Friday, May 30, 2014

Xichang weekend

A few weeks ago, my friends in Kunming and Chengdu came to Xichang over a long weekend. It was an absolute blast.

We went to the lake...



And to a hot spring (which ended up being less hotspringy and more like a pool filled with so many children and undoubtedly even more urine)

Cool ripped up tree stump


If you can't tell, there are two people in the middle of that wheat field beating the wheat from the tares.



My adorable friend named Rachel bought a strap-on basket that she now actually uses in real life

This is rabbit's head. Yes, you're supposed to eat it, and no, I did not partake



















I also took them to the old city where a large population of Yi people live. There is a mostly dry riverbed there where Yi Shamans hang out and people come to them to have rituals performed. We watched a few of the rituals, and they were some of the strangest things I have ever seen. I didn't feel comfortable taking pictures, so I waited until they were done and then took pictures of what they left behind. We came into one of the rituals after it started, and the large-black-hat-wearing Shaman was brushing a live chick back and forth vertically over a seated woman's back. He was singing throughout this strange beating, and stopped every once in a while to take a sip of baijiu and spray it over her head calling out "Oppa!". For those of you who don't know, baijiu is a Chinese spirit made from corn that is 70% alcohol, and 100% disgusting.
You can see the poor little chickadee's head in there
After he had beaten the girl for a good 15 minutes with the live chick, he KILLED IT WITH HIS BARE HANDS and hung it on a teepee like straw ... next to a pit of burning coals filled with people-shaped mud dolls.

They put this t-shirt over it at the end of the ritual


















these dolls creeped me out immensely

But that's not all folks, other strange parts of the ritual included having the girl rub wheat over her body, periodically drinking water and spitting it out into the aforementioned pit of coals, and breathing in the smoke. After the Shaman had killed the baby chick, he picked up a FULL GROWN CHICKEN and continued to BEAT THE GIRL WITH IT. Am I overreacting? Beyond this ritual being somewhat strange, it was also the worst animal treatment I have ever witnessed in person, and I wanted to stop it several times. And offend someone's culture? What is the right decision in that situation? Now, if I could change anything I would have mentioned something after they were done about how, heyyy maybe you shouldn't do that to those poor freaking chickens. Anyway. That's my PETA side coming out I guess.

The whole time I was thinking, this girl must have a serious medical issue, or be trying to expel a demon or something. When they were done, at least 45 minutes into when we started watching, they drank some naaasty baijiu together and I saw the girl slip the shaman a 50 (about $8) They had noticed us watching and came over to offer us alcohols. Of which I happily partook of a lid full because, sorry BYU, but I was not going to not be a part of that moment. I asked her what she did the ritual for, and she said she had peeling skin on her face. WHAT? Seriously? All that for something that could be healed by some moisturizer and maybe staying indoors? This place baffles me at times.

Well I hope that was entertaining. See you in 11 days, America!

And in the meantime, enjoy this dog with a mullet. 



Monday, April 21, 2014

Kunming

I had the greatest weekend ever! I went to Kunming and saw three of my friends from Flagship that are interning there this semester. It was so much fun! Kunming is the capital of Yunnan where 26 different Chinese ethnic minorities live. I am pretty sure it's the biggest variety of minorities in China. The city is absolutely gorgeous, and CLEAN. It was the first thing I noticed, along with the gorgeous weather and sunshine.

On Friday night, we just chilled and caught up. They are also working for an NGO, and it was interesting to compare similarities and differences with my internship. The next day was easily one of the most fun days I have had in a while. We were originally going to go to the Stone Forest that day, but we missed the last train, and Vicky took us to 民族村, or nationalities village. It is kind of like a theme park that has a different area representing all of the minorities that live in Yunnan. There are restaurants with traditional dishes, and people all dressed up and doing traditional dances.

Why am I not sharing the thousand pictures that I took while I was there? Funny story. There was a festival going on that weekend called 泼水节 in which everyone ran around with waterguns and bowls full of water and threw it on people. It's like the Indian Festival of Colors but with water. And Rachel and I were HUGE targets because of our blondeness. Literally as soon as we stepped off the bus, we were assaulted. It was so much fun, but my poor little phone didn't stand a chance, and is now dead, and I therefore have no way to post all of the wonderful pictures I took, including of me feeding a watermelon to an elephant, and dancing with gorgeous pirate men from the pumi ethnicity. It was an absolute blast, although I don't know any more about ethnic minorities than when I went in.

