wish you happy everyday
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On Friday night at English corner, we had a Halloween party. I went as a cowgirl, and was pulled into a jig (wha?) as soon as I arrived. There were glow sticks and a lot of feathered masks. Apparently there'd been a fashion show at the beginning that I missed. We played a game that one of the English Association members had read somewhere was a traditional Halloween game: a ping-pong ball is set on top of a bowl filled with flour and a team stands on each side of the bowl. On the count of 1-2-3, both both teams blow and whichever team blows the ball onto the other team's side, wins. Well, they wanted me to judge, but that sounded like too much fun to miss, so I told them I'd prefer to play. Everyone wanted to be on my team and we definitely dominated, even if we were all covered with flour by the time it was over! Great night -- my only regret was that I had forgotten my camera! For tomorrow's English Corner they've asked me to prepare a lesson, so I don't think it'll be nearly as fun, though you never know.
On Saturday we went over to my boss, Rhona's, home. She's the head of the English dept. here at GongDa and is a really classy lady. She spent a year in Australia, and has spent time in Canada and the US as well and her English is great! She and her husband put out a breakfast spread for us at her home, and then they took us out for fish hotpot! mmmmm -- Some of you may remember my descriptions of hotpot from Chengdu. Here in Gansu they often do it a little differently. When we order fish hotpot, a big stew pot is brought out with a cooked fish and some veggies in the bottom, covered by a thick layer of peppers. They scoop the peppers off the top, and then everyone digs in with their chopsticks, pulling out what they want. When the fish (or shrimp!) is all eaten up, they come back and pour in either hot water or a broth, and add some more hot pepper oil. Once the whole mixture is at a good boil, you dip in any of the foods you've ordered (meats or veggies or quail's eggs, my favorite!) and hold them in the water til they're cooked. After pulling out what you want to eat, you dip the bite into a personal bowl of spices and oil, mixed to taste, before eating it. It makes for a special meal every time, and it's reallllly easy to stuff yourself! We didn't order anything particularly crazy to dip into the pot this time, but I'll keep you all updated as I keep expanding my food horizons.
After lunch we went to a tailor shop and I ordered a vest and pants, all made from down. For anyone who I haven't mentioned it to yet.... after giving exams at the beginning of January I'm going to Tibet!!! And it is going to be cold so I'll need all the warm layers that I can get.
After lunch and our adventures at the tailor's, we hightailed it home to meet some more of my seniors who came by to teach me to cook a few chinese dishes. It was a bit of a p
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The last two weeks have been fairly low-key in classes, with a lot of presentations on the part of the students so I can get a benchmark before final exams in January. I'm more than half way through my first semester teaching! Next week inspectors could pop in for observations at any time, BUT after that the evaluation will be over -- I think students and teachers alike will be relieved to have that pressure off.
I've spent a lot of time helping my seniors to edit their resumes and cover letters... I've seen at least 10 cover letters ripped almost directly from some mysterious source which is grammatically terrible not to mention a miserably composed pitch to a possible employer. Ripping those apart while trying to nurture students' confidence in their English abilities (on plaigerized job applications? ugh) was a fun task. I've also been getting tons of text messages and emails, particularly since a new English Corner started on tuesday nights at the main campus. Now I meet at least 40-50 new students each week, most of whom leave with my contact info squirreled away in their backpack. Nobody has abused any of my numbers yet, and I don't expect them to, but I have gotten a lot of messages like this: "Hello, a friend of mine introduces you to me. I hope we can make friends with eachother. I am a student of [in chinese, some engineering major]. Welcome to our school. Wish you happy everyday in China." I am often wished this. Of course, no name, just a hello and welcome! Often these anonymous messages come with an invitation for dinner or a chat as well, which is no problem as I can just show up looking around expectantly and wait for several anxious chinese students to flock towards me asking if I made it there okay and if I know how to use chopsticks. I don't often look forward to these meetings, but they almost always turn out to be a great time. Life is still good and I feel more and more settled here by the week.
Finally, Linds? YOU ROCK. Thank you for the package!!
1 Comments:
Kristen!! I haven't been able to completely catch up on your posts because I'm a lame friend---but from what I read you're having an incredible experience. I can't wait to read more! If you have a free moment, I copied you and am keeping track of my life on a blog too (not quite as exciting...)
www.teachingemily.blogspot.com
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Emily, at 4:43 PM
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