July 4, 2009

Happy Independence Day, america.  Yesterday, we went to temple and my grandparents hired a new servant.  Both should be discussed.

We are Daoist…but also kind of Buddhist.  I asked my grandmother if she learned what we pray to as a child, and she laughed, “Who learns these things?”  So, I really don’t know who knows, and if I were more adept at reading Chinese, I could probably look up the names of deities written beneathe each figure, but I only know maybe one out of every three characters, if that, so it’s a bit impossible.  In high school, I did a group project about Daoism, but reading about the traditions in English is very different from doing things.  The customs are also so engrained culturally that it can vary from region to region and family to family because it’s how you lead your life, not a separate “religion compartment” that you open up to find an instructional manual.

My paternal grandmother told me to “make wishes,” but I find prayer a complex undertaking.  English?  Mandarin?  Taiwanese?  Does it matter?  Putting my desires and aspirations into words feels false, for these thoughts, not typically verbalized, are ill-fitted to my stilted prose.  So, too, are my aspirations prosaic.  If I ask for one “thing” for each member of my immediate familiy, I feel guilty for neglecting my grandparents’ health.  If I rotate through my relatives, who am I to decide what would most benefit each of their lives?  Then, too, if i am judicious in selecting spiritual boons, shouldn’t I concentrate my summoning powers on starving children and war-torn communities?

The whole experience is smoky, from the incense sticks we light to the god money we burn.  You enter from the right-hand door and exit from the left.  The doorways often have raised thresholds, because the gods can float; they don’t need to step over the panel the way we do.  My family takes a rather agnostic approach; my mother laughs a bit at some of the bizarre attributes we ascribe to our deities, but still teaches us the customs because she respects the institution.

Yesterday also saw the advent of a new servant.  JP once made the odd claim that Mongolia is the Mexico of Asia.  Not true.  I think East Asian nations have a relationship with Southeast Asia similar to the US with Mexico.  My grandmother explained to me that, in the early days, Taiwan hired many Filipino laborers.  The problem was that “they liked to go out on weekends, and they didn’t do work on Sundays because they would go to church.”  The labor force thus shifted to the Vietnamese, and I’m not sure if there was any problem with them.  Lee Papa mentioned that Taiwanese men started marrying Vietnamese women, so perhaps households were loathe to exploit “their own.”  At any rate, most workers now come from Indonesia.

Whether motivated by an intent to prevent exploitation or to protect Taiwanese menial laborers, the government passed laws restricting who could hire workers from Southeast Asia.  Households may only do so if someone is elderly or disabled.  Because my grandmother has been having knee troubles, my grandparents have hired a worker to help out around the house.  Two years ago, they had Anda, who was boisterous and claimed girlfriends all over Taiwan.  she ran away with one of them.  Because of the labor laws, they had to wait 6 months; then, the agent brought Lily.  Lily was very delicate and didn’t last very long.  She suffered from depression and went home.  Anda was my age; Lily, a couple years younger.  Yesterday, the agent brought Dina.

The interview with my uncle and his wife ranged from more understandable questions like, “Are you going to run away?” to odd/preposterous pronouncements from the agent, “She only looks dirty because she’s dark.”  the agent didn’t strike me as particularly genuine, sharing details of Dina’s life about which she was quite mistaken.  She tried to assure my family that this would be a good fit, but it became clear that she didn’t know much about Dina.

The entire system is exploitative, but my grandparents do need the help, and they treat their employees with respect and care.  at the same time, I don’t feel comfortable having Dina do things for me, as I’m neither old nor infirm.  I left all my laundry until today to do, so I was about 3/4 done this morning when Dina took over.  (I’m slow.)  It’s the guilt thing again.

She calls my aunt tai-tai (wife, or the Chinese equivalent of Madame), my grandparents Grandma and Grandpa, and me jie-jie (older sister).  Which is cute, but she’s 27, so she’s older than I am.  On the other hand, everyone in my family calls me jie-jie, because my mom’s younger sister is cute and affectionate, and she started calling me that.  So, I guess it’s not really a subservient thing.

My uncle, aunt, and cousin went to Kaoshiung today.  Before he left, my cousin talked to the fish: “I’m leaving now.  You guys be good!”  So cute!

I don’t think I’ve adequately worked through the power structure thing, but I’ll take a break now to share some pictures.

Here’s what a temple looks like.

TempleI didn’t take pictures inside, but I did take pictures of the god money part.

Burning God MoneyThis was the temple we went to with my maternal grandparents.  My dad’s village is in the mountains, and the temple there is set against this backdrop:

Fu HsinIt’s enough to make you feel spiritual, isn’t it?

