Monday, August 31, 2015

AKIC's August 2015 Notes


In this entry, I make many cryptic comments, and I blog about my efforts to buy pineapple beer, going to Yanqiao town, my son Tony’s clumsiness, my reaction to Beijing getting the Winter Olympics, my e-bike, the 85 bakery, witnessing a van hitting an e-bike, local men taking off their tops, Zomia, getting cut off at the lineup to a security machine, hawkers at the Metro station, female students going to Canada who don’t seem to want to, my being stupid, my not making comments on others blogs, Tony and the iPad, Tony developing an attitude, country music, some Nicholas Gomez Davilia aphorisms, students taking drugs, a pretty graduate from Kwantlan College in Vancouver, Charles Adler, an angry Shandong tourist guide, Chinese students and tools, a student returning from Chilliwack, the first Republican Presidential debate, no rain and then lots of leaking in Hui Shan, Tony displaying Chutzpah, True Love, the Donald, PC, imperial English names, my picking on students, a Pete Rose memory, the Donald Trump Love Child, a Spanish student, two e-bikes together, Tony’s 8th birthday, Tianjin, eating with a shovel, Tony and Minecraft, English Speaking Contest, wide straw hats, Hui Shan Central Park, a desire to spit on drivers, my inadequacies, what a barbarian is, the Benedict Option, the Xibei Canal, being called a Waiguoren, buying an ironing board at Ikea, the Canadian federal election, Tony swimming, bagels in China, John Derbyshire and David Warren on Trump, being superfluous, another year at the school, Cristy Li, Chinese Lover’s Day, Sesame Street on HBO, our students heading back to school, Tony and hash browns, the Mark Levin Podcast, quitting blogging, anal telepathy, seeing a foreigner getting on an elevator, a brief trip to Beixin, watching the film Ghostbusters with Tony, the Great Fall of China, the bully boy pickup truck, Grandmothers and their grandchildren, barge train on the Xibei Canal, being a representative of Canada, wanting to blame it all on Canada, a student who has a grandfather who adamantly refuses to learn how to use a telephone, Morrissey, a student named Brandon, cheering for me, a student ranking Los Angeles and San Francisco and Salt Lake City, choosing escalators or stairs at the Metro station, how to explain playing possum, an outburst at an SPC, my reputation, a military parade in Beijing, going swimming, Adios America by Anne Coulter, what I did on the last day of August, and a plan to make more frequent blog entries.


[I wrote some of the following entries in the present tense and some in the past tense. I try my best to edit them, keeping the tense that I think best conveys what I am trying to say, like the ones where I write before something happened which I then wrote later about. Also, some of the bulleted points are numbered. I have done this because these points are meant to be further-indented. The indents work when I type this entry in my word processing program, but don't seem to when I cut and past the text into the blog platform.]


  • July started off wet and ended hot. 

  • Last day of July, I felt crabby when teaching. The students, I deal with, are what they are – annoying – and there is nothing much I can do about it. [Or am willing to do about it.]

  • I don't have much to look forward to in August, but at least, I don't have to waste hours with that spoiled brat student, I dealt with in July, who finally went to Canada. [As soon as I typed that, another student, the mopey one I have called her, is taking classes here before she goes to BC on August 31.]

  • It's been a slow summer for the school. There were no weekday daytime shifts to accommodate summer students. There wasn't any need. 

  • Lesson plans designed to run out the clock; not to teach anything.

  • The kids are bigger and stronger now, but they sure aren't better painters or poets.

  • From school, I walked all the way, in the stifling heat, to a grocery store to buy my favorite brand of pineapple beer, only to find that it was sold out. I ended up buying 750 ml size bottles of Nongfu Spring water because they weren't available in the shops nearer the school.

  • I went to Yanqiao on a Saturday night, for the first time in a year. I saw that the place had been given a face lift and so I was briefly disoriented.

  • The reason I went to Yanqiao was to buy some pineapple beer, but again I had no luck. And in one grocery store, I got heck from an employee for bringing in my purchases from another store.

  • Two times, Tony was with me eating and drinking and being clumsy and knocking things onto the floor. [After writing this entry, there was a third time where he spilled his cheesecake on the floor. I mention this on an editing pass through. In all these incidents, Tony would flinch and instantly apologize in a pleading way.]

  • I was feeling snarky when a student told me that Beijing had been awarded the Winter Olympics, and so I told the entire class that I didn't care because they didn't care when Canada held the Winter Olympics in 2010. [To be fair, I didn't much care for the 2010 Olympics either.] 

  • Hosting the Olympics is a curse that really the communists deserve.

  • I parked my e-bike next to Jenny's e-bike at the Yanqiao Metro station. It was Tony's sharp eyes that spotted his mother's e-bike for me.

  • The 85 degree bakery near our school has a upper floor that is great for having coffee because it is always so empty. I have been taking Tony there in the morning before he has to start his summer school. One Monday morning, I saw an older woman up there and she took to lying down on the booth-like seats. Pathetic.

  • Standing at an intersection corner waiting for a green pedestrian signal, I heard a scream and looked to my right to see a mini-van hit an e-bike on the broadside and knock the rider off her bike so that she landed on her back and seemed to have hit her head. But she quickly got up, the driver of the van got out of his vehicle, and the first result was that the two of them were picking up contents of the woman's purse. They then looked at her e-bike which surely had been damaged. 

  • Witnessing the incident was sobering for me. I hope nothing like that happens to Jenny or me.

  • Who was at fault in the accident? I would say the driver was. I don't think he had a green light and drivers in China don't seem to stop when making right turns on red lights. This driver probably decided he could barrel through the corner.

  • With the summer heat comes, the local males walk shirtless in public, which is disconcerting to this Canadian who has always felt that walking about with no shirt, except at the beach, is low class. One morning, I saw the manager of the nearby Xinjiang restaurant doing this. There he was sitting at a bench in front of the restaurant, with no shirt on, using his calculator. I also saw a young man entering the Yanqiao Metro station wearing a backpack with no shirt on, which struck me as being even more strange and low class.

  • Early in August, I read a book about exploration in the Inca and Peruvian highlands, places that are very high indeed. And then just it happened that David Warren published an entry about an area of highlands in Asia called Zomia. Highlanders said Warren are the last strain of independent peoples in the world. Independent that is of the Nation State.

  • One afternoon at the Metro Station, I was trying quickly to put my bag through the X-ray machine but had the misfortune of being behind a woman who was slowly lifting up a heavy bag of luggage on the conveyor belt. I had to wait but while I was, this other woman squeezed in front of me to try to put her bag on the belt. You had to wonder what she was thinking but she gave a quick start when she saw me standing there, and so moved behind me. I gave her the evil eye.

  • On the Wuxi Metro, I saw a few workers, wearing the same uniforms. One of them had his arm around another man. I assume they were friend friends.

  • Make a sentence with "chicken," I asked a student.  She said:  "I like to cook meat in the chicken."

  • Riding the e-bike home from the Metro station at night is exhilarating.

  • To get to the platform at the Yanqiao Metro Station, one has to ascend stairs and then cross a pedestrian bridge to get to the ticket machines and turnstiles. In the first days of August, I saw people sitting on the bridge selling bottles of drinks. Very entrepreneurial, I thought, and I wondered if they needed a license to do it. [I didn't seem them standing there as the month came to an end. Perhaps, they got shooed away by the security. They do have a security guard around the Station who monitors the parking of bikes and e-bikes, and this guard will move people's bikes around if they are not parked properly.]

  • Another teenage female student is going to Canada. Another trainer who had to teach her told me he had asked her where she was going exactly in Canada and got a mumbly I-don't-know. I had asked her that question a month before and had gotten the same answer. I have a good mind to tell her that she is a spoiled bitch and shouldn't be allowed in Canada. People escape oppression and poverty to get to Canada, and she just seems irritated to be going there. Ten migrant workers from the interior should be allowed to go in her stead. [After making this entry, I had this student, who was the mopey one, in a class. Asking her how she was, she said she was not doing well, and that she wish she was doing homework. She didn't mention whether was excited about going to BC or not.]

