Sunday, September 30, 2018

Sept 29 - Mid-Autumn Festival, Classes, and Off to Tianjin

We didn’t have classes on Monday because of the Mid-Autumn Festival.  I know that the Chinese love his celebration.  It is quite similar to Thanksgiving in the US.  They love it as a time to celebrate the harvest and get together with family.  It’s not like it used to be though, because more people are living far away from family and can’t make it home.  Eva sent me a video that explained a lot of the old traditions that used to be observed for this festival and she said that most young people don’t even follow the old traditions about it anymore.  They mostly use the time to study.  It made her sad.

For Mid-Autumn Festival, we took the Wilkins to DaMing Lake and went on a boat ride around the lake.  They take us all around the area that has the most bridges, it’s very enchanting.  After the boat ride, we walked up to Furong Street and grabbed some lunch from the vendors there.  
A small pavilion at DaMing Lake.

Each  bridge that we went under on DaMing Lake was different.  I just love the bridges!

The willows on the lake are so romantic! (The Chinese use this word a lot.)
The boat that we rode around the lake on.

We also walked around the old village part that they have restored and looked into some of the shops they had there.  We were starting to get a little tired, so we headed home on he bus.  While we were on the bus, one of David’s former students, Jaime, was also riding on it.  He tried to give us his seat, but an old man (who was begging for money, and he had is own QR code so you could pay be WeChat!) took it first.  Then Jaime gave us each a moon cake and the beggar man wanted me to give my cake to him!  I would have except I wasn’t sure if it would have been polite to give away the gift that had just been given to me.  Jaime walked us all the way back to our apartment.
Jay wanted some of the street food and we found this shop that roasts the whole back of the pig.  They cut off as much as you want.  It might have tasted better if it had been warmed up, but it needed some spices, in my opinion.

Squid on a stick is a popular food there.  You can get it breaded, non breaded, spicy or not.  It's really not that bad.

Classes went well this week.  We didn’t have our Monday classes because we were off for the holiday, and we won’t see them again until October 8 because we are on holiday for the National Holiday all of this coming week.  David and I each do a couple of phonics lessons for them, and I noticed many of my students furiously writing down notes on the presentation.  David has about 3 or 4 students that are auditing his classes and I have four auditing my classes.  One of the girls that is auditing my largest class of 40 students told me she had tried to get into my class, but couldn’t because my class was full.  Our reputations precede us!  

We received an email on Monday that our rent was due, so David headed over to the foreign student’s building to get it paid.  You can’t go pay if from noon to 2 p.m. for lunch break, and we teach from 8-12.  He went up the office to pay it, but a new sign said that it was now downstairs.  David went down to the office and there were two people in the office but the middle seat was vacant.  The other two can’t take the rent and told David that the one who could would be back in a half hour.  David went back in an hour, but she was still gone, and they said that she had taken the rest of the day off.  Could he come back tomorrow?  He said sure.
We pass by this sign when we go to the massage place.  The communist party is letting the people know that they are doing everything for them to ensure a safe, secure society, and they want  you to know about it!

So David goes back the next day, and they told him that her son was sick, and so she wasn’t going to be there that day either.  After David came back, we decided that it was probably going to be futile to try and pay it the rest of this week because National Holiday was coming up and there was probably a good chance that she was going to be gone for the rest of the week.  This person is the ONLY one in the office that can give us the receipt for paying our rent.  We decided it could wait until after National Holiday…

David went to get his hair cut on Wednesday.  I decided I’m going to let mine grow out a bit, so I didn’t go.  She asked about me.  David couldn’t tell her why I wasn’t there until an older gentleman came in who knew some English could tell her.  David had a nice little visit with the man.  

On Friday, we went to the hospital to see Dr. Tricia and have a visit.  She provided us with lunch and had a good talk.  It was good to see her again.  We brought some coins for her older son, Bill, and a little die-cast truck for her 5 year-old son, Baobao.  She was pleased with both gifts.  

Before we went to our massage and after we left Dr. Tricia, we went over to the Hanlin Hotel, where the SDNU BYU teachers live, to meet with Daniel and Bonita Quillan.  They were coming to our campus for dinner that night and to see where we lived.  Then we headed to the massage.

