This is the birthday cake that Eva bought for me. It was a nice sponge cake with fruit filling, whipped cream frosting, almonds all around the sides and more fruit on the top. |
- On a report about the Battle of the Little Bighorn, the
student called “Sitting Bull”, “Sitting Cow.” I think that is how it
translated from the Chinese. I
wonder how he would have felt about that translation…
- From a student’s report about a Chinese student who is
living in England, “Men in England lose their hair because of the water,
so I use conditioner on my hair.” !!! Wonder where he got that?
At least some of the papers kept us awake enough
to finish them!
Our week was pretty usual but there were a few
other interesting things. I was riding the bus on Friday morning to go to the appointment with
the orthopedic doctor. I take two different buses to get there. After I got on the second bus, a woman behind
me kept peering around at me. I turned and smiled to her and then turned
back. She peered around at me again, so
I looked back again, and this time she said in halting English, “Where are you
from?” I told her America and said in Chinese, “I am a teacher at
Shandong University.” I smiled at her
and then turned around again.
She waited a few moments, then peered around at
me again, and when I looked at her, she started speaking in Chinese to me, as
if I would understand her. Then she put her fingers on her wrist like she
was taking a pulse and gave me a card. I
took it, even though it was all in Chinese.
After a moment’s thought, I dug out one of my BYU cards with my
information on it and gave it to her just as we were both rising to get off of
the bus. She stood there and tried to decipher the words on it, but then
it was time to get off, and I didn’t see her again after I got off.
This was the card that the woman on the bus gave to me for medical care. I began to wonder if I looked sick or something... |
After I had seen the orthopedic doctor and had
the injection in my knee, Dr. Tricia and I were sitting there talking, so I got
out the card, that the lady had given to me, and asked her to tell me what it
said. She quickly read it and then said, you don’t need this, and started
to put it in her pocket. I asked her
what it said, and she just said, “I’ll tell you later.” I think she was hoping that i would forget to
ask her.
After lunch, as she was taking me out to the
taxi that she had ordered for me to take me home, I asked her again about the
card. She explained that it was from a private clinic, and the woman was
trying to get business for her clinic.
She was rather disgusted about it and kept saying, but you don’t need
that. It was rather cute the way she is so protective of me.
When we were shopping with Tresa and Jay Wilkins last week, Tresa tried on this coat. I thought the design was gorgeous! |
This was our last week of classes with our
students. We start doing oral final
interviews this week. It was kind of bittersweet, because it means that
we will be going home soon, but also
that we will miss some of these kids that we have grown to enjoy and love.
One girl that really struggles with English, brought me a gift. It was a print of Confucius that her
boyfriend’s brother had made. I was very
touched, because she thought it was so special to give to me. Confucius
is considered the epitome of a great teacher, and I think that is what she
wanted to convey to me through her gift.
This is the print of Confucius that Emily gave me. |
David and I both carry two cell phones.
One for China and one for the US.
I sometimes carry both of them. On Monday morning, I was hurrying
to get my coat on so we could get to the bus stop and go to Qianfoshan Campus.
I had my US phone in my hand, and it slipped out of my hand and fell to
the floor. I have a really good shatterproof
cover on it, but it landed on a corner and didn’t seem to be harmed by the fall
to the tile floor in our apartment. During the day, everytime I tried to
get that phone to hook up to WiFi (that’s how I use it here in China) it
wouldn’t get on. I chalked it up to the fact that the internet in China is less
than wonderful. Late that afternoon when
we arrived home, and my phone still wouldn’t get on the internet, it became
evident that the fall that morning had damaged it.
Tuesday morning, after my first class, my class
monitor, John, had come to ask me a question. I noticed that he had an
iPhone, so I asked him if he knew a store where I could go to get it repaired,
or see if it could be repaired. His friend was right next to him, and he
seemed to know more than John did. They
talked about it, and we discussed a time when we could go see about getting it
fixed, if it could be fixed.
