tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9658241201204543422024-03-07T07:06:23.207+00:00ResidentAlienI blog to keep my sanity, as a break from teaching and motherhood. It's also a great way to keep writing.Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.comBlogger413125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-73116791507034342302014-06-01T04:35:00.000+01:002014-06-01T04:39:42.043+01:00Belly-dancing in ChinaMy daughter and I are at our very first belly-dancing class. "Are you sure you want to do this?" I ask her as we enter the gym.<br />
<br />
But she can't hear me. Not only is Arabesque music pounding out of the loudspeakers at full volume, but in China people are used to loud noise and everybody just talks over it, creating a cacophony that has to be heard to be believed. In a country where you can expect firecrackers going off at seven in the morning, making every dog in town howl its lungs out, where some drivers lean on their horns just to let off steam and street vendors holler out their pitches to passersby all day long, a roomful of people screaming to make themselves heard raises no eyebrows.<br />
<br />
My daughter and I are intimidated by the number of women wearing proper belly-dancing outfits: those little belts with tinkling metal bits that jingle when you shake your hips, sexy tops in bright, sparkly colors, and wispy-thin Princess Jasmine-style trousers. On top of this, although this is a belly-dancing class, we seem to be the only ones in the room who have anything close to real bellies: all the women in the room are svelte, willowy, and rail-thin. I try to remind myself that the Turkish belly-dancers I knew were of all sizes, that we should fit right in. But in fact we stand out like guppies among goldfish. Also, we're not Chinese, and everybody else in the room is, including the teacher.<br />
<br />
"We'll just watch the teacher," my daughter argued when I pointed out our language problem. "We don't need the language just for a dance class. And besides, it'll be a learning experience." And I allowed myself to be convinced. But the truth is, although we've both been studying Chinese furiously, we still have a long way to go even just to follow the Chinese a belly-dancing class. <br />
<br />
The class begins. The pounding Arabesque is cranked up a notch and we all concentrate on following the teacher, who starts with stretches--easy enough. Then she moves on to simple movements: we all stand tall, feet together, arms held out, and move our feet rapidly, jiggling the entire body. Then we move on to more simple moves which branch into more moves, complicated ones too --arms held up, arms held out, arms reaching in different directions, turn steps, moving forward, moving backwards, turning one way, turning the other way, all the time the instructions barked out in Chinese that we cannot follow. Given the pounding music, the sound of 40 feet pounding the floor, and the shimmering tinkle of belly-dancing belts in our ears on top of our linguistic ineptitude, it's tough to follow her.<br />
<br />
And then right in the middle of it, when we are both dripping with sweat, panting for breath, screwing up 65% of the moves, and cringing at the sight of our flushed, uncoordinated selves in the mirror, I hear it: <i>zuo jiao. </i>"Left foot!" I almost cry out, in the joy of understanding. "Left foot!" I mouth to my daughter, who is too exhausted to see it. Not five minutes later, I catch another one: <i>Youshou--</i>right hand. I could whoop for joy. Who cares if I'll never belly dance properly? If I can get even a few words of Chinese in this racket, I'm making progress. And I know that I really <i>am </i>getting better: just yesterday I understood somebody who said <i>Is it okay if I sit here?; </i>last week, I was able to understand the cashier when she said <i>320 yuan; will that be by cash or credit card?--</i>and a while back, not only was I able to tell the lady who got on the elevator after me that I wasn't responsible for the pee on the floor, I could understand her chuckled response: <i>Yeah, a kid did that.</i> Clearly I'm on a roll here.<br />
<br />
Later in the evening, when we have showered and nursed our aching arms and legs, my daughter and I practice our Chinese. Tonight we have a song all picked out which should help us, too: <i>heads, shoulders knees and toes (</i>hair,<i> </i>shoulders, knees and feet here in China). It's a simple enough song, and I know from painful experience that my daughter will learn it a lot faster than I will. But never mind: I already know <i>foot.</i><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-2803815964154365312014-05-01T05:00:00.001+01:002014-05-01T05:00:13.758+01:00Key InsideThe receptionist is wearing a tight-fitting purple leotard and a butterfly hair clip, but she is all business. She repeats herself and looks from me to my husband, her eyes flashing impatience. We have no idea what she's saying.<br />
<br />
"Sorry, could you say that again?" I say in a squeak, managing to trip over my words. It's my turn. My husband has already been stretched over the linguistic rack and it's not fair to expect him to do all the work. <br />
<br />
The woman repeats herself, using the exact same words, and predictably, we still don't understand. I forgive her: not everybody is a language teacher. But it still drives me insane.<br />
<br />
"Could you write it down?" I try next. I'm still very much a beginner when it comes to speaking Mandarin, but thanks to over two decades of Japanese and eight months of toughing it out here, my reading is intermediate. Unfortunately, it fails me on this occasion. All I can pick out is <i>you can't-- today-- didn't come-- one to two days-- maybe. </i><br />
<br />
We are trying to join our local gym. We've been told by foreign friends that the registration process is straightforward: all you need to join is cash and very basic Chinese. So here we are with both, but we're getting absolutely nowhere. <br />
<br />
My husband, ever the pessimist, thinks we should cut our losses and go home, but I'm <i>dying </i>for a work-out and determined to make it through this. And I remember Oba-san, a Japanese man I once knew in Amsterdam. If they handed out medals for linguistic bravery, Oba-san would have been in line for the gold. <br />
<br />
I met Oba-san through the owner of the Japanese restaurant where I was working as a dishwasher. Oba-san was a graphic artist working on a project in the Netherlands, and he and his wife and adult son had been in Amsterdam for only a few weeks. None of them spoke Dutch or had more than the merest smattering of English, and I had been asked to help them practice conversational English. This was not easy for any of us: both Oba-san and his wife had gone through school during the war years, when there was no English language instruction at all, and had gained what tiny bit of spoken ability they had through their son, who himself spoke little English. Week after week, we plugged away at the kind of English I thought they might need for shopping, getting around town, and meeting people. It was slow going, but the Obas never seemed to get frustrated with their lack of ability.<br />
<br />
During the months I knew them, one event stands out in my mind as a shining example of the best possible attitude a language learner can have. I had assumed that the Obas primarily needed me to help them translate and interpret, so one stormy day when I turned up at their rented house and learned that their roof was leaking, I prepared myself for a conversation with their landlord. Instead, Mr Oba waved me away. "I'll handle it," he said, hunching over the telephone.<br />
<br />
Listening to Oba-san's side of the conversation, I was both appalled and highly impressed: his grammar was all over the place, his intonation was off at least 50% of the time, and he butchered every vowel and consonant he spoke--<i>Rye-in is fall down, is very strong. Floor I step, water, my feet, my socks, water--</i> as I listened, I found myself wondering if his landlord had any idea what he was trying to say. Or if his landlord, who like most Dutch people was almost certain to speak excellent English, had any idea that there was a native English speaker nearby who could have explained the situation much more efficiently. But here is the wonderful thing: Oba-san got his point across. Soon after this phone call, the landlord sent somebody to the house to repair the roof and inspect the soggy carpet. When I told Oba-san how impressed I was with his bravery, he waved his hand. "If I don't try, I'll never learn." He then told me a marvelous story about an older Japanese friend of his who had gone abroad with even less English. This friend had locked himself out of his hotel room one morning and had puzzled over how to explain this to the receptionist. But on the elevator ride downstairs, he had worked on a strategy. "Me outside, key inside," he explained to the woman behind the desk--and in less than a minute, he was back in his room. <i>Me outside, key inside. </i>Hardly eloquent English, but in an emergency, quick wits are often more useful than grammar and vocabulary.<br />
<br />
One thing I know: if Oba-san and his friend could do it, so can I.<br />
<br />
I point to our fitness bags. "Can we?" I ask, praying the receptionist will understand from the context. I mime running. "Can we today, here, now?" <br />
<br />
The receptionist nods and her butterfly clip bobs back and forth. "Yes, of course," she says. She fishes out her mobile phone and jabs buttons, then presents it to us: <i>Card cannot get today, can get next week maybe. Sports can do today.</i><br />
<br />
Ah yes: Google Translate--sometimes it works, and undoubtedly it comes in handy. But I'll bet Oba-san and his pal would have thought it was for sissies.<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-59966977764860460892014-04-13T11:33:00.000+01:002014-04-13T11:33:52.753+01:00Sweet UnderstandingIt's hot, and my husband and I are in a hurry. As we approach the shop where we get our weekly order of western food--bread and cheese today--we meet an irritated-looking colleague.<br />
<br />
"She doesn't have the order in yet," he tells us. "Or maybe you'll do better than I did understanding her Chinese."<br />
<br />
My husband and I look at each other in dismay. This man has been in China a lot longer than we have--he's bound to know more Chinese than we do. But we go into the shop anyway because we have other things to buy--and besides, despite countless frustrating encounters with people who cannot understand us and who we have no hope of understanding, we have become cautious optimists. Because we <i>have to</i> be getting better. Every day we make a point of spending at least twenty minutes on Mandarin. At some point, this has got to pay off.<br />
<br />
We keep careful track of our tiny achievements in cracking the linguistic code: the taxi driver who got what I was saying on my first try; the cashier who rattled off a total that immediately made sense; being able to recognize red-cooked tofu on a menu; making out what the recording on the bus is saying. Any intelligible exchange with strangers brings us great joy: the man in the elevator who told us it was raining, the waitress in our local restaurant who asked us how we were doing, even the kid in the parking lot who pointed a grubby finger at us and whispered the word <i>foreigner. </i>The day one of my students yawned and groaned to her friend that she was tired, I'm sure she wondered why I grinned so maniacally. Because after months of understanding zip-all, we're thrilled even when mere words and phrases make sense.<br />
