Monday, March 15, 2010
a weekend in Shanghai
Nathan went to Shanghai over the weekend to visit a friend of ours that we met right around the time when Sophia was born. Since then, he got his PhD here at the TU Berlin, and then he returned to China. He was apparently the perfect host, showing Nathan around and refusing any kind of present or well-meant gesture. ;) At any rate, our friend and his wife will have a child soon... and Nathan suggested that'll be our time to reciprocate. Here is his account of the weekend:
Last night I went to dinner with Jianpei... it turned out that his wife had another engagement, so I didn't get to meet her, unfortunately. I guess he also isn't feeling all that well. I was totally surprised, because he sent me a text message just before we were supposed to meet saying that he was at the hospital getting "tropfen(be)handlung" and that he would meet me a little while later. (He of course showed up almost exactly on time.) Of course in Germany of the US, you only get an IV if you have a serious illness or something, but here it is far more commonplace. I guess he had a bad headache and decided to take himself to the clinic. I felt kind of bad, but he insisted there was no problem.
Before I met him I had bought a nice box of oranges to give him and his wife (here they take fruit and wrap it really nicely for giving as gifts) and he refused to take it. He also insisted on paying for just about everything we did together yesterday. He was too generous -- while I enjoyed the visit, he made it difficult to be on an equal level. For the last period of time I kept trying to find ways to get him to take the oranges, but he just wouldn't go for it. The guy is clever. Anyway, if he and/or his family ever visit Berlin again we need to reciprocate. When the baby is born we need to send something. By the way, the local tradition is eggs if it's a boy, chocolate if it's a girl. But I don't think that'll work via the mail...
Sunday, March 7, 2010
rain without end
Yeah, so it's still raining like crazy here... I feel like Forrest Gump a little bit when he's in Vietnam and it starts to rain and it just never stops. Really it's been like that here... I think it's almost stopped at a couple of points but never completely. At least now I can say I've experienced the rainy season here.
I don't have any new pictures for you because it's raining all the time and it's no fun to take the camera out in that. Maybe this weekend though I will go out with my camera just before I have a shower... the problem is that if I get wet, there's no good chance to get warm and dry quickly here. None of the buildings have central heating, not that dormitory, not the classrooms, not the cafeteria. Part of what was so nice about the restaurant I went to last night was that it was a pleasant warm temperature. :)
I don't have any new pictures for you because it's raining all the time and it's no fun to take the camera out in that. Maybe this weekend though I will go out with my camera just before I have a shower... the problem is that if I get wet, there's no good chance to get warm and dry quickly here. None of the buildings have central heating, not that dormitory, not the classrooms, not the cafeteria. Part of what was so nice about the restaurant I went to last night was that it was a pleasant warm temperature. :)
picture factory visit
These are pictures from the factory we visited on Wednesday. It was pretty interesting... essentially they make the pictures that you buy at Ikea or Walmart or Target or Costco that are framed prints, like roses or a bridge or whatever. They have high quality printing machines, make the frames themselves, put them together and then shrink wrap and label them. All the big box stores do is put it on the shelf. And we wonder where all the jobs go. Essentially, these guys make about $1 on every picture they sell. I asked the guy how many pictures he shipped in 2009... he said 10 million or something... pretty amazing stuff.
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Monday, March 1, 2010
intercultural exchange
So on Saturday night they picked us up at the airport. I managed to get into a rather lively discussion somehow with this guy (they sent over a bunch of German and English students to be our "tutors") who had very strong opinions that "Growing Pains" was a far better television series than "Friends." While I partially agreed with him, it's pretty amazing to see the degree to which students in China use the American tv shows they can find on the internet or on dvd to learn English, and how much they actually end up thinking about it. I mean for us it's just sheer entertainment, but for him, he was adamant that America should take better care of the type of programming they decide to share with the world. I decided not to go into a detailed discussion with him about what Mike's friend "Boner" actually means in everyday slang...
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