Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Medical examination and bank account opening day

Today should have been my first day at school, but in order to get a resident and working permit, I have to undergo medical examinations. A bit like the Gastarbeiter in Germany in the 1960s and 1970s. The difference is, that I’m not descending a train and walking down to the basement of the Munich Hauptbahnhof to get checked up by the doctors. As an expat, I have flown here and today I’m being picked up by the nice Chinese office clerk who picked me up at the airport and driven to a medical centre run by the authorities. 
It’s not very far from my home and it doesn’t take long to get there. First my Chinese has to register at the entrance and then we walk up to the first floor. There are many practices along a long corridor, but before that, I have to get registered with them. We both stand out in the crowd because a) I’m the tallest and he’s the second tallest and b) I’m the only foreigner.
The two ladies at the front desk put on a smile from ear to ear and are very kind and friendly. I have to show my passport and give them two photos. Then they produce a form I have to sign. After that, we have to line up. It’s six examinations I have to undergo. Since we don’t have to do them in a particular order, we join the shortest queue. I enter a practice and am asked to take off my shoes and step on a machine that looks like a scale. In front of me is a display in which a red light flickers and moves from left to right and back again. A bit like the red light Knight Rider had. I’m about to step down again, when I hear a beeping sound. The light stops and some figures appear. It’s my weight, height and BMI index. Then my eyesight gets checked. What I have to read is not in front of me, but behind me and I have to use a mirror. Weird those Chinese methods…
Other examinations include x-ray, ECG, urine and blood sample. I’m asked to sit down on a chair and a nurse comes with her utensils to take some blood. I consider shortly to faint in sight of the needle, but I guess this would look ridiculous and let it be. The first attempt isn’t successful. I suggest the right instead of the left arm, but the nurse insists on trying on the left arm again. The second attempt isn’t successful either. Then she decides to switch arms and try it on my right, which proves to be successful. 
After almost an hour running from practice to practice, we are finally done and go for breakfast. I wasn’t allowed to eat or drink since last night. That’s now over twelve hours and I’m thirsty and starving. 
My Chinese calls the driver to pick us up and we’re driven to a noodle place. Very Chinese breakfast. The noodle place is very basic and has no decoration whatsoever. A bit like the place in Riyadh where I had my first ever breakfast in Saudi two years ago. There are tables and chairs, the till next to the entrance, a kitchen in the back, a TV hanging on one of the walls and a fridge with drinks that is not plugged in. On the tables are several herbs and spices and the entire place smells quite spicy. 
It is an art to eat noodles with chopsticks. But I manage pretty well. Even though it takes me longer to finish than my Chinese. 

After breakfast we are driven back to the school. I hang around at the office for a while and get to know my colleagues and am shown where the books are and which ones I can or should use. An admin lady WeChats me and takes a photo for my staff card. She also gives me a card to get into the housing complex and my building. Well, on the card is the photo of a Chinese lady. I was told that she was a teacher at our school and left last summer. After a while we are taken by the driver in the school’s van and brought to a bank to open accounts. Again, like everywhere, nobody speaks English or any other language, that’s why we need a Chinese with us. Luckily opening a bank account is one of the things a foreigner is allowed to do and/or have. It usually doesn’t take that long to finish, but today it takes a very long time. The bank lady gets confused with my Greek passport and doens’t know which one is my last and which is my first name. On the form she puts down my surname only. Given name is missing. I point that out and the hassle begins. She has to call her superior, place some phone calls and try to enter the changes onto the system. Because the system doesn’t accept any alterations, she has to place more phone calls, and I have to fill in and sign more forms. A long time later she finally manages to put my first and last name onto the system. I’m surprised that the only thing we get is a bank card with a number and an expiration date on it. No name, no other information. We get to choose our own PIN number and enter it into a machine. That’s it. The Chinese are so far ahead of us. They surprise me every day.



    Card to get into the housing complex and my building (Aren't looking great?)

   Part of the housing complex with future shopping centre.

If you would like to read more by me, here are my novel and my diary from Ar'ar, in the northern Saudi desert. Both available on Amazon as soft and hard copy. 



