Finally Home

Well everyone, this experience has finally come to an end and I made it home safely. It was absolutely amazing to participate in this program and I learned a lot. I have so many people to thank for this amazing experience. First I should thank STEP for helping me pay for this experience, I’m not sure if I would have been able to afford it without this funding. Then I should thank Jian Laoshi and the rest of the Chinese Department, without him and the department this program would have never happened. I should also thank Jia Laoshi, who took her summer and decided to go to Suzhou China to teach us. I also want to thank all of my friends and family for their support throughout this whole process. Finally, and most importantly I should thank my parents, but not just for this Suzhou program, but for so many more things. They have always been there for me. They encouraged me to take risks, capitalize on opportunities, to learn from mistakes, and let me make my own decisions and supported me when I did. Going into my freshman year of high school, I decided to take a Chinese language course. My parents encouraged me to explore all the opportunities that it could offer, and it has led to wonderful experiences and adventures. Without their support, love , and encourage, I would have never been able to participate in a program like this.

Thank you so much to everyone who helped make this program a reality and have supported me along the way.

Heading Into the Final Stretch

Hello there everyone,

This is my last weekend here in China, I come back next Saturday. It’s going by quick, but there is still plenty to do!!

First, this weekend I am travelling a little on my own. First I am going to Nanjing, the city that I studied in my first time here. I’m going to spend a little time exploring and then I’m going to meet up with my host family for dinner! I haven’t seen them in 4 years, so there will be a lot of catching up to do. I’ll spend the night the night at their place and then the next morning I will go to Shanghai. In Shanghai, I will meet up with my TA from Mount Union named Sha. Some of you may know her, but for those who don’t she is the best! I am so excited to see her, I haven’t seen her since freshman year, so there is definitely a lot of catching up to do. Then I’ll come back to Suzhou Sunday night.

Next week I’ll be crazy busy. I have to finish what’s left of my normal homework, plus I need to do 2 presentations, 2 papers, and my community service project. My two presentations are on my latest research project and also one on my life in Suzhou. My current research project is on what apps/websites Chinese people use to watch movies online.  For that I have to interview 20 people, create a slideshow, give a presentation, and then write an 8-10 page paper. Then my other paper will be on my community service project, which we will all do as a group. We are going to sit down with firefighters on Wednesday and talk, get to know them, and of course thank them for their service. It’s not really community service in the traditional sense, but it counts and I think it will be a good way to get to know the community better. Then on Friday night, we are having a banquet to celebrate our time here in Suzhou. All of our professors, TA’s, and language partners will all be there to share one last meal. Then on Saturday I head home. It’s going to be a crazy week, but you better believe I’m going to get it all done and have some fun along the way.

This past week hasn’t been anything super special, but I have had fun and been learning. I have been hanging out with some friends here, played some pool, met some new people, and explored a little. This afternoon (Friday) we all went to a traditional opera house. It was actually really cool and I wish I had the time to see a show there, but with my travel plans I can’t make it happen.

I must admit that I have mixed emotions about coming home so soon. I am having fun here and learning quite a bit, but it’ll be nice to have a short break before heading back to OSU for RA training. I come home on one Saturday and then leave for school the next; time is really flying.

All I can do is enjoy the time I have left here and do a good job on the work that I have left. I’ll see you all soon!

What’s New With Me

Hello again Everyone, hard to believe it’s been over a week since I have posted last, so my apologies for waiting for so long. It’s been one of those weird weeks where it felt so long in the moment but last Sunday doesn’t seem all that long ago. This week has forced me to do a bit of planning as I have so much left to do but I have only 2 weeks left here. My time here is quickly coming to an end, but I have so much work and travelling left to do. But before I can really get into what I have left to do, I should probably tell you what I have been doing since I last posted.

It’s about 6:30 PM on Sunday July 19th as I sit here writing this, I’ve just spent most of my day writing the rough draft of my research report for my latest research project. That’s pretty much been the story of my week, that research project. This time around, because I had less time to do it, I picked a simpler research topic, but I think that it’s still fairly important. This time I researched how college students watch movies. I interviewed 9 people about what kind of movies they watch, when they watch them, how many they watch a week, how they watch them, and would they watch banned movies (yes, in China they do ban movies. In America they ban books as well.).

All of the work that I put into this project just wore me out though, so I had a pretty relaxed weekend. Friday night and almost all of Saturday I spent watching movies and relaxing. I did go out on Saturday night for dinner and spent a little time at Jinji Lake, but overall it was a very relaxing and quiet weekend.