Travel Journal: Taiwan 2009

June 28, 2009

2009 is shaping up to be a year of many flights.  1/2 of the flight to Paris, the ones coming back from Paris, to and fro Columbus, and now, Taiwan.  Today’s estimated flight time is 12 hours 28 min; we are supposed to arrive in Taiwan at 9:55PM.  The plan: stay up the entire time, eat everything, drink everything, watch thought-provoking films, world movies, and trashy pleasures.  This should render me physically and mentally exhausted so that I can rest soundly upon arrival.

Now watching: The Watchmen

Followed by Two Lovers

–> bathroom break

~7 hours left

crossword interlude

And now, no video is showing.  might I have broken the feed?  Fail.  Aha.  There is a problem with the system, which they just announced.  At first, I was worried, because in Chinese, they said wo men shu yiao tsong shin chi dong, which i thought meant something was seriously amiss with the plane.  Luckily, the next announcement was in English: We need to reboot.

I’ll jot down some of the highlights of the day, and if the movies don’t start back up when I’m done, I’ll commence with the Oscar Wilde.  (I missed Pride, so it’s the next best thing.)

  • Jon giving me advice
    • Try not to make people hate you
    • You’ll be living with 4 other girls.  Your cycles will sync. So I’ve been told.
    • Watch out for a guy called Louis.  He’s perverted…and smelly…
  • Running into family friends we’ve known since Cleveland who now live in the Bay Area.  Same flight.
  • Man starts talking to us in the waiting area.  Asked how many children Lee Papa and I had.  (Fail.)
  • Man next to me on the plane got moved to better seats (three to himself) so Lee Papa and I get to spread out.  (Win.)
  • The Watchmen-is superhero sex more super?  What’s the back story?
  • Two Lovers-Why settle?  Didn’t Joaquin Phoenix go wonky?

Thoughts on the trip…

  • Not yet packed for Ohio.  Fail.
  • Lee Mama is neurotic.  Clearly, I’m her daughter…

Alright, time for some Wildeing…

July 1, 2009

I read “The Importance of Being Earnest,” (or should plays be underlined?) but then my eyes got really dry, so I thought I’d better take a nap.  I never did get any more movies to play.

-> baggage claim took forever!
-> American lady asked how to call home; she had lived in Taiwan 15 years ago
-> My name is listed wrong in the Taiwanese computers

We finally got back around 11PM and went to sleep.  The room i got seems cleaner than it was last year.  Hm.  I woke up around 8:30 and spent the day watching TV, with interludees helping out with the store and selling peaches.

-> something to look up: movie in French, took place in Japan.  Frenchman and his Japanese daughter.  Male lead looked familiar.

[I did look this up.  It's a movie called Wasabi.]

I wonder if I should read A Picture of Dorian Grey today.  It seems pretty creepy…

Now writing on THSR.  I ended up reading a book on mythology entitled…wait for it…Mythology.  Its author, Edith Hamilton, was apparently a renowned classicist.  This is yet to be confirmed by my classicist friends.

Between yesterday and today, I must have become much tastier, as I now have a multitude of bites and am oddly swollen.  Gross.  (Hand, finger, arms, possibly panty-line, face, feet, ankles…ô, my poor delicate ankles…)

Wow, HSR is freaking fast.  Well, duh, that’s the point.  It’ll take only half an hour to travel from Taoyuan to Taichung.  i feel pretty out of sorts.  First off, I ate too much for breakfast.  In the past, when I felt full, I could soldier on for another 10 minutes.  Now, if I fell full, I fell like throwing up.  Then, i twas hot.  Then, there were all the mosquito bites.  Then, there was the car ride down the mountain.  My intestinal fortitude is lacking these days, so the twists and turns began getting to me, at which point I took a nap.  Now, my eyes are dry, I’m swollen and itchy, and…I cannot go to school today, said little Peggy Ann McKay…

Let’s talk a bit about Asian guilt.  From a young age, I was taught that the home of my father’s childhood is my home.  These are my people, but they don’t know me.  Fewer and fewer in the village recognize my dad each time we go (it’s still a small town, though; many still know him); there is nothing in my visage to mark me as his or my grandmother’s.  Filial loyalty instills love and respect, but going to the mountains makes me uncomfortable.  Then, I am guilty, for I am uncomfortable.

Also up for disucssion- temple.  I’m never quite sure who hears my prayers, and my dad doesn’t really know, either.  I don’t know if he’s paid much attention to these things.  I should ask Lee Mama.