  • Stupid me, I spent the whole day thinking I was to discuss education and culture with an evening class. But when I had done introductions and small talk with the students, they told me that they were expecting to talk about musical instruments, and I had to leave the class to find the binder with the right lesson plan in it.

  • I am not the sort to make comments on articles or other people's blogs on the Internet. One reason I don't is because I am in China and connection to sites where comments can be made are weak, and I would often run the risk of typing out something and having it get lost in the netherworld of poor Internet connectivity. But even if the poor connectivity wasn't a problem, I still wouldn't make comments because of my passive nature. I just love making diary and blog entries.

  • My son Tony – I say it again – has got some sort of unhealthy Ipad addiction and an attitude. I point his addiction out to him constantly – all the while indulging him in his addiction, I know – and he gets mighty snarky. I don't know where he picked up this action, but what he likes to do when something I say annoys him is to roll his eyes, presenting the whites to me. I am going to have to use the power of controlling the Ipad to stop this. He feels he is entitled to use it anytime he wants.

  • Free Wifi is what you pay for sometimes. Recently, I haven't been able to connect to it easily everywhere I go, including school.

  • David Warren wrote a blog entry about country music. He said he appreciated that music because it was musical and had truths to say about life, unlike rock music with all its vulgarity. His entry reminded me of people I have known who hated country music. One person back in my Winnipeg days told me he hated country music because all it was about was dogs dying and wives running away. Another person, a Brit of some sort in Wuxi, told me he was proud of the fact that he had only ever listened to one country song. [This person was of another zoological species and not having anything to say to him, I didn't bother ever talking to him.] 

  • And I will give the Chinese much credit for this: most of them tell me that they like country music. In the class I had about musical instruments in which I had to wing it because I had prepared the wrong topic, I played a Bob Willis and Texas Playboys songs with fiddles, and all the students told me they loved it. [In the middle of August, I downloaded albums by Johnny Cash, Emmylou Harris, Kris Kristofferson, Merle Haggard and the Flying Burrito Brothers.]

  • So many people seem to be of a different zoological species from me. [I make this thought after thinking of that Nicholas Gomez Davilia aphorism (see my July entry) about many people being of different zoological species from the authors we read.] I don't mean that they all should be put in zoos – though there are always some that should – but it is like I am a fish and they are cows who never the twain should meet.

  • Do Chinese students take drugs? The ones I deal with don't, but I had one stuttering, giggling young male student who made me wonder. He conformed to my recollections of potheads right down to the unkempt hair.

  • One female student I had was a graduate of Kwantlan College in Vancouver. I first encountered her attending one of my salon classes. Her prettiness and her having been to Vancouver, made me want to ask her all sorts of questions. She said she had been to Hope once which amazed me. I have this impression that most Chinese who go to Vancouver don't ever go into the Fraser River Valley.

  • Charles Adler is no longer working at CJOB. What's he doing? Moving to BC. I did the same thing. And yet, he says Winnipeg is a wonderful place. It was for family reasons he said he was leaving. Right.

  • A student told me this: a tour guide in Shandong was so angry about the tourists not buying anything at these shops that she had taken them to, that she threatened to abandon them on the side of the road. So what did the Chinese tourists do? They bought things at the shops.

  • Tools class. Chinese students don't use tools. What do you use this tool for? Silence till someone says “Ah! Killing People!”  Has anyone used this tool? Silence.

  • Student spends two years at our school and then spends a year in Chilliwack and her English, when I reunited with her here, was awful. In my mind, I had thought it was much better than it was. Or was my memory playing tricks on me? 

  • She told these things about high schools in BC. She said she was good in her First Nations class. The teachers were on strike for three weeks. She had classes from 9:00 to 2:30. [In Wuxi, the classes are from 7:30 to 5:00.]

  • Shop Class or Cooking class? During the tools class, I asked the students (mostly males), and all but one, said they would choose to take cooking class.

  • I downloaded and watched the full video of the first Republican presidential debate. That is the one with the ten front-runners. It was a great spectacle but a terrible basis on which to decide who should be the president. There were simply too many candidates and no real debate. It was a scatter-shot thing to watch so I will just have to make scatter-shot comments [13 scatter-shots actually]

  1. I liked all the candidates, even the Donald. They were all impressive in their own way. They would all make better presidents than any Democrat.

  2. What to think of the Donald? He was entertaining. He had some fine moments and some low moments. I think he will be in the race for a while.

  3. I very much liked Ben Carson. His quiet and gracious manner was endearing. But alas he is too reflective for the soundbite age in which we live.

  4. I was disappointed with Scott Walker's performance. But then the forum that he was in wouldn't never show him at his best. He has the best record of all the candidates to run on.

  5. Jeb Bush wasn't so bad. He gave good answers but he wasn't commanding. [There was a deer in the headlight look to him when he was standing near the Donald.]

  6. Marco Rubio looked the best.

  7. Rand Paul has a strange hairdo but not as strange as the Donald's.

  8. I wish that more questions could have been asked of Ted Cruz.

  9. Chris Christie wasn't bad, but it seems like his time has passed.

  10. John Kasich didn't seem presidential with his body language. He shook like John Diefenbaker.

  11. Mike Huckabee gave some great answers.

  12. Who won the debate? No one really. For most of them it was a draw. For a few, it was a lost. Just don't ask me who.

  13. I suppose the winner of the debate will be decided by the pundits. After watching the debate, I quickly surfed for their reactions. I found I didn't see what they said they saw.

  • We paid for ten days of no rain by having a day of torrential rain which caused all buildings of Hui Shan to leak. The Hui Shan Wanda Plaza had the usual hundred pails out in the corridors to catch the rain leaking through the glass roof. The Yanqiao Metro Station's escalator on the arrival side of the platform was closed because it was drenched in rain from a leaking roof of its own as well as the wind blowing the rain in from the wall-less sides of the platform.

  • When I was trying to read a book on the Ipad, Tony said to me, “The Ipad is bad for your eyes.” Chutzpah?

  • Davilia aphorism 592:  Indifference to art is betrayed by the pompous solemnity of the homage often rendered it. True love remains silent or mocks.  [I like the sound of the last sentence, but is it true?]

  • One sunny but cool Wednesday morning, I was to take Tony to his summer school so I was out early to retrieve the e-bike from its parking spot which is at the other end of the Apartment Complex. Walking down a lane, I passed three old men wearing those wide-brimmed straw hats that are so Asian, and the sight of them was enough to give me a good feeling.

  • So much I would like to tell (or teach) Tony, but I don't think he is capable of or interested in understanding me.

  • What to make of the Donald? I have been hearing a lot of reasons not to like him. I will have to listen for arguments for him. But it is hard for me to get away from the impression that Trump is really anti-free trade, pro-socialized medicine, pro-abortion, pro-Hilary Clinton despite his claims that he has changed his mind.... One thing is for sure, if he does win the Republican nomination, it would change the alignment of US politics such that I would have to give up on democracy altogether.

  • Is Trump perhaps the product of the vulgarity that was unleashed in the 1960s that political correctness tried so hard but failed to put back in the genie bottle?

  • In the 1960's, there was an easing on the censorship of vulgarity. It was mistakenly thought of as leading to a greater freedom of expression. It instead lead to a coarsening of language and thus thought and a different kind of censorship commonly refereed to as political correctness tried to put the coarseness down. But PC became an untenable censorship of ideas and the coarseners are rebelling. Oh, how we need the old standards back!

  • Looking out my apartment window at the road below, I happened to see a self-propelled wagon (actually a motorcycle attached to a small 3 feet by 8 feet deck) carrying six old ladies.

