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| The Crazy Train Station... |
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| Playing "Go Fish" With Our New Friends |
Just when I think I’m starting
to get a hold on China, it surprises me yet again. Last week we went to Xi’an,
in a different province north of here, for a vacation during National Week… us
and everyone else! We heard rumors of people saying not to travel during
National Week but we didn’t know what we were getting ourselves into. Wednesday
morning we woke up and got all ready and ventured up to the train station. A
quick walk and subway ride away. When we got to the train station it was a
crazy bustle of people! We found some food and made our way to our car. The
train station here is similar to a small airport, but with less security. You
have to show your tickets, your passport or ID, go through a security check,
have a metal detector wand swiped over you, then you have to find your
terminal, or in this case your platform. Once we got to our seats we settled in
for the next 16 hours! Our first mistake was not getting sleeper cars and only
getting seats. They were the equivalent of a less comfortable airplane seat.
Second mistake was not getting enough food. They have a food car onboard but
it’s a set meal and is 50 RNB per person, just under $10 USD. They also sell
fruits, vegetables, cup of noodles, and snacks, but all the prices are so high!
Once we got settled on the train, it didn’t take long to realize we were the
only white people on the 18 car train, so we got a lot of stairs. My roommate
and I sat across from a couple who were traveling with a group of about 12
friends. They were on their way home from traveling for the first part of the
national week. The first four hours or so we talked to them in their broken
English and our attempted Chinese, they helped my roommate with her Chinese
homework and we taught them how to play Go Fish in Chinese. It was fun! And a
great way to learn some Chinese. The scenery was absolutely beautiful!!! We
went through the suburbs of the city which is fun to look at but as we got
further north we saw the mountains, rivers, people working in their rice fields
with their traditional Chinese hats, land, and more! We went through a million
tunnels that they cut into the mountain. The next 12 hours were a drag though.
We watched some movies on a laptop, read, played more cards, talked, tried to
sleep, and just sat there staring off into space. The train is so uncomfortable
to sleep on! Not to mention, fairly unsanitary as well.
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| The Crowded Streets of the Muslim District |
After a long and grueling trade
ride, we finally arrived in Xi’an at 5:30AM with no idea how to get around town
or where our hotel was – so we just started walking and the only knowledge we
had was the name of the hotel and the name of the street. After walking in what
we thought was the right direction, one of the guys finally decided to pull out
his GPS and we wandered to the hotel, all exhausted of course! When we got
there they miraculously let us check in at 6:30 in the morning and had our room
all ready for us, which was awesome! We had to sneak in the three boys because
the room was technically only for two people and it was under mine and my roommates
names. When we finally all got settled we all decided to nap, what was supposed
to be a 3 hour nap turned into a 5 hour nap and we all woke up at 12 and got a
start on our day. We decided to just start exploring. We had heard that there
are a ton of Muslim’s in Xi’an and a whole Muslim district so we set out to get
lunch and find the market. We went to the city center in which there is a giant
bell tower and then went towards the drum tower. In that district there is a
Haggen Daz, a fancy Starbucks, and a KFC, all very popular in China. Beyond
that was the bell tower and then an extremely crowded street. That crowded
street we discovered was the Muslim district. There were a ton of fun shops,
tourist souvenirs, and restaurants. The best part was the street food! The
Muslim people know how to cook let me tell you. We had so much greasy but tasty
street food that was fairly cheap. I had a fried quesadilla type thing but
instead of cheese in it, there was pickled cabbage and meat, it was so good!!!
