Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Sorry for Disappearing ... my JOB has been crazy!



For the two of you following my blog closely (I love you both!), my last entry was a bit of a cliffhanger...! Here's the recap: I was getting ready for a teaching demo at one of the biggest English teaching schools in China, and I wanted the job badly. I had been to the school several times already to sit-in on classes and talk to the Director of Studies, so I couldn't help but feel invested in the school already. I even paid for and finished a teaching certificate program to show them how serious I was.

So the day of the demo class came... and it went AWESOMELY! I was offered the job at the end of the interview, and I started training immediately. We opened a new branch of the school March 1st, so there was a lot of extra work to be done. I was enlisted to help right away, and I basically volunteered for a couple of weeks at the school while my paperwork was being drawn up. I signed my contract at the end of February and officially started March 2nd! I'm still in the process of getting a work visa (I'm currently on a tourist visa), which can be a big hassle, but I'm keeping my fingers crossed that it will all work out. In the meantime, I can work and be paid, which is key. It has been CRAZY busy, but a lot of fun! I'll update more later, but in the meantime, here's a picture from my "teacher's photo shoot."

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

And the Job Search Goes On....


What a week! Beijing has come back to life and the endless fireworks have been replaced with the inumerable Beijing residents returning from their hometowns. The job search is once again in full swing for Liz and I both, and it's been surprisingly busy. I've been having a good time in Beijing, but make no mistake, I've been busy looking for a job as well. This week, I'm creating and editing English reading comprehension exercises for a publishing company that puts out English language testing materials. This is in a trial phase, so I'm not being paid yet. I'm also privately tutoring a high school kid as he prepares for the TOEFL. This was arranged by a friend as a mutually beneficial situation as I can familiarize myself with the TOEFL and he gets English tutoring; unfortunately, this means I'm not being paid yet. Thankfully, I'm also privately tutoring a lawyer who is looking to interview at multi-national companies and needs help with his English interviewing skills - this one pays....somewhat.

Most promising on the long-term job front is my interview process at New Oriental, a major English teaching company in China. I've had some informal interviews, gone to their orientation session, and sat in on classes taught at the center. My ex-roommate from 2006 works at the company, and his boss likes me a lot, which gives me all the advantages in the world. The most crucial part of the interview comes tomorrow - I have to teach a one hour demo class on any subject I like. I've also been getting an online TEFL (Teaching English as a Foreign Language) certificate, and she's expecting me to show what I've learned in this demo. The online courses have been time-consuming, but useful. Still, they certainly aren't the same as an in-person certificate program. I've tutored privately, I've mentored, I've led presentations, and I've facilitated groups, but I don't think I've put all those skills together to teach an actual class. The ability to pull those skills together will be put to the test tomorrow, so wish me luck!

On a more fun note, I've now seen the Bird's Nest and Water Cube in the Beijing Olympic Park. It's funny, but somehow I always had the impression the 2 structures were far away from each other. They're actually right across the street from each other! A panoramic photo I took proves that point (see above). They're quite inspiring!

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Happy 牛 (niu) Year

The Chinese New Year in Beijing = absolute crazy mayhem and celebration! It's insanity! (that's for you, Megan!). I woke up on Jan 25th, Chinese New Years eve, to the sound of fireworks going off in our courtyard, which didn't stop all day long. The traditional purpose of Chinese fireworks is to scare off evil spirits with loud noises before the coming New Year, which means instead of spectacular displays of light, there were spectacular displays of sound all day, and THEN spectacular displays of light at night.

For a couple of days, there wasn't a whole lot going on because this is mainly a family holiday and much of the city is shut down, so Liz and I had our own feast of Mac & Cheese and jiaozi (dumplings) at our apt and watched a bit of the Spring Festival Gala on TV. At about 11pm, Seth came over and we went outside to a major intersection to watch the fireworks exploding all around us. I almost walked into fireworks being set off a couple of times in the middle of the street, only to be pulled back in time by Seth (thanks!). We saw all these large-scale, professional fireworks displays all around us, and I was puzzled at first because I couldn't figure out if companies or hotels were arranging these displays, only to get up close and realize that half the time, a 12 year old kid was setting them off! It was non-stop fireworks mayhem in every direction you looked!



