Jocelyn Writes:
Well we are finally getting caught up in blog entries.....Below is Ayden's piece on Yunnan Province--stay tuned for Gavi's entry...
Ayden Writes:
Last week I went to Yunnan Province. Yunnan is in the south of China. The plane ride to Yunnan was not very long, only about two hours. When we arrived in Yunnan, a tour guide picked us up, then the tour guide brought us to a hotel. The next day we went to the stone forest. The stone forest is a forest that instead of there being trees there are stones everywhere so it looks like a forest of stones.
The next day we took a eight hour over night train ride to Dali. We slept on the train. There were three levels of bunk beds. I slept part of the night on each of the bunks. When we got to Dali, we went straight to breakfast. After breakfast we went to a pagoda. The pagoda was different because there were mountains in the background. On the way to the pagoda we went past the area that Cheng Ho was born. For the people who don’t know who Cheng Ho was, Cheng Ho was my explorer this year in social studies class. Cheng Ho went on 7 voyages in the China Sea. When we arrived at the pagoda, my first thought was this is beautiful. We were not allowed in the pagoda but we were allowed to get really close to the pagoda. We also saw members of the Bai community who were wearing funky head dresses.
The next day we drove to Lijiang. It took us three hours to get there. When we got there we went to Snow Dragon Mountain. The Snow Dragon Mountain is a huge mountain in Lijiang. It is over 10,000 feet high. We didn’t go to the top of the mountain, but we went pretty far up. When we got to the mountain a bus drove us to a spot on the mountain that we could hop on a cable car and go to the half way mark. When we reached the half way mark we started to hike. We hiked for about an hour, then we went back down on a cable car because some students had trouble breathing.
On the second day in Lijiang we went to the old city. We spent the whole morning there. The old city is a shopping area. Then we drove back to Dali, where we hopped on a train then a plane that brought us back to Xi’an. I had a great time in Yunnan Province.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Thursday, March 20, 2008
March 18: Trip to Xing Xing Park & We are Off to Yunnan Province
Jocelyn Writes:
We have been "thin" on blog entries this week... I think the kids have been feeling tired of our routine--such that it is.... and are experiencing a bit of homesickness. In a timely-sort-of -way, we, the 5 Mallory-Gordons and the 8 BHS students, are all heading to the airport on Sunday, March 23, 2008--to spend five days in Yunnan Province--that's southern China near the border with Vietnam.
Our group will be visiting Kunming--the City of Eternal Spring, Dali --where the regional population is Bai and the city of Lijiang capital of the Naxi kingdom (another Chinese minority people). According to our itinerary, we are also going to climb some part of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (5600 meters above the sea level). We'll be out of touch till our return on Friday, March 28th, 2008 (Happy Birthday Mom, Zimra, Aunt Judy and Cousin Steve!!!). Our friend Marilyn Shapiro arrives in Xi'an on the day of our return--We are sooo looking forward to seeing her! Safe travels Marilyn! Happy Purim and much love to all!!
--Jocelyn
Ben Says: I lost a tooth!! (Ed. Comment: bottom front!)
Ayden Writes:
Yesterday I went to a park where you can see birds, ride boats and do many other things. The first thing we did was ride on a paddleboat. I was really scared at first but when we got out in the lake I decided that I wanted to steer the boat. The view from the boat was gorgeous. On the other hand the lake was not so pretty. The lake was full of dirt. It looked like the Charles River.
After the boat ride we went to look at birds. When we walked in, someone gave us a bag of stuff that we can feed to the birds. First we saw many pigeons. We also saw parrots. The next kind of bird we saw was a peacock. There were two different kinds of peacocks, the first kind was the regular kind that most of you know, the next kind was a white peacock. We saw many different kind of birds. I am sorry but I don’t know the names of the birds.
We also saw a bird show. It was really cool. I’m going to tell you about some of the really special acts. In the first act, a bird took a few pieces of paper and put them in the right order, then the bird held it up. My translator told me that the words meant “welcome”. In another act, a person who works with the birds took a bird and held it up. He told the audience that if someone wanted to hold up two kinds of money that the bird would choose the bill with the greatest value. The act was really entertaining to watch because the bird would always choose the bill with the higher value. The last act was a bird walking across a tightrope and didn’t fall off. I bet I could tell you a bunch more but that would take ages.
We have been "thin" on blog entries this week... I think the kids have been feeling tired of our routine--such that it is.... and are experiencing a bit of homesickness. In a timely-sort-of -way, we, the 5 Mallory-Gordons and the 8 BHS students, are all heading to the airport on Sunday, March 23, 2008--to spend five days in Yunnan Province--that's southern China near the border with Vietnam.
Our group will be visiting Kunming--the City of Eternal Spring, Dali --where the regional population is Bai and the city of Lijiang capital of the Naxi kingdom (another Chinese minority people). According to our itinerary, we are also going to climb some part of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (5600 meters above the sea level). We'll be out of touch till our return on Friday, March 28th, 2008 (Happy Birthday Mom, Zimra, Aunt Judy and Cousin Steve!!!). Our friend Marilyn Shapiro arrives in Xi'an on the day of our return--We are sooo looking forward to seeing her! Safe travels Marilyn! Happy Purim and much love to all!!
--Jocelyn
Ben Says: I lost a tooth!! (Ed. Comment: bottom front!)
Ayden Writes:
Yesterday I went to a park where you can see birds, ride boats and do many other things. The first thing we did was ride on a paddleboat. I was really scared at first but when we got out in the lake I decided that I wanted to steer the boat. The view from the boat was gorgeous. On the other hand the lake was not so pretty. The lake was full of dirt. It looked like the Charles River.
After the boat ride we went to look at birds. When we walked in, someone gave us a bag of stuff that we can feed to the birds. First we saw many pigeons. We also saw parrots. The next kind of bird we saw was a peacock. There were two different kinds of peacocks, the first kind was the regular kind that most of you know, the next kind was a white peacock. We saw many different kind of birds. I am sorry but I don’t know the names of the birds.
We also saw a bird show. It was really cool. I’m going to tell you about some of the really special acts. In the first act, a bird took a few pieces of paper and put them in the right order, then the bird held it up. My translator told me that the words meant “welcome”. In another act, a person who works with the birds took a bird and held it up. He told the audience that if someone wanted to hold up two kinds of money that the bird would choose the bill with the greatest value. The act was really entertaining to watch because the bird would always choose the bill with the higher value. The last act was a bird walking across a tightrope and didn’t fall off. I bet I could tell you a bunch more but that would take ages.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
March 17: Our Weekend Away & Gavi's Monday
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about what I did this weekend. This weekend I went to Luoyang. It took five hours to get there in a minibus. When I looked out the minibus window, I saw fields with crops and farmers planting crops. It was 12:00 AM when we arrived in Luoyang.
We stayed in a fancy hotel in Luoyang. The next morning we went down to the breakfast buffet. The first thing I saw was corn flakes. My eyes lit up because I have not had American cereal in a while.
After breakfast, we got into the minibus with our tour guide. We drove to the White Horse Temple. It is a Buddhist temple. We saw many Buddha statues. Next we went to the Shaolin Si, the Kung Fu school. We watched the Kung Fu show. My favorite part was when a warrior monk took a piece of metal and broke it with his head. Another cool part was when another warrior monk took a sewing needle and pushed it through a large glass square and popped a balloon with the needle. The glass was left with a hole the size of a sewing needle. After the show, we walked to the Temple at the school and saw basically the same things we saw at the White Horse Temple.
