Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Snow White... and the 20 million Shanghainese

Every day since Saturday I've looked out the window at the ever-growing snow-scene before me and thought "I'd better take a photo, because Shanghai doesn't get any 'snowier' than this"... and every day more snow has fallen.

It turns out that this is the biggest snowfall Shanghai has experienced in 24 years (according to the Shanghai Daily), and I'm pretty happy to have seen it (as chaotic as it is!).

Here are the photos from today.. The snow seems to be melting a bit now, and there is no more snow predicted until Friday, so this may be the last of them!

In the park across the street from us.

Camelias in the park, shivering their petals off.

This charming fellow greeted me when I went downstairs this morning!

My scooter, firmly staying put for the time-being... I draw the line at riding in snow.

A digitally arranged panorama from our building this morning (click to see screen-sized version)

Monday, January 28, 2008

He loves me...

I came home from the snowiest day I've ever seen in Shanghai feeling like crap. Granted a few inches is not a whole lot of snow in the global sense, but when it falls in a city that rarely ever sees snow it creates havoc. We in Shanghai are so unprepared for this sort of weather that the cars have no idea how to drive (my taxi skidded across a intersection before I'd even left my street this morning); we have no snow shoes for walking in the piles of slush caused by a city with atrocious drainage systems, and we have no idea how to balance on the slippery- and now icy- glazed tiles the Shanghai city authorities insist on using to pave all outdoor areas.

The snow is beautiful, but quite frankly the city is in a shambles.

So, as I said I came home today feeling pretty crappy and demanded a hug from Phil.

As hugged me he said:

"What's the matter baby?"
"I don't know. I just feel all Floobery-Jibbery inside."
"Oh. Is that a word?"
"No, but it's how I feel today."
"Ok," he says, and continues to hug me without question.

Ah love.

----------------------
To celebrate the fact that tomorrow has just been declared a no-school Snow Day (my first ever!) by the Shanghai Education Authorities, I'll post some snow photos from school today:

Spring Festival/Chinese New Year decorations ready for next week

One of the playgrounds- a few hours after this was taken the grass was entirely white

Some of the munchkins from my class (with my co-teacher Hellena on the right and my assistant teacher Susie, left)- it takes 45 minutes of our morning just to get them in and out of their coats and boots.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Snow in Shanghai- Happy Australia Day!

Some photos of Australia day in snowing Shanghai- in vast contrast to the gorgeous sunny photos on the harbour that I just saw on the Sydney Morning Herald online.

I should also mention that snow in Shanghai is a very rare occasion indeed, so today is pretty special. Well, as I see it, if it has to be cold on Australia Day, then at the very least it can snow!

Showing my patriotism




Tuesday, January 22, 2008

DIY oven

Ok, I love to cook, whether it be on the stove or in an oven. However, most Chinese kitchens do not have ovens, and that wipes out half the recipes I love. A few months after moving here I bought a good quality, large toaster oven, which works a treat (I recently baked a three-tiered wedding cake in it), however prior to that, and also during the year I lived in Nepal, I used an oven made of cooking pots on the gas stove.

Anyone who is lucky enough to have their own oven can stop reading here- but readers from Asia might be interested in the method.

First you take a large cooking pot with a lid- the largest pot you can find.

Place it on the gas stove and put a small metal bowl (like a small rice bowl), upturned in the bottom of it. Then on top of that sits your item for baking (on a baking tray or in a baking dish, as directed by the recipe).

Put the lid on and cook on a low heat.

A cross-section of the stove

I've used this oven to cook bread, lasagna, quiche, cakes, cookies, and baked pastas.

Tips:
You don't need to add water to the pot- this is the most common question people ask me.
Cooking times will vary from the recipe- try to check it often.
If it cooks too fast the bottom will burn before the middle is done- try turning the heat down.
It's better of course to find a heavy pot to be the oven, but I've used cheap, thin saucepans with no problem.
Remember to use a baking dish small enough to get back out of the pot- I've used some that were too snug a fit inside the 'oven' for me to get my fingers around it to lift it out- try picking up a quiche in it's pan with chopsticks!

A picture tells a thousand words

I'm not going to incriminate myself by writing anything to accompany this picture- not while I still live in Shanghai...

Saturday, January 19, 2008

New hair

While I'm posting pictures, here's a quick shot of my new hair:
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Subtle, isn't it?

Random snapshots from Christmas/New Year in Oz

A real post is coming soon- I promise.... for now here are some random shots from our trip to Oz.

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My niece Naomie ("Namomie") trying out my hair.

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The Blue Mountains and the Three Sisters as viewed from the bottom of the Scenic Railway.