  • In a private class, I will have two students named General and Caesar. In the past, we have had students named King and Kaiser. [It turned out that Caesar didn't come.]

  • When I do Salon classes (Conversation classes with 7 or 8 students), I always need to have one students be a comic foil; or if you're cynical about me, I need some student on whom to pick. [There I didn't end the sentence with a preposition.] One kid, who is very slim – so much so that I would say is his face is chipmunk-like – and very fidgety always receives my wrath. In a salon class about gambling, I said that if he won a jackpot, he would take to wearing gold rings on all his fingers, a big gold chain on his chest, and a big gold crown, tilted, on his head. To his credit though, he said he would put the money in the bank and live off the interest.

  • A memory popped into my head. When I was living in New Brunswick, I was able, in the night, to pick up the signal from WCAU, a Philadelphia AM sports talk radio station. And I was sending letters to one of the hosts, whose name was Nick Charles, if I remembered correctly. He got me an autographed photo of Pete Rose (not a betting slip.) But after a while, he got sick of my letters so he told me that I should hit the school books. Good advice, but I don't know if I heeded that well.

  • Tony will think of any way he can to get Ipad Mini playing time. One morning when we were in the 85 Degree Bakery so I could have morning coffee and he could eat something for breakfast, I told him it was time for us to leave and for him to get to school. He made a whining sound to this order and said that I wasn't finished my coffee. I told him I could take the coffee with me but he wanted me to finish it first.

  • One of my colleagues is truly a Donald Trump love child, conceived in a limousine parked near a boardwalk in Atlantic City.

  • One of the students is studying Spanish. One day, he told me that these studies were experiencing a bottleneck because of the language's pronouns.

  • One night, I had the two Kaulins family e-bikes parked together for recharging. They were practically hugging, I told Jenny.

  • Tony's 8th birthday is on August 23rd. The whole month, I did give some thought to what present to buy him but there was no thing which the idea of could satisfy me, or Jenny. Tony was a not source of any ideas because he was obsessed by computer games and nothing else.

  • Jenny was also floating the idea of having his birthday party in the countryside.[I was mistaken when I typed that.]

  • I asked Tony where I should park my e-bike by the Metro Station. He would say he didn't know and then get upset by where I did decide to park; his criteria suddenly being that he wanted to park as close to the entrance as possible.

  • Student more interested in the Tianjin blast, not the currency devaluation.

  • A student mistakenly told me that she ate with shovel, and I teased and teased her. One dinnertime, She came into a restaurant that was near the school, saw me, and I could see that she didn't want to me to watch her eat.

  • It is always a struggle for me to get Tony to go to bed. Obsessed he is about Minecraft. One night, when he finally gave the Ipad to me and he went to bed, I said he was a good boy for listening to me. He replied by saying he was a bad boy.

  • Ever feeling like you are being a heel, and you are impotent to do anything about it?

  • Perverts, losers, dipsomaniacs and snake oil salesmen.

  • We had a speaking contest on a Saturday afternoon. There were about 25 contestants. The ones I saw, who were from two different levels, were surprisingly good to disappointingly bad. Some of the contestants who registered for the contest chickened out. One student, who had in the morning class, and couldn't keep up in the class, didn't show up in the afternoon for the contest.

  • Tony is giving me attitude, big-time. When we squabble, and I try to criticize and reason with him, he resorts to mimicry in response. When I say he is being selfish, he calls me selfish; when I say he is being dumb, he says I am dumb; and when I say I want him to be good, he says he wants me to be good. My idea of his being good involves him not playing the iPad so much; his idea of my being good involves me letting him play the iPad all the time.

  • Tony's biggest outrage was to walk into an Apple store and demand that another kid playing iPad, surrender the iPad because it had Minecraft on it and the other devices in the store did not. After I took him out the store because of his whining, Tony complained to me that that kid was being selfish. 

  • From the train, as it was crossing the Xibei canal, I saw two men in a rowboat wearing those distinctive wide-brimmed straw hats.

  • When I take Tony to the Metro Station every morning, I drive my e-bike through the Hui Shan Central Park. There is one point in the park where I have to avoid some old people doing morning calisthenics to music. They do their exercising on the pathway because it is beneath the cooling shade of trees.

  • I want to spit on drivers who don't yield to me as I attempt to cross Zhongshan Road at what is supposed to be a pedestrian crossing.

  • Am I boring or bored? Both, probably. Life in China has made me a talker but not much of a doer. 

  • I could also say life here has made me into a bystander. I don't fix anything.

  • Do I lack self-possession or I am too self-conscious to be a character? I want to be, but I don't know how to be without putting on an act. I want to be, but I am what I am. I want to be the me that I was supposed by me to be, but never was because the real me, the me without courage and imagination, kept getting in the way. This me, this meek me, had a way of asserting himself (or herself) so that I couldn't be the me I wanted to be. Oh! I blame it on the real me! That's my excuse.

  • Was I a victim of civilization? That is, I never thought of escaping because civilization did all it could to make me and the ones I was stuck with blind to the possibilities?

  • How to make this existence of mine tolerable? More importantly, how to make it have a point? There has to be a God. Humanism is not enough. Humanism is the state.

  • Two different ideas of what a barbarian is: 1) A barbarian is someone who chooses to live outside the framework of the state. 2) A barbarian is someone who acts atrociously. The first idea I get from reading a book entitled: The Art of Not Being Governed: An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia. The book seems to be making a libertarian defense of people who choose to not live in the nation-state by stating that the term barbarian was used as a pejorative by statists against these people not wanting to live or be slaves in their states. The book makes me sympathetic to the barbarians by making them seem libertarian. The second idea comes from an article I read about the Benedict Option, entitled Barbarians at the Gates. The Benedict Option is an idea among modern Christians that they may have to retreat to small Christian communities in order to get away from what they see as the immoral modern secular culture. The problem these Christian retreats would have to face, says the article, is that barbarians are going to be knocking on its doors. And these barbarians are going want to the Christians to act in certain ways that are un-Christian and immoral... The barbarians of the first definition are anti-state, the barbarians of the second definition are anti-Christian. The barbarians of the first definition are antithetical to Christianity when it is part of the state. The barbarians of the second definition are part of the state and antithetical to Christianity. And yet the barbarians of the first definition, like the Christians dealing with the barbarians of the second definition, are antithetical to the state and being libertarian. How to reconcile this for someone who is sympathetic to the barbarians of the first definition and to Christianity like me? There is a paradox at play here is about all I can say. Or maybe communities are okay as long as they don't morph into secular states. [The author of the book said that the term barbarian was a relational term.] 

  • Tony was playing Minecraft on my Iphone so I missed a good opportunity to take a photo of a barge train on the Xibei Canal.

  • Riding on my e-bike, a little girl walking with her parents shouted that annoying term for foreigner that I heard almost every time I am in public: Waiguoren. So, I shouted Zhonguoren back at her.

  • The seat on my e-bike no longer is attached to the frame. It is merely a cover now.

  • I will be getting a new ironing board. The old one is warping and is becoming dis-attached from its metal folding frame....

  • And I got the ironing board, at Ikea, one Wednesday morning after dropping off Tony at his summer school. Since I didn't start my shift till 1:00 PM, I had plenty of time to go to Ikea which is far, as the crow flies, from Casa Kaulins. I had so much time, in fact, thatWednesday morning, that the train got me to the Hui Ju shopping complex and the Ikea 40 minutes before they were to open. I thought the place was open for business at 9:30, not 10:00 as it turned out. To while away the time I wandered aimlessly around the complex while listening to a Milton Rosenberg podcast about film noire. I eventually retreated to the shade of the Metro station, I had disembarked at, to take photos of trains leaving and entering the station. [Three more bullets to follow about getting the Ironing Board. I have numbered just in case, they aren't indented.]

  1. Now, I do my share of dopey things. I would even admit to the possibility that my portion of dopey things I have done is bigger than the portions of dopey things done by other persons. But I want to say is that when I wander aimlessly, I become dopey, even pretending for anyone who might observe me to maintain the ridiculous posture of wandering purposely. 

