Thursday, May 29, 2008

A busy week...in which we find chili fries, acquire a lizard and give Thomas a haircut


Here we are at midday on Tuesday -- working hard as you can see, with our friend Gary, the visiting prof from Syracuse anticipating what is rumored to be the best American food in Xiamen, at a new place along the island ring road.

There was plenty of outdoor beach ambiance to the place, including this little guy. We are experiencing what can only be classified as an insect "bloom" here -- overnight the heat and humidity have exploded the insect population and affected our lives..more on that in a minute.

First we must celebrate the arrival at our table of not only real hamburgers not made with preformed patties, actual burritos with sour cream....just when we thought it could not get any better...chili cheese fries. I mean we are talking not just about American food here, but almost Detroit Coney Island chili cheese fries -- except the cheese was too high quality for Coney Island. Above you see the happy sabbatical professor..and below another happy professor while teaching abroad! Could it be the beer with lunch?!?!?!?



If you are ever in Xiamen and need real American cuisine (at real American prices by the way) -- here is the place. I told my classmates about it and they are all psyched..

OK -- now the lizard. With the increased population of our apartment on an insect level (although no cockroaches yet, thank heavens, just ants, mosquitoes and for 2 days dozens of moth pupa crawling around) it stands to reason that a predator might find its way in as well, in the form of the house gecko. He took up residence in the sink one morning and we have taken to him and are allowing him to roam freely, provided he 1) eats bugs 2) stays in the kitchen 3) stays out of the bedrooms 4) does not run across my toes while I do the dishes. Helen has named him Wushu (like the martial art?!?) and although she has been warned that a free roaming gecko is not likely to make a long term commitment to us, she has rushed home from school to see him the past 2 days (oh yes -- he is still here after 2 days -- he sleeps in a quiet corner in the day time and does his roaming at night) and has made him a water cup out of the lid of the toothpaste tube. It think she misses the cats.

This picture is here because this is a very cute child, don't you agree?!?! Still working on the "V" sign, though..we are killing time waiting for Helen's bus, which one of us does with Sophia every day because her school gets to at 4:30 and Helen's bus doesn't arrive until 5. It is Sophia's daily public appearance on campus -- she does get tired of the attention sometimes and declares "Why is that lady LOOKING at me?!"

Finally..the haircut. Over the last week Xiamen has become a very hot, but especially humid place. We have A/C at home and in my classroom (not Michael's or the kids though) which helps. But it is hot and we are all slowing into the tropical rhythm of slowing down in the heat of the day and expecting rain every afternoon. Then Thomas agreed to have haircut...now you know its gotta be hot. We started cutting and just couldn't stop. Here he is at dinner tonight...

And at bedtime with his head a lot lighter! Now you know it must be hot for T. to give up his beloved long hair. Or I guess he decided it was time for a change. By the way he wanted me to wait to post this until he had time to email Uncle Dave and see if his uncle would give him $5 if he got his hair cut.


The blog is celebrating its 10,000th visit this week. Wow! Lots of loyal readers from family and friends and some new "e-friends" too! If you make a comment and want a personal reply -- include your email address if I do not have it. I do not need to post the comments if they contain personal info.

Please continue to hold the people of China and Sichuan province in your thoughts. The death toll form the earthquake, not to mention the injured and homeless, is staggering. And there is some political trouble brewing over the fact that so many of the buildings which collapsed were schools. Some grieving parents have begun protesting quite angrily in the hardest hit areas, contending that officials knew that some schools were unsafe-- a serious allegation which will hopefully be taken seriously and investigated.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hey friends! Thomas is not going to want to hear this, but I think he looks younger with his haircut. Is he going to be 12 in June?! I have my own little long-haired fellow at home. Jonah has declared his intention to let his hair grow to the floor! though recently he did consent to a quick trim :) Thinking of you all and hoping to see you when you are in MI.

Cara

Anonymous said...

Dear Ann and Micheal,
Thank you for not only sharing Xiamen with Gary but also sharing such warth, friendship and happiness.
Sincerely, The Scott's of Scottholm

Mikenjane said...

Dear Ann,

Loved your blog post about Children's Day in China. Thomas looks very handsome with his new hair cut, Sophia looks charming making her "V" sign (for victory??) and has Helen lost a front tooth?

We celebrated Children's Day here in Buffalo with the Western NY Chinese Club. We had planned a Mother's Dance Performance, but it became a kind of requiem for the children lost in the earthquake with the dance performance tacked on at the end. It began with a Power Point slide show of photos of the earthquake; there was not a dry eye in the house. Of course it was also a fund raiser as well. Fortunately, our children didn't seem too traumatized by the photos, but many families took their children out of the room for that part of the program.

If you would like to see our dance,
it is on YouTube under "Xi Xi Shou." (Wash hands.) I don't know if you can open YouTube, but it was fun for everyone.

If you participate in an adult Mandarin class next year, I am definitely there, no question.

I heard from Kate Haq that you will be returning July 14. We're looking forward to welcoming you back to the 'hood. Meanwhile, enjoy your last weeks in China!

Love, Jane, Mike, Ani and Elia