On Sunday we went to a costume museum, it had exhibits of what people wore and wear in China. We were going to see a shadow puppet show but the Museum had no electricity so the show was cancelled. After the Museum, we went to the Longmen Caves. We saw many Buddhas at the caves. Many people wanted to take pictures with me and my brother and sister. Taking pictures with Chinese strangers felt a bit odd and sort of fun. After the caves we took a boat back to the main entrance. We then hopped into our minibus and went to lunch. After lunch, we went home. It was a really fun trip.
Gavi Writes:
Hi Everyone,
Today was pretty much a normal school day for me well, as normal as they get here. I was a little late to school because my dad accidentally locked me out of the room with my shoes, backpack, and cell phone before going down to breakfast. So I had to walk down-stairs and then outside to the dining hall in my sister’s slippers which didn’t fit at all and get the keys. The students and school guards, who usually stare at me because I am Caucasian and have curly hair, which is rare here, gave me even more weird looks then usual. I am starting to get used to people staring at me everywhere with looks of amazement on their faces but these looks weren’t ones of amazement, just confusion.
Once at school I had English class, then Chinese, then we had flag raising, then Math then English again. After Chinese school, I went back to the high school campus to eat lunch and then play soccer with the BHS students. After lunch we had a history class and Jennifer did her presentation on the chapters she was assigned from Jonathan Spence’s The Search for Modern China. Then I had my Chinese class. Today instead of having the usual sit down Chinese class, Zhou Lou Shi and I went outside and just talked in Chinese. He was really surprised to hear that I wasn’t allowed to bike in China because of the lack of helmets. His response to my telling him that most people in America always wore helmets was that they must not be very good at riding bikes.
For cultural class today we had Kung-fu. We used swords again today and learned a really cool routine. It consists of a lot of swinging the sword around your head and then trusting it forward really fast. It was really fun to do but many people came very close to getting hit. After cultural class I went back up to my room and did a little homework. Then, because it’s my parent’s anniversary, we all went out for hot pot. We were fairly successful in ordering what we intended to order however the waitress did at one point bring us a platter of entire fish on sticks which I don’t believer we ordered, but you never really know. After dinner we all went back to the dorms and I did more homework. So to sum it all up it was just another day here in Xi’an China.
More later,
Gavi
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about what I did this weekend. This weekend I went to Luoyang. It took five hours to get there in a minibus. When I looked out the minibus window, I saw fields with crops and farmers planting crops. It was 12:00 AM when we arrived in Luoyang.
We stayed in a fancy hotel in Luoyang. The next morning we went down to the breakfast buffet. The first thing I saw was corn flakes. My eyes lit up because I have not had American cereal in a while.
After breakfast, we got into the minibus with our tour guide. We drove to the White Horse Temple. It is a Buddhist temple. We saw many Buddha statues. Next we went to the Shaolin Si, the Kung Fu school. We watched the Kung Fu show. My favorite part was when a warrior monk took a piece of metal and broke it with his head. Another cool part was when another warrior monk took a sewing needle and pushed it through a large glass square and popped a balloon with the needle. The glass was left with a hole the size of a sewing needle. After the show, we walked to the Temple at the school and saw basically the same things we saw at the White Horse Temple.
On Sunday we went to a costume museum, it had exhibits of what people wore and wear in China. We were going to see a shadow puppet show but the Museum had no electricity so the show was cancelled. After the Museum, we went to the Longmen Caves. We saw many Buddhas at the caves. Many people wanted to take pictures with me and my brother and sister. Taking pictures with Chinese strangers felt a bit odd and sort of fun. After the caves we took a boat back to the main entrance. We then hopped into our minibus and went to lunch. After lunch, we went home. It was a really fun trip.
Gavi Writes:
Hi Everyone,
Today was pretty much a normal school day for me well, as normal as they get here. I was a little late to school because my dad accidentally locked me out of the room with my shoes, backpack, and cell phone before going down to breakfast. So I had to walk down-stairs and then outside to the dining hall in my sister’s slippers which didn’t fit at all and get the keys. The students and school guards, who usually stare at me because I am Caucasian and have curly hair, which is rare here, gave me even more weird looks then usual. I am starting to get used to people staring at me everywhere with looks of amazement on their faces but these looks weren’t ones of amazement, just confusion.
Once at school I had English class, then Chinese, then we had flag raising, then Math then English again. After Chinese school, I went back to the high school campus to eat lunch and then play soccer with the BHS students. After lunch we had a history class and Jennifer did her presentation on the chapters she was assigned from Jonathan Spence’s The Search for Modern China. Then I had my Chinese class. Today instead of having the usual sit down Chinese class, Zhou Lou Shi and I went outside and just talked in Chinese. He was really surprised to hear that I wasn’t allowed to bike in China because of the lack of helmets. His response to my telling him that most people in America always wore helmets was that they must not be very good at riding bikes.
For cultural class today we had Kung-fu. We used swords again today and learned a really cool routine. It consists of a lot of swinging the sword around your head and then trusting it forward really fast. It was really fun to do but many people came very close to getting hit. After cultural class I went back up to my room and did a little homework. Then, because it’s my parent’s anniversary, we all went out for hot pot. We were fairly successful in ordering what we intended to order however the waitress did at one point bring us a platter of entire fish on sticks which I don’t believer we ordered, but you never really know. After dinner we all went back to the dorms and I did more homework. So to sum it all up it was just another day here in Xi’an China.
More later,
Gavi
Thursday, March 13, 2008
March 14: Outdoor Market, Dancers and Chinese
Jocelyn Writes:
Well, we have the whole nuclear family involved today... We will be off line this weekend because we are heading out of town on a nuclear family adventure (I bother with the word nuclear because..."family" on its own has come to mean Gavi, Ayden, Ben, Bruce, Caroline, Jenna, Emily, Mickey,Kile, Jonathan, Joe and Jennifer).
Bruce, the kids and I are off to the area around Luoyang to see the Longmen Caves and the Shaolin Si. "They say" (whoever "they" are) that the Longmen Caves are a spectacular parade of Buddhist figurines and reliefs (stay tuned for pics). There are 1350 caves, 750 niches and 40 pagodas....I am expecting we'll manage one or two. The Shaolin Si is a Buddhist Monastery and the birth place of Kung Fu--- we'll be watching all sorts of KungFu demonstrations. Stay tuned for the report...
Take Care,
Joc
Ben Says:
Today I went to an out door market with my mom. I scootered there on my new scooter. I didn’t go to school because my parents said I could take a day off. At the out door market, first there were a lot of motorcycles then there was a lady selling spinach. There was a lot of meat. The men were chopping up pork and beef. It was really disgusting. We came to a person who was selling mangos and tomatoes in baskets. Then I saw big pile of mops. There was an apartment with two little dogs playing in front of the door. I don’t think there are big dogs in China. You never see them.
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry I will be writing about what I see on my way to school. First I usually take a cab to school, but I see many different things when I am in the cab. When I am in the cab, I see all of these dancers on the street dancing. Everyday I see something different. When I’m riding to school I usually see about two or three different dances. Each one is very unique. I will describe two for you.
The first one I see on my way to school is a slow kind of dance called Tai chi. The people doing the dance all have the same outfit. It is a dark, reddish pink velvet. The dancers put their hands up and then they move their feet. This all takes place really slowly. Sometimes I see them doing the same dance with swords. They do the dance over and over. It is kind of fun to watch.
