The Best of 2013 While Searching for the End of the Sidewalk

As the final days of 2013 are winding down and everyone is gearing up for 2014, it is time once again to look back over the last year and consider how awesome the majority of the year was. (Of course, there were some frustrating times, most recently revolving around future job possibilities, but those are more than overshadowed by the fantastic adventures the year offered up on a silver platter.)

Following in the footsteps of my 2012 year in review blog, here is the best of In Search of the End of the Sidewalk- 2013.

Best Books of 2013

Looking back over last year’s wrap-up entry, it looks like I ended 2012 having read ninety-four books. I beat that by seven, tagging out of the literary ring at 101 this year! With so many great (and not so great) books on my list over the last twelve months, this one got its very own post this year, so click here to link to the best (and worst!) of my 2013 reading list.

Best Outings* of 2013

(*in no particular order)

1- The Maldives- This is my new favorite place on Earth! It was so beautiful and relaxing with the clear blue skies and brilliant blue waters. I learned to snorkel, which was amazing (and terrifying for a non-swimmer like myself) and officially had a sunburn within four hours of touching down, but I’d go back in a heartbeat!

2- Italy/Greece- Happy 15th anniversary! To celebrate fifteen years of marriage, we flew to Europe – our first taste of the Old World. And taste we did! I’m pretty sure I ate enough pasta and gelato to tide me over until we get a EUR posting with Foreign Service. (Fingers crossed?)  Plus, we (meaning Thad) drove a restored Fiat 500, we climbed to the top of the Leaning Tower of Pisa and we hung out with the fashionably dressed Vatican guards. Not a bad way to spend a few weeks in the fall!

3- Taiwan- I’ve always heard that Taiwan is everything great about China, without the less desirable aspects. I didn’t really understand the whole “China-lite” cliché until spending a long weekend with great friends who are posted there. Not only did I do some major bookstore shopping (I miss good bookstores!) and ate a ridiculous number of strangely shaped waffles, but we got to bike around the city and enjoy a relaxing weekend with some of our favorite Foreign Service folks.

4- Idaho/Yellowstone- Two weeks in Idaho flew by last spring. It is always great to see a blue sky again, but even better to catch up in person (although Skype and Facetime really are terrific!) with friends and family. I shopped and I ate, but mostly I hung out with the people who mean the most to me.

5- Bamboo Sea- As a part of my ongoing CLO Outing adventures, I took about twenty people on an overnight trip to Bamboo Sea, a beautiful forest filled with millions of bamboo trees. After risking my life on a terrifying cable car, we rowed across a peaceful lake and enjoyed meal after meal of bamboo cooked in every style imaginable. This was a great trip out of the city, even with a few hiccups along the way.

Best Moments* of 2013

(*again, in no particular order)

1- Hosting friends from home during November. We were lucky to have Justin and Josh join us for several weeks this fall, making Chengdu their home away from home. We all attended the Marine Ball together, they traveled with Thad to Malaysia and Singapore (I had to work in Shanghai that week) and we ate lots of great Sichuan food. It’s always nice to have folks from home make the 24(+) hour trip to China to visit and we are always happy to host.

2- Receiving Thad’s new assignment, via email, while we were in Taiwan with friends. I must admit to a bit of shock, as I didn’t remember even listing Kuala Lumpur on our (his!) bid list, but after a bit of research, it appears that we did and we are thrilled! (I can’t wait for sunshine and warm, year round. This girl was meant to live on the equator!)

3- Volunteering at the BiFeng Panda Base was amazing, mostly because I got to touch a panda and I’m pretty obsessed with touching all the animals, all of the time. (Okay, technically, touching a panda was against the rules, but this is one regulation I had to break. When the guide wandered away, leaving me mere inches from the giant panda, there was nothing to be done but reach out and make contact. Who wouldn’t have done the same thing?!)

4- River “rafting” at QingCheng Shan was one of the more entertaining things I’ve done all year long. I expected Idaho-style river rafting, but instead was loaded into a two-person raft and sent down a three-feet deep man-made gauntlet, where water gun wielding parties met us at each turn, soaking the foreigners and creating mayhem. It was awesome!

