Thursday, January 3, 2013

Country vs. City

Every week Shane, Shobana and I meet with a group of Chinese English teachers to help them practice their English.  We usually have an informal conversation, lasting around 45 minutes, about anything ranging from teaching methods to hobbies to the Hukou (household registration) system.  What's really great about these meetings is they are mutually beneficial- we help the teachers practice their spoken English, they teach us about China.

One meeting we discussed China's countryside and the many changes it has undergone within the past decade.  You hear so much about migrant workers leaving the countryside to find work in cities.  Prior to moving to Hunan, I had the naive notion that everyone dreams of someday moving to the big city for a better life.  Hearing the perspective of families making a decent living in the countryside has, in many ways, rocked my world.  Most of the teachers are middle-aged women who are married and have children.  Among this segment of the population the feeling seems universal, at least at OYY: people prefer to live in the countryside.

They say life in the countryside has more freedom, physical and otherwise.  There is more space for families to build their own homes.  The greater space also means less restrictions, particularly with fireworks, which play a large role in life in China.  We hear fireworks on a semi-daily basis.  The teachers told us people set off fireworks for everything- happy things, sad things, mundane things.  Nothing is too trite for fireworks.  Perhaps when I finish this blog post that has remained unfinished for several months now, I will set off a few fireworks of my own.

The pace of life here is also special.  The pace is slower, so there is more time for deep and meaningful conversations.  This is something the women specifically mentioned.  In the city, you are busy, always on the go.  When people come home after work, they enter their apartments and are in for the night.  Here interactions extend beyond the work hours.  People often dance or sing karaoke together late into the evening.  During holidays everyone remains near or at the school, because all their families live here too.  Relationships are different, everything is shared.  I love how all the teachers call each other sisters.

Apparently even the laws have changed to accommodate people living in the countryside so they can enjoy more rights such as medical insurance.  This is something I will research more on my own.

I loved living in Beijing, but I'm also enjoying country living.  The biggest difference I have experience so far is greeting.  Here, I greet people.  They greet me.  We greet each other.  The greeting of random strangers you pass on the street would not happen in Beijing.  As a result I feel welcomed here, even loved.  I need to give the countryside more credit.  People are happy here, as am I.
New Year's Day dinner with a student and her family

Christmas in Hunan

Christmas this year was everything an expat could want... stressful and exciting work that served as an excellent distraction from home and family, and relaxation time spent with good friends.

The evening of Christmas Eve was OYY's 2012 Christmas Talent Show Extravaganza.  A show Shobana, Shane and I had been planning for weeks.  It is one of OYY's biggest events of the year and is traditionally planned, coordinated and run entirely by the foreign teachers.  As a lover of planning, I was in hog heaven.

Some highlights from the show:
  • We started off with several rounds of auditions to decide the performers and hosts for the show.  The student talent was amazing!
  • Against some of their wills, we mandated an English teacher group performance of Jingle Bells to be performed at the show.  I think that number received the most applause.
  • Shobana, Shane and I practiced and memorized our own song performance in Chinese.  We came in second for applause.
  • We rented excellent quality light and sound equipment from a local business to up the ante in performance quality.  The men were incredible to work with- easygoing and interactive with the students.  Without prompting, they started a Gangnam Style dance party after the show with blasting music and flashing lights.  Major points for them.
  • Our wonderful team of student helpers assisted us with decorations, performer prizes, raffle prizes and gifts for judges.  They also helped run crowd control the day of the show- probably the hardest job of all.
  • We ran a dress rehearsal a couple nights before the show to work out any kinks- some things went wonderfully, some things went terribly.  Thank goodness for practice.
  • The biggest challenge of all was ticket distribution.  We had a limited amount of tickets to distribute and an unlimited amount of interest.  During the weeks leading up to the show, students would approach us and beg for a ticket to the show.  We tried to make student selection as fair as possible, but broken hearts were unavoidable.  I made my classes extra fun the week of the show to keep my students feeling loved and happy.
  • I must admit during the show I was on a major power trip.  It was awesome having complete control over such a big event.  Even more than the power trip, what I really enjoyed were the student transformations.  Before performances, students would be terrified.  Afterward, they would walk off stage with the biggest smiles.  Now that was awesome.
Here are some pictures from the show:

The light and sound equipment we rented for the show
We had a full house
Some of the performes
My excited Junior 1 students


My Junior 1 boys- they got second place!
The greatest helpers in the world



Christmas Day:

Shobana, Shane and I slept in until lunch, when we met the school administration for a big meal at the school cafeteria.  The admin men were pounding back the Chinese alcohol and we held our own with beer.  The three of us then ventured to Xintang's very own sauna.  Yes, a sauna.  It is new and has two rooms, complete with heated walls and floor.  We brought snacks and cards and camped out in a room for a couple hours, enjoying the peace and heat.  Afterward we made it back to campus in time to have a Christmas dinner with my wonderful Chinese tutor and her family.  They made special local dishes for us, dishes we had never tried before.  The school principal joined us as well.  To conclude our day of eating and relaxing, we watched a Christmas classic, Home Alone 2.

Merry Christmas family and friends!