  2. Case in point, this Wednesday morning wandering made me feel overwhelmed on my trip to get the Ironing Board at Ikea. I first screwed up when I put my backpack in the locker as I would subsequently find out. I then felt confused about how it was that I would find the Ironing Board; Ikea being so huge. I went through the display area wondering where it could be. When I did find the ironing board on display, there were no boards for me to take to the registers to purchase. I continued through the path of the display area and the subsequent small items section thinking I would see the boards in another place. I didn't. I was just lucky that the person I found in the warehouse told me where the ironing boards were. I at least didn't screw up using the credit card to make the purchase as I am wont to do. I even didn't act so clumsy when having my obligatory Ikea hot dogs. But then I couldn't open the locker where I had put my backpack. I realized reading the instructions that I had forgotten to press the “*” key after I had entered my password. So, I had to get staff to help me open the locker. (I had this sort of thing happen to me once before at the Tesco near Casa Kaulins) They thought at first I was trying to put my ironing board in the locker. But once I explained to them what I had done, I got my bag and signed a form attesting it was mine. On my way back to school and before the start of my shift, I did two more dopey things. Getting off the line #2 train at San Yang Plaza, I went to exit from the wrong side of the train. And then at the Family Mart near the school, I was clumsy with my Ipod Touch. Fumbling around with two water bottles, a package of fruit and the Ipod, I suddenly had the Ipod fly out of my hands onto the floor. At least the Ipod stops podcasts from playing when the earphones are detached.

  3. I now [at this typing] wonder how I will be able to get the ironing board home from school. The problem is that I have the e-bike at the station. If I didn't have the e-bike there, getting the board home would be easy. I would just walk and carry it home. However taking it and the e-bike won't be so easy. I figure I will have to hold the board between my knees as I ride the bike home. Not an easy prospect, that is, if I do take the board home tonight. I am debating to take the board home tomorrow and use the shuttle bus to get to the metro station. [Later: Taking the board home with the e-bike wasn't as all as bad I imagined it would be. I was able to stand the board between my legs and rest it on one shoulder without slowing down my driving at all.]

  • There is a federal election in Canada which I haven't been following. I know the three party leaders are Stephen Harper, Justin Trudeau and Thomas Mulcair. There is no way I would ever want this Trudeau to be PM unless he completely repudiates the legacy of his father. Justin hasn't done so. Mulcair is an NDPer. Nuff said about why I would not want him to be PM. So, I am stuck supporting Harper. Harper is no doubt a very intelligent man. Being intelligent in a left leaning country like Canada, he has to govern and to politic cynically if he is to maintain his power. So he disappoints Canadian conservatives, but what other choice do they have?

  • Tony is taking swimming class as the summer wanes. One evening, I came home and he was all excited to tell me how he was able to put his head under water and how that because he was wearing goggles, it was so interesting.

  • After school finishes, Tony wants nothing more than to sit in my office and play Minecraft on my Ipad.

  • Jenny phones to tell me that she has bought bagels. I hope these bagels are authentic. I have never known bagels to be available in China. Jenny says she got them from a place that says they do European style baking. [Ultimately, Jenny tried the bagels and said they weren't as good as the ones she had had in Canada.]

  • John Derbyshire is a Trump supporter. David Warren despises the Donald. Warren and Derbyshire are both writers I very much like reading, so these two viewpoints leave me conflicted as to what I think of the Donald. 

  • What do I think of Trump now? [I add “now” to the question because I see I have asked this question in an earlier bullet] I can understand how one can enjoy the trouble Trump is causing the Rino Squishes and career pols of the Republican party; but I can only exclaim: why does it have to be Trump who is the guy who is doing it!

  • To be this way: a useless man; a truly superfluous man; a man who is, in some cosmic sense, unemployed and relentlessly unemployable.  This kind of man was posited in a recent David Warren blog entry. Now this man is not a welfare dependent. He doesn't get a government cheque, and sit on the sofa all day watching television or surfing the internet. He is active but his activity is useless to the capitalist mindset. That is, it isn't profitable in the monetary sense, but instead has a cosmological significance. He does what is worth doing for its own sake. Though, I can't help but feel that becoming an English teacher has made me relentlessly unemployable if I went back to Canada, I can't say that I am a person whose activity has any cosmological significance. I am useless and nothing can be said for that uselessness.

  • I signed on for another year at the school.

  • I tried to make it a habit to visit the site: www.cristyli.com. If you look the links on the side, you will see my two are top of the list.

  • August 20th was Chinese Lover's Day this year. Because the day is celebrated on the Chinese calendar, it can come suddenly upon an unaware Wuxi foreigner. I only figured it out after I espied, from my office perch, one and than another male carrying a bouquet of roses. As soon as I realized it was 7/7, I sent Jenny 250 rmb from my Wechat wallet. But she was not happy about this because 250 in Chinese means dumb and silly. So, I had to send her fifty more rmb.

  • Sesame Street is moving to HBO! HBO?!?! I can imagine what's going to happen. Ernie and Bert are going to be sitting in a bathtub together shaving each other's chests. Oscar won't be living by himself in a garbage can any longer. And Big Bird will be big because...

  • As the month of August wound down, I began asking students when they were heading back to school, and I got dates ranging from the August 24th to September 6th. Asking the students if they were looking forward to going back, I got some unexpected answers. Some actually said they were looking forward to it. Asking them why, they said they were tired of sitting around the house.

  • On the last day of his summer school, Tony told me he would miss it.

  • The last week of his summer school, Tony choose to go to McDonalds for hash browns. He had been eating cheesecake at 85 degree bakery.

  • I am re-reading my entries through the month instead of at the end.

  • I attended the graduation (?) ceremony of Tony's summer school. Tony did some performances, not very competently. He walked around confused during a play in which he had a role and for which all the players were looking at a screen for their lines.

  • Tony's birthday will be spent in the countryside and I haven't bought him a present. I will be recording thoughts on my devices while I am in the countryside and I will then put them in this blog entry.

  • I am wasting my time following US politics and yet I cannot turn away from it. 

  • I have started listening to the Mark Levin podcast again, after having given up on it, for two reasons. First, the presidential race seems so damn interesting and full of possibilities other than Hilary against some Rino Squish. Second, my cousin Pat, when I was in Winnipeg, told me how much he liked listening to Levin.

  • Sister lived exactly long enough for some to realize that when we try to hold on too tightly out of our own selfish desires, we risk even greater hurt or greater pain.  I read this quote in David Warren's blog and it has me thinking that I should give up on my blogging ambitions and just stop blogging.

  • I had a class with two female students who sat together and far away from me at the other end of the table. I made them sit apart from each other and close to me. “We want to sit together.” they told me. “No,” I said.

  • I very much love my Ikea Ironing Board. It is taller and more sturdily built than the cheap wooden piece of crap that Jenny had me buy seven years ago. [To my pleasant surprise, Jenny is using the board a lot herself.]

  • One of my colleagues has what I would term “anal telepathy,” as opposed to the mental kind. What does this mean? I giggle thinking of the possibilities.

  • I saw a foreigner who was ahead of me getting on an elevator that I was going to get on; and I decided to slow down and wait for the next elevator. I just didn't want to chat and I had a good idea what the foreigner was doing in Wuxi.

  • The Kaulins Family went to Beixin, Jenny's hometown, one weekend (Sunday and Monday). I make 16 bulleted entries about it:

  1. We took the bus there. And again, I loved taking the Jiangying Bridge which offered a great view of Yangtze River ship traffic. 

  2. For the first time, I was able to get Internet on the bus. I took advantage of this to post photos and video to my Wechat account and some of my blogs.