<br />
In the shop, the woman behind the cashier shakes her head when we ask for our order and rattles off something in Chinese. We can't understand a word she says. Dejected, we turn to leave when I suddenly hear what she is saying, clear as day. <i>Wait here for a minute and I'll be right back--it's arrived, but I can't leave</i>. Overjoyed, I turn to my husband and see that he too has gotten it.<br />
<br />
"She wants us to wait here!" I practically scream. "She's going to go get our order!" <br />
<br />
We fall all over ourselves to say that yes, we will wait for our bread and cheese--five minutes is fine--we will wait longer if necessary, no problem. Five minutes later, the woman is back, and hallelujah, she has the bread with her, proving that we have indeed just understood an entire fairly complicated (for us) exchange. <br />
<br />
We carry our bread and cheese home, grinning like fools. Helen Keller holding her hand out at the water pump has <i>nothing </i>on us. <br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-10683584884080806052014-03-23T07:31:00.003+00:002014-03-23T07:31:37.445+00:00Getting The Tone RightIt is late at night, and I am spectacularly lost. I have just been out for sushi with colleagues on my own, and although usually there is someone with whom I can share a taxi home, tonight nobody is going my way. I have been given good instructions, but somehow I still have managed to get myself into a neighborhood I find totally unfamiliar.<br />
<br />
All the buses have stopped running and taxis are thin on the ground. And even if they weren't, there would be the problem of having to explain where I want to go to the taxi driver in Chinese. I can do this pretty well now, but what I still <i>cannot </i>do is make myself understood; apparently, I'm still butchering the tones. The way it usually works is this: my husband and I get into a taxi after one of us, usually my husband, has worked over a laborious spiel explaining our destination, honing it and repeating it ad nauseam. We then give the instructions to the taxi driver, who gapes at us uncomprehendingly and asks us to repeat ourselves. Which we do. After half a dozen tries, he finally seems to get it and we drive off, <i>most </i>of the time in the right direction. It is, to say the least, very frustrating.<br />
<br />
The last time I had to do this on my own, it took me over ten tries before the driver understood. Tonight, I am reluctant to go through the misery and humiliation. So I retrace my steps and go back over the bridge I've just crossed. I go past the gated apartment building with the giant stone lions in front and along a path bordered by willows. When I get to the Korean restaurant I remember from ten minutes ago, I try going left instead of going straight on. And I walk for more than fifteen minutes, but I can't see anything familiar. So I try a different route, then when that one culminates in a dead end, a different one. I end up on a vast road that is utterly deserted--weird in China--and rather dark. I suck my breath in and squeeze my eyes shut. There is no alternative: I've been walking for over an hour now and my husband, home marking papers, will be starting to worry. I've got to find a taxi.<br />
<br />
Ten minutes later, I spot one and hold up my hand, my heart pounding in my throat. For once, I have no competition and the driver obligingly screeches to a halt. I get in, clear my throat, and tell him where I want to go. <i>He gets it the very first time. </i><br />
<br />
I am, as it turns out, less than a minute away from home. This is how bad my sense of direction is: even when I'm almost home, I have no idea where I am. <br />
<br />
I end up paying full whack for the taxi, of course. But for once, I don't care one bit.<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-24161383539531824512014-03-01T05:13:00.000+00:002014-03-01T05:37:50.480+00:00Holding My BreathZhi is a nice young man with a friendly smile and a refreshingly honest way of speaking. He isn't a student of mine, but we got to know each other through a university club and instantly bonded over a shared liking of cats, travel, and the fact that we both come from cities known for their air pollution. Zhi is from an industrial center in the north of China, and I am from Riverside, in Southern California's infamous smog belt. We are comparing notes on our respective hometowns right now, and so far Zhi is winning, if you can call it that.<br />
<br />
"We're famous for our particulate matter," Zhi tells me. "Most cities have high particulate matter in their air, but ours is the very small kind that is most dangerous. You can't see it."<br />
<br />
"You could see ours," I tell him, embarrassed that I can't remember our town's exact air quality index. Zhi remembers the air quality index of his city and can quote it on a weekly, sometimes daily, basis. This week it's 489, which is more than 20 times over the acceptable WHO maximum standard of 20. On days when people set off fireworks, it reaches a level that is right off the charts. <br />
<br />
"What kind of particulate matter does your hometown have?" Zhi wants to know. He is a science student, and these things matter to him.<br />
<br />
I am a rather unscientific person and this question makes me squirm. "I'm not sure. But it was very bad."<br />
<br />
Zhi nods. "My city has small particulate matter--" He frowns and picks up a pen and starts writing a complicated equation that goes on and on<i> (< 2.5</i><i>µ </i>is all I can remember)<i>.<!--2--></i><br />
<br />
"Very small," Zhi adds superfluously.<br />
<br />
I feel irritated with myself for not being able to describe the consistency and composition of Riverside's smog, as if I'm letting our side down somehow. "I don't know if our particulate matter was that small, but because of our smog, you couldn't see much of anything," I explain, pointing to a building close by. "For instance, that building would be hard to see if we were in my hometown."<br />
<br />
Zhi wrinkles his forehead. "That building would be <i>impossible </i>to see in my hometown."<br />
<br />
"When we were kids, we couldn't run on bad days," I say. "They made us stay inside because the air was so bad. One boy even died after running half a mile on a smoggy day."<br />
<br />
Zhi nods. "Some people die in my school too."<br />
<br />
"You mean this happened in your school recently?" Zhi's tenses are a little shaky sometimes.<br />
<br />
"Yes--recently, also before."<br />
<br />
My own face mask is hanging over the arm of my chair. Zhi points to it now, a look of astonishment on his face.<br />
<br />
"Why do you have this? Do you <i>need</i> it?" <br />
<br />
"I brought it just in case," I say, feeling like an utter wimp. Today the air quality index in our city is only 65, just over three times the maximum limit.<br />
<br />
Zhi picks my mask up and examines it. He does not look impressed.<br />
<br />
"My mother, father have disposable respirator, N-95 and P-100, change filter every day, wear every day." He regards mine with amusement. "This one like scarf. Not good." <br />
<br />
At this, I give up. Zhi's hometown has worse air pollution than Riverside ever did. We spend the rest of our time discussing effective clean air filters and alternative energy. <br />
<br />
<b> </b><b></b>
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-42382258541449934302014-01-10T13:25:00.001+00:002014-01-12T09:33:45.411+00:00Miss PoliteIt is seven o'clock in the morning and I am waiting for the bus. It is raining and cold, and I have been standing at the stop for a good fifteen minutes, chilling myself, and getting sprayed with gutter-water by cars, trucks, and e-bikes that whiz past. At last the bus arrives and, to my delight, stops right in front of me--almost a first. I step forward as the doors wheeze open, but before I can get on, a couple of students beat me to it, one of them so enthusiastic about getting out of the rain that she almost puts my eye out with her umbrella. One after the other, the students pile onto the bus ahead of me, talking non-stop as they completely ignore me. I am the last one on, and sadly, there are now no more seats. I stand all the way to the university and ponder the differences in manners between cultures. <br />
<br />
--- <br />
<br />
It is five o'clock in the evening and my last student has left. It has been an especially long and grueling day as I've been seeing students for private tutorials in my office and giving them advice about their various compositions since early in the morning, and I worked right through my lunch break to accommodate a student who needed to be squeezed in between appointments. I'm dying to see what there is of the sky; and I need a brisk walk, a cup of tea, and something to eat. But more than anything else, I just need a break. I've seen so much head-achingly bad English, I feel like whooping and hollering to finally have reached this point of no more students. Just as I start to lock my office door, however, a girl appears from nowhere, clutching a composition. My heart sinks, but I stand my ground. "I'm all done," I tell her. "I'll be back at nine o'clock tomorrow morning."<br />
<br />
The girl's eyes widen and her mouth drops open. "But I have appointment!"<br />
<br />
"Not at five o'clock, surely."<br />
<br />
"Nooo!" the girl wails. "At four I come here!"<br />
<br />
"And did you knock on the door?"<br />
<br />
"No, you are busy so I wait."<br />
<br />
I stare at this girl in dismay. "Didn't you see the sign?" I point to it. <i><b>IF YOU HAVE AN APPOINTMENT, PLEASE KNOCK ON THE DOOR AND ANNOUNCE YOURSELF.</b> </i>It is accompanied, for good measure, by the equivalent in my shaky Chinese. I put this sign up because too many of my students were waiting outside, twiddling their thumbs while I talked to their classmates, instead of letting me know they were there. This way, the students who have appointments with me can stay a little longer if they need extra help--and I don't end up twiddling my own thumbs waiting for no-shows.<br />
<br />
The girl shakes her head. "I see, but you are busy so I wait."<br />
<br />
"Well you <i>shouldn't </i>have waited if you had an appointment! If you have an appointment, it's perfectly fine to expect whoever you are meeting to stop what they're doing and see you!" My voice sounds obnoxiously strident, but I want to be outside, on my way home. I want to be smelling the roses and feeling the bracing air on my face, not quibbling with this girl about appointment protocol.<br />
<br />
"But you are talking," the girl points out. "To other student."<br />
<br />
"Only because you didn't knock," I say. "If you'd knocked, I'd have known you were there. I'd have told her that I had an appointment and she would have left."<br />
<br />
The girl stares back at me. "But I cannot do that!"<br />
<br />
"Why in the world not?"<br />
<br />
"Because-- that is mispolite!"<br />
<br />
An hour later, I am waiting at the bus stop again. When the bus arrives, once again, a throng of students pushes past me as though I am not there. Once again, I am the last one on the bus. <br />
<br />
All the way home, I ponder the differences in manners between cultures.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-4008638035238867602013-12-15T03:25:00.000+00:002013-12-15T03:25:15.481+00:00Missing Our GirlsI am standing in a mall, waiting for my husband, when I see them: a woman about my age and her grown-up daughter. They are window shopping, their arms linked, and they are deep in amicable conversation. The daughter--she has to be the woman's daughter; they have the same high forehead and wide-spaced eyes--is about four months pregnant, The expression on her mother's face makes me want to cry. She is obviously so happy to be with her daughter, and so proud.<br />