The next dance that I see is a dance that involves fans. The dancers wear the same outfit that the people Tai chi wear. All of the people doing the dance are lined up perfectly straight in rows. The fans they use are very big and colorful. The dancers start by taking their fans and waving them around, then they wave the fans to themselves. This all happens really quickly. This dance is a lot more interesting because it is faster. All of the dances are a lot different from the kind of dance in America.
Gavi Writes:
Hi Everyone,
Last week I started actually being tutored in Chinese. My teacher’s name is Zhou Lao Shi (pronounced Joe) and he is also one of the three teachers that the BHS students have. Compared to the other languages I have studied (Hebrew, Spanish, English) Chinese is definitely the hardest. For one thing, many of the sounds are very similar to each other and if you say the wrong one you are saying a completely different word.
Then there are the tones. These are what really throw me off. There are four tones, rising, falling, flat and falling then rising. If you use the wrong tone on a word, even if you got the right pronunciation otherwise, you could be in big trouble! For example, the word “ma” with different tones can mean mother, horse, and can denote a question. As you can see, if you’re not careful you could easily end up calling you mother a horse which probably wouldn’t end very well.
Chinese writing is also an extreme challenge for me. Unlike other languages I have studied, Chinese has no alphabet. There are different characters for each word and you just have to memorize them. Zhou Lao Shi gives me about seven of these characters to memorize a night and the first night it took me over an hour to remember all of them. However, now I can do it in about 15 minutes. I’ve figured out that if I write the character over and over again while thinking the word to myself the character gets built into my muscle memory and my brain associates it with the word. Though it’s a little tedious it’s the only way I can figure out that works.
Reading Chinese can also be hard and frustrating because if you don’t recognize a character there is no sounding it out and looking it up is almost impossible. So really, the only thing to do is to ask someone who does know. This can be rather problematic when you are the only person in your family who can read any Chinese at all. However, although Chinese is extremely hard and exhausting to learn, I am having a lot of fun using it. It’s amazing how even after just a week of studying Chinese I can communicate much better with my desk buddy in school, and with people around town such as taxi drivers and store clerks. I think its so much more fun learning a language in a place where people actually speak it because there are so many opportunities to practice.
More later,
Gavi
Well, we have the whole nuclear family involved today... We will be off line this weekend because we are heading out of town on a nuclear family adventure (I bother with the word nuclear because..."family" on its own has come to mean Gavi, Ayden, Ben, Bruce, Caroline, Jenna, Emily, Mickey,Kile, Jonathan, Joe and Jennifer).
Bruce, the kids and I are off to the area around Luoyang to see the Longmen Caves and the Shaolin Si. "They say" (whoever "they" are) that the Longmen Caves are a spectacular parade of Buddhist figurines and reliefs (stay tuned for pics). There are 1350 caves, 750 niches and 40 pagodas....I am expecting we'll manage one or two. The Shaolin Si is a Buddhist Monastery and the birth place of Kung Fu--- we'll be watching all sorts of KungFu demonstrations. Stay tuned for the report...
Take Care,
Joc
Ben Says:
Today I went to an out door market with my mom. I scootered there on my new scooter. I didn’t go to school because my parents said I could take a day off. At the out door market, first there were a lot of motorcycles then there was a lady selling spinach. There was a lot of meat. The men were chopping up pork and beef. It was really disgusting. We came to a person who was selling mangos and tomatoes in baskets. Then I saw big pile of mops. There was an apartment with two little dogs playing in front of the door. I don’t think there are big dogs in China. You never see them.
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry I will be writing about what I see on my way to school. First I usually take a cab to school, but I see many different things when I am in the cab. When I am in the cab, I see all of these dancers on the street dancing. Everyday I see something different. When I’m riding to school I usually see about two or three different dances. Each one is very unique. I will describe two for you.
The first one I see on my way to school is a slow kind of dance called Tai chi. The people doing the dance all have the same outfit. It is a dark, reddish pink velvet. The dancers put their hands up and then they move their feet. This all takes place really slowly. Sometimes I see them doing the same dance with swords. They do the dance over and over. It is kind of fun to watch.
The next dance that I see is a dance that involves fans. The dancers wear the same outfit that the people Tai chi wear. All of the people doing the dance are lined up perfectly straight in rows. The fans they use are very big and colorful. The dancers start by taking their fans and waving them around, then they wave the fans to themselves. This all happens really quickly. This dance is a lot more interesting because it is faster. All of the dances are a lot different from the kind of dance in America.
Gavi Writes:
Hi Everyone,
Last week I started actually being tutored in Chinese. My teacher’s name is Zhou Lao Shi (pronounced Joe) and he is also one of the three teachers that the BHS students have. Compared to the other languages I have studied (Hebrew, Spanish, English) Chinese is definitely the hardest. For one thing, many of the sounds are very similar to each other and if you say the wrong one you are saying a completely different word.
Then there are the tones. These are what really throw me off. There are four tones, rising, falling, flat and falling then rising. If you use the wrong tone on a word, even if you got the right pronunciation otherwise, you could be in big trouble! For example, the word “ma” with different tones can mean mother, horse, and can denote a question. As you can see, if you’re not careful you could easily end up calling you mother a horse which probably wouldn’t end very well.
Chinese writing is also an extreme challenge for me. Unlike other languages I have studied, Chinese has no alphabet. There are different characters for each word and you just have to memorize them. Zhou Lao Shi gives me about seven of these characters to memorize a night and the first night it took me over an hour to remember all of them. However, now I can do it in about 15 minutes. I’ve figured out that if I write the character over and over again while thinking the word to myself the character gets built into my muscle memory and my brain associates it with the word. Though it’s a little tedious it’s the only way I can figure out that works.
Reading Chinese can also be hard and frustrating because if you don’t recognize a character there is no sounding it out and looking it up is almost impossible. So really, the only thing to do is to ask someone who does know. This can be rather problematic when you are the only person in your family who can read any Chinese at all. However, although Chinese is extremely hard and exhausting to learn, I am having a lot of fun using it. It’s amazing how even after just a week of studying Chinese I can communicate much better with my desk buddy in school, and with people around town such as taxi drivers and store clerks. I think its so much more fun learning a language in a place where people actually speak it because there are so many opportunities to practice.
More later,
Gavi
March 7-9: Weekend Update From Gavi
Gavi Writes:
Hi Everyone,
Saturday morning the Gaoxin School took my family, the 8 BHS students and me to the Provincial Museum. The Provincial Museum exhibits included artifacts from quite a few of the dynasties. It was really interesting to go through and look at all of it in one place. There were a few displays that had versions of the same artifact from different dynasties that were really interesting to look at. For example, there was a display of the decorated backs of 5 or so mirrors from different dynasties. All of which had very different patterns but elements from the ones that came before it.
After the museum, we all went out for boud zi, which is becoming a Saturday afternoon tradition. After lunch, the BHS students and I, minus Emily who had a ton of homework, went to the Muslim Quarter to do some shopping and work on our bargaining skills. I didn’t really need anything but I found Ayden some jade earrings for her birthday, which I got for 20 yuan from about 50. When we finished our shopping, we all went home for dinner, and then went to Jenna’s for a movie night. Though, it wasn’t really a movie night because Mikey, the keeper of the movies, was two hours late. Subsequently, it was a mahjong/ hide and go seek/ movie night. However, it was fun nevertheless.