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New Year's Eve in Sydney Park with Simon ('Bear'), Nath, Julia and Phil (with Jess and Viv offscreen)

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Gordon's Bay, Sydney

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A nice place to rest for eternity- Waverly Cemetery Sydney

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Cooper and Aunty Lou

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Cooper's funny 'Push-up' bum cheeks- the inspirations for the nickname "Squishy Bums"
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Cooper being entertained by his crazy Uncle Phil. Thumbs up Uncle Spikey.

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Back under the flight path....

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A photo I will come back to when life in the concrete jungle of Shanghai gets to be too much...

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Hot bunnies

Ignore the fact that this video is posted on a site called College Humour"... this is actually really well filmed and put together- very 'art house'.

Monday, January 07, 2008

Things I see in the Church

This is from my Year One/First Grade Religious Education book (it was a Catholic school) which I found at mum and dad's place over Christmas.
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I'm not exactly sure what I saw in the church, but I'm pretty sure it's the reason I'm now a Buddhist.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

alive....

Call off the Saint Bernards, I am still here and alive... however I wouldn't mind the brandy, so in fact if they have nothing better to do the Saint Bernards can keep on coming.

St Bernards always make me think of Belle and Sebastian...

Give me a minute here, what was I saying?

Oh yes, I am alive and kicking, or at least twitching. The last couple of weeks have been filled with writing reports (yes, report cards for two year olds- how many different ways can you write "Little Johnny is a pleasure to teach but should try to remember that we don't lick our friends..."?), doing assessments, putting together "topic books" (compiled craft and art works for each child from the last three months), Christmas shopping, running errands (like paying three months worth of overdue bills before they cut us off), and attending a plethora of Christmas parties and going away parties.

Oh, and on top of all of that, in the next few days I need to decorate a three-tiered wedding cake for our fabulous friends Daniela and Gerald.

So in short: my life, she's a crazy.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Christmas is coming...

Christmas is coming... don't forget that you can get original gifts created by yours truly at the Loud Creations Cafepress store -- without ever having to leave the house!

Now, what could be better than that?





Wednesday, November 21, 2007

The Stuff Nightmares Are Made Of

Last night Phil woke me up by shouting "NO!" in his sleep. Thinking he was in the middle of a nightmare I shook him awake, and when his breathing calmed down we had the following conversation:

Me: "What happened?"
Phil: "Oh, there was this guy in my dream and he was really pissing me off!"
Me: "Well... how?"
Phil (still agitated): "He said my handwriting was sloppy!"
Me: "Uh-huuuh....?"
Phil: "And he kept interrupting me!"
Me: "Uh-huuuh...?"
*pause*
Me: "Oh. That's it? Oh."
*pause*
"BWA-HA-HA-HA-HAAAAAA!"

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Farewell Summer

The title of this post is not a reference to the weather- summer has been well and truly over for a month or so in Shanghai. It's a reference to the fact that on Thursday night I sold this painting, titled 'Summer':

It is a bitter-sweet feeling to sell something that is so much a part of me- I sometimes say my paintings are like my babies. You put so much work into it, blood sweat and tears, and then someone comes along and says: "Yeah, I'll take it" and just like that, your baby is gone.

Don't get me wrong, this is what I want to do, but when the euphoria of having a near-stranger fork over a wad of cash in a bar (a transaction that felt distinctly shady!) wears off, I am left feeling a mixture of elation and grief. Will they love the painting? Will they take care of it? And what happens in a few years? Will it be passes down as an heirloom (unlikely) or dumped in a moldy basement somewhere?

Perhaps this is an artist's version of Empty Nest syndrome. My babies are going out into the world on their own.

Friday, November 16, 2007

My kinda diet

While I was standing at the counter of Starbucks this morning (yes, I ordinarily hate Starbucks, it's over-priced bad coffee and everything it represents, but in China there are very little options available for coffee drinkers, and even fewer at 7.15am) I heard the man next to me say:

"I'll have a Tall Latte with non-fat milk... and whipped cream"

Is it just me or does the whipped cream kinda cancel out the non-fat milk?

Sunday, November 11, 2007

"Happy Birthday To You, Happy Birthday Tattoo..."

So for my birthday this year I asked Phil to get me a tattoo.

Wait for it....

[THUD-SPLAT!]

There. That was the sound of my mum's brains exploding onto her computer monitor.

(Actually I pre-warned her, to avoid exactly that situation, but I think there may be some thud-splatting going on anyway.)

So, with no further ado, this is it:


(please ignore the creases in my foot from sleeping with socks on!)