Next weekend will not be that way at all. Sometime in the next two weeks I need to do some sort of community service project and write a report about it. Next weekend I’ll be doing some travelling. Sometime on Saturday I’ll leave from Suzhou and ride the train to Nanjing. I’ll spend most of the the afternoon exploring all of the places that I used to hang out and then that night I plan on treating my host family to dinner to say thank you for putting up with me everyday for 5 months. Sometime on Sunday I’ll take a train from Nanjing to Shanghai to visit my TA, Sha from Mount Union. At Mount Union, I was in a special Chinese language program and the university put us all 10 of us in this one house with our TA, so we all became quite close with her. I’m so excited to see my host family and Sha again!!

It should all be fun, but quite tiring on top of school work and our new research projects. This trip will be over before I know it, and I have mixed emotions about this trip ending. On the one hand, I love being in China, eating real Chinese food, and speaking Chinese everyday. I can definitely tell that my Chinese has improved a bit since I’ve gotten here. However, as I get further along in my academic career, I find myself with more and more responsibilities, leaving less time time to spend with my family and friends. I must admit that I am really looking forward to getting back so that I can spend a week with my parents and see some friends before I move back into school.

I think now I’m going to actually post some of my pictures. Stay posted gang.

*Edit: Due to some technical difficulties, pictures won’t be put up tonight

As always, I welcome any emails that you want send me and will answer any questions that you have about what’s going on!

See you all soon!

 

-TR

The Study Trip

Hello again Everyone!

It’s Saturday morning on July 11th here in tropical Suzhou, so that means it’s time to update the blog! This past week was the halfway point in our time here, so it was planned as a vacation. For the past 5 days we have traveled around different cities in the area with the big ones being Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Shanghai. I know many of you haven’t heard of Hangzhou or Nanjing, but they are famous and important cities here. Hangzhou is home to West Lake, an absolutely beautiful lake that has been there for centuries. Nanjing was the capital city of China a couple of times, most recently for the KMT. It is most famous for being invaded by Japan, their military went a little overboard. By the end, the soldiers there had killed around 300,000 people in about 1 month. If you want to know more about that, you should look up the Rape of Nanking (same city, just a different way of romanizing Chinese). However, the city holds a special place in my heart because that’s where I lived when I studied in China for 5 months (feel free to check out my old blog which goes into my time there).

The trip was a lot of fun, but it was tiring too. We climbed some mountains which were all absolutely beautiful (even though I was sweating like crazy by the time I reached the top). The first mountain we climbed, Daming Mountain (大明山) was surrounded by fog so you couldn’t see anything past the mountains. It made it feel as though the rest of the world didn’t exist making it quite peaceful. It was also raining a lot, which made the normally small waterfall quite large. We all got soaked from the rain and waterfalls, but it was worth it. We climbed up, but we took a cable car down. It was a lot of hiking, plus it involved 2 suspension bridges which were very high up, one was 48 meters (157 feet) above the rapidly moving waterfall. On the way down we had to walk on a path that extended out over the side of the mountain. I’m not a fan of heights, so this wasn’t the easiest thing for me. The second mountain was a little different because it had multiple ways to get down. You could ride a slide down (like the previous mountain) or zipline down, or you could just walk down too. They also had a waterslide that took you out into the parking lot. It was a beautiful mountain and I found it to be quite peaceful.

Then we went to Hangzhou, which is famous for it’s West Lake. The lake is so famous that it is actually on the back of the 1 kuai bill here. The highlight of Hangzhou was riding a boat across the lake. You could see the ancient city and architecture in the lake, but off in the distance you could see the modern city and it’s sky-scrapers. That night we found a jazz bar and hung out there while listening to a band perform. The band didn’t play for very long, but they were pretty good and it was a nice evening.