Almost equally as amazing is how quickly the streets got cleaned up! By the time I got back to my apartment at 1am, this is what was piled up just in front of my building - the pile was taller than I am!




The Chinese New Years holiday lasted about a week, and though I was a little sick for most of it, I tried to do something fun every day. For example, Liz and I went ice skating on Beijing University's lake one day, and we went to a 庙会 (a temple fair) on another. Temple fairs are a famous part of the celebrations held over this week of holidays that are strangely remniscent of the NC State Fair - only with 串 instead of funnel cakes. There were performances, vendors selling all sorts of Ox themed paraphenalia to celebrate the Ox year, food stands, and excited crowds... a lot of fun! (see facebook for more pictures)

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Drinking Obamas


9 pm on January 20th - after a long day and freezing temperatures, did we brave the cold weather and a crowded, smoky bar to see Obama's Inauguration? Hell yeah! Wouldn't have missed it for the world! Liz (my roommate), Seth, Carl, and I taxi-ed over to The Rickshaw in Sanlitun to watch the presidential inauguration on their flat-screen TVs broadcasting CNN (I miss CNN!). We couldn't hear a thing for the first 3 hours since the bar was full of people from all over chatting about Obama and American politics. It was fun hearing Americans explain everything that had happened during the election and describe Obama's cabinet appointees to their British and Chinese buddies. There was definitely a palpable sense of pride in being American all around us that night.

So we had a couple of drinks (of course, one of the drink specials was named The Obama, and of course, we all ordered one) and the bar finally quieted down to complete silence as we watched Obama take the presidential oath and make his inaugural speech. I think many Americans are now holding their heads a bit higher after that night. 2009 is turning out to be a new start in so many ways!

Thursday, January 15, 2009

The Neighborhood View


Whoa. I'm in Beijing. I'm living in Beijing. This is my new reality. This is what I've been wanting to do for a long time - probably a couple of years now - and I've finally transformed my aspirations into actuality. It hasn't been easy, and my first week here was especially overwhelming. I went apartment hunting 4 days in a row, met up with 8 friends, started job hunting, signed an apartment contract, joined a gym, and went on a date all within the first week and a half. phew! The good news is that now, after 2 weeks, what was once so new and different is already becoming familiar - it's amazing how quickly people adapt to new situations.

Even though I'm still pretty stressed about job hunting, and I only understand half of what's said around me, I can already tell that coming to China was the right decision. It's an everyday challenge just to navigate my way around here every day, and though it comes with some stress, I like that challenge. I didn't realize just how comfortable....actually, complacent, I was with my life in Chapel Hill. I felt in control of every aspect of my life there, yet somehow felt lost. Here, I'm forced left and right to give up on my perfectionist tendencies and the necessity to know exactly what's going on around me (sign this 1 year apartment contract that I can't read at all? sure!), and I feel great! Who knew?

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

The Wang Family Reunion


Hi everyone! So in the spirit of trying new things out, like moving halfway around the world, I've also decided to give blogging a try so that I can chronicle my experiences and thoughts as I begin a life in Beijing. Why did I decide to move to China for a period of time? Well, there are many reasons that most of you have heard at some point, but I often forget to acknowledge the most basic, underlying reason - my family and the appreciation of my Chinese heritage, language, and culture that comes from them.

This trip to China first started with a Wang family reunion in Anhui province, composed of just my paternal grandfather, his children (my dad and his siblings), and their families. You'd think it'd be easier to get us all together, but with my Uncle Qingbo and his family in China, my family in America, and my Aunt Ruiping and her family in Japan, we haven't all gotten together in over a decade. This reunion was especially cool because my cousins are both 19 years old, and this time we talked pretty frankly and in depth about our very different lives. At night, when there wasn't much to do, I thought a lot about how my life would've been if my family had never immigrated to the West and I had grown up in Anhui.

I did get to spend time out of my head though, and there was lots of celebrating, good food, banquet rooms, toasting my relatives with tiny cups of 白酒,relatives once, twice, and three times removed, and conversation (much of which was heavily accented to the point where I just nodded my head and tried to go with the flow). All in all, it was a good time, but more importantly, hearing my parents talk about the hopes and dreams they had when they grew up in China and how far they've come since then was the perfect way to mark the start of my own independent life in China and the hopes and dreams I'm (hopefully) on my way to fulfilling.