<br />
They stop in front of a window display of clothing for toddlers and admire the tiny coats, sweaters and shoes. The daughter laughs and points at a stuffed zebra the size of a panda. <br />
<br />
Suddenly I miss my daughters! My husband and I have missed them ever since we arrived here, in late summer, but at this moment, seeing this woman and her daughter together, I miss them so much I can hardly stand it.<br />
<br />
Earlier, I looked for presents to give my girls for Christmas. I browsed through trays of carved hair ornaments, rows of sweaters on plastic hangers, stacks of tee shirts I thought they might like. I found so many things I thought would please them, but I stopped myself from actually buying them. I want to see my girls trying these things on--see them wearing the sweaters, frowning at themselves in the mirror--<i>Do you think this is my color? Would a smaller size be better? </i>I want to drink coffee with them afterwards, take them out for lunch, try on lipsticks and perfume with them that we have no intention of buying. <br />
<br />
We are generally happy here, my husband and I. We are doing interesting and demanding jobs; we are struggling to learn Chinese, which is as engrossing as it is frustrating; and we are gradually getting to know this country. But being away from our daughters is so hard!<br />
<br />
My husband rejoins me and we take the elevator to the basement. There, we walk past a huge play area where children tumble about on brightly-colored mats and climb plastic honeycombs. One kid is bawling his head off, kicking the floor. His exasperated mother watches him, arms crossed over her chest, a look of irritated resignation on her face. Ever so often, she bawls out something that he is making too much noise to hear. <br />
<br />
"Been there," my husband murmurs as we watch the struggling toddler, and I automatically echo, "Done that." We continue walking, but the toddler's screams are still perfectly audible from quite a distance.<br />
<br />
And yes, we feel a little bit better. But we still miss our girls. <div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-7903669286959607652013-12-05T11:50:00.001+00:002013-12-05T11:50:21.989+00:00The Triumph Of TomatoesThere is a greengrocer's near our apartment. It is a small shop along a busy road, run by a bustling, no-nonsense middle-aged woman wearing an apron. Up until last night, my husband and I have pointed, gestured, and sometimes drawn air pictures of what we want to buy, always to the amused reaction of the greengrocer. Once in a while, we have tried to use Chinese--to the even more amused reaction of the greengrocer.<br />
<br />
But last night, a small breakthrough occurred. I went into the shop as usual, picked out the produce I wanted -- apples and pears -- and then I stopped and frowned, unable to see any tomatoes. And I really wanted tomatoes.<br />
<br />
"What are you waiting for?" my husband asked, anxious to get home.<br />
<br />
"Hang on while I get some tomatoes," I said. He shook his head. "I think you're going to be disappointed." He gestured around us. "Do you see any tomatoes?" <br />
<br />
I approached the greengrocer, my heart pounding. <i>"Xihonshi yomeiyo?" </i>I managed to squeal, working hard to get my tones right. At first she just stared at me, then she asked me to repeat it.<br />
<br />
I said it again more slowly and she said <i>ah! </i>For a second I couldn't believe she had actually understood. Then she walked over to a box of pears and lifted it up. Underneath were tomatoes. Glossy little ruby-red tomatoes with tiny green tops. <br />
<br />
We went home and ate them, along with the apples and pears I bought, which were very sweet. But the tomatoes were sweeter still.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-59406887044766167022013-11-08T10:44:00.002+00:002013-11-10T02:20:24.503+00:00Cracking the CodeLearning how to speak Mandarin, it turns out, is not easy.<br />
<br />
Decades ago when I first moved to Japan, I must have gone through the same agony, but however frustrating it was then, I can't believe it was anything like this. In China, I have been in a number of 'situations'. Times when being able to communicate with the people around me was hugely important, but woefully beyond my capabilities. Like when I forgot to weigh a few pieces of fruit at the supermarket and my husband had to run back to do this, aggravating a man behind me who turned red-faced with rage and began to rant. I knew what he must be saying: <i>What happened? How could you possibly have forgotten to weigh your fruit? How dare you keep me waiting? </i>Again and again he seemed to be demanding an explanation which I was, of course, unable to give him. Or, on another occasion, when I tried desperately to tell a taxi driver where I wanted to go, having rehearsed it at least a dozen times--to find that he still could not understand me. Or when I answered the phone in our office and could not tell the obviously agitated woman on the other end that a colleague was away from her desk. I could manage "not here now, five minutes," but that just didn't cut it. <br />
<br />
My frustration at this lack has a lot to do with the Great Expectations I came here with: I thought that given my ability to read some Chinese, learning to speak might be easier for me. But I was wrong--so wrong! Despite the fact that I spent decades in Japan learning how to write <i>kanji, </i>or Chinese characters, learning to read in China is a whole new ball of wax. Characters have been greatly modified here, and the ones I'm familiar with have often been changed beyond recognition. Even simple ones like <i>push, pull, east, </i>and <i>car </i>were mysteries to me at first. Days of the week, pronouns, verbs, nouns--all were woefully mystifying. Then there's the pronunciation. The vowels make me want to weep--no clear, easy-to-follow <i>a-i-u-e-o </i>like there is in Japanese; certain Chinese vowels change with certain consonants, and I can never remember which. And the tones are murder.<br />
<br />
But lately, I have been having breakthroughs. Tiny ones, it is true, but breakthroughs nevertheless. <br />
<br />
<b>Breakthrough 1</b>: My husband and I are buying persimmons from a man who is selling them from a cart. As we pack them into a bag, the man, assuming that we don't know how to eat them, indicates that they must be peeled first. I take a pen from the counter and scrawl on a piece of newspaper in Chinese: <i>In my country we also have persimmons. I like them very much. </i>He reads this out loud and nods slowly, then gives me a broad grin. Eureka! He understands! <br />
<br />
<b>Breakthrough 2: </b>I am with a Japanese friend, applying for a courtesy card at a local department store. The woman asks my Japanese friend to fill in my address for me, but I shake my head and write my address in Chinese in the space provided. The woman reads it and looks up at me with a hint of respect in her eyes: <i>Oh, </i>she says, <i>you can write Chinese. </i>And eureka! I understand her!<br />
<br />
<b>Breakthrough 3: </b>We arrive home from work to find a handwritten note in Chinese on our front door. It has been scrawled in haste and it takes me ages to work through, but with the help of a Chinese-Japanese dictionary and my husband's character-recognition software, I finally piece it out: <i>I am your upstairs neighbor. Recently my toilet pipes have been blocked. I need to gain access to your apartment in order to fix the pipes. I came today, but you were not home. Can you please phone me to let me know when you will be home so that we can unblock our pipes? Thank you very much. </i>By the time I've worked this out, my husband has already photographed the note and texted it to our real estate agent. She texts back the following message: <i>Your neighbor needs to get into your apartment because her toilet is blocked and she needs to fix it. </i>Sweet hallelujah! I was right!<br />
<br />
I'm thrilled with these tiny breakthroughs. So thrilled that the idea of perfect strangers showing up on our one day off to tear up our floorboards and fiddle with the pipes to unclog a blocked toilet hardly gives me a moment's pause. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-32016069913152095932013-10-20T12:42:00.002+01:002013-10-20T12:42:55.702+01:00Duck EggsI'm fairly open-minded when it comes to food. Although I'm not crazy about offal, I've eaten a lot of things other people might turn their noses up at. Fermented fish guts, for instance (<i>shiokara </i>in Japanese), raw onions, <i>inago, </i>or fried grasshoppers (by mistake, but they weren't that bad), and my mother's infamous peanut butter and mustard sandwiches. <br />
<br />
So the other day, when I got home from shopping and discovered that we'd bought duck eggs instead of the usual hens' eggs, I wasn't upset. I told myself that duck eggs would be just as tasty in egg salad sandwiches, perhaps even better. As I popped the eggs into boiling water, I marveled at how different they were from conventional eggs: larger, sturdier, and oilier, somehow. It wasn't until I broke one open that I discovered just what we'd bought: preserved duck eggs, the color of dark chocolate.<br />
<br />
Unlike chocolate, however, the eggs smelled strongly of sulfur and were intensely salty. They weren't anything I wanted to make lunch with.<br />
<br />
I gave up on making egg salad sandwiches, packed the eggs into a bag, and took them to work. I put them on a counter in the office, wrote <i>Bought by mistake, free to a good home</i> on a piece of paper, and pasted it to the carton.<br />
<br />
"Why are you giving these away?" a colleague asked incredulously when she saw the eggs. I explained what had happened.<br />
<br />
"I hate to waste things," I said. "And we couldn't possibly finish them ourselves, not even if we had weeks." I grimaced. "And they're not going to last weeks, are they?"<br />
<br />
"Yes they will-- they'll keep forever!"<br />
<br />
This shouldn't have surprised me--'preserved eggs' must be like other preserved things, after all--but it did. "Really?"<br />
<br />
"Absolutely. Just keep them until you need them. Then slice them into wedges and serve them with some pickled ginger." She nodded approvingly. "Delicious!"<br />
<br />
In fact, one of my writing pals had said the same thing. <i>Try them with pickled ginger, they're great. </i>And yet at the time, this advice was hard for me to take in. Because I hadn't want pickled eggs when I bought them; I'd wanted eggs for egg salad sandwiches.<br />
<br />
Expectations are everything, especially when it comes to food. Years ago, when I lived in Japan, I dropped a clove of raw garlic while I was cooking. I searched everywhere for it, but finally gave up, thinking it must have fallen behind the stove. A few hours later, I was eating sweetened popcorn when I bit down on the clove of garlic. Although I'm a huge fan of raw garlic, on this occasion, it was hardly a welcome treat. My mouth had been expecting carmelized popcorn, not a big clove of raw garlic. <br />
<br />
Now, free from my dreams of egg salad sandwiches, I saw the duck eggs in a different light. Not as disappointments that couldn't be mixed with mayonnaise and white pepper, but as potentially tasty appetizers. I could picture them sliced onto a bed of thinly-sliced cucumbers with a garnish of pickled ginger and spring onions, or tossed like anchovies with cold noodles and sesame oil. My mouth even started to water.<br />