  3. We went on Tony's birthday and I am afraid it wasn't much of a birthday for Tony. We didn't buy him any birthday presents. I had assumed that the Relatives or in the in-laws had something planned for him, but there was nothing. It was just another visit to the in-laws compound. The in-laws and Jenny just sat around and we had meals at scheduled times. I took Tony to the local shops to get him a birthday toy. He choose a plastic toy machine-gun that made shooting noises when you pressed the trigger. The cost was 28 rmb. There was no birthday cake but Tony said he didn't want one.

  4. I later noticed that the toy gun had a red aiming light. I found this feature quite fun and thought of taking it to school where the red light feature would be great for playing pranks. I could use the light to have fun at other teacher's expense. Nothing would be funnier than to shine the red light on a teacher as he was teaching, except maybe shining it on a students notebook as he or she was looking at it.

  5. I passed the time by listening to podcasts and music, and reading, either on my Ipod or, if Tony would let, on my Ipad.

  6. Sunday afternoon, my father in-law drove Tony & me on his self-propelled wagon to a place where a friend of his could shorten the belt that Jenny had bought me for in Thailand and that I now needed to wear. If my father-in-law would let me drive that or find a bike I could use, I would be able to while my time away in Beixin quite agreeably.

  7. In the Sunday evening, after supper, I went for a walk through nearby fields and then down streets. I must have been quite the sight for locals, on bikes and cars and trucks, passing me. I had to fight self-consciousness anytime I passed a group of locals talking. Still, it was a good time for a walk. It was cool for a summer in Jiangsu, and the fields and shops I saw were interesting to look at. I took some photos which can you find in my wordpress blog (look there for Beixin, China Field).

  8. The fields were lush and green. Harvest coming soon, I thought.

  9. Thinking about it later, I saw that there were no empty storefronts to be seen anywhere in Beixin. Some that were open were being renovated, but unlike Wuxi where stimulus construction has dotted the area with lots and lots of empty buildings, especially storefronts, I don't recall seeing one empty storefront either in Beixin or when I was riding through nearby villages on the bus.

  10. I noticed a lot of dry corn kernels, the kind I would use to make popcorn, being laid on the ground and/or shifted by locals with this three foot wide round circular straw devices..

  11. Monday, I could hear rain pounding on the roof, and looking outside, I saw that it was as heavy as it sounded. Nothing for us to do but sit in the in-laws house. Jenny and Tony would stay an extra day, I found out, and so I was to take the bus back to Wuxi by myself.

  12. Tony said he didn't want me to leave and that he would miss me. But I as I quickly found out, he didn't want me to take the Ipad with me. Jenny offered him the following choice: he could go home with me, but I would leave the Ipad with her, or I could go home without him, but with the Ipad. He didn't answer the question, pounded his forehead, and said he wanted the choice that we weren't offering: to leave the Ipad with him. [I later phoned Tony from Wuxi and he said he didn't want to talk to me: so much for his missing his Dad!]

  13. The bus to Wuxi was to leave Beixin at 13:10. But it wasn't at the station and so I and the other Wuxi passengers had to take another bus out of Beixin which would then meet up later with the Wuxi bus. It was a good thing that Jenny was with me or I wouldn't have understood what was happening. I suppose this was done because there weren't enough people going to Wuxi to justify bring the bus all the way out there.

  14. On the bus ride back to Wuxi, I got a call from Jenny asking me if I had taken the charger plug and cord for her phone. After saying shit to myself, I checked my charger bag and saw that I had. I immediately was crestfallen and thought to engage in acts of self-punishment because of the agony I imagined that Jenny would go through not having a mobile phone to use. [It turned out that she was able to buy another cord and use her father's charger.]

  15. One thing I don't like about Beixin is how the big trucks barreling down its streets will blare their horns to get pedestrians and bicycles to scurry out of their way. My in-laws compound is actually next to the street and one of these trucks is but five to ten yards from their beds as it barrels through, its horns blaring like a liner leaving port.

  16. I didn't smoke at all when I was in Beixin as I am wont to do when I go there because my in-laws smoke and so I don't have to pay for cigarettes, but I resisted the small urge I had to do so. At school, I have stopped bumming cigarettes and the habit of not smoking maintained itself in Beixin.

  • Tony walked up to me one evening and told me that he wanted to watch the Ghostbusters movie. It was strange that he would do so for two reasons. The first was was because I had to wonder how he got it into his head to want to see a movie from the 1980s. It was also strange because I actually happened to be downloading the movie when he talked to me about it. Always responsive to movie recommendations, I got the idea to download the movie from an email newsletter from the Ricochet conservative website. The next evening after Tony's request, which was the evening before we went to Beixin, Tony and I together watched the movie. I am not sure if he understood all that was going on, but he told me afterwards that he liked the movie a lot, and in Beixin, he told me that he wanted to watch it again. [Tony also like the sequel which I downloaded later in August]

  • What did I think of Ghostbusters? I remember seeing the movie in the cinema when it came out in 1984. I particularly remembered the Staypuff Marshmallow Man because someone, I saw the film with, laughed his head off at that scene. It wasn't so funny when I saw it with Tony. However, the rest of the film I didn't recall and I will say that it had some funny moments and that it was particularly enjoyable for making the government bureaucrat from the EPA the bad and obtuse guy. As well, Bill Murray's enigmatic performance makes the film still watchable after all these years. I would have deleted the film from my computer if Tony hadn't wanted to watch it again.

  • On Monday while I was in Beixin, in Wuxi and in-between, there was a great stock market collapse. That it should be happening, as I said before, is no surprise to me. I have seen too many empty storefronts and buildings since 2008 be built. There would be no need in Wuxi for a subway if the powers that be didn't decide to try to spread the city out. [I made mention of the Great Fall of China to one of the students and they tried to correct me by saying it was happening all over the world.]

  • On the next Tuesday, I saw what I call a government bully boy pick-up at the Yanqiao Metro Station. It was stopped in the area where normally twenty pedicabs would be parked waiting to get fares from passengers who had gotten off the train. There were then only two pedicabs parked near the police pick-up. I saw the other pedicabs dropping off their passengers at a distance from the station, obviously to avoid dealing with the cops. As I entered the metro station, I saw that the drivers of the two pedicabs were the unlucky schmucks who happened to be there when the bully boys came a-calling.

  • Grandmother and child interactions that I saw one day: 1) On the train, a little girl ran exuberantly on the bus and was then roundly criticized by her grandmother (I assume). The grandma's tirade lasted a few minutes, and the end result was that the little girl got up and sat away from the old lady. The grandmother sat beside her again and again the girl sat away from her. Just then, a trio got on the train and sat between them. This sit-off continued as I got off the train. Tony sometimes pulls the defiance act on me after I carp at him. 2) Later, from my office perch which overlooks pedestrian traffic Zhongshan road, I happened to see a teenage boy holding an umbrella high in the air so that his grandmother (I assume) would be protected from the sun.

  • I was able to get photos of a barge train on the Xibei Canal while witnessing the little girl sit away from her grandmother. I will publish the best one in my wordpress photo blog.

  • Davilia Aphorism #1922:  The individual does not search for his identity except when he despairs of his quality.  I am thinking that applies to me somehow, but not exactly. I mean I have known through my wanderings that one cannot escape oneself and one is always taking one with oneself where ever one goes. I was searching, really I thought, for the right milieu. I can't say that I found this right milieu. I have instead retreated into myself and despaired of the quality of the people around me that I have become stuck among. But there is this suspicion that I should be despairing of my quality as well. Since I hit fifty, this suspicion has become a realization. So the last five words of the aphorism do apply to me.

  • I am a Canadian in China but the thought of my being a sort of representative of Canada in China is ridiculous. In Canada, I was never truly a Canadian. I never achieved any success there whether in a professional or social manner. I worked a lot of jobs that were low status and one of these jobs that I had for a long time, I hesitate to talk about with anyone to this day. (It was nothing sordid but it was a situation of a loser.) When it came to friendships and romance, I was without for a long time. I don't even want to tell Jenny about it.

