Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Why I Write

 
"Spark"


My birth, I'm told, went smoothly. There were no complications and it did not take place under any extraordinary circumstances. On her part, my mother says that it wasn't particularly difficult, even with me being her first. In other words, I came as one would knocking on a neighbor's door.


It could be for this reason that I've since frequently imagined myself in a wide range of dire straights. From the tragedy of one's parents dying and being taken in by one's relatives to a military invasion and ensueing war, even a minor event like breaking a leg--they've all crossed my mind. I wonder how I would handle such circumstances. In my average, ordinary childhood, I liked to believe that I would have gracefully accepted my lot and worked tirelessly to thrive within the challenge, much like my favorite literary heroines do in the face of their trials. 

As an adult, what I see, feel, and experience on a regular basis often confounds my sense of good and bad, right and wrong. What looks simple on the outside is inwardly a complex circuit pulsing with its own deliberate energy. Conversely, what looks or feels complicated can be as simple as a 'yes' or 'no' question. As my life stretches out horizontally, my soul's life continues deeper in its vertical plane. To navigate myself back to myself (as is necessary to exist in both planes at once), I write.

My experiences, both inward and outward, give me structure and provide content. My imagination provides the rest. One day I came across a man in camoflouge with a construction hat standing under an overpass holding a large turtle in one hand and smoking a cigarette in the other. In a story, he could turn out to be any number of characters. He could be the wise man the protagonist seeks to find, yet just as believable, he could end up being the antagonist. In some other turn of events, he could just as easily be an image written into the background of a scene. 

I write to fill in the gaps of daily living. After the thoughtless actions and words of all the people I interact with daily, including those of the ones I love most, and the inevitable despondency that follows, I write. I write out of boredom.

Sometimes I write about the breaking of my heart, which held up the weight of misunderstandings, misgivings, and countless unspoken disappointments for almost a generation, and then broke irreparably. Everything once walled up has yet to be contained. The flood has not ceased its force. What surfaces does so without any particular pattern, a memory here, an unrelated emotion there. I write to plead forgiveness for its destructive momentum that builds as the spring rains arrive to nourish, but which only add to the horror. I write as a prayer. God save those in the wake of this flood. 

Like a friend knocking at a neighbor's door, I arrived in this world. I came to tell you what happened to me today. I came to find out what you experienced as well. I came to turn our ordinary, routine lives into miraculous narratives worthy of re-telling. I came to write.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Free Ride to Dalian

Because of my participation in last spring's Exploring China competition, I was given one free school trip. Last year I wasn't around for their winter outing, so I decided to go to Dalian with them this spring. Dalian is a port city on the southern-most tip of Liaoning province. It's known for being the site of the Russo-Japanese war in the early 1900's and as a colonial hub for the two warring countries from then until the end of World War II. For students like us, Dalian offers a great weekend getaway location, especially now that the high-speed train makes it possible to get there from Changchun in three hours. Luckily for us, we had a weekend of perfect weather waiting for us.
 

 
 
Mandatory hotel shot
 
 
 
Night market behind the hotel

Day 1: Discovery Land


 
Lolli-- lolli-- oh, lollipop!
 

 
Waiting for the "Splash Mountain" ride
 

 
The moment we shell out 5 yuan to stay dry
 


 
All that plastic only half-worked
 

 
Near Aladdin's food court (all Chinese food)
 

 
Lots of Russians in their street parade
 


 
One of the rides Tavj (blue hair) just managed to handle. So proud of him!
 

 
Ethnic something show. Never found out where the performers are from. Could be southern Chinese, could be a minority...could be Filipinos for all I know!
 

 
This is my "losing face" face.
 

 
No books were harmed while shooting this fabulous picture of myself.
 

 
At the American Street, all I could find was dried squid and knock-off leather.
 

 
Yo ho, yo ho, a pirate's life for me!
 
 
Day 2: Aquarium
 
I've already posted all of my good aquarium pictures on Storehouse. I'm posting this one because not long after it was taken I lost my sunglasses. I was in the bathroom, getting ready to leave the stall. I had just grabbed my bag where my sunglasses were hanging. They fell off, hit the ground, slid under the wall to the next stall, and landed right in the squatty potty. As I stood just outside the stall wondering if I should go in for them, and old Taitai came in, spotted my glasses and said, "My mother! What are these doing here?!" She reached into the basin, fetched the shades, and tossed them aside. She then closed the door and proceeded with her business. I left, not knowing what to do. I decided if she could touch them, then so could I. So I marched back into the restroom only to find that they had disappeared.
 