<br />
Those duck eggs are sitting on my shelves, waiting for their chance. They won't go to waste. Besides, there's always April Fools Day. <div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-49609626036237060772013-09-20T14:08:00.005+01:002013-09-20T14:08:40.404+01:00China SnapshotsI'm actually a better-than-average photographer. You'll just have to take my word for that, because I can't offer you any proof, not now. Every time I see something worth photographing here in China--which, when I am outside, is every other minute--by the time I've got my camera ready, it's gone. And besides, you have to keep your wits sharp when you're out and about here. No walking around and staring up at skyscrapers; no goggling at over-loaded rickshaws driven by tiny, weather-worn grandmothers; no swerving around to look back at the entire family of four perched on an electric bike, shopping piled high on the back. In the two seconds it takes to point and focus, you could be flattened by half a dozen cars driving at top speed. California gets a lot of flack for letting its drivers turn right on red lights, but at least there you have to come to a complete stop first, and other cars and pedestrians get right of way. In China, not only do you not have to come to a complete stop, you don't have to stop at all. In fact, you don't even have to <i>slow down</i>. Crossing a street here demands your full attention as does walking along the sidewalk, where you may compete for right-of-way with electric bicycles, motorcycles, bicycles, and even cars. Believe me: I have lost hundreds of incredible, National Geographic-worthy shots<i>, </i>and it is only because I value my own life over art.<i> </i>It is agonizing to have lost so many wonderful photo opportunities, though, so tonight, on my way home from work, I decided to write my photos instead.<br />
<br />
I took all of these word photos at six thirty in the evening, in a crowded alley between two narrow rows of restaurants and bars. In China, there is a lovely custom: people go out in the evening and fill the parks and public spaces, where they chat, play games, dance, do martial arts, parade grandchildren, and generally hang out in the cool of the evening. <br />
<br />
<b>Photo 1</b>: A little boy dressed in a white shirt and blue trousers is sitting all by himself at a table, frowning at a pad of paper. He is chewing on a pencil, his face screwed up in concentration, his features as serious as a six-year-old's can possibly be. It is obvious that he doesn't see anybody around him--all his attention is focused on the pad of paper. Suddenly his eyes widen and his mouth opens. He grins and pounds his fists on the table, then jumps up and cries out, at the top of his lungs, waving the pad of paper about. He has solved his puzzle! None of the adults around him pay him the least bit of notice.<br />
<br />
<b>Photo 2</b>: Three seconds away from the little boy, six college-age girls in short skirts and tight blouses sit together around a small round table. They are all holding mobile phones, and although their mouths are slightly slack -- they all have eerily similar expressions -- their thumbs are working hard. They take no notice of anybody around them.<br />
<br />
<b>Photo 3</b>: Next to the girls, three middle-aged men sit on park benches, smoking. Two of them have their white T-shirts hiked up so that everything but the tops of their shoulders is exposed. Half-smoked cigarettes hang from their mouths. Believe me, this cannot be described as an attractive look, and it is odd that only middle-aged men here feel the need to bare their chests. The men barely look up as we pass.<br />
<br />
<b>Photo 4</b>: As we turn the corner past the men, two more college-age girls come towards us. One girl is dressed normally, but her companion is eye-popping in a hot pink Minnie Mouse-style short taffeta skirt, fishnet stockings, five-inch heels of some glitzy silver-and-white material, a strapless silver top that seems to defy the laws of gravity, and what looks like half a pound of make-up. As they sashay past, I do my best not to stare, but it's tough. The girls don't seem to notice us, though.<br />
<br />
<b>Photo 5</b>: Around the corner there is a small public square where a CD player is blasting out music. It is so similar to the folk songs you hear in Japan during the summer festivals that I stop, filled with nostalgia. A dozen middle-aged women are dancing together, synchronizing their movements, their arms lifted high one moment, then swooping down in graceful arcs. They strut and dip and turn; they move backwards and forwards and sideways, and it is obvious how much they are enjoying themselves, how happy they are. We stop to watch them and they keep dancing, showing not the tiniest trace of embarrassment. My admiration is complete. One of them flashes me a broad smile, but they keep dancing.<br />
<br />
My camera stays in my backpack all the way home.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-18114604864432055472013-08-20T19:29:00.001+01:002013-08-20T20:34:05.827+01:00The Quintessential Scottish ExperienceWe are leaving Scotland again, this time to teach in China. Although we are excited about this move and our new jobs, it is hard to leave this country where we have lived so comfortably and happily for so many years.<br />
<br />
When we knew we were going to leave Japan, I began to store up what I considered to be quintessentially Japanese experiences: walking under a canopy of cherry blossoms in full bloom, their pale pink and white petals radiating light; eating sushi and drinking green tea outside on plastic mats, listening to <i>enka </i>blasting from the boom boxes of fellow picnickers; walking with our children through a park full of cicadas whining their plaintive <i>shree-shree-shree. </i>But the experience of Japan I treasure the most is the one I consider to be the most quintessentially Japanese in that I can't imagine it happening anywhere else. It happened at the Ito-Yokado department store in Abiko, where my little girls and I had been shopping for souvenirs. At some point, my daughters discovered they had lost a bag of whoopee cushions. Blushing, I reported the loss, and the store employee who handled our case treated it with with the utmost gravity and politeness, writing down the details of where we had last seen the bag and assuring my children that she would track it down. How she managed to keep a straight face when I described whoopee cushions in Japanese, I have no idea. I almost lost it when she confirmed what we had misplaced: <i>I see--a bag of those little rubber cushions you put on people's chairs to make a farting noise. Can you tell me where you last saw them? </i>When we finally recovered the bag, this woman gave every appearance of being delighted that we had regained our essentially worthless purchases. This experience has stayed with me over the years because it is so typically Japanese: the woman's politeness and courtesy; her care in doing her job; her (feigned or sincere) delight in the happy outcome. <br />
<br />
For the past three months, I have been trying to do the same for Scotland, capturing and treasuring the memories that I consider to be definingly Scottish. Whenever my husband and I go out for walks, we stop and gaze out on the beautiful scenery around us--the heather in full bloom, the clumps of thistles and ferns, the lime-green moss, the sheep grazing in the fields. I run water from the tap and savor its good, clean taste; I walk down the cobblestone streets of our picturesque little town and admire the flourishing flowers in the window boxes; I listen to the bagpipes playing in the square and do my best to appreciate their shrill whining.<br />
<br />
But then the other night I had it: the perfect, quintessential Scottish experience, something that could only ever happen here--an event that in its complete simplicity, speaks volumes about the people, the culture, the entire ethos of Scotland. First of all, it was unseasonably cold, and it was raining, which in itself is utterly Scottish. The wind had a sharp edge to it--again, very Scottish--and it was late at night. My husband and I were on our way back from work, dodging the dog-do and crumpled potato chip packets on the Glasgow sidewalks, when we saw a man coming our way, holding a Styrofoam take-out container of chips (french fries) which he was eating from. The man was dressed in a track suit he had probably slept in, and he did not have an umbrella. From the way he lurched as he walked, he had almost certainly been drinking--again, like it or not, I fear this is prototypically Scottish. As we passed him, I saw the man select a french fry, pop it into his mouth, and squeeze his eyes shut in obvious rapture. And although you might think I am being ironic here, that simple gesture of pure enjoyment filled me with respect and awe. In what other country could someone walking along rain-slicked, trash-strewn streets in unseasonably cold weather eat potatoes fried in saturated fat, drenched in vinegar and moistened by rainwater, in the bitterly, cruelly whipping wind, <i>and obviously enjoy it?</i><br />
<br />
Forget Braveheart, forget thistles and bluebells and shortbread and bagpipes--the real pith of Scotland is in the people, who can derive pleasure from such bleak experiences, and nutrition from such un-nutritious food. I take my hat off to this man in his rumpled tracksuit. The memory of him enjoying his soggy chips will join the rolling hills covered with sheep and heather, the refreshing Scottish summer weather, the beautiful sandstone buildings of Glasgow. In his genuine stoicism and stubborn pleasure against all odds, he is every bit as impressive as the Japanese store employee who could listen to a foreigner's description of a whoopee cushion with an entirely straight face. <div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-24572057975247503572013-08-05T21:48:00.001+01:002013-08-08T15:44:03.690+01:00Trading PlacesI know this classroom well; I've taught at least three different classes in it over the past two years. As I sit here, I remember the time Chen fell over backwards in the back lefthand corner. Chen was a big lad who liked to lean back in his chair and had been warned that he could hurt himself. I'll never forget the split second it finally happened and he went heels over head, how scared I was that he'd broken his back--or how the entire class (including me and, eventually, Chen) roared with laughter when we saw he was okay. There are many familiar features: the place where I whacked my own head on a ledge when I straightened back up after leaning over to help a student; the window I could never manage to get open; the nasty radiators that could not be turned down in the winter when they turned boiling hot. And finally, there is the screen that, when pulled down, is almost impossible to roll back up; it needs to be pulled hard at a certain angle. Perfecting the technique took me a good year. <br />
<br />
So it feels weird that here in this very familiar room I am not at the head of the classroom with the attendance sheet and a textbook; I am a student. And it is weirder still that the person teaching us is a Chinese graduate student. For the past three years, I have been teaching Chinese graduate students English. Here I am now, a student, being taught Mandarin by a Chinese graduate student. In fact, although this feels weird, it also feels great. Like being the household help for three years and then, one day, you are the one sitting down, putting her feet up while someone else is fussing around, fixing your meals, plumping up the pillows. <br />
