Day 47 in Beijing
Day 46 in Beijing
Today is such a windy cold day. It's quite alright to just sit inside the office where the air conditioning is on and the room is always kept at around 18 celsius degrees. But once you walk out of the building, OMG, the wind is so strong and cold that it can almost cut open my skin and give me the worst chilll down the spine. Eeek!
Tonight I had dinner with a colleague of mine at the Jiamao Shopping Centre, the huge shopping centre outside of the Xizhimen train station exit. I've been there once last week for Jordan Chong's birthday dinner (the scary turtles...) and I was really excited to see Honeymoon, the famous HK dessert shop chain inside Jiamao. So today, I've asked to go there for dinner and enjoy some real nice dessert =)
We had dinner at Chamate, 一茶一坐. This is a chain restaurant started in 2001 from Shanghai and it focuses on expanding the Chinese tea culture. There is more than 80 outlets now around the country and it's a very famous, casual, light and easy restaurant that focuses on providing the most natural ingredients and flavours to their customers. I remember Dianna told me once that she really likes Chamate, and today I finally understand why.
The prices in Chamate is about average high, a full meal can be between 25-50RMB per person. The food in Chamate is rather healthy (compared to a lot of other restaurants) given that most of the dishes are boiled or steamed, and more vegies than meat. Maybe it was already too late by the time we sat down at the restaurant (and that the restaurant is still FULL of customers) my top two choices were all sold out. Eventually I fixed on ordering a pot of vegies and mushrooms. It's quite Japanese style with sweet soup, boiled vegies, slices of meat, and lots of mushrooms. I really like it~ but I hate it how my camera lost all the photos!! RA!!!
Honeymoon is on the top of my recommendations list. It's soooo good! I ordered the same dessert: fresh mango with sago and sweet glutinous black rice. It's so good, it's a perfect combination of all the ingredients, refreshing, the right degrees of sweetness, a little chill, a little soft, mmmmm so good. Anyone who visits China or Hong Kong must try Honeymoon dessert!!
Day 45 in Beijing
Tonight, according to aunty, is the welcome meal for my mum. Tonight we're going out for dinner to welcome my mum in China for the first time in 13 years. Chengxiang is probably aunty and mum's favourite place. I started referring them as The Mums, it's just so much easier to talk about them between Anson and me when I say 'the mums'.
We arrived at the Jinyuan Shopping Centre near Renmin University after hauling through the typical peak hour Beijing traffic, finding our way through the swamp of people and cars, our ears bombared by the amount of car honks and noises. Sigh. Beijing traffic.
Jinyuan Shopping Centre is seriously WAY TOO BIG! Mum, Jordan and I arrived at the top level of the shopping centre (where all the restaurants are) before aunty and Anson. As soon as we arrived at the top level, mum suddenly turned to us and said, "wait here, I'll go buy something". LOL! Mum is so excited to come to this shopping centre. Apparently, aunty have already taken mum here for a massive shopping day and mum knows this place really well. Just a few minutes later, mum came back with a dissappointment on her face and said, 'ah, it's all sold out'. I asked what she was looking for and she told me it was type of handmade pancake that aunty and her really likes and they promised each other that they will come back here and try it again. The pankcakes are too good that it was sold out by evening. Just as we speak, aunty and Anson arrived next to us and hoho, aunty was definitely dissappointed too that the pancakes were sold out. So, instead of pancakes, aunty said she'll buy some Tianjin steam buns for us.
Jordan and I were speechless when we heard 'Tianjin buns'. Oh god, the memories from Tianjin, the cold air, the lack of people, the lack of food, and the disgusting buns we had in Tianjin, oh my god! But, OH MY GOD!!!! This Tianjin buns that aunty and mum bought for us was SOOOOOO AMAZING~ It was the meat buns that we liked, and it was juicy, tender, just the right flavour, and just the right size! One bun for one mouthful, and once you bite into it, you feel the tender meat and juice fills up your mouth, mmmmm, the taste lingers between the teeth even after you swallowed the bun. It's SOOOO GOOD!!!!
We were so satisfied while the mums take us around and find a restaurant that they wanna go for. Eventually, the mums decided on a restaurant of Dalian seafood style. Aunty is from Dalian and she said that the best seafood will be in Dalian, not Beijing, but this restaurant will do for now. The restaurant sells very traditional northern China food, seafood selections are quite ok given that it is deep winter now around the country. What we like the most is also the handmade dumplings on the menu, mmmmm, some REAL Chinese food!