They also had a ton of quail eggs; they are really good, healthy and popular
here, tofu swirlies as we call them, fresh squeezed pomegranate juice, and
cooked quail eggs. The street food was all amazing!!!! We wandered around for a
while through all the shops and wound up at Subway for lunch. It was great to
get a turkey sandwich but the sauces were way different, but it was still a
nice little taste of home. Afterwards, we walked to the city wall which is the
oldest fully intact city wall in China. Xi’an used to be the capital of China
so it has a ton of history behind it, including the city wall and the terra
cotta warriors. We watched a show by people dressed like ancient Chinese
warriors – they danced and played the drums. Then we watched a gymnastics show put
on by some young male gymnasts, most of them looked to be in their early teens
if that. It was crazy to watch! We had heard that the big thing to do while in
Xi’an is to ride bikes around the city wall, so we stood in line for about 45
minutes and rented bikes to ride around the wall. There were five of us so we
got two tandem bikes and one normal one and rode around. We weren’t super
excited because it was going to get dark and we didn’t think we would be able
to see much, but boy were we wrong! In the evenings, the lanterns along the
wall light up and the whole city is lit up, it was absolutely beautiful! It
only took us just over an hour to bike around it, including stopping to take
pictures. After that we were all pretty exhausted so we grabbed dinner and
headed back to the hotel.
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Early Friday morning there was a
knock on the door; it was the boys who had traveled along the Silk Road who
were meeting up with us. After they got all settled, we found the bus to go to
the terra cotta warriors and we were off. It was an interesting drive as we
escaped the main portion of the city we saw a lot more farms, tractors driving
down the street (just like in Snohomish!), and a ton of statues of terra cotta
warriors. When we got there it was tourist central. We walked through a ton of
shops displaying warriors among other things! We finally reached the entrance
and it was a long walk to get to the pits where the warriors were discovered.
At the main tourist site there are there are three pits. The first one is the largest
with over 6,000 warriors, chariots, and terra cotta horses were found. Every
warrior has a different facial expression, face structure, and hair style,
which is crazy when you think about it! They are the 8th Wonder of
the World, considering the fact that they were made over 2,000 years ago by
hand and were only discovered and uncovered about 40 years ago. The 2nd
pit is still fairly large but contains more chariots and horses. The third pit
is the smallest and contains the least amount but you can still see a lot of
chariots. The cool thing is, you can see the rotting wood, I know that’s gross
but the fact that it’s 2,000 year old wood that has withstood being underground
for all these years is cool. After that we all ate and once again walked through
all the tourist shops. Then about half of our group returned back to the hotel
and the other half of us went to some smaller sites about 2km away. There was a
small bus that took us there and it was all included in our initial ticket.
This other park is more park like. There are trails, lots of trees, and it just
has a lot more of a nature aspect to it with way less tourists. There are a few
pits over there which were only uncovered about 20 years ago for some. It was cool;
we got to watch the workers work to excavate the pits even more. It was
interesting to watch and crazy to realize the fact that there is still more to
be found and explored. It made for a long day! And when we got back, we ate
more street food for dinner. On our last full day in Xi’an 西安, our group was split. Most of the group went hiking at a place a few
hours from the city of Xi’an, while the other four of us decided to tour around
the city. The mountain looked fun, but I didn’t bring hiking stuff and it would
have taken up literally ALL day! So two of us decided to sleep in and then went
adventuring. We went and found the Large Goose Pagoda, a huge seven story
Pagoda in the south of the city that is a large tourist destination but also
has a lot of historical significance. It is within an old monastery, but the
whole area outside has been turned into a tourist destination. The monastery
was absolutely beautiful! After walking
around the monastery, we went up into the Pagoda. The Pagoda used to be ten
stories but was partially destroyed in World War II so now it only has seven.
It was a trek to the top and the stairs were really steep but it was an amazing
view from the top. You can look out four large windows at all four directions
of the city. However the smog kept it from being a very clear view, but it was
still beautiful. After that we went and found a small hole in the wall
cafeteria looking place. They had amazing dumplings and it was super cheap. The
people there were really nice as well and it was a nice atmosphere. After that we
went to the Shaanxi (陕西) Museum, the province that Xi’an is in. It is a huge free government
museum with artifacts from up to 10th century BC through now. You
walk through the three different sections of the museum and as you do so, you
progress through time. It was interesting minus the fact I couldn’t read a lot
of it because it was in Chinese, but it was a free government museum. Our
friends who went hiking didn’t get back until about 11 because they had missed
the last train back from Xi’an and had to catch a ride with some random driver.