5- It just sneaked in before the end of the year, but definitely won itself a spot in the top 5- my brother and sister-in-law announced a new addition to their ever-growing family. Baby #3 will be born in late August, putting Thad and I at the rather large total of twelve nieces and nephews! Congratulations Matt and Kristina (and Audrey and Kellen)!

So there you have it, a roundup of the high points of 2013. While the year has flown by, I can only imagine 2014 will go with the same speed, as we face another big move, I face another job change and a whole new set of sidewalks are presented for continued searching.

Happy 2014!

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Book Roundup- 2013

Sadly, I’m not much of a long-term goal-setter.  I’m great at making plans and organizing for them, but terrible at following through with those artfully laid out efforts. That doesn’t mean I’m not moving forward and experiencing awesome new things in life (this last has allowed me to see some awesome new parts of the globe, including my new favorite place on earth- the Maldives, so I’m doing stuff, just not stuff I wrote down on paper!), it just means I’m lazy about the whole resolution thing. (Maybe this isn’t the best time of year to admit to a lack of resolution when it comes to resolutions!)  Needless to say, I don’t enter a number in the Good Reads goal box (which constantly pops up when I log into my account) and I don’t have a magic number of the scale (as long as my pants still fit, I’m good!).

But, with the end of the year quickly approaching, I did take a moment to scan over my read books list on Good Reads this last week and realized I was just a couple books short of 100 for the year! Suddenly, I had a goal- I had ten days to read three books. Easy-peasy! (Maybe I should go with ten-day resolutions this year. I seem to be able to stick to them.)

Now that I have hit that nice round 1-0-0 (okay, I’m at 101 and may or may not finish 102 before next week), I thought it would be fun to do a quick round up of my best and worst when it came to books in 2013. So, with no further ado, below are my five favorite and five least favorite books of the year, in no particular order.

BEST OF 2013

And the Mountains Echoed by Khaled Hosseini – Beautifully written, as always with Hosseini‘s fiction. I excitedly bought a hardback copy of this book the weekend we were in Taiwan (yay for no censorship!) and read it cover to cover in just a few days. The spinning of various tales into a larger story was done with grace and ease. The fairy tale with which the book commences not only sets the tone and themes for the rest of the book, but has stuck with me for months now. Life is all about the decisions we make, hoping that what seems right in the moment turns out to be good in the long-run.

Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock by Matthew Quick- Amazing and heartbreaking. Those are the two best words I can come up with to describe this young adult novel.  I couldn’t bear to walk away from Leonard, the protagonist, as he stumbled his way towards a heart wrenching decision. While definitely not an easy read, it is an important one, dealing with some very real issues faced by many teenagers.

Wool by Hugh Howey– Always a fan of the post-apocalyptic novel, I was drawn into this one very quickly. The idea of living in a silo, segregated by position and ability is a different take on the survival genre than I’ve read before. I was also intrigued by the idea that everyone who was banished happily completed their final task, even though it meant certain death.  I’ve heard there are now more stories out in this series, which may just be the top of my list for Christmas gift card purchases!

The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown- I’m a huge fan of narrative non-fiction. History told through the stories of people, rather than a list of facts and dates has so much more meaning and depth to it and this book definitely did that. I also love when authors entwine various subjects into a single running narrative. (This author very much reminds me of Erik Larson.) While rowing holds no particular interest for me, the Northwest setting was a draw, and then combine in the building of the Coulee Dam and the Nazi-era Olympics and I was hooked.

The Circle by Dave Eggers- We all know technology and surveillance can quickly spin out of control, but just how willing are we to feed into the various data collection of various companies? Set in the not-so-distant future, this novel is a real eye-opener about just how much personal information we provide to the world through our Tweets, status updates, weekly blogs, etc. While the book takes these ideas to the extremes, it definitely made me stop and ponder my own digital footprint.

