Hase telling us how he is on the advisory board and helped purchase a lot of the storefronts that line the “HK in the Early 20th Century” exhibit. Quite spectacular. Due to the heat (96 degrees and 93% humidity), we cut our visits to Chi Lin nunnery and Kowloon’s Tin Hau temple a bit short, but those were both great as well. Saturday night a group of us went for our tri-weekly Mexican, to a restaurant called Agave in LKF, the local club/bar district. Agave had the best margaritas I’ve ever had (Which of course arne’t many), especially the Wild Berry ones. So good. That’s all I have for Agave, though.

I won’t write any more and bore you all. I did however put up new pictures at http://picasaweb.google.com/evanjdoran. Thank you for reading!





Refreshments

20 09 2009

It has been extremely hot these last few days. Everyone here changes outfits a lot during the day. It’s like being a middle school girl, having to change clothes, but this is out of necessity. The alternative is looking like you just swam in Victoria Harbor with your clothes on. There are a lot of refreshing things I’ve seen and experienced here though and I thought I’d share some of them with you.

Air conditioning is refreshing. When walking down any of the main streets here, we often split up to stand on the stoops of various 7-11′s and other stores blasting air out their fronts. It’s a great way to both develop a sniffle and avoid heat stroke. Damned if you do, damned if you don’t I suppose.

Good deals are refreshing. Rachel and I went to the Ladies, Temple Street and Jade markets last night. I got a new Oakley wallet for HK$80 (Abou US$10). The lady first wanted HK$180, but I said 70. We honed our bargaining skills in China, so this lady didn’t really know who she was dealing with. She told me no way. I kept at $70. At $90, she told me this was her favorite wallet. She almost stroked it, bizarre. I could appreciate good taste though. I eventually got to my target of $70, but she had been so nice and a decently good salesperson, so I gave her $10 from my change. She smiled.

People from home are refreshing. I talk to members of my family fairly regularly during the week. They have proven very useful in helping me make decisions about Hong Kong, experiences I should make and chance I should take. Families are always a point of moderation, cooling your jets when needed, lighting fires when necessary.

In depth conversations are refreshing. I didn’t go out last night. I didn’t go out the night before. I didn’t go out this entire weekend. I couldn’t be happier with those decisions, instead I created a great bond with my neighbor Jessica talking about everything under the sun. She is the first good Latina friend I can say I have. She brought new perspectives on what its like to be a Latina accountancy student in upstate New York. I provided her with knowledge about being a mid-western politico in a big city. She said I was refreshing for being an Obama supporter. I gave her a hug when she praised Joe Biden.

It isn’t really every until I sit to think that I realize I don’t give people enough credit. As a collective whole, my abroad-mates have moved past many of the lines that are necessarily drawn during the beginnings of any long endeavor. I hung out with people this weekend I haven’t really talked to since the beginning of our trip. Now that’s refreshing.





Reflections on China Part IV: Journal Entries and Journy Endings

12 09 2009

Note: The following entry is an edited version of my final “journal,” our reflective pieces that we had to write periodically through the trip to give it an appearance of academic proportions. With that, happy reading. Additionally, I’ve posted my China pictures at http://picasaweb.google.com/evanjdoran

My time in China has been very eye opening for many of reasons, seeing something new and different every second of every day tends to be both exhilarating and exhausting.  Even simple actions such as ordering at a McDonald’s on Nanjing Road can turn into a lesson in “Lost in Translation” and I was often very pleasantly surprised that two people with vastly different languages can still enjoy McNuggets through hand gestures. Simple things walking down the street were noticeable in their subtly, a shoe store crammed into a space no bigger than a closet, but still thriving with customers. Everyone in China seems to want their share. The three different cities we visited in China have come to illustrate small pieces of the large puzzle that is China as well as mean vastly different things to me personally. I’ve also really tried to reconcile some of the paradoxes of China’s rapid growth, from the massive development of the country to the “Gucci question” and the inefficiencies of much of the current system of growth. China’s growth has lead many of my fellow students and I, as well as our lecturers to comment (or lament) the rise of China and what it means for both China and the United States. After visiting China, if only for a brief time, I feel as though China’s rise might be less a signal of the US’s demise and more a resurgence of Americanism, a rise in disguise.