  • So, I sometimes think F*** Canada! What did it ever do for me? But there is a photo of me taken in my mid-twenties that shows a scowling unattractive me that I look at now and think no wonder I failed so utterly.

  • School starting up in last August. One morning I was walking to school, and I saw hundreds of kids walking, as an organized group in double file, to the primary school that is near our school.

  • A student tells me he has a grandfather who refuses to use a phone and would rather write notes and letters to people in his circle. When I say phone, I don't mean mobile phone, I mean the old land line. Furthermore, his grandfather doesn't have a fridge or washing machine. When they try to teach him how to use a phone, he gets angry. David Warren would love it, and so do I. Reactionaries! You just gotta love them!

  • I read about Morrissey's criticism of Obama. His criticism is from a left wing perspective and so is utterly moonbat. And yet Morrissey is still a compelling pop star in a way... 

  • A student named Brandon told me that when he was born, the character for his given name was not on the computer of the birth certificate authorities so they told his mother to change his name which she did. However, his name's new character was obscure and so he was always having his name mispronounced.

  • One cheer for me! I never made a lot of money in this life and I may have been a loser, but I never became a drug addict, a rapist, a thief, a mountebank, an alcoholic, a bull-shitter, a victim or an atheist. And I threw off my stupid youthful socialist cloak and became a thoughtful reactionary. Furthermore, I got married and had a son.

  • Many of the students have gone on interesting summer trips. One student toured Europe. Another student went to Los Angeles, San Francisco and Salt Lake City. I asked the second student, who was wearing a Golden State Warriors cap, which of the three cities he liked the best, and he answered Salt Lake City. I can figure out why he didn't like LA but his reasons for preferring Salt Lake City to San Francisco were interesting. San Francisco was expensive and a little scary, he said, with too many poor people on the streets there, many of whom were black. Salt Lake City, on the other hand, was quiet and safe, and the family he stayed with was very nice to him.

  • When I get off the Metro train, I have a choice of taking the stairs, escalator or elevator to get to the exit. As most passengers, I choose between the escalator and the stairs. But I choose to take the escalators which puts me in a small minority which is sometimes so small that I am one against a hundred: I like the exercise I get taking the stairs and I also like to avoid the crowds and the feeling of being in a herd.

  • Playing Possum. To demonstrate this idiom to a student, I thought of the following example: when your math teacher walks into the class with homework for you, do you play possum?

  • Yes! I didn't have to teach the mopey girl for her last class! I should have told her that when she hears “timber” in BC, she is expected run under the falling tree.

  • On the last Speaker's Corner of the month, I reamed out two female students seated at the back for chatting while I was speaking. My outburst came so suddenly, that it surprised me and the students. And for a few minutes, I was shaking like a leaf trying to be calm. And when the shaking stopped and I was in control, I felt sheepish and exhilarated at the same time. I did what I had to do and yet I felt embarrassed that I had to do it. I imagine that these outbursts don't earn me any allies and add to a reputation I perhaps have for being cold and mean. [My reputation? I really don't know what it is. I can only surmise. But it does raise a question for me. Which is better? To be much discussed or not discussed at all by others when one is not around? From what I have seen, no one, who is absent, is discussed except in a negative manner.]

  • The Chinese Communists are having a big military parade in Beijing on September 3rd to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of the Japanese – Chinese war. They are billing the parade as a victory celebration, though no foreigner and many honest Chinese know that the war's end was not a victory, if it was a victory, by the Chinese Communists at all. I think the Japanese just up and left China after they surrendered to the Americans. I have come across news stories about the parade on the website of the English People's Daily but I haven't paid them much attention. To be honest, I only look at the site for its photos of comely young Chinese women and ignore the news stories which are all propaganda anyway. 

  • I only make mention of the parade in this blog because a student mentioned it in my Speaker's Corner when I asked what was in the news. The student told me that the Japanese had been invited but weren't attending the parade, and the Taiwanese were coming, but not with the full support of that island's population. The Taiwanese person who was coming was now a figure of great controversy on the island. I didn't say anything to the student in way of an opinion about what he had told me. China has been very provocative towards the Japanese and so it begs credulity for the Chinese to say that the parade is all about how hard it is to achieve peace. Till the Chinese Communists are at least honest and forthright to honor the victims of Mao's famines and Mao's Cultural Revolution, the Japanese should not attend parades put on by the Chicoms having to do with the end of World War Two.

  • The last evening of August, I took a plunge in the swimming complex near Xishan High School. There were two pools there: an indoor and an outdoor. I swam in the indoor pool because Tony was nearby having a swimming class, but I found it wasn't deep enough. In the deep end, I was able to stand at the bottom with my head above the water. So, I went to check the outdoor pool. I saw a 2.2 m sign and wanted to go check it out. But pool staff blocked me from going to the deep end. They told me I had to take a swimming test, which would cost 20 rmb, before I could go into it. I walked away muttering.

  • If you want to understand the attraction that many have for Donald Trump, you have to read Anne Coulter's Adios America. For Coulter, immigration is the issue that American conservatives must deal with now before they can even begin to deal with the other problems facing America. Illegal immigration that has taken place since 1986, says Coulter, is a result of the political class, whether Republican or Democrat, conspiring against average Americans who don't want it. For Democrats, illegal immigrants are future Democratic voters. For the Republican donor class, illegal immigrants are a source of cheap labour. The illegal immigrants are taking advantage of system and bringing in a culture that very much debases the culture that made America such a magnet for immigrants in the first place. Coulter makes a pretty damning case that every Republican presidential candidate with the exception of Trump has been soft and dishonest about the immigration issue.

  • The last day of August, I took Tony to a birthday party that he was invited to at the Hui Shan Wanda McDonalds, I ate Teppanyaki, I got my haircut downtown, and I took Tony to the local public pool. The end result was that I was tired and sore.

  • This blog entry is too long. On my word processor, it is fills up 14 pages with a font that is size 12. I think from now on, I will publish entries no more than 4 pages long which means you may see me make more frequent entries.