WORST OF 2013

Dad is Fat by Jim Gaffigan – I love memoir/short essay books, as I see my own writing as being in a similar vein, but I just couldn’t muster any enthusiasm for this one. Maybe it was the constant complaining about his million children (okay, not million, maybe four or five, but that must feel like a million some days) and then a page later his mooning over those same kiddos. I get that you love your kids even though they drive you nuts, but I felt like I was riding Miley Cyrus’ wrecking ball, back and forth, page to page. Because I do like this genre so much, I think I was more disappointed in this book than is fair, but when I turned the last page, I must admit to a bit of relief that it was finally over.

Headhunters on My Doorstep: A True Treasure Island Ghost Story by J. Maarten Troost- Again, another genre that I love (travel writing), but it didn’t stir an ounce of desire to pack my bags and follow in his footsteps. I’ve really enjoyed Troost’s previous books, but this one seemed hugely self-indulgent and was really just literary tangent after literary tangent. Maybe a recovering alcoholic would find solace in Troost’s travels and musings, but I was annoyed and wanted more adventure and less mental meandering.

Flu: The Story OfThe Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918 and the Search for the Virus that Caused It by Gina Kolata – Who doesn’t enjoy a bit of creepy pandemic gore on occasion? Over the last several years, I’ve read a few books about the spread of disease from animal to human and the science behind pandemics, so I was excited or this one about the 1918 flu, but in the end, could barely make it from page to page. Maybe that was the author’s intentions- make me achy and weary and exhausted so that I commiserated more fully with the victims of the book- if so, she was a success. While the book attempted to go the route of narrative non-fiction, the characters were not well-crafted, the stories weren’t interesting and the links between them were tenuous, as best.  I’m afraid there is no remedy for all that is wrong with this one.

Checkout Girl: A Life Behind the Register by Anna Sam– Again, my love of the memoir/essay genre drew me to this book and as someone who worked retail all through high school and college, I thought I’d definitely relate to her stories, but instead, I was just annoyed. Each essay was short and lacked the details needed to create a full-bodied tale. I didn’t realize it until after I finished the book and did a bit of research, but apparently the original book was in French,  so I think some of the problems could possibly be linked to translation (both literal and cultural) difficulties. I wouldn’t buy this one again, even if it were in the $1.99 bin at the bookstore.

Silver Orphan by Martine Lacombe- I wanted to like this one, as it was the first galley copy I ever reviewed, but I just couldn’t get on board with it. The premise is a good one, but the whole book felt like an early draft, not a novel ready to go to publishing. Without giving the ending away, I did feel like it came a bit out of left-field and has me closing the book with some lingering questions, not about the main plot line of the book, but about new twists that were introduced on the final page. While not a terrible book, I just felt like it was still in the revision process, not one people are paying money to read quite yet.

So there you have it. The good and the bad (no ugly) of my 2013 reading list. I can’t wait to see what comes out in the new year, as I will once again be jobless by June, I should have lot of time to find new stand-outs (and those that should hide in the shadows) for 2014.

Happy reading!

(Notice there is no parallel story to go along with the number on the scale reference in the introduction. My shiny treadmill sits in the other room, awaiting the same spark of inspiration. It will come…someday!)

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Hazarding a Life in Chengdu

Here’s the blog I entered in the ExpatsBlog.com contest. I ended up getting 2nd out of 8 entries in the China catergory, with 39 comments. It wasn’t the showing I was hoping for, but it was still fun to write for a wider audience. I hope to find some similar writing opportunities in the future.

Thank you to everyone who commented!