Sunday night Ayden and I had our joint birthday party. Ayden’s birthday is March 7th and mine March 11th so March 9th seemed like an appropriate day. For our party my parents treated us, and the BHS students to a hot pot dinner. Hot pot is a type of Chinese meal that can be found all over Xi’an. Basically, everyone gets their own pot of boiling fish broth and all sorts of things, such as fish and meat, are put on the table. Each person chooses what he or she wants to eat and then they put it in their pot to either cook or heat up. Then you dip it in sauce and eat it, it tastes amazing! After dinner we had a cake shaped like a panda’s head, which Ayden picked out last week, then did presents and went home.
Monday was pretty much a normal school day for me. I went to Chinese school, then came to the dorms for lunch. After lunch we played ping pong for a while and then had a discussion about the trip we went on last weekend to the country-side. Then, while everyone else was editing journal entries for the WebLab, I did some schoolwork from back home. For our cultural class, we had Kung Fu. Unlike in the past, we got to use swords. It was really fun and cool though, had the swords been real Ben would have probably lost his head 5 times over. After we learned a routine, our teacher took our measurements for Kung-fu uniforms she is having made for us. When cultural class was over I went back up to the dorms to do more school work.
More later,
Gavi
Hi Everyone,
Saturday morning the Gaoxin School took my family, the 8 BHS students and me to the Provincial Museum. The Provincial Museum exhibits included artifacts from quite a few of the dynasties. It was really interesting to go through and look at all of it in one place. There were a few displays that had versions of the same artifact from different dynasties that were really interesting to look at. For example, there was a display of the decorated backs of 5 or so mirrors from different dynasties. All of which had very different patterns but elements from the ones that came before it.
After the museum, we all went out for boud zi, which is becoming a Saturday afternoon tradition. After lunch, the BHS students and I, minus Emily who had a ton of homework, went to the Muslim Quarter to do some shopping and work on our bargaining skills. I didn’t really need anything but I found Ayden some jade earrings for her birthday, which I got for 20 yuan from about 50. When we finished our shopping, we all went home for dinner, and then went to Jenna’s for a movie night. Though, it wasn’t really a movie night because Mikey, the keeper of the movies, was two hours late. Subsequently, it was a mahjong/ hide and go seek/ movie night. However, it was fun nevertheless.
Sunday night Ayden and I had our joint birthday party. Ayden’s birthday is March 7th and mine March 11th so March 9th seemed like an appropriate day. For our party my parents treated us, and the BHS students to a hot pot dinner. Hot pot is a type of Chinese meal that can be found all over Xi’an. Basically, everyone gets their own pot of boiling fish broth and all sorts of things, such as fish and meat, are put on the table. Each person chooses what he or she wants to eat and then they put it in their pot to either cook or heat up. Then you dip it in sauce and eat it, it tastes amazing! After dinner we had a cake shaped like a panda’s head, which Ayden picked out last week, then did presents and went home.
Monday was pretty much a normal school day for me. I went to Chinese school, then came to the dorms for lunch. After lunch we played ping pong for a while and then had a discussion about the trip we went on last weekend to the country-side. Then, while everyone else was editing journal entries for the WebLab, I did some schoolwork from back home. For our cultural class, we had Kung Fu. Unlike in the past, we got to use swords. It was really fun and cool though, had the swords been real Ben would have probably lost his head 5 times over. After we learned a routine, our teacher took our measurements for Kung-fu uniforms she is having made for us. When cultural class was over I went back up to the dorms to do more school work.
More later,
Gavi
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Tuesday March 11, 2008: Morning Exercises and Breakfast
Jocelyn Writes:
Hello everyone!! Today Ben has joined our blogging effort. He dictated his entry to me. Enjoy! Much love-Joc
Ben Says:
Today I am going to tell you about morning exercises. We go out to morning exercises in the playground. Then someone says something in Chinese. The music starts and the kids do their morning exercises.
This is how you do the morning exercises:
You pause for a second then squat down for about 9 seconds then you come back up and wave your arms.
Then you cross your arms, turn your body to the right and pat your chest. Then you do the same thing to the left and repeat 4 times.
Then you run in place for 4 times and then lunge forward and put your arms behind back. You do this lunge part 4 times.
Then you put your arms out and then you pull them back in and then put one of your hands like the handle of a teapot to the side and reach your other arm over your head.
Make a fist and bend your arm up by your cheek and then do that with the other arm. Do this 2 times.
Then jump forward and back 2 times.
Put your arms over your head 2 times.
Make a butterfly with your hands and raise your butterfly above your head.
That's all I can remember now.
When I learn the rest I will tell you.
--Ben
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about what people eat for breakfast in China. We don’t live in a house, we live in dorm room; and we don’t have a kitchen so we eat in the cafeteria. Chinese breakfast is very different than the breakfast in America. First of all, Chinese people don’t eat cereal, instead they eat sandwiches. Also, in China we eat hard-boiled eggs, muffins, cookies, flat strudel, corn bread and a lot of other stuff for breakfast. We also have a kind of soup that is called “she fan”, it is a really gross soup made of red beans and rice.
I am going to describe the sandwiches to you. Okay first of all, you only eat them for breakfast. The bread for the sandwiches looks like pita bread and an English muffin. You get to choose what you want in your sandwiches. Some things you put in the sandwiches are peanuts with celery, rice noodles with green seaweed, cucumbers, bok choy and a bunch of other things. I think that the food for breakfast is really good. Breakfast is my favorite meal, because of the sandwiches. I know that in the states we usually eat sandwiches for lunch, but these are much better than the sandwiches my dad makes for lunch.
When we first arrived in China it was Spring Festival school vacation. During vacation, we ate a different breakfast then we do now. At breakfast during vacation, the cooks in the school kitchen tried to serve us an American food, but it ended up looking a lot more like a Chinese breakfast. They served fried eggs, toast, shi fan and green things. Also when we ate, a girl would stand around the table and wait until we were done. At breakfast, we would drink this kind of milk that was sweet—it didn’t taste like milk.
Both breakfasts are very good.
Hello everyone!! Today Ben has joined our blogging effort. He dictated his entry to me. Enjoy! Much love-Joc
Ben Says:
Today I am going to tell you about morning exercises. We go out to morning exercises in the playground. Then someone says something in Chinese. The music starts and the kids do their morning exercises.
This is how you do the morning exercises:
You pause for a second then squat down for about 9 seconds then you come back up and wave your arms.
Then you cross your arms, turn your body to the right and pat your chest. Then you do the same thing to the left and repeat 4 times.
Then you run in place for 4 times and then lunge forward and put your arms behind back. You do this lunge part 4 times.
Then you put your arms out and then you pull them back in and then put one of your hands like the handle of a teapot to the side and reach your other arm over your head.
Make a fist and bend your arm up by your cheek and then do that with the other arm. Do this 2 times.
Then jump forward and back 2 times.
Put your arms over your head 2 times.
Make a butterfly with your hands and raise your butterfly above your head.
That's all I can remember now.
When I learn the rest I will tell you.
--Ben
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about what people eat for breakfast in China. We don’t live in a house, we live in dorm room; and we don’t have a kitchen so we eat in the cafeteria. Chinese breakfast is very different than the breakfast in America. First of all, Chinese people don’t eat cereal, instead they eat sandwiches. Also, in China we eat hard-boiled eggs, muffins, cookies, flat strudel, corn bread and a lot of other stuff for breakfast. We also have a kind of soup that is called “she fan”, it is a really gross soup made of red beans and rice.