It seemed like we had the worse luck getting buses all day Friday.  We were late getting to Dr. Tricia, and late to our massage.  That was going to put us late getting out of the massage and home in time for our three tutoring students at 4:30.  We walked back to the bus stop as quickly as we could, praying the whole time that the bus we needed would be there soon.  We stood for less than thirty seconds at the bus stop before we saw the bus we needed come!  Then, that driver drove like he was possessed!  He made it through every light that was starting to turn red!  He didn’t have to linger very long at any of the bus stops for slow passengers, and we made it home in record time!  We were walking up to our apartment building just as our three students had come down the stairwell from knocking on our door!  Our prayers were SO answered!!

For tutoring, we decided to make some banana bread.  I had two bananas that needed to be used or else thrown out.  What better way to practice English than to have some skills go with it?!  The kids were excited.  Doris likes food!  Stone likes to play with whatever, and Michael likes to learn new English words.  They mashed the bananas, put the eggs in, creamed the butter and sugar, and then we put the batter into the little bread pans that I have.  While they baked, we showed them about Thanksgiving and made similarities to the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival.  At the end of the hour, they were so excited to take a little loaf of banana bread home.  I wonder how much of it actually made it home….

We met the Quillan’s at the bus stop for our campus and then went to the KFC for supper.  They were ready to try some “American” food, even if it has a Chinese twist to it.  After supper, they came to our apartment for some banana bread and talk.  It was a nice evening.

Saturday, we got packed for our trip to Tianjin and later, for our cruise to Japan.  Aaron got a taxi for us and met us at the taxi.  We enjoyed the high speed train trip to Tianjin.  It took about one hour 45 minutes.  I so enjoy the high speed trains!  We were successful in getting a taxi to our hotel and enjoyed some quiet time in our lovely room while we waited for the Holts, Allen and Shelly, BYU teachers in Tianjin.  They were showing Allen’s sister, Cathie Thunell, and her husband, Randall, Beijing, Tianjin.  We will all be going on the cruise to Japan on Monday.

We had dinner with them and then walked along the river to a place where we could catch a river boat cruise.  It was really nice, not very cold, and we had a wonderful time visiting and getting to know each other better.  
St. Regis Hotel in Tinajin was our home for two nights. Very nice place!

Tianjin at night, all lit up.

A famous bridge in Tianjin.  There was a lot of European influence in Tianjin and the architecture shows it.

On the Haihe River.

We didn’t have church until 2 p.m., so the Holt’s had us all go to their campus, Nankai University and showed us around their campus.  We compared notes on their campus versus ours.  They are both good.  We like ours better.  They seem to have to take taxis most everywhere, while we catch buses to wherever we need to go.  Then we had lunch and went to church.  There were six of us, and we had to take two taxis.  Church was nice.  
Walking to church with the Pages (Jeff and Kristy) and Randy Thunell.
While we were in the taxi driving to church, Shelly Holt pointed out this building.  The guy who made it put china vases ALL over the outside!  It really is quite a tourist attraction.  If we go to Tianjin again, I want to go see it up close.

After church was over, we went back to the Holt’s apartment and had dinner with them, Cathie and Randy, and Dr. Jeff Page and his wife, Kristy, another couple that is going on the cruise with us.  We had a fun evening getting to know each other.  We had taxi rides back to the hotel where we will meet all the others tomorrow morning and riding together to the ship docks.
European style buildings along the river.

Looks like the Salt Lake LDS Temple, only taller.

We sure enjoyed this river cruise.

One of the largest ferris wheels in the world.  

Sunday, September 23, 2018

Sept. 23 Classes Start, Rain, Dr. Yang, Moon Cakes

This is what the top of the moon cake looks like.  The characters on the top are supposed to tell you what is inside.


We started off the week bright and early on Monday morning.  We had to get up at 5:30 in order to catch the bus at 7 a.m. for the ride over to Qianfoshan Campus for our classes there.  I was lucky enough to get a seat, but David had to stand for the entire 40 minute ride. 

After we arrived, we had a 10 minute walk to the building and then four flights of stairs to climb to the classroom.  It was a hot and muggy day, so thank goodness there was AC in the classroom!!  They are just small units that are in the front and back of the classroom, but to have that cold air blowing on me as the sweat trickled down my face gave me some relief.  

The classes were great!  They were all a little smaller than we had been told they would be, but that’s okay.  After classes, we crossed on the bridge back to the other side of the campus and got some lunch at the canteen.  

