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[Diary of a Laowai]
by ~Becka~

previous entry: Randy Bush & Haimen Port

next entry: Organisation!

Pictures of Tianjin

08/16/2010

故宫博物馆
Right! Exciting weekend for moi ^^ Not only did I actually manage to get on FB thanks to Blackberry's gorgeous encrypted connection <3 but entry to the Forbidden City was also gained! *impressive* Not that it's really forbidden anymore, the place is swarming with peasants and communists (Emperor Kangxi would die again).

Friday night I ended up taking Connor (the Brit) to the Goubuli restaurant Sabrina took me to a week ago. It's a really good nom, and the Brit seemed to enjoy it, later on we also ended up in the hotel bar, drinking Tequila (that was just me) - twas a good time. Basically it was good to have someone to chat to on my level, well, more on my level than the Chinese

Saturday ended in film time ^^ Sabrina and I went to see Wang Leehom's new film "Love in Disguise" (恋爱通告. Apparently today is Chinese Valentine's Day, which means, by the Lunar Calendar, today is the 7th day of the 7th month. It also means there's a plethora of lovey-dovey films hitting the market. HOWEVER. This one was quite hilarious and the sense of humour was good, a useless side-kick makes for comedy in any language. There's was also quite a bit of English in it because Leehom was playing an international popstar (ho-ho-ho), so they kept shouting English phrases - Impressively, they also said them really naturally, not like most other films where they're trying desperately to look cool and come out with crazy crazy things like "Gler hee mai boyfriend" instead of "This is my boyfriend" <- actually speaking the language really kills your patience for bad expression, I sympathise with the Chinese for my pronunciation

On Sunday I got up really early *dies* to try out this new-fangled Tianjin <-> Beijing train that takes only HALF AN HOUR to travel between the two places :o The Maglev in Shanghai is famed for reaching 268 mph, this one is on wheels and reaches 205 mph *dies* It's way faster than any car journey and is incredibly efficient in its bureacracy (shock for China)~ We then navigated the Beijing metro, which ahs had so much money poured in to it to make it extremely hi-tech that the journey was easy-peesy - after depositing then retrieving the Brit from his hotel, we went to Qianmen, the station that leads straight in to Tiananmen Square. In reality, Tiananmen looks exactly like it does on the tv. Very bare, very exposed, very hot. The only exciting bit was seeing the Hall of the People at the edge of the square and the plinth where the students scrawled their demands to the government before they were declared "Anti-Revolutionary". My camera decided to give out in the morning, so I stole the Brit's Blackberry (once more) to take many photos! All of which are probably better quality than my camera (-_-) and need to be sent to me before I can post them~

After Tiananmen we headed for Mao's face on the front of the Forbidden City 故宫博物馆. The Chinese name literally means: Ancient Palace Museum. Which seems to be a total attempt to wipe the Emperors' authority from the place. The building is huge, the ticket offices are busy as hell and exposed in the hope that a few tourists will give up and go away - the entrance is over 3 bridges and through long arc/tunnels. The ticket office is then in the main entrance which is a GINORMOUS courtyard, the walls are completely bare, except for dark red paint and they tower over you. To add to this there are watch-towers on the top of these walls, which are really cool to look at. The entire image is "You are worthless compared to the Emperor". The city itself also gets quite boring after a while. All buildings are uniform colours and styles. All courtyards are square, all buildings are square, and passageways inbetween deviate drastically by being rectangular. The most exciting point is the throne room. Well, there are 2, but one's bigger than the other and they both have stupid names about heavenly peace and fortitude (you can tell I'm a real spiritualist.). The thrones are really impressive, you can also still see the original detail in the door carvings and the hinges are engraved with miniature dragons. What nearly killed me was how all the tourists were touching EVERYTHING. Kids were clambering over the ledges, one was scraping his way up a wall. The dragons on the thronw room hinges were being mercilessly fondled by thousands of tourists - you know what? This happens every day. I know the communists sacked the place (I'm even more aware that most of the communist leaders took up residence in imperial palaces), why does the fact that they overthrew their Emperor give them the write to destroy a historic site! The palace's vibrant colours are all the work of paint, which gives the place a slightly fake, impermanent feel, but it's made worse by everyone's lack of respect for the effort that'll eventually have to go in to restoring the place. The archaeologist in me dies a thousand deahts at this atrocity.