Sunday, 22 November 2015

First day in Guiyang

I get up at noon, after having slept for five hours only, I feel perfectly fine. No jet lag, no hangover, no headache, no pain at all. Although when I opened my eyes a few hours ago, I didn’t know where I was. This happens quite often when you travel around. And I have been travelling around for the past month. 
My housemate is still sleeping, so I go in search of food. I try to retrace the steps from last night and manage to find the shopping centre. There I stroll through the entire area and discover many restaurants and small eating places, many clothes shops, a mobile phone shop and some jewellery and watch shops. I enter the supermarket and go from aisle to aisle. There are shop assistants everywhere who are ready to help. Because I don’t understand a word and want to buy only a few specific things, I smile shyly and politely and walk away. The adventure begins when I reach the food section. So many things I’ve never seen in my life, so many things I don’t know what they are. I approach to what seems to be a bakery, but in reality it isn’t. It’s the pastry section. There are all sorts of things that look like food, but in reality it’s pastry. (Photos in a later post). Walking through the fruit section makes me wish I had a pictionary with me. Besides apples and pears and a few other fruit, I see many I haven’t seen before. Fish is alive and in water tanks. Flour and many other things are not packaged, but in small mountains heaped up and you can use a shovel to bag as much as you need. I discover some fridges with drinks, but a closer look reveals that they are not plugged in and the drinks are warm. 
Wherever I go, people stare and smile at me. I smile back and greet when greeted. I can hear some mobile phones clicking. People take photos. 
I retrace my steps and find my house. A few moments later my principal knocks on the door to pick me up and drive me to the school. He wants to give me a tour of the building and show me where everything is and most important the way to the school. The school is not even ten minutes walk away, which is quite handy. 
There’s a gate we have to go through. There are security guards at the gate, because many pupils live on campus and the buildings are 24h open. Each member of staff has a staff card with which the gate can be opened. There are two doors to go through. Next to it the pedestrian gate is the gate for cars, mopeds and bicycles. In front of us is one of the two courtyards. The school is four storey high and quite a labyrinth. There are corridors, teachers rooms, class rooms, offices, loos, labs, etc. I notice that there are no numbers on the doors of the rooms. But it says what class and grade is inside the room. That doesn’t help much. There’s no real system in it. Primary is more or less gathered in one building, but middle and high school are spread over in the rest of the buildings and floors. They are not even in ascending or descending order. I guess it will take a while until I learn where everything is. The pupils dorm is on the top floor and only the kids have access to it and I guess the cleaners will have keys too. No teachers or parents are allowed up there. The library is located in a separate building but it is being refurbished at the moment. There is a sports field, an auditorium and a sports hall. 
The tour ends after an hour and we leave the premisses and walk back towards home. We actually go to the KFC at the shopping centre where we meet the Chinese guy from yesterday who came to pick me up at the airport and some other colleagues. We’re going to get SIMs for our phones. 
This is where the tricky part is. China has some ridiculous laws and it doesn’t allow foreigners many things, even though they have a legal working and residence status. That’s why we need a Chinese. The other reason we need a Chinese is, because nobody here speaks foreign languages and they even have difficulties understanding sign language. Thanks to our office clerk whose one of the jobs is to help the foreign staff, we get our SIMs on his name. Because he’s allowed up to four SIMs, we have to go to different service providers. But not everything runs smoothly. I don’t get 4G on my phone, but only a crappy E. The SIMs don’t work on the phones of some colleagues, so we have to try various providers. It’s due to either locked phones or different frequencies. After several hours we all manage to get a SIM on a semi-contract basis. That is something between a contract and a pay as you go. You choose a plan and have to top up every month for a year. After twelve months your plan expires and you are free to choose a new plan. If you leave the country before the end of the period, you’ll have to pay for the remaining months. It’s good packages for little money. Mine is ten Pounds Sterling and I get 750 MB of data and 400 minutes to all networks. The first three months I get an additional 1gb of data.

We are driven home and I spend the rest of the evening with my housemate. Tomorrow won’t be my first day at school, because I have to go for a medical examination in order to get my resident permit. 


 Welcome to Guiyang Concord College of Sino-Canada


                     Flags (Canadian, Chinese, School)

    Bike shelter

   E-Scooter parking with power station

   One of the two restaurants
 
    Gate (seen from the courtyard)

    Path toward the building I teach and my office

   The various buildings connected with bridges




    second courtyard


    Hall and wall of fame

    English department staff. Left the in the centre the Chinese principal and around her the most experienced Chinese staff. Right in the centre the Canadian principal and around him the most experienced foreign staff. I'm in the top right corner.


    Administration office

   Auditorium

    First courtyard with restaurant on the right and entrance gate at the back

   Primary school wing

   Primary school class room


                      Sign.



    Primary school artwork

    Tower Bridge


    One of my two class rooms



                      Some deep thoughts on the way up.
 
    Sports field

   Library

    Sports hall

    Our office




    School at night

If you would like to read more by me, here are my novel and my diary from Ar'ar, in the northern Saudi desert. Both available on Amazon as soft and hard copy. 