Meanwhile the four of us who stayed back got some food and roamed around the Muslim
quarters again.
Sunday morning was
our last day in Xi’an. We did some last minute shopping; my lovely roommate got
everyone donuts from Dunkin Donuts and coffee. J That day we finally made
it to the train stations about 30 min before our train was set to leave, we
were cutting it close we know, lucky for
us the train was late. It is like pushing through a mob to get through the
lines into the train station and go through security. Then after going through
the metal detector, my bag with food and our souvenirs in it ripped because
everyone was pushing, shoving, and grabbing for their stuff. When we got inside
we found out our train was late, which worked out for us, and then we had to
wait in a long giant line that was actually more like a crazy mob. We finally
made it on our train only to realize people were sitting in our seats because
they had standing room only tickets and were sitting while they could. Yes,
people had standing room only tickets for a 16 hour train ride. They were
absolutely crazy but if you’re desperate to get home you’ll do whatever it
takes. I had to try to get food from our friends three cars away from us and
trying to get through to get to them was a task all in itself. I was one of
only two western girls on the whole train, so I got some weird looks plus
trying to push through everyone was nearly impossible. Luckily one of my
friends met me halfway. The rest of the train ride was spent playing cards,
talking to the people around us, or attempting to, watching movies, and
attempting to sleep. At one point we had all moved around seats and my seat was
open so one of the guys with a standing room only sat there and started
sleeping. Well my roommate came back but I was in her seat, but I didn’t have
the heart to ask the guy for my seat back. He looked so tired, we were about 9
hours into our train ride and he had been standing or sitting between cars on
the ground the whole time. So he sat there for a while but eventually he got up
so I could have my seat back. I just felt so bad! So many people were sitting
between the cars on the ground. Some were sitting on newspaper, smoking, and
playing cards but it looked like a back alley in New York. So many of them looked sad and had hurt in
their eyes, many looked homeless or at least really poor, it was humbling
knowing how lucky I am to have what I do. The train was beyond its capacity for
sure and couldn’t have been legal in anyway, at least not in the US and not
technically in China, but the train company, which is probably owned by the
government, just wanted to make as much money as it could so it didn’t care
about people’s safety or sanitation. The whole train smelled terrible, the
squatting toilets and the whole bathroom were disgusting, and the whole train
was just dirty. It was an experience to say the least but my roommate made the
observation that sometimes those are the conditions that people have to live in;
we are only facing those conditions for sixteen hours. It was a really good perspective
to have but regardless we still weren’t fond of the conditions.
We FINALLY arrived
in Chengdu at about 5:30AM after getting two hours of sleep off and on. Fun
fact however, the subway doesn’t run until 6:45 so we couldn’t take that. So
then we tried to take a taxi but they were trying to charge us 80RNB ($13USD)
for the 12km trip… Something that shouldn’t cost more than 20RNB (about
$3.25USD). So we just began to walk in what we hopped was the right direction
and we planned to either catch the subway once it opened or get a cab.
Eventually our group split up and four of found a cab for 18RNB and finally got
home. I have to say I never thought I would find my hard bed and my dorm room here
in China so comforting. When we finally arrived at about 6:30 we were welcome
with the internet being out for two days and no hot water for a shower. We were
a little irritated but that also was due to the fact that we were tired and it
was 6:30AM. All of our clothing we were wearing and our backpacks reeked of cigarette
smoke and just dirtiness. I had to take two showers that day just to get the
smell of smoke out of my hair a little bit. It was not very pleasant; I’ll put
it that way. My poor roommate was supposed to have had a test the morning we got
back so she studied her little heart out, only to find out at the end of class
that the test got moved to Tuesday. We both just used that day to sleep and
catch up on stuff. That night some of us went out to dinner at a local Western
Food place that happened to have Wi-Fi luckily. I had had no way of letting
anyone know we got home safe from Xi’an so needless to say there were some
worried people! The next few days we relaxed and caught up on classes, but I
was excited for Thursday.