In Xi’an, the immense pride of the people living in a city of such cultural importance to China was eye-opening. And I do believe that in some of the most noticeable ways, Xi’an still represents much of Chinese culture. The Terra Cotta Army was just the first in what seemed like an endless number of ancient sites in the relatively small city of six million. If Beijing and Shanghai we’re full of broad boulevards and designer stores, Xi’an in my mind will always be the smoggy walled city that I think is in many people’s minds when asked to describe the traditional Chinese city.. In the markets, there were smiles at our direction, but to me the smiles indicated a genuine happiness and pride at seeing visitors, and not a smile intended to entice us as shoppers. I also thought that the other lasting legacy of Xi’an was the “realness” of the city to me. It didn’t host the Olympics, isn’t a large port city gleaming with financial skyscrapers, nor will it have an Expo. The lack of these global aspects resulted in a city that was a little grittier, a little dirtier, and a little more Chinese to me.

Beijing, on the other hand, was clearly presented to us as the “present” of China and I thoroughly believe it fit that title. However, even though Beijing was home to the Forbidden City and other historical landmarks (apart from the magnificent Great Wall), the culture of Beijing was very much of a higher attitude: power and stability. There was always a sense of organized chaos, as if the traffic and constant flow of people had a definite pattern and rhythm. Xi’an’s historical legacies were alive in the influx of Chinese and foreign tourists lining the hanger enclosing the warriors and the pride of its citizens. Beijing’s being could very well be felt in the calm, almost cold, reality of the state’s huge power base there. As a student of international relations, it was curious to see the watchful eye of Beijing hovering over everyone. I saw many fewer smiling faces in Beijing as well as many more empty stores than in Shanghai.

Shanghai was an entirely different story when it comes to embracing capitalism. The embodiment of Shanghai wasn’t in its empty designer stores or extravagant malls, but in the attitude of its people. All of the younger people were well dressed and had a sort of carefree attitude. You could tell the wealthier kids from the working class families fairly easily. I know that China’s growth has propelled countless millions out of poverty, but it seems strange to me that so much is spent creating an iconic skyline while thousands within the same city are begging on the streets.

For all the growth of China and the pundits who claim the demise of the United States, being in China has given me a slightly different take on things. I no longer have any doubt that China will one day claim the title of world’s largest absolute economy. However, as China’s economy grows I also notice that it is intimately linked with America’s, growth in one leads to growth in another. I think it’d be hard to deny that as more Chinese have more and more disposable income, the likes of Starbucks and KFC will continue to do well. As was said during lecture, GM’s most profitable region was in Shanghai. Therefore, China’s growth is a lifeline of sorts; it can never grow while America shrinks, because Chinese growth directly propels American corporate growth.

My lasting impression of China will be more than just the Great Wall or the Terra Cotta Soldiers, but the general attitude of its people. I’d imagine that many westerners are turned off by the in-your-face hustle and bustle, but just as many are probably turned on. Writers like to claim that present day China is like America in the 1920’s or the 1780’s or any other rather arbitrary period of time, but China today seems like nothing else I’ve ever experienced or read about. The people’s spirit on one hand embraces a government of censorship and planning to secure jobs for the future while also turning to friends on “Have you eaten yet” (China’s Twitter) to discuss the latest movies, many of them watched via bootleg I’m sure. You can be irritated immediately after stepping into the Pearl Market, but I for one came away with a grudging respect for the people who are in these shops day in and day out to sell the same junk they next stand sells. The rules and laws are firm, but the people are not, they seem to know as a collective whole that they are part of something special. And that while they may never see the day when they can own a car, or a TV, that their days spent in the soy fields outside Xi’an are necessary to propel Shanghai into the world’s preeminent position. Their collective contentment with sacrifice goes hand in hand with their general eagerness to prove themselves on an individual level. The paradoxes and ironies of China never cease to amaze me, as Plaza 66 illustrated to me back in Shanghai. Here was a glittering mall filled with merchandise many Chinese will never touch across the road from local eateries stuffed with Mercedes driving business owners and bike peddling hawkers, all the while scaffolding is up to ensure the upper level apartments are clean enough for next year’s Expo. It’s easy to write in cliché’s about China, I’ve admittedly done it many times in this journal and other, but there really is nothing else left to describe China or her people. As a race, we have yet to come up with a terminology to describe what is happening.

With that concludes my reflections and recollections of my China trip and I’ll be turning my attention to Hong Kong and other cultural commentary, with more of my usual sarcastic tone. Thank you for reading.