Our table was full of dishes within half an hour and we were so high and satisfied. To my greatest dissappointment, I realised all the photos I took of the food and of the night were all gone because there were something wrong with my SD card in my camera. This is so sad!!! I lost so many photos and it's unbelievable!
What I can do to retrieve the photos? Anyone?? >_<
Day 44 in Beijing
We're gonna go out for dinner tonight to celebrate Jordan's birthday, finally you're coming out our side of the 'world', the real world, the no-longer-a-kid side of the world, hehe. The plan is to meet at Xizhimen at 7pm and find the restaurant. This is a complete nightmare, what I mean is to find few people in the huge Beijing city is just insane. We plan to meet at the subway station but due to the poor reception underground, the miscommunication between different people and the misinterpretation of the meeting place, we ended up wondering around just trying to find people. Anson, Jordan and I met up first and then our mission began with trying to find Josi and Gerard. Sigh..... Don't even wanna remind myself of the horrible experience of finding people in Beijing subway stations, just wanna say, OMG, Beijing is too huge!
Finally we met up with Jordan Chong at the restaurant, Fucheng (the logo looks kinda like a swear word though, hoho), a hot pot restaurant. To our surprise, there's such a huge group for Jordan's dinner, a lot of them which we don't know of, and most of them are AIESECers. It was impossible to fit all the people on one table, which the largest one is for a table of 12 people. We managed to fit 16 people onto the 12-people table and 6 people had to move to a smaller table. Getting through introduction and ordering the menu were a big challenge, soon Karina and I gave up in trying to get people order so we just took over the lead, wakaka, we will make the order! Karina recommended to get a pot with two shared flavours, one for spicy and one for curry, this suit everyone right?? Thanks to Karina for the great recommendation, I actually really liked the curry flavour hot pot.
We didn't finish and leave restaurant until after 10pm and we are one of the last people there. Something about the shopping centre that I must mention though: the carton figure respresentative of the shopping centre and the theme. The theme of the shopping centre is underwater sea world, which is quite ok. But the thing is, the biggest issue, the biggest problem, the most revolting thing is the sculptures they have inside the shopping centre. On the top of every elevator, there are two turtle-looking-thing. Well, in fact, they are turtles I'm sure, but the thing is they're turtles with hair! The turtles are wearing wigs!!!! How abnormal and insane was this?! Everytime we saw the turtles, we just couldn't stop wondering, 'WHY ON EARTH would any designer do this'? Then we tried taking off the wig, man, the turtles look even worse!!! >_<
Day 43 in Beijing
We (Anson's mum, Anson and me) all thought mum would be pretty tired from the flight and didn't expect her to get up till lunch. But seriously, mum is just so excited and energetic, my god, she starting talking to me and trying to wake me up since like 8am. Eventually she abandoned me in the room and went out to talk to aunty for the whole morning. Anson and I are still pretty much dead asleep when they are already preparing breakfast. My god.
Breakfast was awesome! Exactly what I love! Milk and steam buns~! Wakaka, so good~! The steam buns are without any fillings, just a bun, and it was made by a company that's really famous in Beijing, a lot of families will line up for it (according to aunty's experience). Aunty knows that my mum loves buns so she went and got these for mum. So nice ~
Today aunty will take us to one of her favourite shopping centres and we'll have lunch there. The shopping centre is called Chengxiang, outside of the Gongzhufen subway station. It's one of the bigger ones in Beijing selling all sorts of products and you can spend the whole day there without getting bored. Aunty and mum picked a Sichuan style restaurant inside Chengxiang and it was so funny that Anson and I got really worried about our rice not coming again. Yesterday's experience really gave us a bad impact huh? How can rice be difficult to get in China? Must be because of our duck fight yesterday with the managers that made our rice order extremely hard >_<
After lunch it'll be my responsibility in taking mum around the shopping centres while aunty and Anson go visit Anson's granddad. I kept on telling mum all these little tips about living in Beijing but I bet she didn't even pay attention to me because she's so focused on shopping.I had to constantly remind her to watch out for cars, not to buy street food, and the most important thing, must bargain when she wants to buy something! I made a good example for mum I think =P We saw this pair of pants on sale for 180RMB and to be honest, it was already a fairly good price for NZ standard. However, I kept mum away from talking to the lady directly so she doesn't express interest, and then I demonstrated my bargaining skills. Eventually after some chit-chat, and walking away etc, we finally got the pair of pants for 120RMB. It's formal wear, black long pants for 120RMB, we all think it's really good =)
Eventually we went home with loads of shopping bag and food. Mum's favourite food was actually corns! I can't believe this. This is something she said she really miss about China, the Chinese corns. Why do I call it the Chinese corns? eeek, it's actually very different to the corns we have in NZ. I don't remember the Chinese corns at all, but I love the NZ ones, sweet and juicy, bright yellow corn, I love it. But the Chinese one is very light coloured with less moist but more starch texture, not sweet at all, but just very chewy. Mum really love this type of corn, she said it's more chewy, have more texture while eating it and won't get sick of the sweetness like the ones in NZ. Eek.