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Chengdu comes in at #39 on a list of the world’s largest cities, with nearly 8 million residents calling this landlocked city home.  8 million people means it is a metropolis, but if it were interviewing for a job and asked to name three adjectives describing itself, cosmopolitan would definitely not be in the list. Big?  Yes. Up and coming? Definitely.  On par with the great cities of the world like New York, Paris and London? Not quite yet. But, that lack of refinement is exactly what I love about this city. Beijing and Shanghai are great, but they’ve lost a lot of their quirks, their uniqueness and their spirit. Having over a thousand miles between here and the bustling life of the capital has allowed Chengdu to remain its own city, fostering a distinctly Sichuan character- loud and brash, but still laid back and relaxed.
Filled with the ruins of ancient civilizations, as a gateway to Tibet and where you can find anything and everything emblazoned with a panda decal, Chengdu is a fantastic city for ex-pats to call home. We’ve got spicy food that will put even the hardiest taste buds to the test and tea houses dot the city like freckles on a ginger. But, it’s not all fun and games! Western China has its own set of rules when it comes to daily life; pitfalls lurk around every corner and on every sidewalk. To be a successful ex-pat in Chengdu, there are a few “dangers” you must be mindful of on a regular basis.

Since the Chinese (especially western China-dwelling) tend to be rather superstitious, here are a lucky eight “Chengdu dangers,” in no particular order:

1) Electric scooters.  Silent as that holy night in late December, they’ll sneak up on the unsuspecting foreigner, whipping by mere centimeters from pedestrians. Heaven forbid you are walking with a friend, gesticulating even semi-wildly as you recount your day at the panda reserve, for your elbow is likely to be clipped by a passing, eerily silent scooter.  Don’t think that you’re safe just because you are walking on the sidewalk, which one would think would be designated for foot traffic. Road, bus lane, sidewalk- they’re all home to the free-range scooters in town.

2) Grandmas on the subway. Who’s the most aggressive public transportation rider in Chengdu? There’s no question it is the little old woman who stands about five feet tall and is willing to push her way through any crowd to be the first on (or off) the bus/subway/train/plane. Her slight stature gives her a lower center of gravity, somehow allowing her to push burly foreign men out of the way, her elbows precisely placed in the kidneys of anyone blocking her passage.

3) Death-che. (Also called “san lun che” or three-wheeled car.) For those who have traveled in Southeast Asia, these are essentially the Chinese version of the tuk-tuk. In Chengdu, these little rolling tin cans are restricted to certain areas of town, and yet, I see them everywhere. The drivers can smell desperation from blocks away; when you are getting passed up by cab after cab on a Friday night, they’ll slowly sidle up next to you, ask where you are going, give you a ridiculously high rate (that they’ll bargain no more than about five kuai on) and then wait for you to give in to the temptation of a ride, even a potentially hazardous one.

4) Brick bombs. It rains in Chengdu. Not all year long, but we have very definite rainy periods where we get enough precipitation to flood the streets and make the river overflow its banks. But, it isn’t the rain that is the hazard. It is the sidewalks after the rain. You see, many sidewalks in Chengdu are made of these square bricks that are set on top of whatever ground was there originally, but they are not well-cemented down. This means after a few rains, they come lose and are wobbly, leaving space between the brick and the ground for small puddles to collect. Then, as you are innocently walking to work in your adorable new gunmetal gray tights, you step on one of these unattached bricks, squirting the muddy water up the back of your legs, forcing you to utter a string of not very nice words and essentially ruining your cute tights. Total brick bomb.

5) Parasols. Yes, fancy umbrellas- watch out for them! The problem isn’t so much the devices themselves, although their ubiquitous nature is a bit overwhelming. They come out when it rains; they come out when it’s sunny. But, the real issue lies in the height difference between the average Chinese woman and me. I’m 5’10”, which puts my eyeballs directly in the line-of-poking for those sharp metal ends that come off of each section of the umbrella. (Google tells me these are called “end cleats.” I think “ocular gougers” would be a more apt moniker.)  While sunglasses are rarely needed in Chengdu due to the constant overcast nature of the city, I’ve become a continuous wearer, as more than once they’ve saved my eyes for near-blinding.

6) Chinese New Year’s fireworks. Fireworks are fabulous and no one does them better than the Chinese. The problem is, Chengdu does them for a month! They start early and run late. Chengdu is always up for a celebration, so the New Year provides the perfect opportunity to show off all manner of explosions. In the month leading up to Spring Festival, little orange tents pop up on every other corner, all around town. Just a step inside the tent reveals the hazards of this time of year. With little or no regulation (at least enforced regulations), you can buy fireworks of all sizes off the street. Explosive devices that would be left to city fire departments to ignite are sold to teenagers, making the days leading up to the festival a cacophony of pops, booms and bangs! I’ve always contended that if a country wanted to invade China, the night of New Year’s Eve would be the time to do it. With so many mortars and shells exploding throughout the city, there would be no way to differential friendly and enemy fire.