So, that’s all transcribed from my travel journal.  I’m now in central Taiwan with my mom’s family.  Perhaps there will be more later, but now, it’s time to eat :D

Pandas

I interrupt the travel updating with a random quote from Lee Mama.  Background information: several months ago, Taiwan got some pandas, so now everyone is extra in love with pandas.  In fact, they’re calling them PAN-da, as opposed to “cat bear,” which is what they’re traditionally called.  PAN = fat.  Hehe.

Anyway, my mother isn’t quite so enamored of pandas.  We weren’t really sure why, until…

Me: Mom, why don’t you like pandas?
Lee Mama: Why would I?
Me: Cause they’re cute!  Everyone loves pandas!
Lee Mama: I know.  It’s annoying.  Everyone thinks they’re so cute.  I think they’re just average.

Gratitude

First, my apologies for dashing to the 100 mark, only to fall prey to midterms.  Some neglect their blogs because of Real Life.  Unfortunately, it seems like exams are my Real Life.  But, I’m temporarily back to wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving!

I am grateful for:

  • a loving family
  • my health (despite being an old lady who’s sore and lacking an appetite, I seem to be doing ok)
  • friendship, farflung and near
  • academic support from faculty and instructors
  • options

No, that last one isn’t a reference to football strategery.  Firefox is telling me that isn’t a word.  I KNOW, ok?  It’s the realization that I have a lot more going for me, academically and socially, than I realized.  So, I’m going to apply to schools this year.  I might end up applying to schools next year, too.  That’s ok.  I’ll keep you posted.

The Talk

As promised, today I bring you a guest post.  Let me introduce you to my friend, Getty, a fellow linguist.  His email said: Here was what I have written up – unedited, really, just the raw ramblings. Tell me if it ought to be longer or shorter or less weird or what. I’ve been reading a lot of Neal Stephenson, which has a lot of overstatement, and I’m pretty sure that showed up there.

As you’ll soon see, though, the best version is the un-edited version.  So, without further ado, I give you, The Talk, Getty Version.
——————————————————-

It was never like sex was a secret at our house. As a young child, my parents would watch movies that other parents might attempt to censor well into a child’s teenage years, if only to avoid the awkward explanations of what those people were doing with sheets conveniently covering their naughty bits. Home videos reveal my grandfather – a coarse, often offensive old man with a salt-and-pepper moustache and a considerable belly from years of alcoholism – being frankly shocked by my mother’s candid discussion of breasts while my brother and I were nearby. And I suppose the real talk happened when I was very young – three, or four, I can’t remember – and I asked my mother at point-blank range.

“Mommy, where do babies come from?”

She looked at me and smiled, and explained to me that when a man and a woman want a child, the man inserts tab a into slot b and then the sperm hunt down the egg and so forth. She was, as a matter of fact, a labor coach, and thus had a great deal of knowledge about babies – not to mention the fact that she had two of them. She took care to explain that for nine months, the fetus develops, and then is birthed. I fixed her with my three-year-old eyes and told her, “I don’t believe you!”

I could go on and list other adorable children-talking-about-sex stories, such as when I offered suggestions for why my mother didn’t have a penis, or my brother’s misunderstandings about how cat sex worked, but that’s not really the point of this piece of writing. My parents weren’t overly protective, and they were always candid enough – however, they also had a somewhat odd sense of humor, which is why, when I was in eighth or ninth grade or so, my mother called me in to her room before the family retired for the night.

“I know you already know some of these things, but I feel like it’s my duty as a parent to educate you. So, I think we need to have The Talk.”

Already, I could feel every rational impulse in my head urging me to dash out the door, and most of the other impulses urging me to dash out the window. Against the better judgement of every conscious neuron firing in my brain, I sat down and nodded apprehensively.

“You already know about sex.” It wasn’t a question. It was fairly impossible not to know about sex. Even if the exact physiological details hadn’t yet been revealed to me, even if I had never put a condom on a banana, even if I had never seen a nude woman that was not on a TV screen or made out of marble, I knew quite enough that, should an occasion arise in which I would be called upon to save humanity by having sex (humor me here), I wouldn’t let my fellow human beings down. So, inasmuch as it was possible for a nerdy, introverted twelve-year-old boy, I knew about sex.

“Yes, mother, I know about sex.” Now the question was whether this was going to be merely aggravating or actually painful.

She thought, clearly trying to taking her job as a mother as seriously as possible. “Well, do you know about sixty-nine?”