So that was Saturday, on Sunday we took an hour and a half train to the Stone Forest where all of my dreams came true. Not really, but it was so surreal. I have been wanting to go there forever, and it was more beautiful that I had imagined. I also just really love rocks, and was geeking out about the amazing different erosion patterns we saw.

So many rocks just looked right about to topple over







how cool is this? This gigantic rock perched on a little stump


I am super adorable
Beautiful girls. I was glad they were as enthralled as I was

It was nice and cool down in the gorgeous gorge



I think this guy looks like an adorable elephant



Are you serious, Nature? Why are you so cool?


Dreams coming true











Besides the amazing rocks, we also heard an actual cuckoo bird! At first, I thought it had to be fake, like someone's ringtone or something. But there were no people around (another wonderful thing about this place, the hordes of people stayed in the touristy areas and we wandered through the forest for hours). Then about half an hour later, we heard another one in a completely different, totally empty place. It was incredible! I knew they were real, but have never heard them outside of clock form. We didn't get to see them, but it was still so surreal.

Now I can cross that off my bucket list! And be completely satisfied, because it was absolutely incredible. I feel like none of my experience in China would be worth it without having gone here.

That night we took a bus back to Kunming where we had to rush to get me to the train station on time, which involved getting swarmed by awful taxi drivers telling me that their meters were "broken" and it would cost 60 yuan to get to the station. With Kunming prices I doubt that the actual price would have been any more than 25 or 30, but we didn't really have a choice and found a girl for 40 kuai. Bargaining can be fun sometimes, but it also gets exhausting. When I got back to the Xichang train station at 3 in the morning, I just took the price that they charged me. Way too tired to try to fight it.

So that was my amazing Kunming weekend! Huge thanks to Rachel, Vicky, and Brian who put up with me the whole time. 佩服你们. I wish I could travel all the weekends for the rest of my life. There is way too much to see in this gorgeous world, and I don't want to miss it!

I love you America! Can't wait to see you in less than two months! #Notcountingthedays #what #ImissInNOutokay?

China pic of the day:

This made me feel like Doctor Evil

Sunday, April 13, 2014

The boys are back!

The boys are back! I was feeling apathetic about this place, about work, about China, and then my favorite boy came back home. Monica came back early from her surgery in Spain, and organized for the boys to come back early as well. Rimu was the first one back, and the other two didn't end up getting back for a week. So the two of us hung out, and he reminded me of why I wanted to be here, and why this job is important.


He was FILTHY when he got back. His underwear and socks were both black, and we showered him three times before the water finally stopped coming off of him brown. He's still adorable though.






















He loves to steal my phone and take selfies



 We went to the lake this weekend! It's the main tourist attraction here, and I still hadn't been, and I though it was a good opportunity so I could go without 6 kids.







The lake had a mini amusement park with bumper cars!!! It had other rides too, but I wondered the last time any of them had passed any sort of inspection. So we stuck with bumper cars, and he still bumped his head and bit his tongue. He got better soon though.



The other two boys got back while we were at the lake, and I noticed how shy they were. They had taken so long to warm up to me before, and now it's like we have to start all over. I know their families hit them, even if they can't talk about it yet, because every time I move to touch them or hug them now they immediately flinch away. I want to punch their family members in the face, but violence only begets violence, right?

The week after I got back from the rural school, my boss gave me a new assignment to go to the same school in the city that I went to at the beginning of the semester with the all-girl middle-school class that we support. My assignment was to compile a report of all of the girls' improvements over the course of their time under our assistance. It is an all-girl's class because of the male-favoring Yi culture. Most of the girls would not have had a chance to go to middle school without us, and would probably be married off by now. I spent the week going to the school and interviewing them during their breaks, and just hanging out with them and talking. They are all so smart and hardworking, and come from really poor backgrounds. Many of them had never seen a car before coming to the city, and all of them have dreams of bringing their families out of poverty.













They are freaking adorable. And there are over 50 of them, so it was a long week. Their stories made me cry. One girl was one of three girls in her entire village that had ever been to school before. Many of the girls don't have parents anymore or have parents who are not home because they have gone out to work in factories for $1.50 per hour wages. Most of them whose parents had died were because of illnesses. Health and hygiene standards are frighteningly low here, and health problems take people at very young ages.