<br />
Then the class starts. The teacher introduces himself and tells us all about Mandarin, that there are five tones, 23 initial sounds, 36 final sounds, and a number of vowels. I do my best to listen carefully, but I'm distracted by our teacher's English. It is so good! His pronunciation is excellent, his use of articles is impressive--'the' and 'a' tend to be tough for Asian students-- and he uses stress well. Even as this poor man speaks, I am mentally giving him marks for fluency, cohesion, coherence, and pronunciation. Until he fumbles at the console to turn on the computer and I suddenly realize afresh that I am the student. He pulls down the awkward screen and it goes down too far and he struggles mightily to get it to up again. And, of course, fails, because this is the screen from hell that requires a good ten minutes of sweaty fiddling before it will cooperate. He worries that he has broken the screen, and my husband and I (my husband has taught in this classroom too) try to reassure him that he has not. I fight the urge to jump up and show him how to fix it. Finally, he gets the screen to roll up half a foot and the class begins.<br />
<br />
I am acutely aware of several things by the end of the class: 1) I have been overloading my students by asking too much of them too quickly, 2) Sometimes people just need to sit there and not be called on, 3) Screwing up in front of a bunch of people is really, really embarrassing, 4) Chinese vowels are much harder than Japanese vowels, 5) Chinese consonants are harder and more plentiful than Japanese consonants, and 6) I have no concept of tones.<br />
<br />
Years ago, I studied Japanese with three brainy Chinese students who assured me that I would be able to pick up Chinese in no time with my Japanese ability. I am ashamed to say that I believed them. They told me that I would surely find learning Chinese as easy as Portuguese learners found learning Spanish, or vice versa. "The characters are mainly the same," they said, "and the grammar is easy." They said nothing about the pronunciation, and in my youthful naivete, I just assumed it would be no problem.<br />
<br />
By the end of the class, I am limp, exhausted, humiliated, and feeling a mixture of compassion and irritation for the teacher--he threw so much at us! Expecting us to get our mouths around all those hard sounds, then telling us that the tones were wrong! And I am filled with respect and admiration for him too: he taught the entire class using English, a foreign language for him, however good he is at it. I would find it exhausting to teach a class using a foreign language.<br />
<br />
"Wow, that was overwhelming, wasn't it?" my husband murmurs as we leave.<br />
<br />
I nod. Seldom have I learned so much in such a short time. And very little of it was Chinese.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-84691736892341873082013-07-24T15:40:00.001+01:002013-07-24T19:14:20.853+01:00Cosmic IdiotI am a naturally awkward person who can stumble over threads on the ground, run right into furniture that isn't blocking my way, and do and say stupid things so effortlessly I amaze myself. So it isn't as though it's hard to catch me doing clumsy things . But there is one woman in this town who has been unerringly (and eerily) present during my many diverse acts of klutzery over the years, and I am beginning to wonder what is up. <br />
<br />
The first time I met this woman was in a local shop where I had gone with my kids. At the cash register, I reached into my bag to pull out my purse--and somehow managed to scatter the contents of my bag all over the floor. Half-eaten candies fused to their wrappers, coins, a hairbrush bristling with hair, a grotty-looking lipstick, and several dozen receipts all went flying, covering several square meters of floor. Before I could pick up my belongings, I looked straight into this woman's eyes. Her expression--eyebrows raised in amused scorn--did nothing to make me feel any less clumsy.<br />
<br />
The second encounter was in front of the school where my daughter and I were having a spirited 'discussion'. I stopped to take a deep, steadying breath and there my censorious friend was, her eyes narrowed in disapproval as she took me in, in my red-faced, shrill-voiced, fishwife state (this woman, I have since learned, has three grown children. I wonder: did they never give her a hard time?). Our third meeting was when I was learning to drive and had stalled the car at a busy intersection in a town <i>forty miles away</i>. I looked up and saw those familiar, deeply disapproving eyes frowning at me in my rear-view mirror, and that was when I knew that there were other forces at work--<i>cosmic </i>forces. Since that last occasion, there have many been others. She has caught me in my nightgown and hiking boots, scraping ice from our car windshield with a square plastic flower pot, swearing a blue streak at a split-open garbage bag on the sidewalk, shrieking and in hot pursuit of a cat who came into our house and sprayed three rooms.<br />
<br />
But here is the eerie thing: other than on these occasions, I doubt I have seen this woman <i>at all</i>. It is as though she materializes <i>only </i>when I am doing something ridiculous and spectacularly unattractive. <br />
<br />
Last night I saw her again. We arrived home late, after a full day of work, learning Chinese, and helping our daughter move, and in the midst of the first good rain we've had in weeks. I was in my pajamas and ready to go to bed, when I realized that I hadn't put down organic slug pellets. I was exhausted, but I could not chance leaving the slugs to ravage my hostas, zucchini, and pumpkins--after that long dry spell, they'd be out there in force with all the rain. So I got up, found a flashlight, and went outside with the slug pellets. And there on the paving stones in front of our entrance, I saw literally dozens, perhaps hundreds of slugs. They were so thick on the ground I could barely manage not to step on them as I made my way across the concrete. I am all about saving, and it was crazy to waste good pellets on all those slugs, so conveniently accessible. So I found a plastic container and embarked on a slug safari. In the end, I scooped up enough slugs to fill a half-liter container. But what could I do with them? I shuddered to think of them slithering up the sides of the trash can, and I couldn't stomach the idea of emptying them onto the pavement and squishing them. Three blocks away from our house there is a creek where ducks often come. I decided to dump my prey there. At least they would have a chance--or make a good meal for the ducks.<br />
<br />
I was half the way there, holding my plastic container full of slugs at arm's length--and yes, in my pajamas--when there she was. The look on her face topped any of the looks she has given me before, and believe me, this woman has scorn down to a fine art. I held the slugs out by way of explanation, gave her my brightest smile, and bid her a cheery good night-- in Mandarin.<br />
<br />
After all, there are other forces at work here--<i>cosmic</i> forces. And if I'm destined to look like an idiot, I might as well go all the way.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-88123975286995336462013-07-07T18:07:00.000+01:002013-07-07T18:07:07.027+01:00Li's Clever Mother
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
“Teacher,
you are okay?” Li asks me, creasing his forehead and pointing to
his chest. Poor kid: right in the middle of his tutorial, I've had a
coughing fit. I coughed through part of the first class, my coffee
break, and now Li's tutorial.
</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
“I'm
fine,” I wheeze, a Kleenex pressed to my mouth. “Don't worry—the
doctor says I'm not infectious.” I lapse into another coughing fit.
“I just—<i>cough—</i><span style="font-style: normal;">have a
tendency—</span><i>cough, cough—</i><span style="font-style: normal;">to
cough.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> Li
doesn't understand </span><i>tendency, </i><span style="font-style: normal;">so
I have him look this up in the dictionary. This frees up some more
time for me to cough some more.</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
Li's
expression gets even more serious. “You must be careful! When you
go home, you must rest.”</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
I
laugh at this. I have another class to teach after this one, plus a
long commute, and when I get home, the housework will be all mine. </div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
“When
I go home, I must do laundry and cook dinner,” I say. “My husband
has a cold too, and his is a lot worse than mine.”</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
Li's
eyes open wide and he shakes his head. “No, no—you must <i>not
</i><span style="font-style: normal;">housework!” he says. “That
is very bad for women with cough!”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> Much
as I'd like to agree with anything that gets me out of housework, I
have to question this. “Isn't it bad for anybody with a cough?” I
say. “Woman or man?”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> He
shakes his head. “</span><i>Especially </i><span style="font-style: normal;">bad
for woman.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> This
intrigues me. “Who told you that?”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “My
mother,” Li says, his eyes wide and innocent. “She often cough.”
He does a good impression of somebody with a bad cough and points to
his chest, putting on a pained expression. “So I know that many
kind of work bad for woman with cough.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> Thinking
that Li's mother could well have a serious illness, I pull out the
dictionary again. But after we've gone through asthma, bronchitis,
emphysema, and tuberculosis, Li shakes his head firmly. “No—my
mother just cough, not disease.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “So
what kind of housework is bad for, um, women with a cough?” I ask.</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> Li
frowns, considering this. “Clean floor. Also shop—very bad to
carry heavy thing if cough.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “What
about cooking?”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “Very
bad.” He furrows his brow. “Also wash clothes.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “Cleaning
the toilet?”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> He
blinks. “Yes, that is bad too.”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> I'm
really beginning to enjoy this conversation. I enjoy it even more
when Li proudly tells me that he can cook, mop floors, shop for
dinner, and do the laundry, that indeed he has become quite skilled
at all of these in order to save his mother from the pain of chores
that are Unsuitable for a Woman with a Cough. I really want to meet
Li's mother. Li may be a bit naïve, but he's not a dumb kid, not by
any stretch of the imagination. He studies diligently, is capable of
critical thinking, and is almost always the first person in class to
answer some of the harder questions. However his mother has worked
her magic I have no idea, but I take my hat off to her.</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> “Take
care yourself, teacher,” Li tells me, pushing his chair back and
gathering up his books. “Do not housework! Then your cough stop.”