7) Paparazzi.  Flash! Snap! Click! The camera shutters are snapping left and right. Okay, so it may not be as intense as Kanye West’s front yard, but being a tall, blonde foreigner in Chengdu definitely attracts some attention. Again, while Chengdu is a large city, it is still relatively undiscovered in terms of ex-pats living here, so a trip anywhere other than the panda base (where the foreigner tourists congregate, en mass) elicits a rather constant stream of less-than-stealthy photography. Whether it is in the supermarket as I buy meat or People’s Park where I just want to enjoy a few brief hours of sunshine, a trip out of my apartment means I need to be camera-ready. Some people will quietly take a cell phone picture, while others will be quite unabashed in their photographical documentation of my existence. I’ve had large lens cameras shoved in my face, been a part of group photos with my new Chinese “friends,” and even posed with women sporting dynasty-era costumes (I was in red-dirt covered jeans after hiking down a mountain. It was awesomely incongruous).

8) Loogies.  It’s disgusting. I know. I almost didn’t add them to my list because it is so icky, but I’d be remiss in my cautionary duties if I didn’t include it, because even though it is yucky, the real danger is in the viscosity. Loogies are literally as slick as snot! Since they are everywhere (on the sidewalk, the floor of the subway train, the aisle of the supermarket, etc.), it is best to be aware and ready to right yourself (and hold down your lunch) when you feel the inevitable slip of your foot in that tiny, gooey pile of phlegm.   (I feel queasy just typing this one!)

So, Chengdu- even with the potentially eye-socket piercing rain gear and silent but deadly scooters- it’s a fabulous city. It’s filled with ancient temples and modern architecture, all sprinkled with more than a little panda.

Come. Live. Enjoy.

The Most *Fabulous* Time of the Year

The holidays can be stressful. There’s no getting around it. From searching for the perfect gift (something I obsess over and start working on in September!) to decorating and wrapping, to holiday parties, there is always lingering things on my to-do list. When you live overseas, some of that stress lessens, as the hectic hustle and bustle of mall shopping in non-existent (okay, in China, it exists, but as the status quo, since you’re sharing the mall with a million other shoppers on any given Saturday) and you’re used to being flexible with traditions. (In the States, we *always* had a full-sized, live Christmas tree, but now that we are constantly on the move, we’ve got an adorable 3-foot tree that stores away on top of an armoire eleven months out of the year, but does the trick.)

But, this year, I ran into a whole new level of holiday craziness. No, it wasn’t the four parties in seven days. That was actually pretty fun: one fancy house party for sixty, one staff party for eighty, one cookie exchange that I baked not one, but *two* kinds of cookies for (the only place I spent less time than the kitchen is the gym!) and then a low-key, enjoyable evening with friends to wrap up the hectic holiday week.

So, if four parties wasn’t the cause of my quickly graying hair, what was? Santa. Plain and simple. It was Santa.

He’s a staple of Christmas parties and was scheduled to make an appearance at not one, but both of the events that I hosted this year. With that in mind, before Thanksgiving, I was checking on my red velvet suit, coal black boot covers and white wig/beard combo. Last year, it was borrowed by some folks at work for their personal Christmas party and it then spent the rest of the year at their place. When I went in search of it a few months ago, I was told by the borrowers that yes, they had it, no problem.  Then, once I tore of the penultimate page of my calendar and was facing down the holiday season, I again inquired about the suit. This time, the news was not good. What the borrowers thought was my Santa suit turned out to be a Mario Brothers costume! (I know. You are currently wondering how in the world the two could be mistaken, but without asking too many questions, I’m chalking it up to seeing a lot of red fabric in a bag and assuming it belonged to Santa, rather than Mario. (Yes, I did just have to look up which brother wore red. Thank you, Google.)