I am going to describe the sandwiches to you. Okay first of all, you only eat them for breakfast. The bread for the sandwiches looks like pita bread and an English muffin. You get to choose what you want in your sandwiches. Some things you put in the sandwiches are peanuts with celery, rice noodles with green seaweed, cucumbers, bok choy and a bunch of other things. I think that the food for breakfast is really good. Breakfast is my favorite meal, because of the sandwiches. I know that in the states we usually eat sandwiches for lunch, but these are much better than the sandwiches my dad makes for lunch.
When we first arrived in China it was Spring Festival school vacation. During vacation, we ate a different breakfast then we do now. At breakfast during vacation, the cooks in the school kitchen tried to serve us an American food, but it ended up looking a lot more like a Chinese breakfast. They served fried eggs, toast, shi fan and green things. Also when we ate, a girl would stand around the table and wait until we were done. At breakfast, we would drink this kind of milk that was sweet—it didn’t taste like milk.
Both breakfasts are very good.
Monday, March 10, 2008
March 10: Crossing the Street in China with Ayden
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about how to cross the street in China. Crossing the street in China is very different than crossing the street in America. First of all, the streets in China are much bigger than the streets in America. The streets in our neighborhood have five lanes, four for cars and one for bikes and motorcycles. Also the streets don’t have stop signs. I have also noticed that Chinese don’t have speed limits.
When you are little in America, your parents teach you to stop, look and listen. In China parents teach you to keep on walking across the street. When you are crossing a street in China, you have to keep walking and not stop. The cars will just move around you.
Many drivers in China don’t follow the traffic signals. The drivers sometimes go through red lights, turn when they are not suppose to and much more. It is terrifying crossing a street. But when you get to the other side, you feel proud of yourself. When I am walking on the sidewalk, the cars on the street sort of look like hair that hasn’t been brushed for a while because all of the cars are moving in different directions very close to each other and look like a big knot.. When I get back to America it will be so easy to cross the street.
For today’s blog entry, I will be writing about how to cross the street in China. Crossing the street in China is very different than crossing the street in America. First of all, the streets in China are much bigger than the streets in America. The streets in our neighborhood have five lanes, four for cars and one for bikes and motorcycles. Also the streets don’t have stop signs. I have also noticed that Chinese don’t have speed limits.
When you are little in America, your parents teach you to stop, look and listen. In China parents teach you to keep on walking across the street. When you are crossing a street in China, you have to keep walking and not stop. The cars will just move around you.
Many drivers in China don’t follow the traffic signals. The drivers sometimes go through red lights, turn when they are not suppose to and much more. It is terrifying crossing a street. But when you get to the other side, you feel proud of yourself. When I am walking on the sidewalk, the cars on the street sort of look like hair that hasn’t been brushed for a while because all of the cars are moving in different directions very close to each other and look like a big knot.. When I get back to America it will be so easy to cross the street.
Saturday, March 8, 2008
Gavi Catching Up With You All!
Hey all,
Sorry I haven’t written in a while. My schedule here is getting extremely busy! On a normal day I wake up at about 6:30 to be at school (a 15-25 minute walk from our dorms) by 8:00. I’m at school until 11:40 supposedly but, the teacher usually takes an extra 7 or so minutes to finish up. After school, I go back to the dorms to have lunch with the BHS students. When we are finished eating, we usually play a game of soccer until we have to go in at 1:30. At 1:30, I have classes with the BHS students taught by my dad. Depending on the day we have either Chinese Literature or Chinese History. Then, every day except for Wednesdays, I have Chinese tutoring. After that, I have more classes with the BHS students and then a cultural class. On Wednesdays however, I have the cultural class, then Chinese then, class with the BHS students. At 4:30, when I am completely done with school, I have to do Chinese homework, then about an hour and a half of keeping up with school in America and then homework for Ma lao shi (otherwise known as Mr. Mallory or my dad.) I usually am completely finished at about 8:00 pm. So as you can see my free time is limited.
Despite my packed schedule, yesterday, after school, Emily, Jonathan, Kyle, Jennifer, Jenna and I all went to Lotus (the local supermarket/ everything you could ever need store) to shop for notebooks, shoes, clothes, and Jonathan wanted a unicycle. We found everything we needed with ease except for the unicycle. First of all, it was hard to get across to the people helping us what a unicycle was. Though Jonathan knew the official word in Chinese they are very rare in China so not many people know what they are. The man in the bike section finally understood after we said “bike with one” and then mimed a spinning wheel. The man pointed in a direction and said something none of us understood and then walked away. We walked in the direction he had pointed but didn’t see anything so we asked someone else who, of course, took us back to the man in the bike section. The man then explained to us that Lotus didn’t have any unicycles and that to get one we would have to take a 15-minute taxi ride out of town to a different store. This other store apparently had two unicycles in stock that they were selling. We decided that it was too late to go then, and ate dinner instead. After we ate, we went our separate ways.
More later,
Gavi
Sorry I haven’t written in a while. My schedule here is getting extremely busy! On a normal day I wake up at about 6:30 to be at school (a 15-25 minute walk from our dorms) by 8:00. I’m at school until 11:40 supposedly but, the teacher usually takes an extra 7 or so minutes to finish up. After school, I go back to the dorms to have lunch with the BHS students. When we are finished eating, we usually play a game of soccer until we have to go in at 1:30. At 1:30, I have classes with the BHS students taught by my dad. Depending on the day we have either Chinese Literature or Chinese History. Then, every day except for Wednesdays, I have Chinese tutoring. After that, I have more classes with the BHS students and then a cultural class. On Wednesdays however, I have the cultural class, then Chinese then, class with the BHS students. At 4:30, when I am completely done with school, I have to do Chinese homework, then about an hour and a half of keeping up with school in America and then homework for Ma lao shi (otherwise known as Mr. Mallory or my dad.) I usually am completely finished at about 8:00 pm. So as you can see my free time is limited.
Despite my packed schedule, yesterday, after school, Emily, Jonathan, Kyle, Jennifer, Jenna and I all went to Lotus (the local supermarket/ everything you could ever need store) to shop for notebooks, shoes, clothes, and Jonathan wanted a unicycle. We found everything we needed with ease except for the unicycle. First of all, it was hard to get across to the people helping us what a unicycle was. Though Jonathan knew the official word in Chinese they are very rare in China so not many people know what they are. The man in the bike section finally understood after we said “bike with one” and then mimed a spinning wheel. The man pointed in a direction and said something none of us understood and then walked away. We walked in the direction he had pointed but didn’t see anything so we asked someone else who, of course, took us back to the man in the bike section. The man then explained to us that Lotus didn’t have any unicycles and that to get one we would have to take a 15-minute taxi ride out of town to a different store. This other store apparently had two unicycles in stock that they were selling. We decided that it was too late to go then, and ate dinner instead. After we ate, we went our separate ways.
More later,
Gavi
Thursday, March 6, 2008
March 6, 2008: Ayden's Pre-Birthday Blog Entry
Ayden Writes:
Hey y’all
Tomorrow I will not be writing my blog, because my birthday is tomorrow. For my birthday I will be sharing a birthday party with my sister, because her birthday is in 5 days. For my birthday, I got my nails done today. Tomorrow I am getting a foot massage with the high school students. I am going to get to choose a big cake for me and my sister’s birthday party. I am very excited to turn ten. For our party, we will be going to a hot pot restaurant.
Hot pot is a type of restaurant where you cook your own food. You have a bowl that is filled with boiling hot fish broth. You take something (a kind of food like a vegetable or egg or meat or fish) you put it in the pot with the boiling broth. The food takes about 1 minute to cook. It tastes really good. For me and my sisters party, we are going to hot pot with all of the high school students. I am very excited. Thanks for taking your time to read this.