Thursday, 19 November 2015

First night in Guiyang

After having gone to the belts to collect my luggage, I walk out and have to pass passport control and my luggage gets scanned once again. There one member of staff has a sort look at my Greek passport and says in very broken English: You country close banks. hihihi.. Jeez! News have reached the edge of the world. Then I walk through customs and out of the hall. On the other side I look out for someone with a paper and my name on it, but I can’t see my name anywhere, only names of other people, companies and hotels. Then I hear someone call my name. I turn and see a Chinese wave at me, repeating my name. I approach him and he introduces himself and says that the school has sent him to collect me. We walk a few yards and the school’s principal appears. A short 30 year old Canadian, who welcomes me warm heartedly. Then we walk to the car park where the driver with one of the school’s vans awaits us. It is late afternoon, it is warm and still light. The trip to the accommodation is very beautiful. We pass some hills, some bridges, areas of green, etc. Half an hour later we arrive and the driver drives into the underground car park of a housing complex. We drive a bit through the car park to find the entrance of my building and then go up to the fourth floor, which in reality is the third floor. There’s no ground floor in China. What is ground floor for us, is the first floor for the Chinese. I share a flat, spread over two floors, with a young Canadian colleague. Our flat consists of a kitchen, a small bedroom, a large living room and a balcony on the downstairs floor, and two bedrooms, a bathroom and a study on the upper floor. Quite spacious and there is a massive window in the living room. 
The young Canadian colleague and I get introduced, I get a tour around the flat, leave my luggage in my room and we leave to dinner and shopping. There are various eating places within walking distance and a large supermarket, that offers clothing and housing appliances. 
My first ever meal in China is in a restaurant called Country Style Cooking. It’s a Chinese fast food place What you get is neither burgers nor chips, but rice with meat and veggies and some western dishes like steak. A meal including a (free refill) drink and small cabbage salad, is about two pounds sterling. I heard stories from various people who claimed that they had meals for a USD, but couldn’t quite believe it. Well, that was many years ago, but things haven’t changed that much since. 
Despite LFO singing in  the song Summer Girls ‘Chinese food makes me sick’, my first ever meal in China is delicious and spicy. And it is completely different from the Chinese food we know from home. This here is real and local. It’s not adjusted to the western taste and palate. It’s genuine. LFO have perhaps never tried real Chinese food.
Then we pay the supermarket a visit and I’m astonished by the variety of food. Most of it I have no clue what it is. Unlike Saudi where every product has an Arabic and an English side, here it’s all in Chinese. No matter how you turn a product around, it’s still in Chinese and you still don’t know what it is. I can’t even say ‘it’s all Greek to me’, because I know Greek. 
When we are about to exit the shopping centre, we see that it’s raining heavily. So we go to KFC and sit around for a while hoping for the rain to stop. Half an hour later it’s still raining cats and dogs, so we decide to return to the shop and buy some umbrellas. Instead of umbrellas, we find raincoats. Cheap in price and quality, but enough to get us home. Well, not really. We still get wet. 
I have exactly half an hour to shower and get ready, then my principal knocks on the door and we’re good to go. Where? To somebody’s birthday party downtown. But first my housemate needs to withdraw money, so we cross some streets and reach the China Construction bank. There I am told again that my foreign cards are useless in this country. 
Then we flag down a taxi and get in. The driver doesn’t really know where we want to go, so we try various map apps and show him the street we want to go and give him directions. After a half an hour trip we arrive in the centre and start looking for the street and once we find it, we start looking for the bar. After asking several people, we still don’t know where it is. So we ask the driver to stop and get out. We look a bit around and discover the bar ‘Obsession’ directly opposite us. It is hard to find, because it is an underground bar and the entrance is between two other locations. Plus, the sign is hidden by some branches. We go down the stairs and meet a dozen or so westerners. It’s a girl’s birthday. There a people from various countries, like Italy, Ukraine, Algeria, Germany, Argentina, France, the UK, etc. My housemate and I go to the bar and read the drinks menu. I discover some beers from Munich. We order some Erdinger Weissbier and then my housemate sees a few bottles of Jägermeister on the shelf opposite. We order some and it comes in two glasses made of ice. I suddenly feel set back in the Ice Hotel in Jukkasjärvi in the north of Sweden, in the polar circle. The Ice Hotel is built every winter when the first snow falls and melts away in May. Therefore every year it looks differently from the year before. Besides the various rooms and suites, there is a vodka bar, entirely made of ice and even the glasses are made of ice. 
It is unusual to find cold drinks in China. I have been told and I will later discover, that even the places westerners go to, offer warm drinks.