That left me a week before Santa was supposed to make his inaugural appearance and with a middle-aged Italian plumber in place of a jolly old fat man with a massive white beard. I don’t think I’d be able to pull that one off, even for the toddlers!

No good.

Talk about ramping up the holiday stress! Four days and counting, with no Santa.

Chengdu was searched, high and low, to no avail. Malls were walked. Markets were scoured. Schools were called. Hotels were contacted. Nothing.

Just as I was starting to contemplate two holiday parties with no guest of honor, a Christmas miracle appeared out of the fog (pollution?). A colleague mentioned that her apartment complex had a holiday party the weekend before, where Father Christmas made an unexpected appearance (along with dancing pandas and dinosaurs  reenacting “What Does the Fox Say?” and scantily clad girls gyrating to Christmas classics, but that is an entirely different story!) This colleague’s husband made a few calls and sent a few emails and within hours we were in possession of a FABULOUS Santa suit. (And believe me, it was fabulous. The white around the collar and the boots was rainbow glittered and the belt was gold and just sparkly enough to summon unicorns, but I was in no position to negotiate my suit accessories. Fabulous Santa it would be!)

In the end, my two volunteer Santas suited up and did a marvelous job, entertaining the young and the less young alike. So, while others are pondering their last minute gift shopping needs (I did have to run and do stocking stuffer shopping at the last minute, on my lunch break today), I’m using Google to search out the nearest hair salon to our hotel in Honolulu. Santa may be blessed with snowy white hair, but after this holiday season, I’ve been gifted with stress-given gray!

Fabulous Santa #1

Fabulous Santa #1

ExpatsBlog Contest Entry- Go Vote (for me)!

It’s time!

The blog contest I entered has gone live. To win, I need your comments on the entry on ExpatsBlog.com

Please go to http://www.expatsblog.com/contests/723/hazarding-life-in-chengdu

To count as a “vote,” you need to leave a comment that is at least ten words long. The website will send you an email verifying your email address (to make sure robots aren’t voting!), so please follow through! 🙂

Once you’ve commented, please send the link on to all of your friends/family/fellow bloggers!

Please. And thank you.

And as always, enjoy.

Yuan Yuan waiting for more food

Yuan Yuan, asking you to go vote (comment) on my ExpatsBlog.com contest entry

Spinning Right Round, Baby, Right Round

Spinning…spinning…spinning.

And now, dizzy.

That’s the way my mind is feeling right now, and sadly, I can’t just blame it on the blonde hair. (That’s often my go-to excuse for everything from losing my pencil, only to find it behind my ear, to forgetting if I should push down on the elevator button because I want the elevator to come down to me or up because I am trying to go up. Seriously, that does happen to me.) Dizzy, because my brain that wants everything to be cheery and happy and carefree all of the time and when tidbits of information throw a wrench in that happy little bubble of a world, my brain suddenly becomes like my favorite amusement park ride- the Scrambler, twisting and turning to make laughter bubble to the surface. But, sometimes the centrifugal force is too tiring.

That’s today.

Sometimes you don’t realize how much you want something until the option is taken off the table and today, my table was cleared, handily. When Thad and I first talked about the Foreign Service a few years ago, I was one hundred percent on board; I think I even said something like, “Great! I will just teach wherever you get assigned!” After all, we’d already been looking at international schools as a way to get overseas again.

I was naïve, no doubt about it. It didn’t take long into my freshman week at FSI to learn that it isn’t as easy as having a teaching degree and applying for jobs. No, the governments (both home and host) have a lot of say in whether or not the dependents of diplomats can work, and as luck would have it, our first posting was one of those countries where I’m not allowed to work. (To be fair, Chengdu was #1 on our bid list and there were definitely squeals of excitement when we got it, but at the time I thought I’d for sure be able to land a job with Peace Corps in Chengdu, which obviously didn’t happen.)  But, I figured I’d sit the two years out from teaching and then jump right back into the middle school pool at post #2.