I nodded, edging into a position where I could tumble backwards out the window, if the situation required it – which it did. “Yes, mom, I know about sixty-nine.” (Around sixth grade, I decided that mommy was too childish, and consciously switched to calling her mom in order to sound more adult and less reliant on her. I would on occasion use it in a pointed, almost patronizing way to let her know that she wasn’t mommy anymore – she was mom, and I was no longer her little baby. I would later do the same thing with mother.)

“I just feel like I haven’t been teaching you enough, like I’m failing as a mother. I need to teach you something new.” She adjusted her glasses and sat up a bit. A smile spread across her face – clearly, she had thought of something to teach me, something which I hadn’t known before. “Well, do you know about golden showers?”

“I’m leaving now,” I said. And I did.

And that was the Talk.

The Generations

I’m taking a graduate seminar this semester; most of the other students are in the Education Department (Cal doesn’t have an undergraduate major for Education).  As we discussed claims that the Internet is dumbing down the world, many remarked that, “Well, we aren’t affected as much–it’s those undergrads that are dumber.”  I could see how this would be true if people were only exposed to the Internet as a credible source, and never been taught to use a library’s resources, non-electronic citations, and the like.  But, I have been!  I may have been part of the last wave to have regular library trips, though–one of my students wasn’t very familiar with her public library’s resources…and now it sounds like I’m saying, “I’m not affected as much–it’s those high schoolers!”  False.  We shouldn’t throw away library and book traditions just because they’re old, but we shouldn’t hold onto these methods just because they’re old, either.  It will take more research for me to be convinced that Internet usage is affecting cognition patterns, but I also like learning from books, not just PDFs.  We can combine multiple learning techniques.  Really.  It’s not an either/or proposition!

My brother (entering college in TWO WEEKS!  AHH!) just played a song that he had heard while spending the summer in Taiwan.
Me: Hey, did you listen to that in Taiwan?
Jon: Yeah.  It’s pretty good.
Me: You know that it’s kind of an old song, right?
Jon: Ok.
Me: No, like Mom and Dad used to listen to it.
Jon: WHAT?!  Oh well, at least it’s a remix…

I’m old enough to remember the music my parents listened to ten years ago, but I’m not hip enough to know what kind of songs are on the scene these days.  It’s cool.  I’m kind of a dinosaur.

Incidentally, Jon and I are now friends on Facebook.  I don’t confirm friendship requests from people still in high school, because it makes me feel like a pedophile.  It’s not that I don’t want them seeing what is in my profile (it’s really not that interesting; I don’t trust the Internet enough to put very much information out there; the flip side of that coin is that I’m sure people creepy/savvy enough to find out information about me have better ways of doing so).  As soon as you confirm, details about their lives start showing up in your News Feed.  Pardon me for judging, but I really don’t need to hear the latest gossip involving two 10th-graders and someone’s older brother.  (Not that that happened in real life.  I hope.)

Once I took the initiative of finding my baby brother on le crackbook, I confirmed the outstanding friend requests from other recent high-school grads.  In honor of the occasion, I added the following status: Cindy is now your Facebook friend because you’re not in high school anymore.  MORE IMPORTANTLY, JONATHAN IS NOT IN HIGH SCHOOL ANYMORE!

Jon: Hey, someone wrote on your wall, asking who Jonathan is.
Me: You were looking at my wall?  You were Facebook stalking me???
Jon: *CAUGHT!* I don’t have to stalk you.  I live with you.

Not for much longer.  Aw.

Momentous

We have reached a momentous occasion. Actually, we’ve surpassed a momentous occasion, as I am currently composing post number SEVENTY. That’s right, Varsh. You came back just in time to achieve the number that might make Kevin-from-The-Office cry.

Speaking of crying, here are some things that bring tears to my eyes.