After Hangzhou we went to Nanjing, my favorite city. Unfortunately, what I wanted to see and do didn’t really line up with the tour guide’s plan. It was alright though, the first night we went to Fuzi Miao (夫子庙). If you have ever talked to me, pretty much ever, or read my old blog then you know that Fuzi Miao (夫子庙) is one of my favorite places in Nanjing. It’s right on a river, they have beautiful lights there at night, and they had an absolutely amazing fake market there where you could find literally anything you wanted (like the first time I was there, my group was offered a live owl; another time a tazer). However, in the four since I was last there, it had changed a lot. Gone was most of the fake market, leaving only the tourist trap stands. In their place were new buildings with legitimate businesses. It had become a tourist trap. Needless to say, I was a little down about that because this was the part of the trip I was really looking forward to. It ended up being alright, I still had some fun and there were still some of the stands that I remembered. Plus some of the new stuff wasn’t bad. We ended up playing cards in a room that was open to the outside and overlooked the river. Unfortunately though, I had no chance to go to Ellen’s, a bar and grill which I used to go to the first time I was there because our hotel was so far away. I have multiple maps of Nanjing and the hotel that we stayed at isn’t on there. It was a 45 minute drive, so I wasn’t willing to pay for the taxi to even get to the nearest subway station, it would have just cost too much. I plan on saving all of my favorite things for when I go back in a couple of weekends to see my host family from the first trip.

The next day we went to the tomb of Sun Yat Sen and then the Presidential Palace. Sun Yat Sen’s tomb is on a mountain and is quite pretty. Sun Yat Sen is important to Chinese history because he led the first rebellion against the war lords that took power after the emperor was dethroned. He is remembered fondly by both the people and government of China even though he brought democracy to China. The thinking is, without first going through a democratic step, it would have been impossible to start the Communist revolution. The same is not really said about his successor Chang Kai Shek, but the thought process is that his rule was a necessary step towards Communism.

After there we went on to Shanghai. We went to the Bund when we arrived there that night, but it wasn’t all that great because there was an insane amount of fog due to the two typhoons that were coming in. You could hardly see across the river and most of the sky-scrapers were hidden in the fog. It was so thick that you couldn’t even see any of the light from the building. We ended up going out that night to a cool place called Windows. We had some fun and played some darts and pool. It just had a really fun atmosphere.

The next day we went to the Shanghai Museum, which I found to be fairly interesting. I spent my limited time there looking at the exhibits on the evolution of Chinese money and also the one of Chinese paintings. While looking at the exhibit on the paintings, one of the TA’s and I started discussing art, and by discussing I mean she was teaching me all about the paintings and the different styles of the painters. It was one of those conversations that I would have had difficulty following in English, but it was even more difficult because we only spoke in Chinese. I did manage to learn something about Chinese art though, so I’d call that a win. After the museum, we had lunch and then had a couple hours to explore Shanghai. A few of us and our professor went to a fake market and then hung out in People’s Square. The fake market was a little too sketchy, so we left and just walked around. When we got to our meeting point, we got back on the bus and returned to Suzhou.

When we got back, we were all tired and hungry. We relaxed a little and then got some food. This weekend shouldn’t be too bad. Today I’m going to try and get a large chunk of my homework done, as I have a paper due tonight and then a rough draft of my research report and power-point due Monday night. This time around I am researching how college age students watch movies. It may seem kind of simple (and admittedly it is), but it is important to understand how our generation watches movies. I also think that this research might tie into future research. I really want to talk to people about piracy, but it’s such a grey area as it is and my Chinese isn’t quite good enough for such a complex topic.

Scary thought though, I’ll be home in exactly three weeks. This time in Suzhou is kind of weird because it feels like it’s going so fast but it also feels like I have been here for a while. It’s hard to explain. As always, feel free to contact me by email if you ever want to talk! Maybe one day I’ll stop being lazy and put some pictures on here, but we’ll see. See you all soon!

 

The Week in Review

I can’t believe that it has already been a week since I lasted posted. So many things have happened this week both in and out of class. I have started a new research topic, I’m now researching how Chinese college students watch movies.  I’ve been working hard in class, especially on the Chinese-American relations book. It is a lot of work, but it’s paying off. I can already tell that my Chinese is improving.

Outside of the classroom, I have been exploring the city and meeting people. On Wednesday night I went to this really fancy mall that I found and did my homework in the Starbucks. However, on the outside there were these strange carts that you could drive that were basically a wide cylinder in the center with 1 wheel that was the same size as the cylinder on each side, allowing you to drive it. It is almost like a rough prototype for the gyrosphere from Jurassic World. It was pretty fun to drive! Afterwards I met up with some friends and had a great night.

The next day after class a few of us went to the lake with our tutors and treated them to dinner and ice cream to thank them for putting up with us trying to learn Chinese. It was a lot of fun, at the lake we rented those peddle cars again and rode around. Then we went to Cold Stone Creamery and Pizza Hut. It was a great time!

Then on Friday I played some ultimate frisbee with some people on campus. It was so darn hot and humid but it was a lot of fun. Later that night we all went to a bar and began to celebrate the 4th of July. I would be lying if I said that we didn’t sing the National Anthem while walking down the streets of China.