</span>
</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> I
tell him that I will leave the housework for the weekend. “Thank
your mother for me, okay?” I say. “Tell her your teacher says
</span><i>good job.</i><span style="font-style: normal;">”</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> Li
looks puzzled, but he nods. </span>
</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> I
watch thoughtfully as Li exits the classroom, his arms full of books
that I know he is going to study. </span>
</div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> I
am seriously considering introducing Li to one of my daughters.</span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> </span></div>
<div class="western" style="line-height: 200%; margin-bottom: 0cm;">
<span style="font-style: normal;"> </span></div>
<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-60481662481122570202013-06-17T20:14:00.000+01:002013-06-17T20:19:49.200+01:00Foot FirstSomewhere in Northeastern Japan, there is a twenty-year-old woman who came into this world her own way: foot first, and painlessly. I think of this young woman and her mother from time to time because their story is so extraordinary.<br />
<br />
I met the girl's mother at a party when I was five months pregnant with my second daughter. I have since forgotten the mother's name, but I will call her Saeko. Saeko and her husband had brought their firstborn six-month-old daughter to the party, and, as women tend to do, we started talking about babies, then giving birth. There were a few other mothers there, one of whom was also pregnant.<br />
<br />
"It didn't hurt!" Saeko told us. "Everybody told me how painful it would be, but it hardly hurt at all!"<br />
<br />
We were all astonished to hear this, so Saeko told us the rest of the story. <br />
<br />
Saeko's baby was facing the wrong direction--feet-first. Her doctor consulted a very experienced midwife who was able to turn the baby in her womb, but although this was accomplished successfully, the baby always flipped back to her original position by the next visit. Because of this, Saeko was scheduled to have a <span class="st">caesarean</span> section, which she was understandably nervous about.<br />
<br />
As she was lying on the guerney waiting to have the surgery, Saeko went into labor. "Only I didn't know at the time because it didn't hurt!" she said.<br />
<br />
Saeko's belly had been painted with betadine and she was waiting for the surgeon to show up when she had a feeling of strong pressure, but no pain. She told the nurses that she needed to go to the bathroom, and before they could help her up, her daughter began to emerge, foot-first. Slowly, but surely. <i>And painlessly. </i><br />
<br />
"She just kept moving, slowly and steadily, until her head was out," Saeko told us. "Her legs weren't doubled over or anything. The nurses said they'd never seen anything like it. She reminded them of a dancer, or somebody doing t'ai chi"<br />
<br />
"And it really didn't hurt?" a woman who'd had a 50-hour labor asked.<br />
<br />
"No! All around me, I heard women screaming their heads off, but I never even had the time to," Saeko said. "And I didn't need to either, because I could hardly feel anything. It was so, so strange!"<br />
<br />
There was a long silence as we all absorbed this. The woman who'd spent 50 hours in hard labor looked especially thoughtful.<br />
<br />
"Is she always this quiet?" another woman asked, pointing her chin at the basinette next to Saeko. Because Saeko's baby had slept placidly through a fairly noisy party.<br />
<br />
Saeko nodded. "Everybody says so. I mean, she cries to let me know she's hungry, but she sleeps a lot. And she's very sweet-tempered."<br />
<br />
This, for me, was tough to hear. A few years later, with two non-sleeping children, one of whom was hell on wheels, it was even tougher to recall.<br />
<br />
All of us mothers got to cuddle Saeko's baby when she woke up from her long, long nap, and she really was placid and sweet-tempered--no false advertising there. As we left the party, there were murmurs all around about Saeko's luck. One woman commented that Saeko might want to consider having a dozen children. My own personal opinion was that she shouldn't tempt fate.<br />
<br />
Over the years, I have wondered to myself what sort of toddler this baby became, what sort of child, and for pity's sake, what sort of teenager. Somewhere along the line, Saeko's luck must have run out or there simply isn't any justice in this world.<br />
<br />
But occasionally, when I meet women who are expecting babies and some young mother asks me that question--<i>Does it hurt?--</i>I always tell the truth, that yes, it did. And then I tell her Saeko's story. <br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-78161253965997622502013-04-12T21:24:00.000+01:002013-04-12T21:26:44.330+01:00Class Act"None of you did it?" I ask, my eyes wide, my hands held out. "Not <i>one </i>of you?"<br />
<br />
A few students have the grace to look ashamed. They lick their lips and shake their heads slightly.<br />
<br />
"But you do remember I told you, right?"<br />
<br />
One girl nods. "Number three, four, six," she murmurs.<br />
<br />
"And exercise two," I tell her. "You remember that, right?"<br />
<br />
She looks uncomfortable. I turn to the rest of the class.<br />
<br />
"On Monday when none of you had done your reading homework, I told you I wanted you to do two as well as three, four, and six. Do you remember?"<br />
<br />
Three of them actually meet my eyes and nod, but I am beyond irritated with this group. This is at least the sixth time they have neglected to do their homework and I've had enough.<br />
<br />
"I absolutely told you to do exercise two!" I say. "I even had you say it back to me afterwards. But now you're telling me that none of you did it."<br />
<br />
Lips jut out. Brows furrow. Nobody will meet my eyes.<br />
<br />
"All right, you are going to do number two right now--all of you, right here." And suddenly I realize what I've just said, and it is extremely funny. So is the fact that my students have no idea what the other meaning of number two is. I'm still hopping mad, but I snicker--I can't help myself.<br />
<br />
The students look alarmed. Clearly I'm disturbed: I've just changed the channel from pissed-off to ha-ha-ha and they can't figure it out. <br />
<br />
"Seriously," I say. "Open your books and start doing number two right now--" I clap my hand over my mouth to stop myself from howling. This is really embarrassing. I could not count the times my students have yakked away in Mandarin, laughing their heads off while I sit there utterly mystified, but suddenly I'm having my own one-woman giggle party. And there is no way I'm going to share this with them.<br />
<br />
One girl casts a furtive look my way and reaches for her book. Now that she knows she's dealing with a madwoman, she's taking no chances.<br />
<br />
"When you've finished <i>exercise </i>two," I splutter, "please check your answers with your partner's, then we'll go over them together." My last words dissolve into a fit of laughter as I wipe my eyes with the back of my hand.<br />
<br />
And by God, they do it. Exercise two is faithfully if not accurately completed. They sit there, heads down, pens busy, occasionally taking peeks at me to see if I'm not actually foaming at the mouth. Then we go over it in class.<br />
<br />
I don't give them any homework afterwards, though. I think they've suffered enough.<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-77111131607271225272013-03-31T19:55:00.000+01:002013-03-31T19:55:07.645+01:00Cleaning FeverI have a fever. It is such a high fever that I actually think I'm dreaming when I hear girlish voices just outside my room. <i>Girlish voices talking about vacuum cleaners.</i><br />
<br />
"You've <i>got </i>to see this!" the first says, and this voice is familiar--it sounds like my daughter. "The suction is incredible--it'll pick up anything." Good God, that doesn't just sound like my daughter, it <i>is </i>my daughter! <br />
<br />
There is a roar as the vacuum cleaner is switched on.<br />
<br />
"Oh my God, you're right, this is amazing!" This voice is harder to place, slightly accented. I recognize it eventually: it is Magdalena, my daughter's university friend who is currently visiting us.<br />
<br />
"Try it over there, on the stairs," my daughter says eagerly. There is a satisfying sound of debris being sucked up. "See?"<br />
<br />
I turn over in bed and blink. No, I'm not dreaming this up: they're actually out there, two eighteen-year-old girls, and they're having at the carpets in the hallway. The cat scurries in and jumps onto the bed, obviously traumatized. <br />
<br />
"Isn't that just fantastic?" My daughter again.<br />
<br />
"Yes! It doesn't leave anything!"<br />
<br />
"Hang on--get that bit of string there in the corner."<br />
<br />
The vacuum cleaner roars on.<br />
<br />
"Oh my God, it picked that right up!" Magdalena squeals.<br />
<br />
"Having a vacuum cleaner like this really makes you <i>want </i>to clean, doesn't it?"<br />
<br />
Are my ears actually hearing this correctly? Having a vacuum cleaner like that doesn't make me want to clean one single bit. Obviously, given the state of our carpets.<br />
<br />
"Doesn't that look better?" my daughter marvels enthusiastically. "You can really see where we've vacuumed!"<br />
<br />
Magdalena makes an equally enthusiastic reply. The two of them could be doing a parody of those over-zealous fifties housewives in cinched-waisted full skirts and high heels you used to see in magazine advertisements, gushing over their brand-new collections of tupperware or gleaming kitchen appliances. I turn over in bed, flushed with fever--and guilt. Magdalena had only been over for two days when I succumbed to the flu. We haven't been able to show her a very good time, and here she is now, amusing herself with my housework.<br />
<br />
"Whenever I come back, I always hope Mom hasn't vacuumed," my daughter says.<br />
<br />
Bless her: this is true, and she is seldom disappointed.<br />
<br />
"With a vacuum cleaner like this, I can see why you want to do it," Magdalena says.<br />
<br />
"Yes," my daughter agrees. "The one we had before we got this one was awful. You could go over a spot a dozen times and not see any effect."<br />
<br />
Ah, I remember that last vacuum cleaner: using it was a long exercise in futility. You could work for hours with very little to show for it afterwards. This is a little like writing. You can slave and soul-search endlessly, to have the fruits
of your labors cast aside in seconds, scorned, or worse still, not even noticed.