There are three possibilities for us to eat there.  On the first floor, there are all sorts of booths that you can go to and select your food from.  The second floor has basically the same options, but there is also a place where you can get fruit juices and soda pop to drink.  The third option is a special teacher’s restaurant in the basement.  We opted for the second floor. 

The canteen is popular for the middle school students that come from the nearby to eat their lunch at.  It was extremely noisy and there was hardly a spot at a table.  We looked around for the trays, finally found them and the chopsticks, and then approached the windows that held the different choices.  

At the window that I went to, the lunch lady was trying to tell me how much the baoze was (bowd-za are little meat filled steamed buns).  I understood her, but I tried to ask if they were pork or chicken.  Two of the middle school girls had come up behind me and the lunch lady wanted them to explain to me about what the cost was for the baoze.  The girls giggles and looked at me and then each other.  They finally told me what I had understood from the lunch lady.  I then tried to ask if they were pork or chicken.  I know the word for pork, but the girls didn’t know what pork was (the term for pork translates better into pig meat.  I need to remember that.). I decided that the only way I was going to get my question answered was to pull out my little picture of a pig with the Chinese characters on it.  After I did that, she showed me which ones were pork and I bought two of them. 

We had a long time to wait on the campus before we could take the bus over to the massage place.  We cleaned off the table that we had eaten at and tried to do a little work. Soon the workers started cleaning the tables and wanted us to move, so we packed up our stuff and decided to seek out a bathroom before we got on the bus.  We went through three buildings before we found a bathroom!  At the third building, I finally asked a cleaning lady, and she walked us down a long hallway and finally we got to the bathroom!

The fortunate thing about the trek to find the bathroom was that we found a beautiful area that we will be able to relax in with small tables and soft chairs for our Mondays at the Qianfoshan campus.  We were glad to get home after a long day away.

My classes on Tuesday were really fun!  Each class has their own personality.  We had a lot of laughter and fun in getting to know each other.  I think Tuesdays will be my favorite day, but Wednesday and Thursday were almost as fun.  Some of these students choose rather usual names, and some choose rather unusual names.  Here are some examples:  Nucky, Brume, Boohoo, Athenals, Lingle, Family, Amitty, Honesty, Varato, Ordinson, Hubery, Children, and Boeing.  Some I know are just very rare, others...

David’s classes are all a little larger than mine, and he was getting frustrated, because the program he uses to keep track of student progress was not working for him.  He finally had to give up on it, because he needed to go teach the accountants class for one more time.  Things started working better the next day. 
 
The accounting students are preparing a speach.

This game is called "Talking Cards."  You line up in two lines facing a partner. The teacher pulls a card from a regular card deck and there is a question that coordinates to that card.  Then they have two minutes to talk about it.  Great English practice!  

David with his class of accountants.

Just as David was ready to leave for the accountants class, we were invited by Dr. Yang to have a party with his students and colleagues that work in the oncology department that he heads.  Dr. Yang is the head oncologist at QiLu hospital and he is in contact with David’s doctors in the US to help with David’s cancer care while we are in China. 


David hurried home from teaching his class, gathered me, and we headed out he door.  Jinan has been inundated with lots and lots of rain this week.  Even umbrellas couldn’t keep all of the rain off.  We headed for the south gate of the campus to try and catch a taxi.  There were NO taxis that would stop for us, and with the ability of the Chinese to call a cab with an app, we had no chance to get a taxi.  

Dr. Yang was able to find out which bus we could take to get to his area in east Jinan.  He sent us an address that we could show to the bus driver and have him help us know which bus stop to get off at.  The traffic was terrible! It crawled through the streets and stopped for long periods.  Dr. Yang was getting anxious, because we were the guests of honor, and they wouldn’t start without us.  We started counting the stops, hoping that we got the right one.

David had figured the right stop based on the characters at the bus stop, but the bus driver was adamant that it was not the one.  The bus driver told us the stop to get off at and… it was the wrong stop!   Dr. Yang’s assistant, Miss Zhang Xiaoli, started calling us, and we tried to tell her what stop we were at.  This stop only had the Chinese characters to identify it, so we couldn’t tell her.  We handed the phone to one of the men that were standing waiting for a bus, and he was able to tell them where we were.  Five minutes later, we were in an Uber type van and headed to the restaurant that the rest of the group were waiting for us at. 
Dinner with Dr. Yang and colleagues.  Dr. Yang was supposed to send us the pictures, but he forgot before he left for Canada.