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

AKIC's July 2015 Back in Wuxi Notes



  • Our flight from Vancouver arrived in Shanghai Pudong where the airport was dingy and the sky was gray.
  • We took a bus from the airport to the Wuxi bus station.
  • At the bus station, the taxi stand was closed so we had to hire a private driver to take us home. It was our good fortune that it wasn't raining because we had to walk a considerable distance, toting three heavy bags of luggage outside, to get to his vehicle.
  • The first thing I noticed on my return to Wuxi was all the wetness. The Yanqiao Metro station, as I went back to work, was particularly damp.
  • They say that of all the students in the world who speak English as a second language, the Chinese are among the worst. Why? I have what are only guesses since Chinese ESL students, not ESL students from other countries, are the only ones I encounter. I first guess that the Chinese are exceedingly shy about using English. I have seen that they will only speak English with a foreigner and often the foreigner has to force them to speak. Many of my students only want to answer questions with a yes, no, or okay. Despite my telling them to speak English among themselves, none of the students ever heed my advice. They will quickly break into Chinese in conversation among themselves in an English class. Do ESL students from other parts of the world have these bad habits?
  • I also blame the Chinese education system for notoriously requiring too much rote learning. I have had many Chinese ESL students learn sentences by rote for my classes. [The same has been said about Japanese students of English as well.] When I ask my students to make a second sentence on the fly using their wits and imagination, they go mute. [Rote learning has its uses but turning history into an exercise of remembering exact dates, like the Chinese do, stops students from taking an interest in it. It must be deliberate.]
  • Is this poor Chinese performance also due to a fear of losing face when making an English speaking mistake?
  • Is it also because the Chinese are arrogant about their place in the world?
  • First day back in Wuxi, I had an evening company class. Maybe, I have mentioned it before but this company is located near the Civic Center Metro Stop (Line #1) and the Coastal City Shopping Mall. To get to the company from the metro stop, I have to walk down a long pedestrian tunnel. This first day back from my trip to Canada, the tunnel floor was damp and my shoes were squeaking as I walked. I thought that there had to have been a flood, but what I learned from the students was that there hadn't been a flood, but that the dampness was the result of the large amount of rain that had fallen in Wuxi during my absence. Ultimately, it was a design flaw by the engineers that was to blame.
  • Second day back at work was Dominion Day, a.k.a. Canada Day, but I didn't care. Stupidly, Canadian politicians changed the name of the July 1st holiday to Canada Day from Dominion Day and so, many Canadians, who are ignorant of Canada's history, think Canada was somehow born on that date in 1867. Canada has existed for 400 years since it was so named by the French who first settled there. What happened in 1867 was that the various Canadian colonies decided to establish a federal government, become the Dominion of Canada as it were. Now, I am proud to be Canadian but not proud of its federal government. Canada would be better off if its federal government was weakened and so I can't celebrate Canada Day because it is really a celebration of the Canadian federal government formation.
  • The second night after my return from Canada, I couldn't get to sleep. Jet Lag. The next day, I was awake till about 8:00 PM when I had to fight to stay awake for my final evening class. Then on the train ride home, I kept nodding off.
  • I will have a class where, if all the students show up, the majority of them will be twins. That is, I will have a three person class with twins. So, 66.7 percent of the students in that class will be twins. Now if the class consisted of five students with two sets of twins, 80 percent of the students would be twins. This adding of a set of twins would mean a 13.3 percent increase in the size of the proportion of twins in the class expressed as a percentage. This increase seems small for what is in fact a 100 percent in the absolute number of twins. Now going from 66.7 to 80 could also be said to be a twenty percent increase if 13.3 is expressed as part of the 66.7. If the 13.3 is expressed as part of the 80, the increase could be said to be 16.7 percent. What does this tell you? Don't trust the numbers you hear from politicians or their spokesman or their enemies in the media. Look at the absolute numbers.
  • A backfire or discharge of gas from a passing bus caused a loud exploding sound that startled the boys and girl in the office. The girls screamed and then some of the boys told stories of bomb explosion that they were near in South Africa and England. There was also talk of Xinjiang people. No one was hurt. The driver of the bus walked around the bus to inspect and eventually went on his way.
  • Trying to cross Zhongshan Road at a pedestrian path, I had to stop otherwise I would have been run over by a bus. The driver was trying to maneuver his vehicle through a traffic jam.
  • The decision to publish my monthly blog entries is fraught with indecision for me. Every time, I go through the notes, I notice something has been overlooked. Often, I am talking about a subject without first introducing it to my readers. I am always forgetting that any readers I may have are not in my mind and know nothing about me. I really need an editor.
  • There are butchers in the butcher shop. So said a student when I asked her to make a sentence with the word butcher. In response to her sentence, I asked if butcher shops sell butchers. [That is another reason why the Chinese are such terrible English speakers.]
  • I was doing a Speaker's Corner and two potential customers, that is possible paying students, fled. They didn't like it when I tried to say something to them. Some students don't want to be forced to overcome their shyness.
  • Summer is humid in Wuxi but I do like the sight of women's legs and peasant wide brimmed straw hats.
  • Tom, our most articulate student, is not in favor of “gay” marriage. “Why would they do that?” he asked me. They being the powers that be in the West. I could only tell him that like China, the West had a cultural revolution in the 1960s for which we are paying dearly now.
  • How can I talk to a student about Game of Thrones which she hasn't seen all the episodes yet? I don't think I can but the student wants to...
  • A teenage student told me that she had just learned to ride a bicycle without training wheels. She hadn't learned to ride a bicycle when she was younger because her mother thought it wasn't safe.
  • Tony, at eight years of age, still rides his bicycle with training wheels. I can blame this on my working four evenings a week, my laziness when I do have time for Tony and Tony's addiction to computer games.
  • On the first Saturday evening back in Wuxi, we found ourselves at Wuxi's Nanchang Jie bar street. Jenny & Tony went to someone's birthday party and I tagged along. Looking for food for myself, I discovered the hard way that the Burger King had shut down. I had to walk the long bar street about three times to make sure I hadn't passed its former location by mistake. The birthday party was at a restaurant and bar called Honeymoon. It had several floors and a nice view of the nearby canal to recommend it.
  • After the party, the three of us had to fight through big crowds to get out of Nanchang Jie.
  • On a Sunday, we bought a new E-Bike that was small-sized for Jenny. The old e-bike is big and hard for Jenny to push around, and will now be for my exclusive use.
  • The Greek crisis caught my attention and for a few days I followed events there closely. These are my thoughts about it: I want to see the EU crumble because I feel large multinational super bureaucracies are evil. Greece, though certainly a wonderful country is socialist, and deserves its fate for being so. So the EU versus Greece, for me, is like the Iran – Iraq war where no one knows who to cheer for. For the sake of humanity, I hope that the battle is short and that from the wreckage, a more distributionist world order can emerge.
  • I don't let Tony forget his shameful behavior to Grandma and Grandpa when we left Brandon. Sad to say, he was more interested in playing Minecraft on the Ipad.
  • Nothing like a “Thank you!” from Jenny to make my day.
  • 30,000 Japanese die a year of Kodokushi. That is, they die old, alone, and neglected so that they may lay undiscovered for weeks. In the USA, 11,000 are killed every year because of guns. (40,000 or so are killed in automobile accidents). Much ado is made of gun deaths in the US and yet we don't dwell so much on the atrocious care of old people in Western style cultures.
  • It's the suits that have screwed up Greece. With their nice hair cuts and their fancy suits, they are truly effeminate, lacking in courage. They couldn't adult up in all the years that people knew the Greek debacle was coming.
  • Rocky, a student, tells me that when he eats spicy food his voice changes.
  • I hadn't been giving much thought to the Chinese stock market collapse till I read an article on the telegraph.uk site saying that what was happening in China was more impactful than what was happening in Greece. So I found myself looking at the stock market app on my Iphone for the first time and I began questioning some students who told me that they had lost money. One told me that the Chinese were now going to put all their money in real estate.
  • That something like this collapse should happen to China is not a surprise to me. In this blog, I have reported how much unnecessary construction of retail space and apartments I have been seeing in the last few years.
  • In the near middle of July as I was thinking about the market crash, I looked at the streets and life seemed to go on. Nobody was jumping out of buildings.
  • I asked a student if she had made a difference during her day before the class. Once she understood what I meant by make a difference, she said she hadn't. Most students would probably tell me that. Selfish twerbs.
  • Imagine, I said to a student, if you knocked on a stranger's door and told them that you wanted to help them, make a difference.
  • How to be taller? Stand by a short person. How to be faster? Stand by a man with no legs.
