Saturday, October 4, 2008

Shenyang Extravaganza!!

So our trip to Shenyang was phenomenal. It began with a long train ride (that we absolutely lucked on on - as we managed to buy tickets that are hard sitters for the ride, which we never should have got due to the national day travelers) that was just as much part of the journey as anything. We met a family; father, mother and daughter, traveling to Shenyang on vacation just like us. They didn't speak much English, but what we could figure out (and have David translate) was all we needed. We befriended each other, they taught me the number system in China very accurately, found that the young woman (daughter) was a reporter for the Tongliao news station, got invited to the father's hometown some day, exchanged email addresses, then took shots of Bai-joe... ON THE TRAIN to commemorate our new friendship. All in all it was a solid ride.

Once in Shenyang, we were met by one of David's friends from his hometown (Hohhot) that lives right outside Shenyang. He spoke absolutely no English, but he was one of the nicest guys we've met since being in China. He took us out to lunch, cheers'd Katie's Birthday, then found us a nice little hotel that cost aprox. $20 a night to stay at. We then hit the mean streets of Shenyang for the night and found ourselves on this CRAZY central street that has been blocked off for cars, so people could go to all the shops and stores along it. It reminded me a lot of Wangfujing street in Beijing. After checking out some shops, we found a European style restaurant that dealt heavily in pizza, so we obviously had to have dinner there. The night was a success, and we made our way back to our hotel - now visitors of Shenyang.

The next morning we woke up early and made our way to the Imperial Palace of Shenyang. The place was absolutely breathtaking - as many of my experiences in China have already been to date. It is one of the lesser renovated ruins of China, and therefore has a lot of the ancient remnants as close to their original state as possible. The architecture and artwork at and inside the Palace was mind blowing. From the emperor's throne, to the officer's desks of the 8 banners of china, to the back gardens, and to the emperors' and empress' sleeping quarters - the entire trip was a memory I will not soon forget. Everything was so intricately designed, so painstakingly carved and painted that it is almost unfathomable to think that artisans and workers from hundreds and hundreds of years ago, without a breath of the technology we have today, accomplished such beautiful works of art and landscape with nothing but dreams and dilligence. The empire of China is something wonderous to behold, and I need to keep reminding myself that I am in a new part of the world and that it's history seeps back in time so much further than anything I've experienced back at home. It is something awe inspiring and literally jaw dropping. This country is very old, and that makes it intrinsically impressive.

After the seeing the palace in it's entirety - and it's conjoining museum of artifacts - we found a rest at our hotel, then made our way back into downtown Shenyang for some shopping and food. After dinner we walked past the palace (it is closed at night) and ran into a few interesting characters along the way. A couple of them were actually playing a sort of hackey-sack game that I got in on for awhile. I wasn't very good at it, but it was fun! David later told me that the game is very popular amongst the students at school, so maybe I'll have a chance to get better at it. Ultimately, we found ourselves waiting outside this famous concert hall in Shenyang at about 8pm at night, as there is a nightly performance outside of it for the public to view for free! We decided, hell, why not. After waiting about a half hour in a crowd of people waiting for it to begin, I pulled out my phrase book and asked a guy next to us what time it was starting. He said 10pm, so we pulled up a seat on a nearby set of stairs and chatted about our journey into China thus far. It was a nice little moment to reflect on everything we have been doing and going through. The show, when it finally happened, was bizarre. It was like a big Mariachi band behind glass, with this guy dancing behind a donkey that walked around a mill, and a girl dancing behind the guy. It lasted like 15 minutes. And I'll never have those 15 minutes of my life back again. What a shame. All in all, we ended the night there, and hit the hotel.

The next day we spent in Shenyang going back to some shops and streets that had interested us previously, and bought a few trinkets and memories of the city. I got a large poster painting of an ancient chinese warrior guard to put up in our apartment. The legend of the guard is that if you put him up in a home, that evil spirits and bad tidings will not be allowed into your home and life, as he will defend your home from such effects. We then took a pair of taxi's to a chinese super market (always a death defying experience - both the taxi rides and the supermarket) then got ourselves to the train station in the nick of time to catch our train (1:15pm) back to Tongliao. It was a quiet ride home, extremely uncrowded (we bought standing tickets, but got to sit the whole ride due to there being only a few people on the train) and played chinese card games taught by Honey most of the ride back.

After getting off the train, we all headed to this killer dumpling restaurant that one of my student's mother's actually owns. The food was unbelieveable, and the service just as good - and we celebrated Meg's birthday! There was plenty of Pi-joe to go around, and we actually bought her a cake from a wonderful bakery just a few blocks away before getting to the restaurant. In china, they whip up the cake RIGHT in front of you while you wait! It's beautiful to watch. We told David that it was so fun to watch the baker's make the cake right there - and he was shocked to find that they don't, or at least VERY rarely, do that in the states. It was just another happy little note about China, I suppose. After dinner we made our way back to our little apartments and settled back in, knowing we were home.

It was a very strange feeling coming back into Tongliao and calling it 'home'. But it was actually the first time I thought of it as home. Shenyang was a fantastic city to visit, but I feel so much more comfortable here in our little Tongliao. It is less hectic, the people are warmer, and it is familiar already. I'm happy to be here and to call our little city and big school 'home'. Happy indeed.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Look at you, you really do update this. I look forward to reading all of this crap.

Have fun Dreyfuss.