3/31/14
The first teacher I observed teaching at the main
office in Shanghai said that Web International is one of the best schools to
work for. It is well established and the
working conditions are good. I am
thankful that I have ended up here by the Grace of God.
Child riding and street side ride in Shanghai with Grandfather watching.
Street vender in Shanghai.
4/07/14
A fellow teacher explained that if I had gotten my
health check form stamped by the Chinese embassy in the US I wouldn’t have had
to go through it again here in China (it cost 660 rmb, about $100). I remember the school representative tried to
explain something like that to me, but she didn’t know how to get it done, as
the immigration clinic and the immigration approval are the same place
here. So I had to go through it again
and pay the fee. Just one of the many
little miscommunications in this process.
I spent three days cleaning my apartment. I had asked for the landlady to clean it
before I moved in, and she did a little, but it was still “filthy” with caked
on dirt on the floors and sticky brown stuff on the shower floor. Now that it is clean I am picky about every
little speck of dirt that blows in from the balcony. I clean it up immediately. I’m sure I’ll get over this.
The bathroom is the only source of running water,
so cooking and cleaning take place there too.
Again, now that I have scrubbed everything I want to keep it clean and I
clean up everything after myself. I take
the shower mat up after I shower so that it won’t get moldy. The space is so small that having it dirty
makes me feel crowded. I will probably
get more relaxed about this also as time goes on.
4/11/14
I have bought an electric kettle to boil water in,
so that I don’t have to buy drinking water.
I bought a stoneware casserole dish so that I can cook soup in my
microwave. This worked pretty well. I used a package of Knorr Chinese soup mix
and added rice and vegetables, including some things I don’t really know what
they are, but they were in the rice and dried bean section of Tesco. I bought
some dried mushrooms for the soup that turned out to be smoked. They taste very good. My soup is pretty good too.
I froze my fresh strawberries. The refrigerator said cooler/freezer, and
there are apparently two settings for it. There are three little lights, and I
set it with all three on. Everything
froze. I have changed the setting so
that only one light is on, and I now the upper part of the refrigerator is not
frozen, I don’t know if the lower part is or not. I don’t have any food in it, but it would be
nice to have a refrigerator for one section and a freezer for the other. No doubt I will figure it out in time. One of
the Chinese tutors suggested I take a picture of it and bring it in for someone
to interpret for me, so I think I will try that for my other appliances.
4/12/14
The clothes rod of my wardrobe has fallen down, and I
need a new bracket to hang it on. I also
need to measure my bed so I can get the appropriate size mattress. As far as I know none of the Americans here
have screw drivers or tape measures (I asked several), and I hate to buy these
things just for this. There isn’t too
much room in my apartment for tools.
It’s a strange existence being so helpless and transient, so I don’t
know how to get things done and what to spend money on.
My desk chair, living room chair, and lamps have arrived
from IKEA. It makes the apartment so
much more comfortable to have good chairs and lighting. I need them to come change the mattress I
ordered for the correct size, and I am hoping they can measure the bed when
they come.
I tried to buy eggs at Tesco the other day. I was looking at a package of them and a
store attendant came and (in Chinese) said that those weren’t good, and handed
me another package, talking apparently about how I should buy them. I sort of looked at them and looked around and
figured they would be okay. The next day
I tried to crack one open and realized it was hard, so I pealed it. It turns out they were black and purple , the
“1000 year old” eggs. Since they were
what I had in the house I decided to go ahead and eat them. I cut two up on my soup. Besides the color, they have the consistency
of soft boiled eggs, and taste like soft boiled eggs. But they have a faint smell of something that
has been in the ground for hundreds of years.
The smell isn’t pleasant, but it’s not that strong. Anyway, I decided to give the rest of the
package of eggs away. It took them to
work and offered them to anyone interested.
Some of the Chinese tutors took them.
4/13/14
I had dinner with Melanie, the manager trainee and
Chinese tutor at Web, last night after work.
We went to a little restaurant and had Hot Pot, my first experience with
it. There are many kinds of Hot Pot, so
I hope to try more of them. Melanie has
traveled a lot, living in Germany and Canada, and visiting the U. S. It seems like we actually have quite a bit in
common. I hope to also get to know some of my students, who are business women and men.


What is Hot Pot?
ReplyDeleteWell, in this restaurant it was a dish with two sides placed in the middle of the table on a hot burner built into the table. We placed the different ingredients into the boiling water to cook and dipped them in sauce to eat them. It think there is a lot of variety in the seasonings and some Hot Pots have a soup or sauce in the pot.
ReplyDeleteI would like to see pics of that, lol. Pretty cool, never went into a restaurant like that.
ReplyDelete