At least in Britain over-throwing your ruler is considered a sign of a healthy populace.

Anyway, I walked so much I thought my legs were going to fall off. We managed to find a cafe (not in any way because I was moaning I was hungry ) where we completely failed on the ordering front and ended up wih soooo much food -__- I got a really tasty butternut squash (w/ sauce of some animal), tres yummy <3

Today has also been a bit stressful. At lunchtime I went to post various packages. My Chinese is admittedly getting better, so I made myself understood, but the packaging fee was ridiculous *frustration* I have sent heavier packages to China for half the price *fist shake* In traditional Chinese style, they probably saw I was western and added 50% on >_<

ANYWAY! Pictures below, finally~ Some are from my hotel window, tres high up~ Others are of the Hot pot 火锅 I had with Sabrina on Saturday. Tres yummy, tres filling, half of the pot was normal and the other half spicy aswell - we didn't eat much of the spicy one... The little yellow bell hat thing was from the waiter for some reason. He kept chatting to us, sometimes speaking English and telling us about Qingdao, apparently it's faster to walk than get public transport and everyone wanders around in swimming costumes There's ba,boo root, sweet potato and peanuts in the picture.
The bridge is the neon cradle that I think was built for the olympics~



Layouts! | Photobucket


previous entry: Randy Bush & Haimen Port

next entry: Organisation!

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the write??

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Oh. Go die.

[~Becka~|0 likes] [|reply]

those pictures are beautiful.

[*tiffymae*|0 likes] [|reply]

That's what we were trying to ask the lecturers to do. One of them agreed and let his students do that and mine wouldn't let me =S

Bab Al Hara is about the really old times in Syria when The French occupied the country and about the life of the people back then. When they were retarded and kept their women inside the house and how the men were real tough and how they fought the French. It's fun because it's quite comical at the bits where they show their lives at home and their women and their everyday things and then it's all intense and dramatic when they show the rebellions and fights.

[GiggleStar|0 likes] [|reply]

Oh Jeez you're Becka Rachel's friend! There was another stalker Becca on here and I was like Ooh she now leaves comments? lol I've added you to my favs though so I can tell who's who XD

China sounds interesting... I like how they go according to their own calendar and celebrate their own valentine's day and stuff like that. Do they also celebrate Valentine's day on Feb 14th or do they not care what the rest of the world are doing?

You're in China for a year to study right? So are you majoring in Chinese language or what exactly?

Wow you have such a wonderful view! I love heights!
That food looks weird, I'm so new to Chinese food I have no idea what any of those things are =P

[GiggleStar|0 likes] [|reply]

Oh em jee I missed an update! I shall have to read right now!

[SnoodStar|0 likes] [|reply]

Wheeeeey forbidden city, that is tres exciting!! You shoud whack those children with whatever heavy object you have on you for being so disrespectful~

Lol, was your ordering failure a bit like our epic woopsie in London with the Sushi XD Yay pictures!! It all looks so exciting ^_____^

[SnoodStar|0 likes] [|reply]

Sushi whoopsie? Did you end up with enough sushi for 20 Bagels?

I know! But in China children are precious little brats, so anyone laying a finger on them is immediately shot. -__- This is not the right country for me. I demand the right to beat random children!!

[~Becka~|0 likes] [|reply]

awesome pics! they made me hungry! =]

[Cass|0 likes] [|reply]

Huzzah! That is their aim. You have a better stomach than my family, they saw the pictures and made retching noises -__-;

[~Becka~|0 likes] [|reply]

previous entry: Randy Bush & Haimen Port

next entry: Organisation!

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