The writing is Tibetan dbu-can script, saying "Om Mani Padme Hum", the Buddhist mantra which invokes the attention and blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion.

The mantra has no exact translation into English, but the following explanation by Gen Rinpoche describes it's purpose and meaning:

"The mantra Om Mani Pädme Hum is easy to say yet quite powerful, because it contains the essence of the entire teaching. When you say the first syllable Om it is blessed to help you achieve perfection in the practice of generosity, Ma helps perfect the practice of pure ethics, and Ni helps achieve perfection in the practice of tolerance and patience. Päd, the fourth syllable, helps to achieve perfection of perseverance, Me helps achieve perfection in the practice of concentration, and the final sixth syllable Hum helps achieve perfection in the practice of wisdom. "
Source and more.

Some Buddhists say that it is inappropriate to have the mantra tattooed on the body below the waste level. However, for me personally, positioning it on my right foot has a great significance- it is with my right foot that I make the first step in any journey, big or small, and so this mantra will always lead my path in life.

So the next questions is "Did it hurt?"

I'm not going to say it didn't hurt (of course it did), but it really didn't hurt as much as I thought it would- it felt like a strong stinging, and if I concentrated on something away from my foot (I found focussing on my head helped- and I made Phil put his hand on my head to help me focus on it) it was quite bearable. On the plus side, although detailed, the actual tattoo lines are not thick, so there was no need to outline first and then fill-in with coulour,- the usual procedure- which shortened the time. Overall, I'd say that getting my nose peirced hurt more, and for more days afterwards than this did. After the actual procedure was over I just felt a general dull ache in my foot, and it was only for one day after that it felt tender to touch or was bothered by my shoes rubbing on it. About 30hours after having it done, it was fine, yet my nose hurt for a good week after having it pierced, and for several weeks after that I had to be gentle with it.

Oh, and on a final point, I can totally see how getting tattoos is addictive- I'm already thinking about my next one.

[THUD-SPLAT!]

Monday, November 05, 2007

Birthday and Bronchitis

So it's my birthday tomorrow, and for the second year in a row I am sick for it. I have been nursing a cold for the last two weeks, and now for about the 20th time in my life I have Bronchitis. I probably should have gone to a doctor sooner, only that is not as easy as it sounds for a foreigner in Shanghai. Basically if you are a foreigner in here (without medical insurance, as I currently am), you have only a few options:

  1. Shell-out between US$50-150 just to see a doctor who speaks English (and that is not including any tests or medication);
  2. Self-diagnose on the internet and go to the nearest local pharmacy and pay about US$5-10 for some over-the-counter antibiotics;
  3. Go to the emergency department of the nearest Chinese Hospital and pay very little for a consultation entirely in Chinese.
Option number one is easy and safe, but I hate paying that much money when I know what is wrong with me and I only need a prescription for antibiotics.
Option number two is also easy, however, although I have done it before, it is obviously not the safest course of treatment.
Option number three is safe and cheap, but the language difficulties certainly do not make it easy. Although I have picked up enough Chinese to for day-to-day life here, my vocabulary falls far short of words such as "bronchitis", "phlegm", and "is that needle new?"

Luckily my friend Daniela, Chinese-speaker-extraordinaire, offered to go with me to a Chinese hospital last Saturday night.

We turned up at the hospital at about 7pm, and walked into an empty waiting area. A passing guard directed us through a door, behind which was a young nurse waiting in a corridor. She plucked a glass thermometer out of many lying in a tupperware container, and thrust it under my tongue while Daniela started filling in my registration form. All they wanted was my first name, age and address (which they didn't check), and I sat down while Daniela went to pay the 5RMB (US$0.67) it cost to see the doctor.

Then we were ushered into a room with about seven people sitting around the desk of a man in a wrinkled white coat. I surmised quickly that the man was the doctor (duh), and all the people were waiting to see him. Yes- you wait IN the doctor's room while the people in the queue in front of you tell the doctor their most embarrassing personal details and physical symptoms. I was reminded of the time a friend told me she went for a gynacological exam at a local hospital, and was lying on the bed, naked from the waist down with her legs in the stirrups while men and women- other patients, doctors, nurses and orderlies- walked to-and fro around her. I was thankful at this point that I only had bronchitis.

After telling the doctor my symptoms he listened to my chest and told me that I needed an x-ray (overkill in my opinion, but ok) and a blood test. We couldn't understand why I would need a blood test and he kept telling us that it was to see if there was _____(insert Chinese word) in my blood. Daniela guessed at what he was saying to look it up in her dictionary. She turned to me and said: "According to the dictionary he is looking to see if there is a dishwasher in your blood".