Today, the 4th of July, I plan on going out with some of my friends and our tutors to sing karaoke and then get dinner. It should be a good time! Today will be the last day that we see them before they go home and we get new tutors. They’ll leave for home while we go on our study trip.

On Monday morning we will leave for our study trip to Hangzhou, Nanjing, and then Shanghai. I am so excited to go back to Nanjing, it has been 4 years since I have been there and I have missed it there. It will be so nice to see that wonderful city again.

I hope that you all have a wonderful 4th of July! I’ll be home again soon! I’ll keep you updated on my life here is going!

Till next time

This Past Week

This past week has gone by so fast and so many things happened. This past week I had to do a research project and present my findings. For this project I chose the topic of “How American Pop Culture Effects the Youth of China” (美国流行文化对中国年轻人的影响). For this project, I had to go and interview people around Suzhou about their thoughts and feelings towards American pop culture. I sort of got the results that I expected, but not entirely. They mostly said that movies have the most influence on Chinese youth, but it wasn’t as large of a majority as I was expecting it to be. The hardest part about it all was either finding the courage to ask random strangers their thoughts on this or the presentation of my results, I’m not sure which. Overall though, I’d like to think that my research was successful and it might be the start for my research in the future for the OSU Flagship program.

Even though I was working hard on my research, I did get to have some fun this week. On Thursday night, I watched “The Big Lebowski” with one of my classmates who had never seen it before. Friday night after all of our presentations were done, we went and explored the city a little bit together. We found a really cool sports bar that has a couple of pool tables and western food, so we had some fun and a little change of pace when it comes to food. Saturday morning our class and our language tutors all went to a nearby mountain and hiked to the top. It wasn’t that tall and it had a path on it so it wasn’t too difficult. It was really nice though because it a drizzling the whole time and it kept me cool. The view from the top was so pretty, especially when you watched the fog blow over the mountains. It was such a beautiful sight and I wish I had a better camera to capture that moment. Saturday night a few of us all hung out together and had a pretty quiet night. We played some cards and shared a few laughs, so I have to say that this weekend was a big success all around. Today, however, will be nice, relaxing, and productive.

I’m really excited for a couple of weeks from now when we go on our study trip. We will all go to Hangzhou, Nanjing, and Shanghai. For those of you who don’t know (which is probably very very few of you at this point because some of my friends have told me that I never shut up about it, haha) that the first time I was in China, I lived in Nanjing for 5 months and went to high school there for a semester. I haven’t seen Nanjing in 4 years and I am so excited to go back and see the old stomping grounds.

Unfortunately, I have to wrap this up and go be productive today. Have a good one everyone!

An Unplanned Adventure

When I was a freshman in college, a good friend of mine (who was a 5th year senior at the time) gave me some advice that has stuck with me throughout my academic career. He told me that you never remember the nights where you only did your homework and then went to bed early. The nights that will stick with you are the ones where you do something fun with friends, stay out late, and do your homework later. This advice paid off for me Tuesday night.

Before I begin, I do want to state that this advice is not some long version of YOLO, it means to go along with the unexpected BUT still take care of your responsibilities.

So, on Tuesday night I realized that due to the differences in the shape of outlets in China, I was unable to charge my laptop which I needed to do my homework. So I went down to the corner store to buy an adapter. It was raining quite heavily, it is RAINEY season after all, so I brought my large umbrella. On my way to the store, these two girls ask for my help. They are trying to find a Pulp Fiction themed bar (which is one of my all time favorite movies), so I agree to help them and the three of us huddle under my umbrella. We kept walking back and forth on the street, looking desperately for it, but alas it could not be found. I was able to practice my Chinese quite a bit, asking random people on the street for directions. Unfortunately for us, nobody knew where it was and some people actually gave us bad directions. They sent us into an apartment building to try and find it, but of course it wasn’t there. It didn’t really matter though, the three of us were laughing and having a wonderful time. We went back to my hotel to get Kris, who had studied in Suzhou before, to help us find it or the other near by western bar, the Drunken Clam (it is named after and has the same neon lights as the bar from Family Guy!). So we accompany them to the bar where we all hung out for a while and got to know each other. The two girls are from Germany and they took a year off to travel all over Asia and the world. It was amazing to hear their stories. The bar itself is amazing as well, and every time I have been there it has had the most recent cavs game on replay, so at least I was able to keep up with that a little. Overall, it was a great night and I met some great people!