Dinner was great, I told Miss Zhang that I can’t do spicy hot foods, so she was able to warn me that something might be hot.  Some people don’t think some things are hot, but they still are.  Dr. Yang asked us to introduce ourselves, and then everyone around the table did the same.  All but one of them were able to do it in English.  After dinner, they ordered another “Uber” driver, and he drove us home. 
Dr. Yang, his colleagues and David and I.

Dr. Yang, David, Zina

Wednesday was still very rainy.  We went for our massages and taught the people there a few more English words.  Last week, it was “face up” and “face down.”  We talked about wet.  One of the men has an app that translates, and they wanted to ask me specific questions, so they used the app to ask.  I had to keep my answers to things they could understand.

On the way home from the massage, we decided to quickly shop for some groceries.  Instead of going out for supper like we usually do, I decided that I was going to make supper.  We were tired of the rain and wanted to stay home.

After our classes on Thursday, I waited at the apartment for the maid to come while David went over to the Hongjialo campus to pick up the Mid-Autumn Festival gift from the university.  It was two huge boxes of Mooncakes.  Mooncakes are the traditional food of this festival.  They have lots of different fillings inside.  Some are sweet, some are savory, some have nuts, and some just don’t taste good to us.  Others are good.  Since we can’t read the Chinese characters, we don’t know what is in them until we open it up. Kind of like gambling…
 
These are the moon cakes from the university.
We had supper with Eva that evening.  She had brought David back from the other campus and we wanted to try out the new 3rd floor canteen. They have a more restaurant type atmosphere there.  You still pick up your food at a window, but you can also order some special things that they will serve to your table, you just have to be able to read and speak Chinese in order to do that.
 
These moon cakes were a gift from the three fourth grade students that we tutor, Michael, Doris and Stone.
This moon cake it "Hong Kong" style, which usually means that it is a sweeter filling inside.

It also has what we think is an "egg yolk" inside.  While the rest of this is moist and sweet, the egg yolk is hard and dry.  We usually take that part out.  It's okay, but I'm an adult now and I don't have to eat it all if I don't want to! 

Close up view of the inside with the "egg yolk." 

Friday morning, we made our way over to the baking store.  It is the only place that we can find in Jinan that has the kind of brown sugar that we are used to.  What they call brown sugar here has some spices mixed up in it and also has the really dark black strap type of molasses still in it.  That messes up my recipes.  They also have a “red” sugar that we were told was the same as the brown sugar from the US, but is isn’t.  Once again, they add something else to it.  I was very happy to find this baking store when we were here the first time so that I can bake with familiar ingredients. 

We had to hurry and finish our other shopping, and then meet Eva at the canteen for lunch again. There is an expanded menu for the noon meal, different from the evening meal the day before.  After lunch, I went home to put my feet up, and David went to get copies picked up.

Saturday, Lily came to Jinan and wanted lunch with us again.  She brought her nephew along, who is studying computer programming.  While we were finishing up some things on the computer, Tresa and Jay Wilkins called us and wanted to know if we knew what bus might get them back to their campus. They had decided to ride bus #1 all the way to the end and see where it went.  The buses usually do a circuit route so that you can ride it from where you got on back to the same spot.  However, sometimes, it is the time for the driver to end his route and take his bus back to the station.  That’s what happened to them.  Tresa sent us a picture of the buses that were at the closest bus stop, and we told them a bus that would get them back, but they were able to find the stop where bus #1 starts.  Since that bus also passes by our campus, we invited them to come meet Lily and eat with us. 

David was keeping track of their progress through texts, and they thought they were at the right stop for our campus.  They weren’t. David went out by the bus stop, while Lily, her nephew, and I went to the canteen to save some seats at a table.  By the time they finally got to the campus, it was too late to eat lunch on the fourth floor like we had planned, at least there was no decent food left.  

We decided to go down to the basement because they serve food there for longer times than any of the other floors.  We still got some good food and had a nice visit. 