  • The earthquake boy from the Opening Ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics. That’s two separate links, so check out both. His name is Lin Hao, and he helped to save some of his classmates after the Sichuan earthquake in May. His poise during the opening ceremony was impressive; his intrepid persistence as hall monitor, heroic.
  • My people. Chinese Taipei? Bump that. Taiwan. We are democratic and peaceful, so back up off, China. Why don’t you improve the quality of life for your own people before trying to subjugate my little yam nation? That being said, we actually got to see the team enter the Bird’s Nest this year. I realize that, for purposes of financial gain, NBC must schedule cuts to advertisement, but you know what? It sucks. Millie was understandably dismayed when NBC excused the plumper Bob Costas and newbie Matt Lauer just as Peru was to make its entrance. For a nation reputed to have such diversity in forebears, we ought to do better. We can do better. Unlike Communist China, however, the federal government can’t just shut down commercials for two weeks.
  • The commentary. Are you freaking kidding me? “Boy, these countries sure have some crazy costumes.” COSTUMES? That’s almost as bad as the lovely Midwesterners who ask me to “draw the Chinese for this word.” No. You write it. Some of the comments were bad enough to bring tears to my eyes. The continuous shock at the “topsy-turvy” order of nations marching in the opening ceremony. I understand that NBC wants to explain to latecoming viewers, but that sort of patronizing commentary was unnecessary. I’m a little-read blogger. My writing is colloquial and sometimes obscene. My thoughts are stream-of-unconscious and seldom insightful. It’s chill. It ain’t slummin’ when you’re in college. Bob Costas? Matt Lauer? NBC is paying the big bucks for some eloquence. By the way, kids, that’s not necessarily big words. Joe Starkey didn’t need FreeRice, although he did quite well in 1982 with The Play. Here’s a transcription, and here’s the video.
  • Oh, and as for the rivalry. You’d think it’s something NBC would know about, sending Diane Dwyer to Sather Gate to talk about the Free Speech Movement and all. But then, they decide to talk about Stanford’s connection with the Olympics, the years of ‘Furd Turds who represented our country for the olive branch. Cool. Then they talk about Natalie Coughlin. HELLO? Remember how she went to Cal? They repeatedly mention that she’s an East Bay-er, but nothing of her alma mater. And they had to film on location for that? At least go to the freaking campus. Not just some random Palo Alto streetcorner. That’s neither representative of Stanford, nor Bay Area athletes (Kerri Walsh is from Santa Clara, by the way. Close, but no cigar.), and definitely not of Natalie Coughlin. A random streetcorner in Palo Alto is representative solely of whatever activity takes place there. The California Golden Bears are a big part of my life. The Free Speech Movement moves me. NBC Bay Area’s cluelessness, though–that moves me to tears.
  • Also, speaking of Kerri Walsh. The volunteer who found her ring? Pretty cute. This isn’t touching, but it’s a nice segue to some talk of eye candy.

It’s like bonbons for your oculars

  • He who shall henceforth be known as the Volunteer Who Saved Kerri’s Marriage actually has a name. It’s Song Zhendong. I can’t find any pictures at this time, but he’s pretty cute.
  • Lucas Black. I should probably watch some other movies, but I’m kind of stuck on Friday Night Lights right now. I finally watched it for the first time this summer, then started watching the TV series on Hulu. Lucas Black isn’t in the TV series, but that’s okay. He’s not always photogenic.
  • ANDERSON COOPER. I’ve always thought he was pretty cute, but didn’t talk about it much because I figured that if I mentioned it, people would be all, “He’s old!” Okay, I looked it up. He’s 41. Anyway, I know he’s a hard-hitting journalist and all, but I haven’t watched very much of it. I did watch Shark Week while in Taiwan, and that was pretty cool. (Sidenote: Lee Mama was apparently bored/jetlagged one night, and decided to watch a special feature on squirrels on the Discovery Channel. “I used to think they were kind of cute, but now I found out that they savagely kill each other! I don’t like them anymore.”) Then, there may be those who heard of the hullabaloo concerning our favorite celeb-parentals. I saw it first! Not really. I saw it three hours after those who saw it first. So, I have to admit, I was aware of this situation from the almost get-go, not because of my appreciation for hard-hitting journalism, but because I kind of like Regis and Kelly. So, I saw it first. It was awesome. Shark Week may have reminded me that I thought Anderson Cooper was cute, but Regis and Kelly ungirded my fear of proclaiming it. I have since been inspired to watch Anderson Cooper 360° several times, which is like the summer I went running six times of my own volition! Dude. The man looks good in a suit.

Lying to Children

I LOVE lying to children.  I’m not sure why, but it makes me giggle inside, so I continue to do so at every possible opportunity.  My trip to Taiwan has afforded just such an opportunity, for the BABY! of three years ago is now…three.  Unfortunately, all the lying has probably turned my karmic wheel.  Case in point…

Aunt: Mommy told you.  If you’re good, and you take a nap now, if we take Cindy out later, you can come, too.
Baby: Going out?  Like, to a night market?
Aunt: Maybe not.
Baby: If we go to a night market, we shouldn’t take Auntie [Lee Mama] and Cindy.

Quickie

Last night, I was sitting in the car with my grandfather, my aunt (married to my mother’s younger brother), and my cousin.  We were waiting for my mom and grandmother to pick up some clothes my mom was having made, and so we were discussing what we’d want to have for dinner.