Last Thursday two of
our professors from SPU were in town for a conference. So on Thursday I hung
out with them, we went shopping at the Lotus Market and then a lot of the SPU
students and the two professors all went out to dinner that night. It was so nice to get some familiarity from
home here in China, especially since one of the professors and I are fairly
close. It was nice to have people from home here that I knew and crazy but
awesome that we were able to hang out on the other side of the world! Friday we
hung out them again, met them for lunch, and then I took them to the bamboo
park (Wangjiang Park) and got dinner with them.
The weekend was busy busy busy! On Saturday I went on the school
sponsored field trip to Dujianyan again. This time it was a bright and sunshiny
day and it was fun. We thought there would be English guides but we were the
only four, on our bus at least, that were Western and spoke English. SO half
the day we had no idea what was going on.
On the way there one of the buses got a flat tire, which was just the
start of the crazy day. After the irrigation system they took us to a nearby
restaurant in which we had a family style lunch. What was really fun is the
fact that at our table of 10 people, 6 different nationalities were
represented. There was a couple from Poland, two girls from France, an American
from the Philippines, three Americans, a guy from England, and another guy from
Japan. Our common languages were English and some Chinese. It was cool to see
so much diversity at one table. After dinner we went to some Ancient City down
the street a ways. It was an ancient town with lots of traditional buildings
and statues that displayed life in China. It was beautiful to look at. One of
my friends and I got yelled at by some Chinese Grandma who thought we were
trying to take a picture of her granddaughter even though we weren’t, she was
convinced we had a picture of her. The thing is, they snipe pictures of us all
the time without asking, so why can’t we? It wasn’t that big of a deal, it was
just the first time we had gotten yelled at like that. When we finally left we
were on our way back to school and all of a sudden our bus turned around. We
were confused thinking maybe we forgot someone or something, but then we saw
that the bus that had been behind us had gotten into an accident. Somehow a
larger truck had hit it and the back windows on one side of the bus were
completely smashed. Luckily, everyone was okay but the Chinese guide on that
student bus had been standing in the back ended up getting thrown to the front
of the bus. She was okay, but was extremely shaken. After that we all managed
to get back safely.
Sunday was awesome! I finally got the chance to go to church and it was
amazing how much you miss it when you don’t go, but you don’t realize the fact
that you do. It was a decent distance away but so worth it. It is a house
church of all foreigners and each week it is at a different person’s apartment
or house. When we walked in we were greeted with the smell of fresh coffee and pastries
as well as about 20 other Western faces… it was amazing. Fresh coffee was a
huge blessing, if you know me, you know that I am a coffee addict and instant
Nescafe just doesn’t do it for me. The coffee was a mixture of hazelnut and
regular and was a little piece of heaven in China. There was also fresh pumpkin
–cream cheese bread homemade by the wife of the apartment we were at. It was
sooooooo good and a nice taste of home! The church was amazing and reminded me
a lot of people at home. It consisted of about 25 adults – an older couple in their
60s or so, several families with kids, and 7 or 8 college kids, as well as
about 10 little kids belonging to the different families. The group was super
nice and it was awesome to see people from all over the world come together.
The guy that lead that week also happened to be originally from Edmonds, WA
though him and his family has been in China for about 16 years and another
couple was from Shoreline, WA, so it really is a small world I found out. After
church some of us went out to lunch and had the best Chinese food I’ve had
since I’ve been here. The family who has been here from 16 years ordered for us
so they knew what was good. One of the women that came with us paid for all of
the college kids’ lunch which was so sweet of her! It was only about 15 RNB a
person (almost $3USD) but the gesture all on its own was sweet. After that we
bussed it back home and hung out with some girls who had just arrived in
Chengdu from the states to teach English. The rest of the day I studied and
hung out. That night my friend had invited me to a worship and prayer night at
an apartment that they rent out. It was so fun and awesome to see everything that
is happening over in China and to be able to fellowship and worship with so
many people half way across the world. It almost felt like we were back in the
states for a while. The interesting thing about the church is that it is
technically illegal because it isn’t registered with the government, but since
it is only foreigners and moves around every week it is okay. But to think that
this is what people used to have to do in order to simply fellowship with each other
is crazy to think about; we don’t realize how lucky we are in the states.