The glass of Jäger we get is quite large and filled up to the brim. I want to drink it slowly and enjoy it, but my housemate insists on downing it. I do him the favour and order a second one to enjoy in peace. In the meantime a band has appeared on stage and many people hit the dance floor. So do we. There I get to know all westerners one by one and have a good time.
When I go back to my beer I meet two Italians. Perfect! I can practice my language skills! Then my principal has this idea of sitting behind the drums and play a bit.
When all decide to leave and go to a club, my principal raises from behind the drum kit and realises that he’s lost his wallet. While most people leave for two different clubs, the waiters and some of us search the bar for the wallet. A small eternity later, my principal finds it in the cubicle he visited a while ago. It fell off his back pocket and was lying in the dark. 
We finally leave and walk to a club called Muse 2. There’s also a Muse 1, somewhere in the centre. When we walk in, I am immediately taken by the beats, the people and the whole atmosphere. I get an adrenaline rush and a smile from ear to ear. I should feel tired after such a long trip with almost no sleep, but I’m fully awake and full of energy. The club is quite small and it doesn’t have a proper dance floor. People dance everywhere in the club. I suddenly remember what my Chinese students from Hull had told me about Clubs in China. They said that only working people go there and no students like in the western world. Unlike in the UK where many people dance, in China only a few dance. That's what I see here. The club has a small bar with stools around it, many sofas with tables and a few high tables with stools around the bar. There’s a VIP area too. There are two DJ areas opposite to each other. On the one stage is a western DJane and directly opposite her are three Chinese male DJs. The DJane dances and moves wildly to the beats and the DJs speak and sing along the tracks. I can’t resist and start dancing. Some other people dance with me and suddenly a whole crowd has gathered around us. Mobile phones are raised and photos taken. Some Chinese either take photo of me/us dancing or hug us and take selfies. I’m in an extremely good mood, despite the very long trip and not having had a proper sleep for two days. Then some people walk on stage around the DJane and above two sitting areas and take me with them. There we jump up and down to the beats and I can see how the audience is taking photographs of us and point at us with their fingers. 
Later when I need to go to the loo, I ask for the way and I’m told it’s next to the DJ stage directly opposite. Well, as I wasn’t told left or right, I take the left stairs and walk into the kitchen. A waiter signals that it’s the stairs on the right. Quite a traffic in the loo. Women look and smile at me, men just look at me and one says: Welcome to China! The washing area is between the men’s and the women’s and therefore common, and there is personnel who give you paper towels and soap.
On my way back to the stage where the other westerners dance, I pass the VIP area and see tables full of champaign, whiskeys and other liquids. Plus, there’s a waiter filling up the glasses when they are empty. Now I understand why students don’t go out in China. They simply can’t afford it. I look around me and see that the people are very cool and most are business like smartly dressed. Unlike in most western and Middle East countries where smoking is banned, here it is allowed and most people smoke. I’ve forgotten what it’s like to smoke in a club and not outside. As I stroll through the club, a Chinese young man bumps into me, says something in his language, smiles and offers me a cigarette. I learnt from my students that it is rude not to accept it. Even though I don’t smoke, I accept it. He lights it up for me, I take a pull, almost choke, smile and say thank you and give it afterwards to my housemate to finish it. 
We continue to dance wildly and have some more beers and leave the club past 5am. Outside it is still warm and the pavements are now full of street kitchens. Despite the tasteful smell and me not having eaten for many hours, I don’t feel hungry. We hail a taxi and my principal tells the driver where we want to go. Unlike the first one, this one knows more or less where we want to go. Half an hour later we arrive home. My housemate goes straight to bed, but I’m overwhelmed by all this and can’t sleep. I answer a few messages and emails and try then to sleep. It takes a long time until Morpheus pays me a visit.



                                                    My first ever dinner in China.

    Germans will find this one funny. SPD stands for Socialist Party of Germany. In China it's a bank.

   Muse 2.


                                            See? No ground floor. No odd numbers.

   My flat. Hall with living room.

                        Kitchen


    Living room with cheesy Chinese curtain.

                      Tiny bedroom downstairs, used as a storage room.

                     (Kinky) stairway to heaven
                   
                     Landing

                     Bathroom

    With frosted glass doors

   My bedroom. With cheesy Chinese curtain.



    My flatmate's (master) bedroom


                      Study with cheesy Chinese curtains.



If you would like to read more by me, here are my novel and my diary from Ar'ar, in the northern Saudi desert. Both available on Amazon as soft and hard copy.