Aunt: Your dad looks like he would eat a lot of Korean food.
Me: Why?
Aunt: Well, he looks Korean!

More

By the way, the French is because TWO of my cousins are learning it!  Hurray!  Slowly, we will take over Taiwan with a dying (not from a linguist’s standpoint) language…

So, let’s see.  Oh, on VENDREDI, we also went to the hospital.  Sister 3 works in the library at MacKay Hospital in Taipei, so we stopped by her office because she took off a half-day, and then we went to visit my great-uncle in the hospital.  Kidney stones, I believe.  He is married to my grandmother’s youngest sister.  It turned into a small family reunion, as various people poured in, including my great-uncle (grandmother’s younger brother) and his wife, my mom’s cousin (daughter of the invalid), and us.  The wife of the great-uncle (see, in Chinese, there are all these terms to describe these relations–whereas in English, you end up with relatives called, “Mrs. Uncle Jimmy’s Wife”) was rather preoccupied with Steve Jobs, having just read his biography.  Or something.  I wasn’t completely paying attention.

SAMEDI, 12 juillet 2008
For lunch, we have Pizza Hut and KFC.  But it’s good, because Taiwanese versions of American fast food often smells better.  At least, I really liked the pizza crust (but beware–if you get the seafood pizza, it’ll have sweet mayonnaise, which is quite revolting!) that we had.  My mom and I also walked through the market nearby, and DEAR LORD the Taiwanese people walk slowly!  I thought that, since we were in a big city, we would be slow tortoises among ambitious hares.  NO.  They’re SLOW.  I hate slow walkers :(   I saw a man walking around holding what looked like a Hello Kitty compact, which was odd, because a) it would have been a rather large compact and b) um.  Why?  Later on, I saw someone else with the same contraption, but from a different angle, and realized it was a portable fan.  Clever!  But Hello Kitty?  Not so much.  That night, we went to a pretty famous Night Market.  I think my parents used to go on dates here, but I could be mistaken, because really, my parents?  Anyway, I had what would be translated as, “Big Bread around Little Bread.”  Maybe.  It was good.  Much better than my translation.  We also discussed my great-uncle’s wife, whose hair was rather unattractively permed in the latest fashion: cornsilk.  I asked, “Why would she wear her hair like that?”  Lee mama’s response: “She’s depressed.”

DIMANCHE, 13 juillet 2008
We pick up Jon, but he’s late.  They had gotten in at 2 in the morning, having gathered in central Taiwan for the big performance/shin-dig thing Joyce and I both went to three years ago.  (Aborigine dance!  Yeah!  Pictures later…)  We go shopping at a department store, which, to my understanding, is kind of the main event, in contrast to American malls, which include department stores, but also other (perhaps more exciting) stores.  I used to hate department stores when I was little, but Taiwanese ones are much more fun.  There are 10 stories (above which there are tens of floors of offices) with your typical department store offerings, but also usually a floor with a bookstore, several floors of food options (supermarket, food court, &c.), and ARTS & CRAFTS!  When I was younger, I always hoped we’d have time to stop and do some sort of project, but in the whirlwind of family, that never happened.  Now, I’m too old and…not creative.  Highlights?  Um.  There was a display of “California scents.”  For the home, I think.  It was rather bizarre to see all these place names from home, especially in conjunction with the scents with which they were each associated.  For instance: Los Angeles Lavender.  Don’t shoot the messenger, Mik!  That night, we had shabu-shabu, which is Japanese hot pot.  It’s named thusly because pick up a piece of meat (sliced thinly, but not so thin as carpaccio) and sweep it through the bubbling broth in one direction (shabu ) and then in the other with just a flick of the wrist (shabu ), and that’s how long it takes to cook!  There were plenty of other offerings on hand (I love Taiwanese cabbage.  It’s somehow much more flavorful than American!) to cook in the hot pot, and it was that night that I decided, I will never challenge anyone to an eating contest again.  I left alimentarily exhausted.  Um, also.  This has never happened to me before, but…I got a chopstick cramp.  Seriously.  Later, we saw one of those Japanese-inspired gameshows.  The segment we watched involved using someone’s head as a mallet…to pop balloons.  Awesome.

