Tuesday, March 20, 2012

シーン: Sound of Silence

In Japanese, there are a number of sounds for things we don't think of as having sounds in English.  Pika pika means flashing lights.  Fuwa fuwa means something fluffy.  And Shiin means still silence.  The following are all pictures from vacation which I associate with Shiin.



Osaka Castle Park

Summer Palace in Winter

National Museum in Beijing

若草山焼き
Wakakusayamayaki
Burning Wakakusa Mountain

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Kidneys Behind Their Eyeballs

It's St. Patrick's Day.  I'm planning lessons to talk to my classes about Ireland.  The Chinese for Ireland, 爱尔兰 (aierlan), happens to start with the character for love.  St. Patrick's Day is a time when I remember my grandmother Sally.  Not only was she Irish, but she passed away right around St. Patty's Day about eight years ago.  Like most Americans, I'm a mix of several different countries, none of which I have any real solid claim to.  But a little sliver Ireland has been passed through, though I cannot be sure how much of it is my grandmother and her quirky personality.

It times when I have been in distress, my father or my aunts and uncles would say to me sayings that Grandma Sally used to say to them.  Many of these are things that don't make much sense the first time, or have a wry, slightly crude humor to them which I have been told is very Irish.  But they stick with me, and over time have given me strength and wisdom.  “Do the best you can, it's all a horse can do.” Don't worry about getting everything perfect, you have limits.  Just do your best.  And the one that I have been thinking about the last few days, “The Irish have their kidneys behind their eyeballs.”
This last one was explained to me as meaning that Irish people are sentimental and emotional and dwell over what they've lost in a mournful wistful way.  I once read someone describe a requiem this way.  You're sad, but you feel good feeling sad.

I am embarrassed to say that my knowledge of Irish history is sorely lacking.  I have had the chance, in preparing for class, to read a bit more of history and I feel like I'm getting in touch with my roots.  In describing St. Patrick's Day, and in describing why the Irish left Ireland, and how Irish Americans feel, I feel a great deal of pride and emotion.  Were I in the United States, around various Irish American organizations, or even just home with my family, I would say I am not the most Irish person.  My Dad, whom I take after, is more Norwegian than Irish.  Which, a family joke, needs explaining.  Even among caucasians in America, there is a deal of surviving cultural distinctions that still exist in communities.  Depending on the community, that ethnic origin has come to be associated with regional traits.  The Dakotas, Minnesota, and Montana were settled by many Norwegians, and those Norwegian cultural traits in America have come to be associated with the area even more so than the ethnicity.  Other communities, like in New York City, can be distinguished by neighborhood and has a bit of a stronger sense of country of origin because that neighborhood is trying to remind itself and its neighbors that they are different from the Italians or the Polish neighborhood just next door.  Growing up, when I would visit my aunt and uncle in Fish Town I would see Irish flags flying next to American flags outside people's houses.  It was much the same way I would see Italian flags outside the houses in South Philly, where I went to middle-school.  So who can be the most Irish or the most Norwegian out of a set of brothers and sisters?  Though I don't think any of us have a serious definition for it, I would say it's a combination of personality, stereotypes, and what we tell ourselves it means to be Irish or to be Norwegian.  So though in Fish Town I don't think I would be very Irish, I feel very Irish right now.

I have been listening to Irish songs I have either heard second hand that my grandmother used to sing, or have read about once when I was younger.  There is a feeling of longing and sorrow.  There's “Down By the Glen-side,” about remembering the brave young men of an Irish rebellion.  The singer does not say that he/she saw them himself, but heard of it from an old woman humming to herself.  “Green Fields of America,” a series of letters are sent out to a man who has gone to America.  He and his family grow up.  Time passes.  And though the family is glad for him, thankful for the money he sends them, have great affection for the family he has started, they miss him very much.  They keep asking him to please come home to visit.  It would be good to see him again.  And I cry when I hear them.  And I listen again.

It feels good to cry.  It feels good to feel sad about the things that have been lost, the things that will be lost.  And though I feel like I'm making the right decision, I still feel sad.

I never like saying goodbye.  I hate saying goodbye to friends.  Thanks to the internet it is easy to stay in contact with people.  We don't really have to say goodbye to people so long as we have a computer.  But there still can be emotional distances between people.  And though we hope it is not goodbye forever, we know it will not be the same.  I will miss my students here very much.  But at the same time I feel that I have to go.  The more I learn about Shenzhen, the more I think about the future there, the more certain I feel about the decision I have made.  But I still wish I could have my cake and eat it too.  I wish I could keep everything I like and carefully cut around the unpleasant things.  But I can't.
I can accept that.  But I feel a good cry is in order.  And a good cry is in order, in honor of Ireland, and my grandmother whom I wish I had known better.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Road Not Taken*

There are a number of different people reading this blog.  Most of you have met me in person.  We are friends from high school, or college.  We are family, or friends of family.  You may even possibly be a former professor.