I know my last post was negative, there are a lot of problems here. But these girls are proof that they are getting better, because of us. It is difficult, but things are changing. 

In short, all is good! And I am so excited to keep working and trying to help out these amazing kids. 


China pic of the day:


I love you, America!

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Oh, Apathy



I probably had one of the worst weeks of my life last week. I haven't posted about it, not out of laziness, but because I had so many feels I couldn't put them into words. I mentioned in my last post that my boss told me that I would be going to a rural school to help out for a month. He said it on quite short notice, and didn't give me crystal clear instructions on exactly what he wanted me to do. I was nervous, but I got prepared and kind of made my own goals for what I wanted to focus on while I was there. The wife of my boss (their relationship is terrifying, I'll get to that later) gave me more specific instructions that I was to inspect the school and the classes and try to help with any problems that the students were having.

I got there on Sunday night to start the week on Monday, and left on Thursday morning, making my total stay less than four days. "What happened to one month?", you may be asking yourself. No worries, I'll get there. As I said, I was there for four days, and I saw more problems than I thought I could possibly see in a month.

The students don't have toilet paper. Neither the school nor our organization provides it for them! One of the most basic human sanitation needs is simply not provided to students, but it's okay, because they're "used to it". When I confronted my boss about it, she got extremely defensive. She said they have bought toilet paper before, but the students don't use it, or they wasted it, and so now they won't buy it anymore. The students will buy it for themselves. With what money? Some of the kids' parents give them 5 yuan every now and then to buy snacks, but it is very unstable. And most of these kids have either one or no parents and relatives don't want to waste their money on some other person's kid.

Another problem: hand-washing and general cleanliness. There are no showers on the premises of this school. Students are expected to wash their hands and faces in the morning and at night, which is the only time that the water is running besides lunchtime. Which means that during the day, the students have no way of washing their hands after using the bathroom. But that's okay, because they don't wipe anyway right? These kids were filthy. Some of the older grade ones were slightly better, but I was in charge of the third graders during my stay, and I couldn't stand the smell of them after a while. I asked the main manager if they ever showered, and he gave me this long explanation about how they try to twice a week, but there is no hot water, and on some weekend days they go to the river to wash. In the sparkling clean RIVER WATER. So basically I took that as a no, and decided to make them shower on Wednesday afternoon. That way, even though they had to wash with cold water, they would warm up right away because it was so hot outside. Problem solved. So why don't they do it? Since I was in charge of the third graders, I said I was going to help them shower, and after watching them carelessly splash water on their arms for a few minutes, ended up physically washing their bodies for them because they were so filthy. I took their towels and scrubbed layers of dirt off them, and the water used was all brown by the time I was done.

Another problem: the teachers smoke in front of the students. But again, it's okay, because the students are "used to it". They're also used to their parents smoking and dying of lung cancer, but that doesn't mean it's a good thing. I started asking people to stop smoking whenever I saw a cigarette, and I freaked out when I saw some middle school kids smoking behind the school one day. I may have gone overboard, because I made one of them cry, but I had to do something! I mentioned it to the head manager later, and I think that was the first time he considered sending me home.

On Tuesday morning, I was at the school store seeing what they sold, when a man walked up behind me to buy a pack of cigarettes. I asked him if he was a teacher at the school, and he said yes and that he was about to start class (the bell had rang ten minutes before) and would I care to watch his class. I thought he was acting sort of strange, and asked him if he had been drinking. He said yes, and I asked if he was still planning on teaching while drunk. The store-owner jokingly said that the teacher was a descendant of Libai (a Chinese artist famous for working while drunk) and so it didn't matter. They laughed about it, and I attended the class of a drunk man, in which he said nothing of substance and stumbled around like an idiot most of the time. Afterwards, I spoke to the head manager, and his first reaction was to laugh before he realized how angry I was. While he went to speak to the principle for me, the teacher came into the office and asked me how I thought his class was. I blew up at him a little bit and told him that this was the most unprofessional thing I have ever seen, and that he should be ashamed of himself for being such a horrible example to the students. He pulled me aside and told me all about how he had tested second on the exam to become a teacher in the region, and that this was just the way China is, and there was no way to change it, it was unavoidable. Hey well I think I have a solution that might work, guy. Don't do it! Don't drink and then come to school. It's as simple as that. You do not have to participate in the customs that keep your culture from progressing, you have the power to change a culture because you have the power to change yourself, and you choose not to. I was beside myself, and I think he finally got the message. In the end, the principal suspended him for a week without pay. I honestly don't think any action would have been taken if I hadn't been there. Nobody would have even noticed that he was drunk, or ten minutes late for all of his classes. So many things go unnoticed or aren't considered important here.