Day 42 in Beijing
Chrissy came to Beijing a few days ago, to spend Christmas with her family here in Beijing and today we're going to meet up for lunch before she leaves tomorrow. Chrissy is such a bubbly girl, it makes me really really happy to just see her. I call today 'The Kiwi Day'. Just look at the people that came to lunch (from left): Josi, Kayne, Chrissy, Gerard, Jordan Chong, Karina, Jordan Wang, Anson and me. All kiwis!!! All from AIESEC New Zealand, spending a fantastic 'summer' here in China, and now all sitting together for traditional Beijing roast duck in Beijing!!! What a small world?!!!!
Day 41 in Beijing
Day 40 in Beijing
Today I made a special trip to Changping 昌平 with Gerard. Gerard's workplace is in Changping, in a school called Sun Village. He needs some help with translation at work and to prepare for the Christmas Party Sun Village, so I took the day off and went with him. Gerard always asked all of us to go to Changping one day for a visit. From what he described, Changping is very rural and really not fun at all. It's a place that he wouldn't go unless required, lol, we always make jokes around this topic.
Changping is located at the 30kms north west of Beijing and is at the south side of the Great Wall. This is a city with very long history and very protected for its resources endownments and ancient history. If anyone wants to go to Badaling part of the Great Wall, you will definitely pass Changping, and therefore it's also a town for tourism.
We took the the subway to Jishuitan and caught the express bus 919 to Changping. The total journey lasted about 1 and a half hour. Poor Gerard >_<>
We were going to go to the Christmas Party held by the AIESEC MC team in their flat. But eventually due to logistic reasons we decided not to attend. It's pity that we couldn't attend but we made sure us four still stay together for the festival. Gerard and I met up with Josi then eventually meeting Jordan at The Palace. The Palace is a high class shopping centre in Chaoyang and is famous for the massive screen up in the air. We were hoping to see the undersea animals showing up in the screen, but it's Christmas, of course there will be Christmas related things instead. It's such a cold night tonight, but there are still a lot of people around in town, especially young people. It's just too cold though, for us to stay out for long so let's just go home for a warmer night =P
(LOL at Gerard and Jordan trying to pose like penguins!! hehe)
Day 39 in Beijing
Bodyguards and Assassins is a movie about an assassination in Hong Kong on the 15th October 1906. On this day, a group of bodyguards made up of revolutioners, businessmen, begger, cart driver, student, gambler, circus owner etc, were trying to protect Sun Zhong Shan (孙中山). The businessman hosting Sun Zhongshan (who's coming to HK for a planning meeting for the upcoming revolution against the Qing Dynasty of China) found out that the Qing officials has sent a group of assassins to kill Sun and therefore the businessman gathered a group of individuals and combined their unique skills to protect Sun in Hong Kong.
The characters in this movie are mostly made up for the storyline but everyone one of them have a very interesting and unique background. Each individual have their own reasonings behind why they agreed to join this dangerous plan.
Firstly there's Shaobai Chen 陈少白(actor, 梁家辉Tony Leung). He's the planner and initiator of Sun's visit to Hong Kong, a revolutionist. He is willing to sacrifice everything for the upcoming revolution because the only way out to make a better life for everyone in China is to take down the emperor and his dictatorship, and to do so there must be a revolution. He always borrown money from Yutang Li (a businessman) as the funds for the revolution and is also the teachr of Li's son, Chongguang Li. I learned from this character how one can suffer from guilt and the lack of ability to choose even from doing something he believes in, when he had choose between protecting his student/close friend's only son, or letting this young revolutionist contribute to the plan. This is one of the two only remaining bodyguards left behind at the end of the day, it leaves a trail of thoughts for me.