Getting My Life Together

4 09 2009

Well I am back in Hong Kong and couldn’t be happier. A group of us went to IKEA today and just got some bedding and closet organizers cause our “rooms” are actually dingy hostel-like hotel rooms, so we’re basically commandeering the design of them and making it our own. This is also just a head’s up post, because I’ll start posting the summary of my travels through China in probably a multi-part chronicle, but I haven’t even started writing yet so it’ll be a bit. Most likely this weekend sometime.

I also celebrated my 21st birthday yesterday, on September 3. It was my longest birthday because I started it in HK and I’m sure my mom ended it in the states. It was fun to turn 21 abroad, but I’m already looking forward to a proper celebration with my friends at school and home. Besides, being able to legally drink a month before your birthday leaves the actual day fairly anti-climactic.





Leavin’ on a Jet Plane

21 08 2009

Today I leave for my 2 week China seminar which takes us through Xi’an ,Beijing, and Shanghai. I don’t know how much access I’ll have to a computer because I am not bringing mine, so this is my fond farewell until I return or find an internet cafe. Which ever comes first and I’ll bet hell freezes over before I am able to communicate well enough to find a McDonalds much less a computer.





Praying Not to be Left Behind

20 08 2009

Today we had another God awful session of pre-departure lectures concerning our program: classes, China seminar and more. Apparently, we may all die of H1N1, but even if just one person has a temperature, they get quarantined and left behind. I don’t suppose the ungodly heat levels here have much bearing on my inner body temp? They have been shooting us with temperature guns. Don’t temp me bro! I mean three or four times a day, we get our temperature checked and we don’t know what’s normal because no one has thought to do the conversion to Celsius. It’s approximately 36.6, or maybe 37.6. Maybe 36.2. That’s what life is like here. One question, three people, four answers. It should be a reality show. Like that tacky Japenese one that is on sometimes. Our program managers don’t even seem to know what’s going on.

Hong Kong is great though. I feel like I’m living on a floor of Thurston, but the people are all pretty cool. Those of them I’ve met so far, which is a good chunk, but there’s an interesting social dynamic at play. Due to complete chance, we separated into somewhat smaller groups the first night of like 10-15 for dinner and drinks, however as any normal people do, we kept going out with people we knew and those who they knew. Therefore, we’ve sorted into half, creating an awkward dynamic where I talk to everyone, but don’t really know who they are or what their name is. Oh well, we’ll get there soon enough.

Just a snap of Thailand if you haven’t been getting the slide show working:

Phranang Cave Beach Panorama

Phranang Cave Beach Panorama





A Craftsman Tool

4 08 2009

Well it’s almost time to go. A mere 28 some odd hours, not like I’m counting. This post will possibly serve as my last post before I leave in case I forget to write anything tomorrow. So as a quick schedule of events for the next months, here’s where I’ll be:

August 6-10: Bangkok, Thailand

August 10-16: Krabi, Thailand

August 16-21: Hong Kong, SAR

August 21-24: Xi’an, China

August 24-29: Beijing, China

August 29-September 3: Shanghai, China

Sept 3 Onwards: Hong Kong, SAR

This message is titled Craftsman because in my infinitely small knowledge of real tools I believe that craftsman is one brand. I feel sort of like a giant tool because most of you reading this soon will have been tipped off to my blogs existence through a variety of fairly meaningless online social tools, including Facebook and others. Twitter should die though. I mean a little blue annoying cartoon bird as your logo? Seriously? In case someone doesn’t know, the picture on top of this webpage is of Hong Kong, though it’s not entirely real. It was a picture that was photoshopped. I still like it however, so I’m pretending it’s real and that giant clouds of Chinese factory anthrax isn’t slowly sweeping down the country side to kill me.

This is going to be a crazy journey. Especially the first month, where, like so many hobo’s from movies I won’t be sleeping in the same place for more than a few days at a time. Living out of a suitcase sounds less than fun. Living out of a suitcase in China sounds like a bad nightmare. Living out of a suitcase with the possibility of getting some weird third world venereal disease is exciting. That one was for my mom. Love you. As this blog goes on, it will become more dedicated to my travels and activities while abroad and less about my commentary on, well, anything. All previous entries can be considered test material. Like Conan’s entire life. I know a redhead in China right now. Her name is Vicki and she is volunteering at a Beijing hospital where she was supposed to know Chinese. She doesn’t. I’m also supposed to mention my friend Alli Bell. Alli Bell. I’m going to an island while in Krabi called Ko Phi Phi. Guess what? It’s pronounced Ko PP. Like Go Pee Pee. I’m that mature.