LUNDI, 14 2008
Hey!  Bastille Day!  Anyway, time to head to the mountains, where my dad’s family lives.  We stop by a famous dam (much more scenic than Hoover Dam, but that might be due to the greenery).  Some berries had dropped from a tree in the parking lot, and my mom made a point to say, “Hey, Cindy…look!  Pop!”  Yeah, she said pop.  It made me think of the Facebook group about going out of your way to step on a crunchy leaf.  There were many signs for restaurants selling “Live Fish,” a regional specialty, but it’s unclear to me whether you got to point to a fish that they would prepare for you, or if you would be eating something whose heart might still be beating, because we stopped at a roadside…uh…shack.  They offered us “free-range chicken [in Taiwan, this isn't as yuppie as in San Francisco], mountain boar, wild greens, and mountain rodents.”  To eat.  It wasn’t a particularly hygienic locale, but we put on a brave face because my aunt was so grossed out, and hey, at least I’m not Tony Bourdain.  Then, home.  (My grandma’s home, but it’s been drummed into me since I was little that it’s my home, because, you know, my last name is Lee.)  Peach season is in full swing, so my grandmother and her next-door neighbor were selling the fruit out back.  The neighbor, the first to see us, called out, “Really?  Is that you, Cindy?  You’ve gotten so fat I could barely recognize you!”  Thankyouverymuch.  In the mountains, it’s cooler, but there are also a lot of…insects.

MARDI, 15 juillet 2008
In the 20 hours I’ve been in this village, I have acquired 15 mosquito bites.  I keep count throughout the day.  By the night, I’ve given up, having 11 just on one arm.  Oh yes, that’s right.  My index fingers have two each.  Sounds like an exciting life, right?  This is where my father grew up, and I love my grandmother, but with her so busy with the peaches (which the aborigines drop off by the truckload), there is not much for us to do.  We do go bai-bai today, which is actually kind of late, because usually, it’s one of the first things we do when we get to Taiwan.  But, usually, we go to the mountains first thing (the Lee side takes precedence, you see), whereas this time, we were in Taipei for several days (also, we were staying with Sister 3’s family, who is Christian.  It’s odd…I’ve discovered all these Christian relatives…) before going home.  Anyway, I’ve come to realize that, if asked what my religion is, the proper answer is, “I’m Taiwanese.”  It’s not a Chinese thing–the Chinese aren’t allowed to be religious, remember?  It’s kind of a Buddhist and Daoist thing, but ultimately, it’s cultural.  Eastern religions are much more cultural, not relegated to only one day a week or two holidays a year–one of the reasons why Christianity was at first embraced in India, where worship is a daily ritual, and “God” is one more idol to whom you pay your respects.  Anyway, when you bai-bai, (and here’s a related article), you light incense and pray to the deity or your ancestor (we did both; there are particular deities whose pagodas we visit, as well as the ancestral Lee home where we honor my great-grandmother, whose favorite grandson was Lee Papa).  After telling them (silently) who you are, where you live, and whose child you are, you thank them for protecting you.  Then, you ask for things.  Like good grades and world peace.  If this sounds pedestrian rather than spiritual, it’s because I received these instructions while in elementary school, and now my family assumes I know how to do it, so I’ve never really been taught how to be um…holier in the process.  And you know, a lot of people do go to temples around the time of national exams (kind of like the guy whose grandfather hired 1,000 people in India to pray for spelling bee success day and night, but slightly less neurotic–Punal and Varsha will understand and be able to explain this reference) to pray for deliverance.  At the end of your prayer, you place the incense in special urns in front of the deity/ancestor’s portrait, which is why it’s so rude to stick your chopsticks straight up in your food–it’s reminiscent of the incense, which implies that the person dining across from you is deceased.  You also bring offerings of fruit and/or sweets, which, after the praying, you take home and eat.  It’s a bit odd to me, but don’t worry, the deities are not left without sustenance, for we also bring them money.  You also bring stacks of gold paper, and in order for the spirits to be able to use the money, you have to burn it.  It’s god-money, not mortal-money.  Speaking of spirits, temple doors tend to have these high thresholds because the spirits, they don’t walk.  They float.  We mere mortals must hurdle over them gracefully, but when my great-aunt (married to the older brother of Lee Papa’s biological father, who also had EIGHT sisters) entered, she had to hang onto the doorframe to keep from falling.  This trip has been kind of melancholic, because our older relatives are all…older.  The great-uncle (married to one of the sisters) who used to drive us around everywhere is limping around with a bad knee.  His car still smells the same.  My grandmother has a bad leg.  We don’t see them for three years, and then we see very intimately how hobbled their daily routines become.  Still, my grandmother is a businesswoman.  And her business is thriving, so it’s hard to convince her to leave it behind and move in with us.  I stay up late looking at my dad’s old pictures.