Wednesday afternoon, I went to meet John at the
store. I knew the approximate area, but not the exact store. As I neared the area that I thought it would
be, I couldn’t see a store for Apple. I stopped a young couple walking on
the street and showed them the store on the map that John had sent me. The young man looked at it, jerked his head
up, looked all around, and then pointed across the street, where sure enough,
there was a big white apple glowing on the side of the store.
After I crossed the street and started toward
the store, John met me and we went in. He had been in there earlier to
find out who to talk to about my phone.
After we approached the man, he told John that there would be a 4-5 hour
wait!! I didn’t have that kind of time, but the man did say that there
were other authorized locations that weren’t as busy as this main store
was.
John got the location, and we headed out the
door. He wondered if we wanted to catch a bus or walk. I asked how far it
was. He said it was about a kilometer.
I thought, I can walk a kilometer, so we started out walking. Then
we walked, and we walked, and we walked, and we walked. I was beginning to think he didn’t really
know where the store was. He finally stopped to ask a building guard, and
the man indicated a little further down the street.
We found the repair place. It wasn’t near
as busy, but it did have several people waiting. John found out how much
it was going to take to possibly fix the problem. Just to look at it was
going to be 199 RMB ($28 US), and they would run a diagnostic on it to see if
it could be fixed. If they couldn’t fix it, I was out the 199 RMB. If they could, then it would be fixed for 199
RMB.
After about 10 minutes, one of the workers came
out to me and told John that the VPN was causing problems with diagnosing the
problem. I wasn’t sure how that could be, but told them they could remove
the program if necessary. (I knew how to get it back on after they were
done.) After a half hour, they brought me the phone, and it connected up
to the WiFi just fine. I was rather
happy to have it up and working again, as I had a lot of Church stuff on there
that I needed to connect with people here in China.
This was available on the menu of a restaurant we went to last week. YUM! |
John and I rode the bus back to campus. I
was to meet David, Eva, and the Wilkins at a restaurant not far from the bus
stop for my birthday dinner. David and I had gone out to an Italian
restaurant the night before to celebrate my birthday by ourselves, but Eva
couldn’t be there, to she wanted to do something Wednesday evening. We
had a nice dinner and Eva bought me a lovely cake.
Ready to blow out the candles on my birthday cake. |
After all the walking on Wednesday and also a
fair amount of walking on Thursday, my knee was starting to ache. Friday
after my shot in my knee, it started to swell and get stiff. It was hard to walk, and I had to take a pain
reliever to sleep. The next morning, it was still pretty sore, so we
didn’t go anywhere during the day, just stayed in and tried to finish reading
all the student papers, which I was successful in doing.
Friday evening David had English Corner. I
had planned to go with him because he was taking his guitar to sing Christmas
songs with them. My knee was hurting so much, and I still felt so much
stress from the papers that still needed to be graded, that I didn’t go with
him. He had a pretty good group there, and they had a lot of fun. They gave him a nice bouquet of flowers and a
fountain pen. It was a nice evening for
him, just wish I could have gone also.
David with his guitar singing at English Corner. |
English Corner students. |
The group photo after English Corner. |
Gifts to David from the English Corner students. |
Saturday evening was a birthday party for those
of us who have birthdays in December. Tresa Wilkins and I were the
celebrants. It was a fun party and
Bonita Quillin made a wonderful carrot cake for me and cheesecake for Tresa.
Zina and Tresa with our birthday cakes. |
Enjoying the evening with the Jinan group for our December birthday party. |
Sunday was church and then dinner afterward.
Besides Patty and Catherine, who join us regularly, Lily also asked if
she could come have dinner with us. It was nice to have all of them. My knee is also feeling better.
He just needs a name tag and he would look like a missionary. |
More of the murals. The girl in the coat almost looks 3-D. |
Last of the murals. |
1 comment:
I hope you have an appointment with an orthopedist when you go home.
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