My last real American activity this week will be getting Chipotle, but prior to that it will have been watching the Minnesota Twins in their pathetic attempts against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. I wanted to spell their entire name just to get a real feel for how ridiculous it is. How about the New York Giants of East Rutherford, New Jersey. At least its bi-statial. New word. Before the game I met a Shih Tzu my uncle got. I’m going to spell it as Shit Zoo. It’s funnier. It’s a girl named Ernie, well actually I think it’s name is Ernice, but it’s a girl, hence Ernie. I love logic. It’s very small and soft and looks like it maybe came out of it’s mom and ran into a door head first. Adorable. I just hope I don’t see Ernice’s third cousin on my plate in Xi’an. No sauce makes that good. I wonder…chewy or tender? I’ll never be able to tell you.

I’m hoping to spend an entire day at the Peak in Hong Kong. It’s this mountain that gives you the views like in my picture. I want to get a sunrise and sunset and nighttime. It’d be sweet. Red dragons glinting in the sunlight as they race down the glass facades mirroring the sunset. That was my attempt at flowery writing. Or my attempt to be like Mel. 15 hours will be a long time on a plane. Hello Tylenol PM! And Sleepy Time! And maybe Melatonin. A friend once asked if she could have some of my melanoma. Wasn’t aware I had cancer. I probably will once I get back so same diff. Once again for my mom…and dad that time. Love you all!





Ironies of the World #1

1 08 2009

Just a quick nugget: Why are there two British judges on America’s Got Talent? I mean I’ve read a million times that the 19th century was Britain’s, 20th was Pax Americana and 21st we all better get used to Chinese Communism. But WTF? I’d like to see two Yankee’s judging SuperGirl (PS: Get some tissue for when your ears start to bleed.)





Appeasing Melanie

1 08 2009

This post is not something I was originally going to create, but was pushed to do so at the request of a one Melanie Moore. She writes her own blog at “Altitude Sickness,” but that crap is  mostly a rudimentary look at the ancient Nepalese and Tibetan cultures that will be her home for the next few months. J.K. Rowling wrote better stuff on toilet paper. That said, I’m sitting her writing this blog while I should be packing. I’ve gone through a ton of my clothes and I won’t lie it’s sort of fun having virtually all of your worldly possessions sitting on the floor of one’s living room. It gives you perspective. I’ve even made a pile of clothes to be given to my (future) step-sister (This title is easier than “my mom’s boyfriend’s daugher”) Erin who will be delivering them to needy children in Guatemala this month. Awesome.

Mostly though this blog is to simply appreciate my new Amazon Kindle. It is actually a pretty cool device, letting one keep thousands of books on a piece of metal no thicker or bigger then Readers Digest. I’ve downloaded a bunch of samples from Amazon to help me fill out my Kindle a little before going abroad. The one bummer is that I can’t download onto it while abroad, so I’ve got to fill it up now. At $10/book it’s sort of a financial pain, but I’d read these books at full price at some point, so what the hell.

So far, I’ve got

  • Are you there Vodka, It’s Me Chelsea by Chelsea Handler, which I heard was hilarious.
  • The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time by Mark Haddon, a murder mystery told from the point of view of an autistic 15 year old boy. Supposedly ground breaking.
  • Both Free and The Long Tail by Chris Anderson, studies of new online and free marketplaces
  • Titan: The Life of John D. Rockefeller by Ron Chernow who wrote a great biography of JP Morgan, so this should be good
  • Roma a fictional timeline of the entire history of Rome, by Steven Saylor
  • A Bull In China by Jim Rogers, an investment banker which I thought was appropriate given the next few months
  • Istanbul by Orhan Pamuk who wrote a great book called Snow, but this is more a story of a city through a network of people
  • And three non-fiction geopolitical/globalization/money books; One Up on Wall Street by Peter Lynch, The Second World by Parag Khanna, and The Emerging Markets Century by Antone van Agtmael

There will be more. I’ll let you know how they go. FYI: I actually think Melanie’s blog is hilarious.