KARL: Last weekend, I joined 200 people for an open sailing day on Lake Dianshan. The majority were first timers dressed in their Sunday best – suits and dress shoes. Showing up in my shorts and life jacket, I was immediately accepted as the expert of the crowd. Unfortunately only 5 boats were volunteered for sailing, which meant most of the day was spent queued up (did I just really say “queued up”?! What's happening to my English?). I decided to join the Yacht Club which includes ~250 sailors from around the globe. With the multi-national membership, I was told I have to learn “blue/red/yellow line” and a dozen other words in 10 different languages to be effective sailing in Shanghai. I’m still trying to learn Chinese! After 5 lessons, I can finally pronounce all the Chinese sounds, 5tones (4 + non-tone), and can remember a dozen words! Only 100 more lessons to go before I can communicate at a taxi driver level.
I also had my first solo adventure in intra-China travel between Shanghai and Beijing. The two-hour flights are like mega-buses, departing every ½ hour on 747s/777s that are at 95% full with 300+ passengers. Travel proved to be interesting because the government has my passport to process the work visa. I traveled with a single sheet of paper full of Chinese and my grinning passport-sized photo. Fortunately, my passport and new Chinese ID returned just a few days later.
LILA: While Karl was enjoying Chinese transportation, I should have been excited about going to Italy and Portugal. However, I spent 14 hours flying from Shanghai to Frankfurt in the middle seat next to the bathrooms, then connected to Rome and visited Portugal before finally returning home. The 5-day Europe trip was quite short when you consider 2 days were spent on yucky flights. By the end, I wish I’d invested in a few rolls of that $2 Charmin to cushion the ride. The good news? I have now visited 68 countries in my life -- Italy was #67 and Portugal#68. I’m wondering what took me so long to get to both countries. However, after spending days inside the gold-wall, blue-carpeted Marriott conference rooms, I definitely earned a vacation trip back!
TOGETHER: Intel expat buddies came to the rescue the past week – helping us adjust and answering our 3 pages of questions. Jay arranged a special tour including 7 stops at home stores, sporting goods, and book stores. We were thrilled to find our way around. A week later, Kapil and his wife had us over for a home-cooked (!!!) meal, complemented with Wii advice from his son.
After developing a Chinese flesh-eating skin rash (clearly self-diagnosed), we got Karl to the doctor. Fortunately the expat-friendly WorldLink medical clinic proved that the US healthcare system really does have a ton of room for improvement! Within 2 hours of a phone call, Karl had an after-hours appointment with a dermatologist – no waiting beforehand & he even walked out with medication in hand.
Karl arranged for our first suburb exploration into Xitang, about 1.5 hours from Shanghai. The town is pending UNESCO World Heritage status, and is composed of traditional houses from ~1000 years ago along a canal. It’s more famous, however, for the cameo in Mission Impossible III. We had so much fun exploring the town. Of course, we stopped by the DVD store on the way back to pick up the movie. Pictures to follow soon – beautiful and very picturesque.
We still have fun exploring the city, wandering around. We’ve discovered our ayi (helper) cooks. She’s now preparing dinner for us 3x/week. That’s very helpful with Lila’s 2 hour/day commute and Karl’s late office hours. We also finally gave into our ice cream craving, walked down the street, and actually paid $10 for a pint of ice-cream. Yes, it was worth it.
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
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