I would like to point out that I realize that I have absolutely no tact. My boss told me to inspect the school and find the problems, and I did. I am blunt, I am straightforward. It's usually something I like about myself, I am a problem solver, and to solve problems, you first have to find them and admit that you have them. That got me in trouble here. I think I spoke way too quickly and insulted the teachers at the school. It makes sense that they were insulted, but that still doesn't make it okay. They are cowards, and don't care about what they are doing. They are supposed to be helping the poor children of the region, and all their "help" is is making sure they eat enough and whipping them when they step out of line. They literally have a whip.

On Tuesday evening, a news report came out about basically how crappy the education is in the county I was in. I don't know what the big deal was, because it's kind of obvious that there is a huge problem. But from what I gather, the education department got pissed after they saw the news, and my organization had neglected to register my presence at the school with the education department. So they were afraid that they would find out that I was there without permission, and get mad at my organization. I still don't know for sure, nobody would explain the situation to me fully. But on Wednesday evening, my boss called me and told me I was going home. I told her that I respected that, but I really felt that I should stay because there was still a lot that I had to do here. She responded: I don't care what you feel, you are my employee and you are coming back tomorrow morning. So that was that. I was crying I was so angry. The problems here are engrained in the system. The education department gets mad about a news article saying there's a problem? They should be putting out their best efforts to fix the problem, not getting rid of the people trying their best to solve it. In China, as long as everything looks decent on the surface, nothing gets done. I can't count how many times I heard "没办法“ - there's no solution, or "习惯了” - we're used to it, while I was at the school.

Before I came home, I called my Chinese teacher back in Nanjing for some advice about how to handle things with my boss because I was so angry. She said that I shouldn't bring it up, and to just go about my work as usual. What? This was a really big deal to me, and I wanted to know why I was being taken away from the kids so early. But in China, there is no communication within an office. No wonder nothing ever gets done! People take their orders and follow them like gophers and clock out at five, not caring whether or not they got anything worthwhile done that day. And I am sick of it. Sick of this messed up place, and sick of not being able to get through to anyone. Sick of feeling inexperienced and that nothing I do matters. I had heard of this Chinaness before, but now after working here I know how bad it is. When I got back to the office, my boss gave me no word of explanation, not even a welcome back, just new assignments. I'm pretty close to giving up, which is something I don't do very often. This place has drained me of my drive, and right now all I want to do is go home.

I had been planning on going to Chengdu that weekend, and I figured I should still go even though I was upset, to take my mind off of everything. It was really nice. I have awesome friends there that let me stay with them. And I stuffed my face with burgers and Frappuccinos the whole time. While I was waiting for the train to Chengdu, I ran into a French guy and almost had a panic attack because he was the only white person I have ever seen in this place besides Monica. I sat next to him and forced him to be my friend. While we waited together, we were approached by an Yi man who spoke to us and I translated for Colin (cool French guy). The man told us that he did business all over Guangzhou and Shanghai. I asked him what he did and he was reluctant to tell me at first, but I got out of him that he was a drug dealer. After I finished freaking out that he was somehow going to force heroin into my body and sell me into slavery, I told him that he was a bad person and ruined people's lives and should find a new job. He smiled and nodded and "oh yes of course I will do that"-ed me. And this just sort of added to my apathy. Maybe he actually will find a new job. Let's hope so.

So that was a HUGE vent sesh. Does anyone have any advice for me? I literally have no will to be here anymore. There's some lesson to learn from this, I think. Just need to put some distance between myself and the situation to find what it is.

Thanks for being better than China, America. People in America, stop complaining about America. It could be a hecka lot worse.

Bye bye for now

China pic of the day: iPheno is an awesome new brand.