In any case the doctor wouldn't give me the prescription until I had the test, so we traipsed off to the 3rd floor. After stopping to pay on the way (you always pay before treatment or tests in China), when the lift doors opened we came to a dark and completely empty floor. The corridor went in two directions so we took a guess and went left... then left again... then right, with still no clue if we were even going in the right direction. Luckily we chanced on something that looked like a cross between a bank (counters with glass from ceiling to about 20cm off the top of the counter) and a laboratory (blipping machines in the room behind the glass). We buzzed the doorbell and a man, nay a boy (he looked about 14 years old but must have been at least 19), instructed me to sit with my arm pushed through under the glass partition.

Now normally my skin is so transparently white that finding a vein is about as difficult as finding a neon sign in Vegas, however the environment must have scared them all into hiding, as he just couldn't find one, no matter how tightly he pulled the rubber junkies' strap around my upper arm. While he was doing this I distracted myself from thoughts of gangrene by looking around. I wish I hadn't because up until that point I hadn't noticed the old blood splattered up on the glass. Daniela pointed out the overflowing mound of used bloody needle points sitting on a tray on the otherside of the glass. I was suddenly grateful of the glass wall. Finally on the second arm the Boy Lab Dude finally found a little vein and took the blood (with a new needle!). He popped it into his machine and within about two minutes I had a print-out analysis of my blood. We amused ourselves on the trip to x-ray figuring out what all the values referred to.

X-ray was much as usual, aside from the fact that the door was wide open and any patients could walk in. Again within minutes of having the x-ray taken I had the film in my hands, and we were heading back to the doctor's room. He stopped talking to the patient in front of him, glanced quickly at the x-ray and blood results and told us that there was indeed that mysterious something in my blood. Again we gave him blank looks, and he pulled out his mobile to call his friend to ask him to translate for us. Somewhere along the line Daniela cottoned on to the fact that it was not after all a dishwasher in my blood but bacteria. Or at least the bacteria was somewhere in my body, evidenced by an elevated white blood cell count in my blood.

So the doctor decided that I was right and I did have bronchitis after all. He recommended that I have IV antibiotics, as that was the quickest way to cure it. IV antibiotics are administered like candy in China and I was having none of it. Oral antibiotics were good enough for me, and I promised dutifully to take the whole course.

So, the total tally reads like a Mastercard ad:
Time: one hour in total
Cost: about Rmb350 (US$46) including consultation, x-ray, blood work and prescriptions for antibiotics, something to ease my breathing and a cough elixir.
Privacy: 0
Cleanliness and hygiene: umm.. let's not go there...
Confusion: only about 5% on Daniela's side; 95% on mine
Having a Chinese-speaking friend translate and provide playful distracting banter: Priceless.
Thanks Daniela for being the hero of the hour, and while I'm saying thanks, thank you to Phil for putting up with my miserable face, continuous hacking coughs and constant need for hugs and attention over the past few days.

mmmm... yummy!

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

The chinglish never stops coming...

On an ad for 'Top Goun' hardwear company, overlaid over an image of a walk-in wardrobe:

"Light and soft music
Cut through the time that have no language
Gradually widespread
Place oneself the among them small and soft tasty"


Ummm.... tasty?

Friday, October 26, 2007

nutritional labels

A conversation at dinner:

Phil: "I know you are vegetarian and you don't eat meat or fish, but what do you call someone who doesn't eat meat, but does eat fish?"

Me: "Picky?"

Please wait while this blogger ducks to avoid projectiles from all her so-called "picky" friends... just kidding guys!! Forgive me...?

Colds and Kindergarten (well Nursery actually, but there's no alliteration in that...)

A mum shepherds her kid into my classroom and as I say good morning to them I double over, coughing up a lung or two.

She steps backwards, instinctively thrusting her arms down in front of her child with the age old back-away-from-my-kid-you-evil-predator-move.

What I actually say: "He he, it's just a cold, nothing to worry about" [splutter. cough. croak]

What I want to say: "Hey lady, you didn't see me backing away from your kid when he was coughing snot balls onto my favourite shirt and literally sneezing in my face, so the least you can do is have the courtesy not to flinch when I catch the same cold off him and yet still manage drag myself off my death bed into this petri dish known as a Nursery to look after your child."

Thursday, October 25, 2007

email surprise

I recieved this from STA Travel in my inbox today.



My first thought was "Wow, what a great deal!"

It was soon followed by "Why does that world globe have legs... hang-on, I can see it's bum! Oh, what's it saying to me? .... ew, I feel dirty."

Seriously, who designed that campaign?