Ayden
Hey y’all
Tomorrow I will not be writing my blog, because my birthday is tomorrow. For my birthday I will be sharing a birthday party with my sister, because her birthday is in 5 days. For my birthday, I got my nails done today. Tomorrow I am getting a foot massage with the high school students. I am going to get to choose a big cake for me and my sister’s birthday party. I am very excited to turn ten. For our party, we will be going to a hot pot restaurant.
Hot pot is a type of restaurant where you cook your own food. You have a bowl that is filled with boiling hot fish broth. You take something (a kind of food like a vegetable or egg or meat or fish) you put it in the pot with the boiling broth. The food takes about 1 minute to cook. It tastes really good. For me and my sisters party, we are going to hot pot with all of the high school students. I am very excited. Thanks for taking your time to read this.
Ayden
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
Ayden's Observations
Ayden Writes:
For today’s blog entry I will be writing about my observations about China. My first observation is that everybody in China is short. At school when we get into lines we do it by height. I am always at the back of the line. The line sort of looks like a staircase until it gets to me, that’s when it jumps up. Whenever my class does something, I am usually the last person to do it because I am the tallest.
My second observation is that everyone in China has straight black hair. Whenever I am in line I always see black. That is because if I look up, I see everybody’s hair which is all black. Whenever I am walking down the street I never see anybody with blond hair. No body in my class has curly hair except me.
Next observation is that everybody treats me like royalty. When I am at school, there is always a big crowd around me; and it is hard for me to go anywhere without somebody following me. School is a very hard place to move around, some people want me to talk to them, some people want my autograph. But no matter what, the students just want to be near me. My mom says that they think that I am sort of like an alien and sort of like a rockstar. Everybody I talk to is just so nice and so welcoming to me. And those are my main observations.
--Ayden
For today’s blog entry I will be writing about my observations about China. My first observation is that everybody in China is short. At school when we get into lines we do it by height. I am always at the back of the line. The line sort of looks like a staircase until it gets to me, that’s when it jumps up. Whenever my class does something, I am usually the last person to do it because I am the tallest.
My second observation is that everyone in China has straight black hair. Whenever I am in line I always see black. That is because if I look up, I see everybody’s hair which is all black. Whenever I am walking down the street I never see anybody with blond hair. No body in my class has curly hair except me.
Next observation is that everybody treats me like royalty. When I am at school, there is always a big crowd around me; and it is hard for me to go anywhere without somebody following me. School is a very hard place to move around, some people want me to talk to them, some people want my autograph. But no matter what, the students just want to be near me. My mom says that they think that I am sort of like an alien and sort of like a rockstar. Everybody I talk to is just so nice and so welcoming to me. And those are my main observations.
--Ayden
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
Trip to Xianyang Museum and Zhouzhi Scool
Hey all,
Saturday (March 1) my family and I went to the Xianyang Museum. The Xianyang Museum houses artifacts found in the tomb of Emperor Chang Ling who ruled during the Han dynasty. One of these artifacts is an army of 3 foot tall clay soldiers he was buried with. When you first walk into the Museum, you are in a large room with many different things that were found in the Emperor’s tomb. On the wall are plaques about the Emperor and the time period he lived in. When you go down-stairs, there is a room very similar to the one upstairs. Both rooms have displays of the little clay soldiers. After the museum, we went to the actual tomb where we walked on glass flours above the remains and saw these soldiers in different stages of restoration. It was really interesting to see the actual steps the archeologists took to get the soldiers to the state they are in today from the state they were in when they were found. After going to the museum, my mom, my sister and I all went to get massages. Then, we went to a vegetarian restaurant for dinner and from there back to the dorms.
Sunday was one of my favorite days so far. The Gao Xin School took me, my dad, the BHS students and 20 of their own students to their sister school in the country-side. The Zhouzhi School is about a 2-hour bus ride from the School. The neighborhood that we are living in is one of the most well-off in China; so, it was really interesting and moving to see what majority of the country really looked like. When we arrived at the school we were greeted by about 75 high school students who were smiling and clapping. We were divided into two groups and each group went into one of the two classrooms that were being used at the time. In the classroom I was in, there were many speeches given that I didn’t understand much of. Then, the boy from Gao Xin sitting next to me turned to me and said “ Okay now they would like you to give a little introduction.” So we all reluctantly got up and introduced ourselves and Joe spoke a little about BHS. I personally am still not used to being told that I’m going to have to do something like this minuets before I have to do it. However, it seems to be a very common way to run things here. After the speeches were done, we got to talk a little with the kids from the Zhouzhi School; but, there was a lot more picture taking then talking. Then we had formal picture taking and a few of the BHS students were interviewed by some cameramen for who knows what. After the trip had been documented to their standards, we had some free time. Jenna, my dad, and I played basketball with some of the Gao Xin students and some of the students from the Zhouzhi school.
After the break we had lunch, which consisted of really good cooked vegetables, soup, and bread. Then we were told that we were going to visit a student’s home in the mountains; so we all piled into the bus again. The trip was about a 30-minute bus ride and then an amazingly beautiful hour-long hike. The air in the mountains was much cleaner then that in the city and that in it’s self was really satisfying. But the view was even better. Looking up you could see more mountains above you and looking down there were little cottages spotting gorgeous grass covered hills. When we reached the students home, I realized for the fist time how different the living standards we were experiencing were from those that most Chinese people experience. This boy lived in a little dirt floor hut with 3 rooms, a kitchen, a bedroom, and another room I didn’t go into. There was also a cellar for keeping food cold, and a loft around the top of the house for storing wheat and corn, which the family grew. Going to this boy’s house really put into perspective how well off I really am, and in other ways what I am missing. It really got me thinking about what was important to me. Though this boy didn’t have fridge, or his own bed, he was living in one of the most beautiful places I had ever seen. After exploring the mountains a little, we all made the hike down and then piled back onto the bus to go back to Gao Xin School. On the bus ride home Jonathan (one of the BHS students) taught me a never loose way to solve a rubix cube. So now you can scramble it as much as you like and I can solve it! Well… probably.
More later,
Gavi
Saturday (March 1) my family and I went to the Xianyang Museum. The Xianyang Museum houses artifacts found in the tomb of Emperor Chang Ling who ruled during the Han dynasty. One of these artifacts is an army of 3 foot tall clay soldiers he was buried with. When you first walk into the Museum, you are in a large room with many different things that were found in the Emperor’s tomb. On the wall are plaques about the Emperor and the time period he lived in. When you go down-stairs, there is a room very similar to the one upstairs. Both rooms have displays of the little clay soldiers. After the museum, we went to the actual tomb where we walked on glass flours above the remains and saw these soldiers in different stages of restoration. It was really interesting to see the actual steps the archeologists took to get the soldiers to the state they are in today from the state they were in when they were found. After going to the museum, my mom, my sister and I all went to get massages. Then, we went to a vegetarian restaurant for dinner and from there back to the dorms.