I wish I could have stayed out longer or joined in some of the festivities, but I still had to do my homework and prepare for the next day. I left them at 11 pm, went back to the hotel, and finished my homework. I wish those two the best of luck on their travels and I hope they have the time of their lives!

端午节: The Dragon Boat Festival

Today, 6/20/2015, is the Dragon Boat Festival in China. Dragon Boat Festival is a day celebrated by many in China by eating 粽子 (zong zi), which is rice and meat or eggs wrapped in bamboo leaves and then steamed. It is also celebrated by having dragon boat races, where people in these long canoes which look like dragons race each other. This day is memorialize a a famous scholar and official named Qu Yuan (chew yu-en for a rough pronunciation) who was banished by the Chu (chew) emperor during the Warring States period. Soon after his banishment, the Chu court fell to the Qin (Chin) empire (which would later go on to be the first empire to unite all of China). Upon hearing this news, Qu Yuan drowned himself in a river. So you’re probably wondering has any of this has to do with rice wrapped in bamboo leaves and wooden boats shaped like dragons. Well, apparently the best way to honor someone is give them food, so for years and years people would come to the river and throw rice into it to show their respect for Qu Yuan. However, many believed that water dragons (which many now suspect to just be big catfish) would eat the rice before it could get to Qu Yuan. So the spirit of Qu Yuan told the people to wrap the rice in bamboo leaves so the water dragon couldn’t take it. Why people race the dragon boats isn’t as clear, but it makes for a good holiday now a days.

However, my friends and I celebrated the holiday a little differently. We tried to go watch the race at the large lake in town, however we were too late. We slightly under-estimated how long it would take to walk there, so it ended up taking us about an hour and fifteen minutes to walk there. The lake is absolutely beautiful  there though and there were so many people. The three of us rented this peddle cart and drove around for a while on the side walks that go around the lake. It was a strange set up though, as it had the normal driver and passenger seat, but the other passenger seat was in front of the driver and passenger seats. The front seat also didn’t have any peddles, so they were truly a passenger. If you have seen the movie “Mad Max: Fury Road” it was kind of similar to the beginning of the film wear max is riding on the front of the car, so whoever road in the front seat was dubbed “blood bag”. When we returned the cart, we sat down on this big rock by the lake to rest a little (we had just walked a few miles and then went for a bike ride, so I think it was warranted), but while we were sitting there many Chinese people would come up to us and take our picture or take pictures with us! They didn’t even ask us permission half of the time, they would just stand in front of us or try to convince their kids to stand with us and take a picture. We were of course polite, and it always feels a little cool to have random people want to take pictures with you. We then ended up walking most of the way back, but we did ride a bus for part of the way. All in all I have to say, today was a good day.

So That’s What I’m Here For….

Today was the first day of classes, and boy did I feel like a deer in headlights sometimes. We had so much to do (so much to see) for class that I couldn’t even do it all the night before. Luckily I wasn’t alone, but we all realized what we are here for. Luckily I came out of class feeling pretty good about everything, but then came my hour with the tutor and that quickly went away.

Tonight though, I plan on joining a gym and getting dinner in a different part of the city, so I’ll still get to have some fun along with all of the homework.

What was kind of funny about all of this though is that my arrival to Suzhou coincides with the start of the rainy season, so I guess it’s the Rainey season here in Suzhou now. * It was so rainy here that within 5 minutes, my rain jacket was so thoroughly soaked that my shirt and my backpack, which were both under the jacket, got soaked as well. My books even got fairly wet.

Well, it’s time to get ready for the gym. I’ll see you all later.

 

*Yes I do realize this joke is terrible, but I’m going to milk it for all it’s worth.

We Made It!

I am officially safe and sound in China. Although Chicago o’Hare tried to make me as late as possible with a broken plane, I have made it to Suzhou. Almost the whole group is here and we got a nice dinner together. I must say, it feels good to be back. Tomorrow is orientation and the day that I get a Chinese phone number!

I can’t wait to hit the ground running with learning Chinese. I feel as though I’m already getting a little better just by having to speak the language to do anything.

I’m so pumped about everything that’s happening and will happen during this study abroad experience.

The only negatives about this program is that I missed my Grandpa’s birthday and that I will miss my Dad’s birthday as well. Luckily, thay are just as excited for this opportunity as I am.

If any of you ever want to contact me, please feel free to email me or to add me on wechat!

Have a good one!