While we were waiting for David and the Wilkins to come, two Chinese men asked if they could sit down by us.  There were just two more chairs available, so we said they could.  One of them introduced himself to me, Peter, and said that he had been teaching philosophy and English at a university in the Philippines for the last few years and was now back in China teaching at Shandong University.  His emphasis in philosophy is “Knowledge and Morality.”  He asked me whether I thought that knowledge led to morality or caused a lack of morality.  Wow!  Deep subject for a foreigner who has to watch what she might say about religion!  I told him that I thought that sometimes people that had a lot of knowledge sometimes led to that person thinking that they didn’t need to follow laws of morality because they were “too smart” and didn’t need to be moral.  

Peter also wanted to know what I thought about brainwashing.   Was it necessary for people to be brainwashed so that they would be moral?  My opinion was that if you were brainwashing someone, you were taking away that person’s ability to be moral.  Brainwashing takes away the ability for a person to think for themselves and to make moral choices.  They were only making the choices of another person, not for themselves.  We should have the ability to make our own choices- to choose either to do what was moral and right, or to choose what would cause harm to others and eventually themselves.  Where Peter led most of the questions and discussion, his dinner companion was listening, and while his English may not have been as good as Peter’s, he understood what I said and seemed to agree with it.  They left before David, Jay, and Tresa arrived.

After we finished eating, we said good-bye to Lily and her nephew and then got on the bus to take the Wilkins over to the old market that was near their campus.  We had several items that we were shopping for and they had some things to get.  Since it is so close to their campus, it is good for them to know about it.   We were able to find most of the things we needed.  David needed to go get money on his bus card, but I was tired, so I went home, and he came home later. 

Sunday was pretty usual, going to church and lunch afterward.  We didn’t get to linger, because I needed to be home for Branch Council Meeting.  Quiet evening.


Wednesday, September 19, 2018

Sept 16 Food, Friends, Teaching and Springs


Pizza Hut Pizza made with Cuddlefish in the crust.  Cuddlefish makes it black.  Tasted kind of fishy...

This whole week has been so hot and muggy.  It feels great to get back in our apartment each time after we go out, so I can turn on the fan and try to cool off and dry out at the same time.  

Monday we went to our massage in the morning.  We are getting more used to the Chinese massage, and we feel like it is doing some good for our old bodies.  We were going to be a little late, so we were moving pretty fast for the hot weather to get there.  After the woman who does my massage moved to work on my head, it was still a little damp from hustling to get there that she made some exclamation, wiped off my forehead and then went to work.  

After  lunch at home, Eva picked us up and drove us to the Qianfo campus, where we will be teaching on Mondays.  We hadn’t been on that campus before, so we wanted to know where our building and classrooms were.  We met the two men who will be opening our classrooms and helping us get set up.  They almost always keep the classrooms locked, so you either have to have a key or have someone open the room for you. 

Our classrooms are on the fourth floor in a building without an elevator… again.  I will get used to it after a while, but that’s a long climb.  David and I teach just a few doors away from each other.  It will be nice to be on that campus together.  We plan to go eat lunch after we are done teaching for our four hours, then go for our massages, and then go home.  It’s going to be a long day, but it’s okay.

I was exhausted when we finally got home, so David went to Subway and picked up some sandwiches for us for supper.  We had done a lot of walking that day in the heat and humidity, so I was happy to get off my feet for the rest of the day.

Tuesday, David met with Rita, who works for the English training group that hires him to teach five or six days each month before they send a group of workers out to other countries for work.  This time it is a group of eighteen accountants. 

Wayne and Libby Clark invited us to have dinner with them Tuesday evening.  LIbby was meeting three or four of her former students and said we could come along.  We had a fun dinner, and we are now WeChat friends with Libby’s student, Ivy.  It was a fun evening.
 
A seal at Baotu Springs.  They are fun to watch.
David had his first day of teaching the Accountants class in the morning, and then David and I were invited to lunch with Tony, the man who heads up this program for teaching people English for the China construction company.  It was a nice meal, but again, I just couldn’t eat the sea cucumber.  We were finally able to excuse ourselves at 1:30 because we needed to get to the grocery store for some supplies.
 
Lunch with the boss, Tony, Mr. Ding from SDU, Zina.

Eating lunch with Patty and Rita.  They help train the accountants in other classes.

Thursday was another massage (They’re much cheaper here!), and then we had to hurry back to meet Aaron at our campus.  We needed to get train tickets for our cruise during the National Holiday, so we asked Aaron to come help us get them.  We didn’t have any trouble getting the tickets to Tianjin, but the tickets back were a scarce commodity, unless you want to get back way late at night.  We took the tickets for the latest train on Saturday night.  After we got home and checked on the information for the cruise, we don’t get back until Sunday morning!  Yikes! 