Sunday was one of my favorite days so far. The Gao Xin School took me, my dad, the BHS students and 20 of their own students to their sister school in the country-side. The Zhouzhi School is about a 2-hour bus ride from the School. The neighborhood that we are living in is one of the most well-off in China; so, it was really interesting and moving to see what majority of the country really looked like. When we arrived at the school we were greeted by about 75 high school students who were smiling and clapping. We were divided into two groups and each group went into one of the two classrooms that were being used at the time. In the classroom I was in, there were many speeches given that I didn’t understand much of. Then, the boy from Gao Xin sitting next to me turned to me and said “ Okay now they would like you to give a little introduction.” So we all reluctantly got up and introduced ourselves and Joe spoke a little about BHS. I personally am still not used to being told that I’m going to have to do something like this minuets before I have to do it. However, it seems to be a very common way to run things here. After the speeches were done, we got to talk a little with the kids from the Zhouzhi School; but, there was a lot more picture taking then talking. Then we had formal picture taking and a few of the BHS students were interviewed by some cameramen for who knows what. After the trip had been documented to their standards, we had some free time. Jenna, my dad, and I played basketball with some of the Gao Xin students and some of the students from the Zhouzhi school.
After the break we had lunch, which consisted of really good cooked vegetables, soup, and bread. Then we were told that we were going to visit a student’s home in the mountains; so we all piled into the bus again. The trip was about a 30-minute bus ride and then an amazingly beautiful hour-long hike. The air in the mountains was much cleaner then that in the city and that in it’s self was really satisfying. But the view was even better. Looking up you could see more mountains above you and looking down there were little cottages spotting gorgeous grass covered hills. When we reached the students home, I realized for the fist time how different the living standards we were experiencing were from those that most Chinese people experience. This boy lived in a little dirt floor hut with 3 rooms, a kitchen, a bedroom, and another room I didn’t go into. There was also a cellar for keeping food cold, and a loft around the top of the house for storing wheat and corn, which the family grew. Going to this boy’s house really put into perspective how well off I really am, and in other ways what I am missing. It really got me thinking about what was important to me. Though this boy didn’t have fridge, or his own bed, he was living in one of the most beautiful places I had ever seen. After exploring the mountains a little, we all made the hike down and then piled back onto the bus to go back to Gao Xin School. On the bus ride home Jonathan (one of the BHS students) taught me a never loose way to solve a rubix cube. So now you can scramble it as much as you like and I can solve it! Well… probably.
More later,
Gavi
Monday, March 3, 2008
Start of Week 4 and Our Foot Massage Adventure
Ayden Writes:
March 3, 2008
Today I went to school. My first subject was Chinese. During Chinese class my teacher was calling out words and the students were writing them down. My next subject was morning exercises. Today instead of morning exercises we raised the Chinese flag. The Chinese flag is red with four yellow stars, three small and one big star. The first thing we did was the raising of the flag. Next three people gave speeches. I don’t know what the speeches were about because they were in Chinese. Then we sang a song. I didn’t know the words so I decided not to sing. After raising the flag, my teacher told me that I would be getting a uniform. The uniform I got is very ugly. When I got back to my classroom my class was having math. After math class we had eye exercises. After eye exercises we had computer class. My next subject was music. We sang a song about spring. After music class, I went down stairs to meet my mom, my sister and my brother. They were all waiting for me. And that was my day at school.
On Saturday in the afternoon I got a foot massage that included back, shoulders, hands and legs. When Gavi, my mom and I got to the massage place, the employees showed us where to go and they gave us outfits to change into. First, they massaged our hands and then our feet. My mom was trying to talk to the employees in Chinese. She tried to ask them if they were students but instead she asked them to get hot water. The massage felt really good. I was sad when I had to leave.
--Ayden.
March 3, 2008
Today I went to school. My first subject was Chinese. During Chinese class my teacher was calling out words and the students were writing them down. My next subject was morning exercises. Today instead of morning exercises we raised the Chinese flag. The Chinese flag is red with four yellow stars, three small and one big star. The first thing we did was the raising of the flag. Next three people gave speeches. I don’t know what the speeches were about because they were in Chinese. Then we sang a song. I didn’t know the words so I decided not to sing. After raising the flag, my teacher told me that I would be getting a uniform. The uniform I got is very ugly. When I got back to my classroom my class was having math. After math class we had eye exercises. After eye exercises we had computer class. My next subject was music. We sang a song about spring. After music class, I went down stairs to meet my mom, my sister and my brother. They were all waiting for me. And that was my day at school.
On Saturday in the afternoon I got a foot massage that included back, shoulders, hands and legs. When Gavi, my mom and I got to the massage place, the employees showed us where to go and they gave us outfits to change into. First, they massaged our hands and then our feet. My mom was trying to talk to the employees in Chinese. She tried to ask them if they were students but instead she asked them to get hot water. The massage felt really good. I was sad when I had to leave.
--Ayden.
Saturday, March 1, 2008
Blogs from The Last Days in February. Happy Leap Year!
February 29
Gavi Writes:
Hey all,
Today in school, my last period, I had computer class. However, the fact that we were doing computers took a while for Annie (my desk partner) to explain to me. We all lined up outside the way we do for running in the mornings, two rows of boys and two rows of girls. Then we all marched from the building my classroom is in to another building where the computer lab was. We all lined up outside of the computer lab and everyone took out these big sock-like things, which they put over their shoes. The socks were shaped in a way that made our feet look like elf feet, pointy on both ends. I’m not sure why we were wearing them but it couldn’t have been too important because no one seemed to care that I wasn’t wearing any. I’m not really sure what happened in class, it was all in Chinese as was everything on the computer, however the key-board was English. After class I went back to the dorms to have lunch.
Lunch break today was quite an event. First, while we were eating I noticed that Jenna (one of the BHS students) was missing. I asked if anyone knew where she was and someone told me that she was playing basketball with some Chinese boys in her class. The cafeteria we eat lunch in is right above the basketball courts, so I looked out the window to see if I could see her playing. Not only was I able to see Jenna holding her ground against the Chinese boys, but also what must have been 50 or so other students who had all gathered around the basketball court to watch an American girl play. All of us Americans found this very funny and entertaining to watch.
After we ate, we all went out to the soccer field. Yesterday, Mandy one of the China exchange coordinators here told my dad that the BHS students were in charge of entertaining a bunch of Chinese kids visiting from a sister school in the country-side at break today. And what’s a better way to entertain so many people at once than an enormous game of capture the flag? So that’s what we did. We played a huge game of capture the flag. Joe and Emily, who are the best at Chinese in our group, managed to explain the rules as best they could and then split everyone into teams.
Because there were so many people Joe put red water-colors on one of the teams noses so we wouldn’t have to memorize who was on which team. The game that followed was absolutely insane. First of all, everyone used the weirdest strategies such as --causing a distraction by running the width of the field and back multiple times on out side of line making crazy hand motions to look like we were using some sort of code.
I noticed that when you are hanging out with kids your age form a completely different country its hard not to get into interesting and distracting conversations. So, many times I was talking to someone and all of a sudden someone would wiz past me from the other team while all of my team yelled “GAVI WHY DIDN’T YOU TAG HIM???”. Not all of the Chinese students had fully understood the rules so such as the “free walk back from jail rule”; so many such rules were discarded.
The strangest part for me was that after the game about 20 Chinese kids were going around basically asking all of the American students to autograph their notebooks and give them their e-mails. We happily all gave the Chinese students our emails . After all of this going up to my room to do school work seemed rather dull, but what can you do?
More later,
Gavi
February 28, 2008
Ayden Writes:
Today I did not feel so good. When my Dad woke me up this morning, it took me a while to get dressed. I went down to breakfast with my sister. During breakfast I didn’t eat what I normally eat because I was afraid that it was going to upset my stomach. I decided not go to school.