 
 
At the New People's Square we rented a quadracycle for 60 yuan, about $3 per person. We spent the hour navigating traffic, yelling "Push, PUSH!" at each other, and getting chewed out by various police men for driving in all the wrong places. Tavj eventually blared his phone's playlist and we jammed to JLO while I drove us back to the rental station.
 





 
 
Lastly, we had to change our plans because the 30 km stretch of coastal road was closed due to a walking marathon happening. To make up for missing the tiger park and aviary, the tour guide took us to the Russian street, where we bought Dalian's famous dried squid, rip-off Russian chocolate, and where I unsuccessfully searched for a hat. At last, we made it to the train station, where I took a nap on the floor. By eleven that evening we were back in Changchun just in time for the rain to start again.


 
Me, my new fake Gucci, and some Chinese dude

Monday, May 19, 2014

Shenyang Botanical Garden

 
If I were in charge, these bed swings would be installed on every university campus.
 

 
While not as beautiful, the back of a peacock is really fascinating.
 

 
Sure, it's pretty, but take a closer look. Follow the stem. One may never understand China.
 

 
My new friend, S-- and I.
 

 
A lake full of 'May Snow.'
 

 
TULIPS!!
 

 

 

 
A working clock made of flowers.
 

 
J-- and M-- of our group take pictures of each other.
 

 
More of our group.
 

 
MORE TULIPS!!
 

 

 

 

 

 
Changchun in ancient script.
 

 
Possible profile pic?
 

 
What's the Merlion doing in northeast China?! It was like running into an old friend unexpectedly.
 

 
Bridge course that just keeps going and going. Performance anxiety overcame me and I couldn't bring myself to cross ANY of the bridges, not even the easy ones.
 

 
I did, however, try to work a paddle wheel, although not very successfully at first.
 

 

 
I finally got it going!

Tricksters Find their Paradise



 
The culturally aware tourist knew the polite way to treaty with a man on a donkey. 
 
 
"When will this silly girl stop drinking all my wine?" the man thought as he poured her another glass.
 
 
 



It had taken a lot of practice and daring journey into the space-time continuum, but our twenty-first century heroes finally found their way to the log-rolling competition of 1849. 
 

Despite the fear electrifying his every cell, the dentist felt a strange calm overcome him as he beheld the sheer magnitude of his task.
 
 
 

Meilin could not understand why the strange white lady wanted to run across a broken bridge just to hide underneath the very creature looking to sink its jaws into their flesh.
 
 
 

Fido did not appreciate his owner's entering him in this year's Extinct Pet show. 
 

 
The owner's wife, however, was determined to show up the neighbor's Sabertooth Tiger.
 
 
 

 
 
Mr. and Mrs. Smith inadvertently gave each other the same anniversary gift.
 
 
 
 
Isabelle had had another thing in mind when she said she wanted to learn how to use a knife.
 
 

 
The man could finally rest at ease knowing the giant knots in his shoulders had a pair of giant hands to take care of them.
 
 

 
"Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown."
 
 

 
The patient thinks maybe her approach with the cute nurse hasn't been thought through.
 
 

 
"I'll take a mini dry red to go with my giant bread."
 
 
 

 
Michael Jackson had just one mind-blowing performance left...
 
 
 
 
 
They say you can lead a camel to water, but you can't make him get up after he's had his fill.




 
"I think I overslept," she said as she stepped out of her warm crypt.
 
 

 
It's a lovely day to drink from a dragon well.
 
 

 
 

The pair realized too late that their pirate experience was lacking.



 
"Please, tell me again how I'm the first foreigner you've ever seen!"
 
 

 
Model citizens are 'selfies' incarnate.
 
 

 
All things that go up must come down.
 
 

 
The delivery boy remembered too late that he had left his rope at home.
 

 
Yet he could not understand why the uproar over a few boxes.
 
 

 
The Angry Birds were furious at having to be flung on their off-day.
 
 

 
He meticulously coated each toenail in a bright red, careful not to lift his head for fear of what she would do to him if he did.
 
 

 
They followed the middle way and had discovered each other on the same path.