The next day, Aaron came again to help exchange the tickets for something on Sunday, but we couldn’t do it here on our campus.  The only way to exchange them was to go to the train station and change it there.  It was a relief to have Aaron be able to help us and get that change made to Sunday afternoon.  

One of the accountants the David was teaching asked him if he was “Mormon.”  David asked him how he knew about Mormons, and he said he has a friend who joined and who is going to go to BYU.  He then remarked that he doesn’t think he could give up drinking tea to join any church.

Friday afternoon was a lecture being presented from the British Ambassador to China, and David wanted to go listen to that.  She was critical of the US trade dealings, but then, the British are as guilty as some other nations are of taking advantage of the US in trade deals.  

We are tutoring three students this year on Friday afternoons.  One girl and two boys that are in fourth grade.  Michael is the son of Ms Jing, a Chinese English teacher here at SDU.  We had met Michael before when we were invited to present at a Halloween party last year.  Michael, Doris and the other boy (he doesn’t have an English name that he remembers - he even tried to spell it for me, and he couldn’t remember that either), have some fairly good skills.  Michael spent a year in the US with his mom when she was going to school there, but the other two aren’t as good as he is.  He wants to keep his English up, so he asked his mom to see if we would tutor the three of them this year.  After being in school all day long, they got a little squirrely toward the end of class.

On Saturday, we took Tresa and Jay Wilkins to see Baotu Springs and Five Dragon Park.  We had a nice time getting to know them better and also showing them the parks.  We met Eva and her daughter, Alina, at a shopping area so we could have lunch together.  We had planned to just eat a lot of the snacks that are available there, but it was sprinkling and raining a little, so we opted for a restaurant that we had eaten at when we were there with Eva last winter.  The owner remembered us, and even though he didn’t speak English, he told Eva that he remembered and welcomed us back to his restaurant.
 
One of the buildings at Bauto Springs.

Five Dragon Park.  These are the five dragons that saved the city from a drought.

I loved the matching shirts this family had.  It reads, "Family Intimate."

A little girl in a traditional costume getting professional photos.  The parents were okay that I took a picture also.

We sat and talked for some time and then decided to go get a cheese pie.  I love the cheese pies that we can get there!  It is more like a cheesecake tart, but tastes better.  Then we wandered around the area some more.
 
A group of kids noticed that David's and Jay's arms were hairy.  They wanted to touch the hair on their arms.  They let them and then David showed them pictures of our family.

The mother was in awe of the family picture also.

Lunch with Tresa and Jay Wilkins, David, Zina, and Alina.  Eva took the picture.

This was our lunch. The restaurant is called "Dancing Vegetable Rolls."  When you walk into the restaurant, they hand you a silver bowl with handles and  you go to a wall where there are meats, veggies and tofu all cut up.  You choose the foods that you want in your roll and take it to the counter where they weigh it.  You can also add an egg, either chicken or duck, and they cook it, put it in the wrap and bring it to you on a tray.  It was delicious!  We will go again!

I was starting to get pretty tired, so David and I went back to our apartment while Eva and Alina showed Jay and Tresa the Black Tiger Springs, which was right across the road from where we were.  
Alina with her mom, Eva.  Life is much easier in China for us with friends like these!

The parents wanted to take a photo of their son with the Americans.  The boy wasn't going to have any part of a picture with these strangers.  Jay was trying to coax him over, but he flatly refused. 

Since the little boy wouldn't cooperate, the adults all wanted pictures with us.  They would take a picture and then replace some of the people with others so that they all had a chance to be in the photo with these Americans.  

We were up bright and early on Sunday morning, because we needed to be over at the bus stop by Jay and Tresa’s campus.  We needed to show them the way to church, so we met them there and got them on the bus with us. 

Church and the meal after were great.  We stayed for a long time after.  The other new teachers wanted us to answer some questions for them, so we stayed until almost 4 p.m.  David had to be back to teach the Accountant’s class again tonight.  He’s glad that he only has one more night of teaching.  He’s a little tired.
 
We saw the world's smallest watermelons in a store.  I assume you just pop them in your mouth, but I wasn't about to pay 500 Yuan just to try them!