My Dad took me to the Doctor’s office just down stairs from our dorm room. Our Chinese friend Mandy who helps us with Chinese came to the doctor so we could understand the doctor. First, the doctor asked some questions. Then, the doctor asked me to get onto a table. When I got on the table, she started to push on my stomach, then the doctor pushed on my back and then on my legs. After my doctors appointment my Mom told me that the doctor was using acupressure on me. My Mom told me all about acupressure and how it helped my body.
Everyday we have a cultural class. Today the cultural class was cooking. We made jiadsa. In English, jiadsa means dumplings. Mandy took the high school kids and us up to the kitchen. There we started to make dumplings with the cooks who make our meals. First, we rolled our dough in the shape of a snake. Then we started picking little balls off of our snakes of dough. After we flattened the dough into circles, we started putting cut up vegetables inside. Next we folded our dough in half and then squashed the top part of the dumplings with our thumb. After we were finished with all of our dumplings we gave them to the chef so he could cook them. Next thing to do was to eat them. The Jiadsa were so good!!! Eating the dumplings sure was my favorite part.
--Ayden.
Gavi Writes:
Hi everyone,
Today was my first day at school this week because I have been sick since Monday. I was welcomed me back with familiar applause when I walked into the classroom. The morning was fairly uneventful, though I was asked by Feng Lou Shi (the teacher who came to America with the 8 Chinese students who is also my English teacher) to teach a little bit of the English class. Everyone was very impressed at how well I could ask for, and give directions.
After school we had the usual lunch and a soccer game. Then I had more classes with the high school students. Our cultural class today was cooking. I found it the most fun out of all of the other ones we have had so far. We made Jiadsa which are little dumplings. The first step was rolling out thin little circles of dough. The cooks did this fancy thing with their rolling pins and their circles were perfectly circular and symmetrical. I did my best to imitate them and mine resembled circles, a little bit. After we rolled out the dough we put a tofu and vegetable filling in and closed them up. Caroline, who had done this many times before, had some fancy way of closing up her dumplings and they were really neat and very pretty. The rest of us just folded them in half and pinched them shut. Except for Jonathan who decided that was too difficult for him. He made his hamantashen style. (Hamantashen are a Jewish pastry usually made for the holiday Purim in April.)
After all of the dumplings were made the cooks put them in boiling water to cook. When they came out we got to eat them and though they didn’t look very nice, except for Caroline’s, they were really good!
More later,
Gavi
Gavi Writes:
Hey all,
Today in school, my last period, I had computer class. However, the fact that we were doing computers took a while for Annie (my desk partner) to explain to me. We all lined up outside the way we do for running in the mornings, two rows of boys and two rows of girls. Then we all marched from the building my classroom is in to another building where the computer lab was. We all lined up outside of the computer lab and everyone took out these big sock-like things, which they put over their shoes. The socks were shaped in a way that made our feet look like elf feet, pointy on both ends. I’m not sure why we were wearing them but it couldn’t have been too important because no one seemed to care that I wasn’t wearing any. I’m not really sure what happened in class, it was all in Chinese as was everything on the computer, however the key-board was English. After class I went back to the dorms to have lunch.
Lunch break today was quite an event. First, while we were eating I noticed that Jenna (one of the BHS students) was missing. I asked if anyone knew where she was and someone told me that she was playing basketball with some Chinese boys in her class. The cafeteria we eat lunch in is right above the basketball courts, so I looked out the window to see if I could see her playing. Not only was I able to see Jenna holding her ground against the Chinese boys, but also what must have been 50 or so other students who had all gathered around the basketball court to watch an American girl play. All of us Americans found this very funny and entertaining to watch.
After we ate, we all went out to the soccer field. Yesterday, Mandy one of the China exchange coordinators here told my dad that the BHS students were in charge of entertaining a bunch of Chinese kids visiting from a sister school in the country-side at break today. And what’s a better way to entertain so many people at once than an enormous game of capture the flag? So that’s what we did. We played a huge game of capture the flag. Joe and Emily, who are the best at Chinese in our group, managed to explain the rules as best they could and then split everyone into teams.
Because there were so many people Joe put red water-colors on one of the teams noses so we wouldn’t have to memorize who was on which team. The game that followed was absolutely insane. First of all, everyone used the weirdest strategies such as --causing a distraction by running the width of the field and back multiple times on out side of line making crazy hand motions to look like we were using some sort of code.
I noticed that when you are hanging out with kids your age form a completely different country its hard not to get into interesting and distracting conversations. So, many times I was talking to someone and all of a sudden someone would wiz past me from the other team while all of my team yelled “GAVI WHY DIDN’T YOU TAG HIM???”. Not all of the Chinese students had fully understood the rules so such as the “free walk back from jail rule”; so many such rules were discarded.
The strangest part for me was that after the game about 20 Chinese kids were going around basically asking all of the American students to autograph their notebooks and give them their e-mails. We happily all gave the Chinese students our emails . After all of this going up to my room to do school work seemed rather dull, but what can you do?
More later,
Gavi
February 28, 2008
Ayden Writes:
Today I did not feel so good. When my Dad woke me up this morning, it took me a while to get dressed. I went down to breakfast with my sister. During breakfast I didn’t eat what I normally eat because I was afraid that it was going to upset my stomach. I decided not go to school.
My Dad took me to the Doctor’s office just down stairs from our dorm room. Our Chinese friend Mandy who helps us with Chinese came to the doctor so we could understand the doctor. First, the doctor asked some questions. Then, the doctor asked me to get onto a table. When I got on the table, she started to push on my stomach, then the doctor pushed on my back and then on my legs. After my doctors appointment my Mom told me that the doctor was using acupressure on me. My Mom told me all about acupressure and how it helped my body.
Everyday we have a cultural class. Today the cultural class was cooking. We made jiadsa. In English, jiadsa means dumplings. Mandy took the high school kids and us up to the kitchen. There we started to make dumplings with the cooks who make our meals. First, we rolled our dough in the shape of a snake. Then we started picking little balls off of our snakes of dough. After we flattened the dough into circles, we started putting cut up vegetables inside. Next we folded our dough in half and then squashed the top part of the dumplings with our thumb. After we were finished with all of our dumplings we gave them to the chef so he could cook them. Next thing to do was to eat them. The Jiadsa were so good!!! Eating the dumplings sure was my favorite part.
--Ayden.
Gavi Writes:
Hi everyone,
Today was my first day at school this week because I have been sick since Monday. I was welcomed me back with familiar applause when I walked into the classroom. The morning was fairly uneventful, though I was asked by Feng Lou Shi (the teacher who came to America with the 8 Chinese students who is also my English teacher) to teach a little bit of the English class. Everyone was very impressed at how well I could ask for, and give directions.
After school we had the usual lunch and a soccer game. Then I had more classes with the high school students. Our cultural class today was cooking. I found it the most fun out of all of the other ones we have had so far. We made Jiadsa which are little dumplings. The first step was rolling out thin little circles of dough. The cooks did this fancy thing with their rolling pins and their circles were perfectly circular and symmetrical. I did my best to imitate them and mine resembled circles, a little bit. After we rolled out the dough we put a tofu and vegetable filling in and closed them up. Caroline, who had done this many times before, had some fancy way of closing up her dumplings and they were really neat and very pretty. The rest of us just folded them in half and pinched them shut. Except for Jonathan who decided that was too difficult for him. He made his hamantashen style. (Hamantashen are a Jewish pastry usually made for the holiday Purim in April.)
After all of the dumplings were made the cooks put them in boiling water to cook. When they came out we got to eat them and though they didn’t look very nice, except for Caroline’s, they were really good!
More later,
Gavi
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