Maybe I should go back to doing regular vacuuming so that I too can
delight in the satisfaction of a job well done. Of course, I abandon this idea as
quickly as it comes.<br />
<br />
The girls' voices grow more distant, along with the drone of the vacuum cleaner. I settle back on my pillows and marvel at my good luck in daughters and their friends. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-24226322391272794942013-02-03T18:28:00.001+00:002013-02-03T18:28:06.085+00:00InterruptedThe phone rings, shattering my peace and interrupting my train of thought. But I have to answer it: what if one of my daughters is sick or in trouble? What if she needs money? What if somebody I love has died, or a friend just needs to talk? And finally, what if by some crazy quirk a wonderful bit of good fortune is about to fall into my lap? I am both an optimist and a pessimist, so I absolutely have to answer the phone.<br />
<br />
And of course it is an annoying telemarketing person, just doing the only job she can find, but still driving me half wild. These people have been tormenting me for years now. They have brought me flying into the house from the garden; they have forced me to scramble down from ladders; they have vexed half a dozen sleeping cats who have been dumped off my lap so I can rush to the phone and be interrupted. Even one or two of these calls a week is too many.<br />
<br />
And then a tiny lightbulb of inspiration flashes in my brain. I will have some fun with this call: it is my phone, it is my time, and it is my right.<br />
<br />
"Hello?" I say in a low, respectful tone, the kind of tone you would use if there was an elderly invalid in the house and you were a totally out-of-touch menial whose job it was to answer the phone.<br />
<br />
"Hello," says a brassy voice. "Is this Mrs. -- uh . . . " There is a long pause and then the lady mispronounces my husband's name.<br />
<br />
"I'm sorry," I say in the same quiet voice. "With whom do you wish to speak?" I aim for posh east coast American since I can't do British.<br />
<br />
The woman repeats herself, doing a little better this time, but still struggling with the consonant cluster.<br />
<br />
"Ah," I say. "Just a moment. Madam is sleeping at present, but I will see if I can awaken her again." I pause. "This may take some time."<br />
<br />
The woman apologizes so quickly I feel a twinge of remorse. "No, no--please don't bother her! It was just a courtesy call!"<br />
<br />
<i>Courtesy call. </i>My remorse vanishes in an instant. "May I take a message, then--?" I start to say, but the woman has hung up.<br />
<br />
I put the receiver back in its cradle and go back to what I was doing, smiling a smile of deepest satisfaction. I'm still nowhere near finished with the chapter, but I have still managed to achieve something extraordinary: in barely 30 seconds, I have managed to get a telmarketer to hang up on <i>me. </i><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com15tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-45636961282111416192013-01-05T13:35:00.000+00:002013-01-05T13:46:36.758+00:00American BeatlesI am collecting homework when I see them, a real blast from the past: the Famous Four. It's the well-known photo of them crossing a road, single-file, mostly long-haired and bearded, and there they are, on the back of Xu's mobile phone. How touching, that today's young people still revere the classics.<br />
<br />
"Hey," I say, tapping the phone. "You've got the Beatles on your phone. Are you a fan?"<br />
<br />
Xu smiles, caught out. "I don't know," he admits. "Just--famous picture."<br />
<br />
"The Beatles," I say, instantly feeling a lot older. "This photo was on their Abbey Road album."<br />
<br />
He nods. "Famous American singer."<br />
<br />
This stops me in my tracks. "No, not American--British!"<br />
<br />
"Really?" Xu asks, looking doubtful. "I always think American."<br />
<br />
"Believe me, you are wrong. They're British. Just ask Patrick." Patrick is my co-teacher, British, and roughly my age. I smile just thinking about his reaction to Xu's statement. <br />
<br />
Now the rest of the class is interested. Weilong, who sits across from Xu, agrees with me: the Beatles are British. Jenny, who sits next to him, however, has always believed they were American. <br />
<br />
This is the hardest thing about being old: the things you don't know often render the things you do know null and void. Although my students trust and respect my knowledge of English, my general ignorance of anything to do with IT never fails to astonish them. After all, kids like Xu and Jenny have grown up knowing the difference between DVDs and CDs, that YouTube is not spelled U-tube, and that 'cn' in a URL tells you it's from China. The credibility of people who have demonstrated their ignorance of such fundamentally obvious things has to be suspect. <br />
<br />
"The Beatles are British," I tell them. "End of story."<br />
<br />
"But one man dead in America," Jenny informs me pompously. "New York."<br />
<br />
"Yes, I know," I say, a little dizzy when I consider that this happened at least ten years before she was born. "But he was still born in England. All of them were born in England."<br />
<br />
"Mm," Jenny says, frowning. <br />
<br />
Now I get it: they don't really care, one way or another, what nationality the Beatles were. They've got that look in their eye that says <i>What difference does it make? A foreigner is still a foreigner. </i>The look I've had myself when someone has pointed out that a CD is not the same as a DVD.<br />
<br />
"Remember what we were talking about earlier?" I say. "About how you feel when somebody thinks you're Japanese? Or that man you told me about who argued that Confucius was Korean, and how much that irritated Chinese people?"<br />
<br />
Xu and Jenny both nod, their eyes open wide. Suddenly they get my point: every country wants credit for its cultural icons. I will never forget my response to the Japanese student I once had who insisted that Simon and Garfunkel were British. Or for that matter, the spirited, spluttering reaction of a theretofore quiet Kazakh student when a Chinese classmate suggested that the first person in space was American. Xu and Jenny may not believe me, but when they leave, I have no doubt that they will be thinking about this.<br />
<br />
And I am right. Three days later, Xu catches me after class. "Teacher, you are right," he says. "Beatles are British. I look in Wikipedia."<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com17tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-69125356391288454052012-11-16T08:37:00.000+00:002012-11-17T11:03:54.445+00:00CeilidhNone of my students know what a ceilidh is and I can't get over this. None of them have even noticed the posters plastered all over the hallways.<br />
<br />
"How pronounce?" one of them asks, pointing at the board where I have written CEILIDH in big block letters.<br />
<br />
"Kay-lee," I tell them. "Surely somebody has told you about them?"<br />
<br />
Blank stares all around.<br />
<br />
"Seriously?" I ask them, exaggerating my shock by opening my eyes wide and holding my hands up. "<i>Nobody</i> here knows what a ceilidh is?" They shake their heads and knit their brows. Most of them are sitting, slumped, at their desks, mobile phones in
hands, thumbs clicking away. Technically, they're still on their break
and I'm just setting up, pulling books and papers out of my backpack.
But I use this time to try and engage the livelier ones. <br />
<br />
"And you've been in Scotland<i> how</i> long?"<br />
<br />
"Since September," Gan says. Gan will answer any question, no matter how rhetorical. He lines his pencils up on his desk and breaks my heart by coming to class every single day in neatly ironed shirts and trousers with creases in them.<br />
<br />
I hold up the poster I've swiped from the corridor so that everybody can see it. "Then you have got to go. You can't live in Scotland and not got to ceilidhs!"<br />
<br />
"Dance?" one of the girls asks, pointing to the poster. I nod.<br />
<br />
"Yes, but it's not just a dance, it's a whole experience. There's music too, and I'm pretty sure there'll be free food at this one."<br />
<br />
This finally gets everybody's attention, especially the boys'.<br />
<br />
"Free food?" a boy called Jiang asks, sitting up straighter.<br />
<br />
"You bet. It won't be great, but it'll be there. And afterwards you'll dance and listen to music and have fun."<br />
<br />
"But I can't dance," Jiang says, his face falling.<br />
<br />
"Neither can I," I tell him, "but I still love ceilidhs. They're more fun if a few people can't dance." This is entirely true. People who don't know what they're supposed to do at ceilidhs provide a source of innocent merriment for the ones who do. I've done my bit as a graceless klutz at ceilidhs, and it won't hurt Jiang to do the same. <br />
<br />
"But it is raining," a girl called Lin says, gesturing at the window.<br />
<br />
"Ceilidhs are indoors!" I say. "And come on, this is Scotland. You can't use rain as an excuse for not going to ceilidhs." In fact, rain is one of the reasons people go to ceilidhs in the first place. What else are you going to do on cold, grey, wet days? Whooping it up to fiddle music is just the thing to revive your spirits.<br />
<br />
Since everyone seems interested, I decide to show them a ceilidh video on the internet. The first YouTube clip I find is from our rival university. It shows a group of students being instructed in basic ceilidh dance steps. This isn't what I'm after, so I fast forward until the students are actually dancing. But the dancing is so careful, so earnestly, precisely executed and well-behaved, that I immediately abandon this clip. <br />
<br />
"Okay," I say, clicking through YouTube videos, "this is going to take me a little time. Just hang on."<br />
<br />
The students don't care: this is keeping them from reporting verbs and transportation graphs. We're near the end of term and they're exhausted. I could tell them we were watching a how-to taxidermy clip and they'd be okay with it.<br />
<br />
And then I find the perfect YouTube clip. It shows a ceilidh in full swing, the fiddles merrily playing, the dancers' faces lit up, their hair plastered to their heads as they strip the willow. You almost feel the steam in the air. You can spot the ones who don't have a clue, but when they aren't tripping over their own feet or running into others, they are smiling.<br />
<br />
"I will go," Jiang says, watching a boy run smack into another one. "Free food?"<br />
<br />
"It says so on the poster," I tell him, fervently hoping it's more than potato chips and coleslaw this time.<br />
<br />
After the class, the minute I open the door, I see one of our Asian students in a full kilt, obviously planning on going to the ceilidh. He is a strapping, good-looking boy. I can hear Lin behind me, saying something in Chinese to her friends. I wheel around and manage to catch her eye.<br />
<br />
"We are going to the ceilidh too!" she says. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com25tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-32887389199337590792012-03-04T17:41:00.000+00:002012-03-04T17:41:34.138+00:00To The FlagsWhen we lived in North Cyprus, my husband and I decided one day to walk to the flags. These were huge flags, one Turkish, one North Cypriot (a flag recognized in precisely one country -- Turkey) and I was sure we could reach them if we just kept walking. My husband, a pessimist, didn't think it was possible, and as we labored up the hill, I began to think he might be right. The road curved and twisted and spiraled, and it went up and down. Sometimes the flags looked like they were right around the corner; sometimes it looked as though the road we were on was taking us in the opposite direction. Then, almost an hour after we set out, we turned a corner and saw that we had reached the flags--we were there. And yet there was another road that zig-zagged away, up through the mountains, and I knew that the flags were just the first point of a much longer destination, and that one day we would have to come back and see where that road led.<br />
<br />
I started this blog back in 2007, mainly because I'd always wanted to write, but also because I had nothing better to do. My husband and I had sold our small business, after which we could not find teaching jobs in our small town. We were in a difficult situation: virtually broke and missing intellectual stimulation, but reluctant to go to a new place with better teaching opportunities; we didn't want to put our children through the trauma of another move. So my husband did what he could: he found a job delivering packages. I did legal typing, applied for every secretarial job within a 30-mile radius, and took care of my family. And when I could, I wrote. I believe that writing kept me sane during that period.<br />
<br />
Having a blog has been a great discipline and experience, and it has helped me meet so many interesting people who have given me so much. Someday I want to be able to do what these people have done for me: to help other beginners find their way, deal with the frustration of endless rejections, and generally learn all the things you have to learn to be a good writer. One of the things I have learned is that there is no pinnacle, no end point. Even if you publish something big and manage to become a bestselling author, you just keep going, keep writing, keep trying to get even better. <br />