MERCREDI, 16 juillet 2008
Lee Mama and I had planned to go for a walk on this day and take pictures of the magnificent scenery.  It’s where my dad grew up.  There’s a nice new bridge, which lies next to a rickety foot-bridge my mom was always scared of crossing, for good reason; my dad knew of people who would pitch over drunkenly into the water in the dark, never to be seen again.  Oh yes, the alcoholics.  The Taiwanese aboriginal communities face many of the same problems as the American Indians, with inordinate levels of poverty and alcoholism.  Our village works closely with these “Mountain People,” especially my grandmother, and there is some hope for a much brighter future than what my dad saw in his youth, like the little boys abused by the Catholic priest to whose care they had been entrusted in the forest further in the mountains.  Yeah.  There are Catholics in the Taiwanese mountains!  And even in Lee Papa’s youth, they were already abusing little boys!  Sorry.  I didn’t mean to poke fun; it’s really quite sad.  And yet, oddly relevant to current American happenings.  Anyway, we didn’t end up strolling anywhere, because the typhoon was coming, so my great-uncle suggested we leave on Wednesday rather than our planned Thursday, so as to avoid the sogginess.  It was really hard to leave my grandmother, particularly because we could barely have a proper farewell amidst the peach sales, but it might be better that it was curtailed rather than prolonged.  This was by far my shortest trip to the mountains, but I was helpful (though fat), and folded at least 100 boxes for the peaches–very beautiful giftboxes, not like Costco cartons–and you know…fed the local mosquito hordes.  Then, there was the descent.  First, we had to visit my dad’s cousin in Taoyuan.  Her three daughters (there might have been a fourth, but I heard whispers that it had been aborted, and it’s quite ridiculous to me, because when you’re that fertile, but you don’t want more children, surely you ought to take better preventative measures!  Also, it’s always odd for me to hear the Taiwanese discuss what my mind categorizes as “liberal” procedures.  But, that’s for another time.) are very accomplished, memorizing ancient texts, winning art contests, and the like.  Actually, it’s just the oldest daughter.  She said that the second one was slightly addled, but I think she was exaggerating…and because the oldest (who’s in elementary school, by the way) is so much more advanced.  After that foray, it was onto the youngest great-aunt’s visit.  Huge seafood lunch, which we weren’t expecting, having thought we would simply be deposited at the High Speed Rail station.  Then, the great-aunt’s home (which makes her sound super old, but really, her son’s only a year older than I am), where the sisters discussed politics and family drama.  We finally made it to the station, and HECK YEAH, BRING HIGH SPEED RAIL TO CALIFORNIA!  It’s spectacular!

JEUDI, 17 juillet 2008
This revelation rightfully began the day before, but dear lord, the baby (BABY!) is THREE!  He walks, he talks…he screams.  My youngest cousin is separated from the next oldest cousin by twelve years (one full zodiac round!), the only one at home with the grandparents, and is kind of spoiled.  Not too much, as his parents (my mom’s younger brother and his wife) and grandparents (my maternal grandparents) don’t mean to, but…he is so cute.  And little!  Unfortunately, he’s going through a phase where he demands to be near his mother all the time, wants her to feed him, and SCREAMS if he doesn’t get his way.  I know, I know.  I went through this, too.  But, I was 8 months young.  Oh, and Lee Papa is calling everyday.  I think he’s kind of bored at home, as he has taken to recounting the plot of Korean dramas to Lee Mama (we left right in the middle of one, I guess) during their conversations.  Other highlight: INTERNET!  YES!  Sister 3, as stated, doesn’t want the Internet in her home for the time being, and in the mountains, it’s just these two old ladies at home who never touch the computer.  So, after eight days away, I’m back on the grid!

Next couple of days
More of the same.  I’m on the egg farm, with a three-year-old as my only companion.  It’s chill.  We look at old pictures of Lee Mama, who cringes.  Huge family luncheon on Sunday–when this happened three years ago, I was at the table with all the boy cousins.  All of them are old, now, though (the oldest is 27, I believe), and didn’t come…so I sat with the little ones this time.  There was much more food leftover this time around.

MERCREDI, 23 juillet 2008
Time to go to Hualien!  Fun fact: the eastern coast of Taiwan has rocky beaches, while the western coast of Taiwan has sandy beaches.  I hope we get to go to the beach this time around, but before we do, it’s High Speed Rail from Taichung (central Taiwan) to Taipei (northern Taiwan), followed by train to Hualien.

JEUDI, 24 juillet 2008
Now we’re back to the present.  My cousin is watching Forrest Gump behind me, so I think I’m going to keep Internetting, as I don’t like all the sad parts :(

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