Those of you who spoke to me last year, around this time, might have heard me talk about making a decision about where to go.  I was torn between coming to Kaifeng, and going to Shenzhen, another city in China.  While Kaifeng is nearly two thousand years old, it is considered 'off the beaten path.'  There are few foreigners or tourists.  It is one of the poorer cities.  Shenzhen on the other hand was a small village until 1979, and has since sprouted into the fourth richest city in China.  Between trade, and its close proximity to Hong Kong, there are no lack of foreigners.  When seeking advice as to which city to live in, I kept hearing both cities are incredibly different, but I would gain a valuable experience in both places.

After vacation, I felt I needed to plan what I will do for the next few years.  I will spend one more year in China.  Then I will go to graduate school in International Relations.  Last semester I told many people, including some people back home, that I intended to spend next year in Kaifeng.  But I have applied to the same program in Shenzhen, the one I chose not to do last year, and they have accepted me.  I have not made a final decision yet.  But I find myself getting more and more excited with the idea of going to Shenzhen.

There is one thing that holds me back.

I will miss my students.  Today I taught reading for four hours, and in a few minutes I will teach it for two more hours.  I teach Minsheng, which I have described before.  And it is truly a pleasure to teach them.  I will miss this kind of relationship with students, where we are more like peers.  I really enjoy teaching these classes.  I may find a joy in teaching younger students, but that is still somewhere in the future.  It is unknown.  And this is familiar, and precious.  Some students I have become close to, and consider friends.  I know I will keep in contact with them, even if I do leave.  But I will not be able to stand in front of the class and explain Brave New World and Playdough in the same lesson, with several jokes and questions in between.

I have a little more time before I have to decide.  There are many things I believe Shenzhen can offer.  One of them being that it is so different from Kaifeng, I may be able to use that experience to further my grad school education.  I will have seen different parts of China, and will be able to compare them.  And frankly, as you may have noticed whenever I bring up Japan, I love comparing things.
Unlike Robert Frost, I would be backtracking down the road less traveled by in order to see the road, just as fair, but slightly more traveled by.  I wouldn't be able to set down further roots where I am, which would be a shame.  But I would be able to come back and visit friends and colleagues I wish to keep in touch with.  And so I will take the other road, and see where it takes me.

*This post I had meant to put up for some time.  I have since decided to go to Shenzhen next year.  I still would like to share this piece.

Nothing But Time: Exploring in C

Originally written in early February


Half Recovered Photo of Buddhist Monks





This is a bit of a tangent essay.

Just a few short hours after deleting my vacation photos, I wrote on here, as well as on facebook, bemoaning my stupidity.  Well, on facebook several friends were kind enough to point me to PhotoRec, a freeware program that recovers your lost photos.  I will not get into the specifics of how it works.  But after I got back, I downloaded the tar file for it.  Unfortunately Archive Utility would not unarchive it.  I would keep getting told “Error 2- no such file or directory.”  The best thing about freeware is that you can fiddle with it yourself.  The worst thing is that if you don't usually fiddle around with your computer, you can be more than lost with no customer service.
I would say my computer literacy is maybe a little bit better than my Chinese, though not as good as my Japanese.  That is to say, I've done some cool things in conjunction with classes where teachers would do the hardest parts and I could always double check to make sure I was doing the right thing.  It's been over six months since I've done any kind of programing, and I've forgotten the syntax for C.  I don't remember how list the files in a directory, but I know how to get to understand the contents of the help manual.  So right now I am spelunking through C, trying to see if I can unpack my tar file.  I know I have done all of this before once, but only once.
I will say, one of the great things about liberal arts is that you have the chance to try some crazy things unrelated to your major.  My last semester I took a class on data compilation for Physicists which involved learning the basics of C (a language not too different from Java, which I studied in high school, one of the basic languages many people start out learning).  C is a little bit less pretty and user friendly, and unlike Java, I don't think it can quite flow in a way that English speaking brains can intuit.  But it works.
I've found that I don't have the motivation to learn programing as an end to itself – I have to have some sort of goal, something I want to make.  Similarly, I don't think I would have the patience to learn a dead language – something that can't communicate with live people.  I admire people who can, I just don't think I could do that myself.
When I stop worrying about how much I've forgotten, and what a newbie I feel like, I learn quite a bit.
Though at times it can feel like you are just bashing your head against the wall.  Would that be .bash?