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This may or may not be my last blog post, but whatever the case, I won't be able to spend so much time here: I've been lucky enough to find almost more work than I can do teaching English and Japanese, proofreading, editing, <i>and, </i>especially, writing. I am writing this to explain why I'm disappearing: I have so little free time now that I have to spend it on writing. I've made it to the flags, but I want to aim higher.<br />
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So thank you to everybody who has come here to read what I've written and to comment. I have loved reading your comments and your blog posts as well, and I hope to meet you again -- at the flags, perhaps, or beyond.<br />
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<br /><br /><div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com41tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-88406833057548181382012-02-26T19:07:00.002+00:002012-02-28T06:12:37.539+00:00Something to be Thankful forMy daughter recently came back from school, disgusted. "There was this lecture," she told me, "on polio. And the people who gave it were great, but they made a lot of mistakes."<br />
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My daughter knows about as much about polio as I do, so this surprised me. "What kind of mistakes?"<br />
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"They had this map," she said, "of all the places where polio is still active."<br />
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"And it was wrong?" Because really, how would she know it was wrong?<br />
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"There were lines pointing to the countries," my daughter told me patiently. "And they had Afghanistan as Pakistan!"<br />
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"Well, they <i>are </i>pretty close," I said, desperately trying to remember which was where.<br />
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"Fair enough," my daughter acknowledged. "Afghanistan and Pakistan are close. But how about this?" Her eyes flashed. "They had <i>Nigeria </i>labeled as <i>Afghanistan!"</i><br />
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"Wow."<br />
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<i> </i><br />
"Yeah, <i>wow.</i>"<br />
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"So what did you do?"<br />
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"I pointed it out to them--" she paused, correctly interpreting my worried expression "--<i>very </i>politely and not in a know-it-all way."<br />
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"Good for you," I said, relieved. "What did they say?"<br />
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"That they were just testing us to make sure we knew our geography."<br />
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I nodded. I do this all the time myself whenever I'm caught out on an error in class; it's a trick of the trade. "I do that too," I said. "My students are always catching me out on details, and I tell them I was just testing them."<br />
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My daughter rolled her eyes, not buying it any more than my students buy it when I screw up. "Sure. But come on--Nigeria as Afghanistan? That's unforgivable."<br />
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She's right, but it's also a little comforting: I may struggle to remember whether Pakistan or Afghanistan is further west, but thank God I'm not so daft as to get Nigeria confused with Afghanistan. That's something to be thankful for.<br />
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There's always something to be thankful for. <i>Always.</i> Never mind all those other things.<br />
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While I'm counting my blessings, here's another: I've got a daughter who knows the difference between Afghanistan and Pakistan, and cares about which is which -- and she knows how to point it out politely to people who've got it wrong. Never mind that she lost all her chemistry notes, has failed to turn in two essays, and cannot be pried away from her fan fiction. <br />
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Yep, there's always something to be thankful for.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-84214731247904721812012-02-18T12:33:00.000+00:002012-02-18T12:33:15.390+00:00Kentucky Jam Cake in Yokohama"I have something good waiting for me at home!" the blonde girl squeals to her friends. "Something very delicious. And I will share it!"<br />
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They are walking together, four abreast, hogging the sidewalk and for the past minute I've been waiting for the chance to push past them. But I've missed lunch, and I want to hear what that something good is, so as I finally manage to get by, I do everything but swivel around, one hand cupped behind an ear.<br />
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"What is it?" one of the girls' friends asks, bless her.<br />
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"Finnish rye bread! My mother baked it because I have been <i>longing </i>for it!"<br />
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The others make appreciative noises as the girl tells them about this bread, fresh out of the oven, and how wonderful it is spread with butter, served with soup and cold fish. <br />
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Suddenly I am ravenously hungry. And I think about my own daughter at university, far away from us, getting by on her own cooking: pot noodles, pasta, discount sandwiches. I don't have the time to send her platters of sushi or her favorite tofu dish, <i>mabo dofu, </i>but surely I could bake her chocolate chip cookies? If I did, I'll bet she'd tell her friends -- possibly even share.<br />
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And I remember my mother's Kentucky jam cake, and the one occasion she managed to send it to me my first year in Japan -- and how I almost didn't get it.<br />
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My mother hated cooking and baking. For her, fussing over food was a ridiculous waste of time -- time that could be better spent reading, talking, gardening, or supporting charities. I grew up yearning for all the things my mother didn't cook, nagging her to try out the recipes she perversely loved collecting but not actually testing. But there was one thing she made better than anyone else: fruit cake. My mother's fruit cakes were always moist, the raisins in them didn't rise to the top and get hard and dried out, and they were a lovely pastel lavender because she made them with buttermilk and blackberry jam. The crumb was tender and fragrant with spices, and she frosted her cakes with a carmelized brown sugar frosting that I actually dreamed about. <br />
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The year I moved to Japan, my mother sent me a Kentucky jam cake for Christmas. For weeks, I looked forward to it, eagerly checking my mailbox every day when I got back from work. I could almost taste the spices -- cloves, nutmeg and cinnamon -- and taste the plumpness of the raisins, the delicate crumb of the cake, the buttery richness of the caramel frosting. But Christmas came and went and I waited in vain. Then in February, long after I'd given up hope, one of my co-workers told me a student of his had seen my name in the unclaimed mail section of the Japan Times. After work, I made my way to the Yokohama Main Post Office, wondering whether the thing I'd received was just a misaddressed postcard (this had happened before, a cruel disappointment), or my mother's Kentucky jam cake. I stood at the counter, waiting for the clerk to bring me my unclaimed mail. Ten minutes later, the man emerged, holding a package. My heart leapt as I saw my mother's careful writing. She'd forgotten to write the ward I lived in.<br />
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All the way back to my apartment I stood on the train, crushed on all sides by students and salarymen, clutching my mother's package, filled with anticipation. Would the cake still be edible, or moldy and stale? As soon as I got home, I unwrapped it and cut myself a slice. They say that food is always better shared, but I have to tell you that they lie. The two-month ship journey from California to Japan followed by six weeks in the Yokohama Main Post Office had done nothing but improve the flavor. I ate almost all of that cake in one go -- saving only a few slices for later -- and I can't remember enjoying anything so much. I don't regret my selfishness either: I wasn't to know it then, but that was the last cake I would ever get from my mother. <br />
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Tonight, I'm going to bake my daughter some chocolate chip cookies, and I will put pecans in them. I will double-check that I've got her address right.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-965824120120454342.post-87042884135613947522012-02-10T19:23:00.002+00:002012-02-10T20:05:39.818+00:00The Sidewalks of GlasgowI have a brand new pair of shoes.<br />
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Now I am only telling you this because for me this is huge. I only buy shoes after long and careful deliberation, when my old shoes are full of holes or practically falling off my feet. When I do have new shoes, I make a big deal of it. I pull them out of the tissue paper nests of their boxes, breathe in their delicious new-shoe smell, and admire the wonder of them on my feet. I would almost leave the price tags on them to show that I, cheapskate Mary, have taken the plunge and shelled out for brand-new footwear. As you can probably imagine, I treat my new shoes with extreme respect, only wearing them to work or 'out', and bending over backwards not to scuff or sully them.<br />
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My current new shoes are right-off-the-charts wonderful. They are comfortable, attractive, warm and well-made and, for all that they were on sale, still a good brand. They also have a good, deep tread for walking on icy streets, a real must for a klutz like me.<br />
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So the other morning, when I accidentally planted my feet squarely in the middle of a big, wet, freshly-left dog mess right smack in the middle of the sidewalk, I was beside myself with dismay. I'd been busy adjusting the strap on my backpack and I hadn't seen it. But there was no way whoever was walking their dog could have missed it; it would be like missing Texas on a map of the U.S.A.<br />
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I did everything I could to get it off my shoes. I tried to get off the worst of it by raking my feet through grass; I used a stick and what Kleenex I had in my bag and I scraped the soles of my shoes on the edge of the curb at every block. But it was all in vain: the stuff had filled every single square millimeter of tread. And it stank to high heaven.<br />
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When I got to work, instead of doing the copying I needed to do, I had to wash dog-do off my shoes. I attracted a fair amount of attention in the Ladies' restroom, but after 20 minutes of unstinting effort, my shoes were 99% crap-free. My heart, however, was full of rancor for the people of Glasgow. How inconsiderate for someone to leave such a mess right in the middle of the street where anybody could step on it! What kind of boors would do such a thing? Although a lot of dog owners do clean up after their dogs, Glasgow sidewalks can be a real hazard course. As I sprinted across the campus to get to my class on time, I couldn't help but notice all the steaming piles left right there for me to step on. Every person walking a dog got a long, hard look from me. <br />
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Then, during the final 15 minutes of my last class, a student told me a story. Her friend, newly arrived from China, had gone shopping. At some point during the day, she had dropped her wallet, full of cash, her passport, student ID, and a number of credit cards. "In China, if you do such thing, you must <i>forget </i>it," my student said, shaking her head. "You will never see wallet again. But my friend, she went back to home and she had a call from university. Her wallet was there! Somebody find it and give it back!" All the money and documents were still in it too, amazing and delighting the owner and all her friends. "People in Glasgow honest people," they unanimously concluded. I told them my story about losing my mobile phone and getting it back. I was grateful to them for reminding me that there are plenty of good people in Glasgow, dirty sidewalks notwithstanding.<br />
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Even the dog-walkers got big smiles from me on my way back -- on the few occasions I looked up.<div class="blogger-post-footer">This work is Copyright ©Mary Whitsell and may not be reproduced in any manner without the express permission of the author</div>Mary Witzlhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06458299046574564155noreply@blogger.com16