Bidding time rolled around and after lots of planning and researching, we submitted our list of thirty choices, many of the top ones being places where I could potentially teach. No email. No email. Email! Our assignment arrived! After scrolling down Thad’s BlackBerry to get to the meat of the email, I saw in bold letters our home for the next two years: Kuala Lumpur. I must admit to a bit of shock, as I didn’t even remember having that on our bid list, (after going back and checking, it was #18- love your mid-bids, FS folks!) but was excited to live nearly on the equator, as I do hot much better than cold.

My first order of business was to check out the work situation, which is grim, as it turns out. But, I wasn’t giving up hope. Through the summer and fall, I talked a good game about working at the embassy or online (I even completed nine credits through Pacific Lutheran University during fall term to add an online teaching certification to my resume!), but I think in the back of my mind, I was planning to make the classroom teaching thing happen. Rationally, I knew it was a misguided fantasy I was carrying around, but it was what had settled in my mind and heart.  With Christmas here,  I’ve been dreaming of reading A Christmas Carol with students, marveling at Dicken’s word play, I’ve lain in bed, creating lesson plans revolving  around awesome new YA books I’ve been reading lately, and as I’ve edited blogs for my middle school niece, I’ve realized how much I’ve missed talking with kids about their writing.

It’s not going to happen. At least not in a brick and mortar classroom.

Through the help of some great colleagues, my fears were confirmed this afternoon: I will not be able to teach at an international school in Malaysia. I could apply and even be offered a position, but I would not be allowed to accept it.

I’m having a hard time accepting it.

If you had asked me yesterday (or even this morning!), I would have given you a list of work options that included the embassy, online teaching or working in a local school, but my emphasis would have been on the school.

Tomorrow’s list is going to be one option shorter.

Spinning…spinning…spinning.

Not one to dwell on the negative for too long (although a bit of a short pity party is in order), I’m already hatching plan B. Since international schools do a lot of their hiring in the winter for the coming school year, I was starting to worry about getting my resume, application and letters of reference in order, but now that it has been swept off the table with gusto, it’s time to move on and focus on the options I do have. On a multiple choice test, it’s always better to have two answers to choose from rather than three, so I’m choosing to look at this the same way. I’ll focus my energies on the actual possibilities, rather than the ones I secretly (but without good reason) hoped would materialize.

Online teaching.

Embassy work.

Both could be (will be!) great.

But, maybe I need just another hour to spin…spin…spin.

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Celebrating Twelve Days of Chengdu Christmas

Okay, we’re still 23 days out from Christmas, but sitting here enjoying my one-inch square, waxy piece of chocolate shaped like a deformed bell, I’ve already jumped into the eggnog pool with both feet. So, to kick off my month of glitter and sparkles (in red and green, of course!), here’s my newest version of “The Twelve Days of Christmas.”

12  Days of Christmas- Chengdu Style

On the first day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
A single glowing ray of sunshine

On the second day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the third day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the fourth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,                                                                                                                                                                                        Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the fifth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the sixth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the seventh day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the eighth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Eight grandmas advising,
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the ninth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Nine Saturday outings,
Eight grandmas advising,
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the tenth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Ten sidewalk loogies,
Nine Saturday outings,
Eight grandmas advising,
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the eleventh day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Eleven unsmiling PAP guards,
Ten sidewalk loogies,
Nine Saturday outings,
Eight grandmas advising,
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

On the twelfth day of Christmas,
Chengdu sent to me
Twelve stops on the Metro,
Eleven unsmiling PAP guards,
Ten sidewalk loogies,
Nine Saturday outings,
Eight grandmas advising,
Seven cabbies a-smoking,
Six scooter collisions,
Five air purifiers,
Four fully clothed dogs,
Three wheels of terror,
Two jin of jiaozi,
And a single glowing ray of sunshine

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(A few years ago,as I avoided spending another hour with my Chinese textbooks, desperately wishing for some ayi vocabulary but only learning to express my opinion on six-party trade talks, I wrote an FSI version as well. It’s here, if you are interested.)