Then there's Yutang Li 李玉堂(actor Xuexi Wang王学圻), the financial backbone of for the revolution taking place in Hong Kong. He's the owner of a large business Hong Kong, very well known and every businessman or politicians in Hong Kong all gives very high respect. Li supports Chen's plans and actions for many years with an intial intention of keeping Hong Kong peaceful so he can grow his business. When he realised that his only son was taking part in the revolution he tried every effort to keep his son away from the 'danger'. But with Chen being kidnapped by the Qing assassins and the instabilities within Hong Kong, he was slowly dragged into the whirl pool mess of the plan and eventually became the leader of the bodyguards group. From Li, I saw the pride of being someone who believes in the country and belives in a brighter future. No matter how he tried to stay away from dangers, when he realised that he can in fact make a difference he took the lead undoubtedly and bravely, stay calm and did everything to make the plan happen. This pride of leading the group, giving them the mental support and guidance, staying calm in all kind of situations and the fatherhood love he gives to his son are what attracts me to this charater the most. 

Another fighter in the bodyguards was the begger, Yubai Liu刘郁白 (actor Leon Lai黎明). He was a rich and handsome young man with unique martial art skills inherited from his family (using a super heavy metal made fan as his weapon), but he fell in love with his father's woman (actress Michelle Lee李嘉欣) and ended up witnessing the death of his father and his lover. He was struck really hard by their deaths and became a drug addict and eventually a begger. He joined the bodyguard gang because of the support Li (the businessman) has been giving him since before the collapse of his family and now he's paying back his loyalty to Li. All the audiences in the cinema was really surprised to find out that the scruffy looking begger was Leon Lai (one of the most famous artist from Hong Kong). Thank god his appearance was changed later in the movie and was showing a very artistic martial art performance (Leon does not know kong fu). 




Now finally comes the bad guy. There were 10 bodyguards against 500 assassins, but only the leader of the assassins were really the main character and the strongest fighter in the movie. The leader of the assassins, Xiaoguo Yan 阎孝国was by actor Jun Hu胡军, one of the top actors from Mainland China. Yan used to be the best student of Chen and was being raised up under the western education system. He became very much against westerners because of what they did to China and joined the Qing Dynasty troops. He believes that the revoulion led by Sun will never succeed and when he found out that Sun is coming to Hong Kong, he took on the role and led the assassins to kill Sun. Hu Jun is not a martial artist but he was trained for a long time for this movie and his role. He's definitely one of my favourite actors now, his professionalism and performance were amazing. No matter how bad and scary he was in killing so many bodyguards, but if we think from another point of view, he's really just doing his job and sacrificing himself for his loyalty to what he believes in. His only aim was to kill Sun, which he believed that Sun is inside the cart (by that was Li Junior inside the cart as a cover). Yan followed the cart and killed everyone that came into his way, after stabbing the person in the cart to death, he got shot from the back by Chen, his own teacher. He turned around and said nothing but 'I've completed what I must do'. A lot of audiences hate this role because he's the 'bad guy' and killed a lot of the 'good guys', but I like this character, for his passion and his loyalty. Day 38 in Beijing

The movie left a lot of thoughts with me. This movie is mostly about the tough times people have to go through when you just arrived in a new and foreign country. Although in this movie, Jackie Chan initially was staying in Japan illegally (without visas and passport), but the type and amount of work he must do everyday to just get a bare enough living cost was really shocking.
Sometimes we are forced to do certain things just to stay alive and sometimes we are just forced by external environments. Eventually when Jackie Chan successfully obtained a passport and PR in Japan, he immediately dropped out from everything that he was doing and left with his pride. This the beauty of human, pride. He started to have a really good life, but how long can he have that for?
Another beauty of the human race, friendship and relationship, these two are often the reasons behind a lot of our actions. He eventually went back to his old group of friends thinking he may have a little influence and bring them back onto the right track. This is really touching. He's really going out of his way, letting go what he already achieved, and going back to the past to try and save his friends. Then comes the dirty side of human, how much does friendship weigh? Is it really that precious? Maybe yes for some people, but for others, it can be an obstacle and rubbish.
That led to the end of the movie, everyone died, the good guy and the bad guys. What's left behind? I was left behind, sitting on the couch, thinking about this story, about how little and how weak humans are. An interesting movie leaves behind a trail of thoughts and imagination. What if? What if I'm in the position of Jackie Chan?