Christianity is legal in China but you cannot pass Bible’s out to people, do “mission”
work, and you must be registered if you have a church. So the rules on religion
are fairly strict, though the government isn’t fond of any type of religion.
The rest of this week we have been busy studying, doing homework, and
taking midterms. My poor roommate had four or so midterms for her Chinese class
this week. Our non-intensive class only had one and it was extremely easy, but
it was the first time I’ve had to study since being in China. The test was 50%
of our grade but was only two pages and took about 30 min. It was all in Chinese,
minus the directions, and it was fun to be able to read it! I never thought
that I would be able to read or speak any Chinese in my whole life. Before I
came here all Chinese words sounded the same to me and I never understood how
anyone could understand it, but after being here, listening, and learning some of
the characters and words, I can begin to tell the difference. I love it!
I am starting to get a little bit homesick, but more for the people and
familiarity of home. Being in another country getting around is complicated and
I don’t always know where everything is. So the selfish part of me and the
Western part of me misses the familiarity and simplicity of home and of
Seattle. I am missing the changing of the season of fall and all of the red
leaves, the crisp air, pumpkin spice lattes, pumpkin pie, pumpkin patches, and corn
mazes. It’s amazing how you don’t realize how much you love things like that
until you are away from them. Something as simple as the beautiful leaves
changing. The leaves here change on some trees but they don’t turn beautiful colors,
they just turn brown and die and fall to the ground. I am also missing a lot of
Western food and being able to cook anything but noodles and peanut butter and
jelly. I am missing my friends and family. Don’t get me wrong I love China, the
people are amazing and there is so much to do, I am just really beginning to
realize how much I love the city of Seattle.
Happy fall to everyone and I promise I will try to update this thing
more often.
PS If you want to know a little bit more about how the Chinese government works, here's a lovely little article I found: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-pacific-13904437
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| The Beautiful Mountains! #Xi'an |
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| Fried Food... Yum Yum #Xi'an |
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I wasn't sure what animal.. But I don't want to Know In a food cart window #Xi'an |
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This guy made these from sugar/tafffy by filling them with air inside... it was different. #Xi'an |
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| Dug with his sunglasses :) #Xi'an |
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| City Wall! #Xi'an |
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| City Wall Performance #Xi'an |
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| Gymnastics Performance #Xi'an |
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| Old Town #Xi'an |
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| Xi'an at night, so beautiful #Xi'an |
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| Soldiers with Bryce #Xi'an |
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| Terra Cotta Warriors #Xi'an |
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| Cute little girl posing at the Warriors #Xi'an |
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| Store Pet #Xi'an |
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First time I have seen no people in a public place in China. #Xi'an |
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| Warriors working away #Xi'an |
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| Big Goose Pagoda! #Xi'an |
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| The city from the top of the Pagoda #Xi'an |
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| Pagoda |
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| Pagoda #Xi'an |
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| Garden at the Pagoda #Xi'an |
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| Train Station Mob #Xi'an |
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| Crowded Train Coming Home #Xi'an |
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| New Friends on the Train #Xi'an |
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| Super cute baby!!! |
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| Tiny turtles at Lotus Market |
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| Professor Downing's Birthday Cake |
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| Man doing calligraphy in the park |
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| Beautiful day in China #Dujiangyan |
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| Beautiful day at Dujiangyan |
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| Bridge at Ancient City |
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| Aqueduct at Ancient City |
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| Ancient City |
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| Ancient City |
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| Kid Peeing #Ancient City |
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| Riding a Yak |
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| And a Donkey |
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| Cute kids and Winnie the Pooh |
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| Storybook river |
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| Mountains #Xi'an |
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| Drum at City Wall #Xi'an |
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| Riding bikes #Xi'an |
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