  • In a business salon class, the students and I were reviewing a dialogue where the following was said: “Do you want me to call Amsterdam?” One of the students, whose English is not weak, told me that he did know that Amsterdam was a city in the Netherlands. He had actually thought that Amsterdam was a person. Just have to be careful with proper nouns if you are a teacher and a student, but especially if you are a teacher.
  • I had to ask the local Hui Shan businessman I know about the the stock market collapse. He told me of a few theories he'd heard. In one theory, it was the Americans that were to be blamed. That theory posits that they came to China and did some short selling and left the Chinese holding the bag. Another theory said that the Jiang Zemin faction destroyed the stock market to spite Xi Jing Ping.
  • He also told me of the enormous shadow banking sector that exists everywhere in China to escape the controls, particularly the foreign exchange controls, imposed by the government, which require lots of paperwork to do foreign transactions and which impose daily limits on amounts of foreign currency that can be used. Need a lot of American currency? Go to the shadow bank.
  • Tony told me he was angry with me. This was his response to my criticizing his desire to do nothing but play games on the Ipad and PC and his not wanting to walk to stores in the area of our apartment. And to the latter point about not walking, he told me that walking was not good for him.
  • In spite the silliness of our arguments, Tony is talking more and showing a great fluency in English, using words that I would have thought that he didn't know how to use.
  • I went to the local Decathalon to buy another pair of the same type of shoes that I had worn on my trip to Canada. While I can now buy shoes my size here, thanks to Decathalon, I don't want to take any chances and see my size of shoes no longer in stock.
  • Some English Names the students have given themselves recently: Murphy Portman, Skywalker, Momo, Oliver, Ennis, Kell, Kingsley (a girl gave herself this name), Joyce (a boy), Circle, General, Rocky, Holly, Garfield, Sky, Snow, Nail, Maco (who is studying chemistry because he is a fan of the Breaking Bad TV series), Xavier, Thea, Aviva, Shella, and Effie.
  • For the Summer, Tony is attending something called the HyLite School of Art and Sinology which is the same complex as my school. I can get to Tony's school from mine through a series of stairs and hallways without going outside. Picking him up the first day, Tony said he liked the school, but he couldn't me why.
  • One morning, I got on the Metro at Tai Hu Square and went in the direction of Changguanxi, the southern terminus of Metro Line #1. I only wanted to ride the train to waste time so as to not to get to work too early. I had time on my hand because I took Tony to his school for an 8:30 kickoff. I didn't have to start at my school until 13:00.
  • At the Changuanxi platform, I got off the train to see there was another train parked on the other side, but its doors were closed and looking at the board, I saw a sign saying it wasn't going to depart for forty minutes. I wondered what was going on till I looked back across the platform and saw that the train I had gotten off at was on the side of the platform with signs indicating it was going in the direction of Yanqiao which was the direction I was intending to go. So, I got back on the train. When I arrived at Nanchang station, I was interested to see that it only cost me 1.90 rmb to ride the subway as far as I did. [It should have cost 4.]
  • This company I am teaching (Lan Gui Feng or Lan Kwai Fong is how you spell it) gave me this sheet written in English to edit about Taihu New City and Lan Kwai Fong Wuxi. Taihu New City is what the Wuxi Government wants to be the new Wuxi downtown. It was hoped or estimated or projected said this sheet that one million workers would move to this new CBD!!! I couldn't hold my laugher.
  • Two students, Sky and Betty, or as I call them Skybetty because they are a inseparable pair, told me they went to Vietnam. I asked them if they went to Saigon, Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City. They told me they went to an island that had a water park; and I told them that they had gone all the way to a tourist trap. That is not at all why I would have gone to Vietnam. I suppose their attitude to Vietnam is like a Canadian going to Florida. No one goes to these places for the culture or history.
  • Thursday, which is the Wednesday of my work week, I woke up feeling dead tired. Tony's going to school downtown requires me to leave the house at 7:30 every morning on days when I won't return till 9:45 at night. I admit that my days are not so busy. I am no where near as busy as I was during my time at Loomis and DHL, but I am up a long time all the same.
  • Live not by lies! I don't have the courage to live this way. I am scared to say anything when lies are spoken in my presence. I don't deserve freedom. Why should cattle have the gifts of freedom?
  • To live in China as long as I have: ten years, is to tolerate lies.
  • On a Friday, the forecast was for rain which meant that I wasn't going to chance using the e-bike to get to the Metro station. I still had to make a trip to the e-bike's parking spot to umplug it because I still had it recharging. And it was just as I was walking back to the apartment from the e-bike that I felt drops of rain and felt I had made the right decision to not take the e-bike. But there was a lull in the rain, and Tony doubted my decision. But as the shuttle bus pulled up near the Metro station and we got off, it was raining buckets.
  • And then as we left the Nanchang station so I could go to work and Tony could go to his summer school, we saw that Zhongshan Road was dry and that not a speck of rain had fallen there. Hui Shan District, where I live, is far from Zhongshan Road.
  • President Obama's answer to the question about the four American hostages not being released by the Iranians despite his deal with them was very telling. Obama was staggered by the question and his eventual response, after the stagger of silence, was to be insulted by the question.
  • Long Dung II. In one of the two HyLite men's room stalls behind the squatter's hole, another big load of shit, that was nauseating to behold, had been deposited. Did someone bring their horse to the bathroom? I felt sorry for the janitor (a.k.a. I.E.) who had to clean it.
  • I have chosen to be boring, not because I have decided to become conventional but because I lack courage.
  • Tony and his friend Steven had a sleepover at our apartment. They played Minecraft on my Ipad and my Iphone.
  • I wonder if some of the guys in my office still do sleepovers. It wouldn't surprise me.
  • I'll say it again. I dislike Wuxi's summer humidity.
  • Why do middle-aged and older Wuxi women seem to dress in a manner that makes them look like warthogs? Is it that they want their appearance to revolt and frighten others?
  • Friendship. What is that? Is it something one should seek?
  • Teppanyaki is alright. What is teppanyaki? A Japanese style of cooking when patrons sit around a grill and have a cook prepare their dishes right in front of them. And there is now such a restaurant at the Wanda near Casa K.
  • What to make of the Iran -- USA nuclear deal? I don't know enough about the Middle East to have an opinion. But my instinct is to distrust it because Obama is notoriously anti-American in his foreign policy. He seems to prefer America's enemies at the expense of its friends.
  • I finished reading two travel books written my an Englishwoman ME Durham who was able to tour the Balkan area in the early 20th century before the start of the Great War. She was able travel to places that seemed hundreds of years out of the 20th century. It was the kind of travel I would like to do. Instead, I am stuck witnessing the Chinese acquire cars and build shopping malls. The furthest I can go back in time is when I see some of the migrant workers in Wuxi. They seem to have come of the 1950s. [Lloyd Lofthouse, a Chicom apologist whose blog entries I subscribe to, said that some poverty has been in China for hundreds of years and it is not fair to blame the Chicoms for it. So, maybe these migrant workers I see are hundreds of years from the 21st century.]
  • Maybe I should get back to telling the one or two readers I have about Nicolás Gómez Dávila  quotes that seem quite apt. Here is #2390 from my collection: The people with whom we speak every day and our favorite authors cannot belong to the same zoological species. My favorite writers include David Warren, Anthony Esolen, Father Schall, and of course Dávila. I know no one who likes these authors. And so there seems no point in talking to anyone in Wuxi about anything.
  • One night as I was taking the subway home from work, I got annoyed at a mother and child. The pair sat beside me and the child couldn't stop saying “laowai!” I was trying to read and I had been full of dark thoughts on account of a recent spat with Jenny and recent classes with annoying students; so I frowned at the woman and told her to shut up “her fucking kid!” When the child persisted, I did it again. Feeling sheepish on account of what I know now and even knew then was imprudent behavior, I tried to concentrate on the book I was reading which ironically enough was written by Joseph Ratzinger. I looked up from my book a few instances to see if I was being stared at by the onlookers but I couldn't tell.
  • Since Jenny bought her e-bike, I have been using the old e-bike to go to the metro station. My one fear is that it will rain heavily while the bike is parked outside.
  • At the Nanchang station, I saw a pair of hipster foreigners trying to buy subway tickets. How did I know they were hipsters? The male had one of those long Grizzly Adams beards that I have noticed many professional athletes sporting recently. The female, I assumed was hip, but really she looked non-descript and unexotic in comparison to Asian girls.
  • I had a student tell me that he had been shocked to see foreign couples on the Wuxi Metro engaging in public displays of affection. He asked me why this was. I told him basically that there had been a change in culture in the West and that young foreign lovers now were no longer capable of controlling their passions and also no longer capable to committing themselves to each other beyond the most recent act of groping or fornication.
  • I read reactionary and conservative blogging every day; and lately, I have been wondering what is the point of me doing so since I am in China and living an isolated life where there is no opportunities for me to discuss the issues with anyone anyhow.
  • I had to explode at a listless student who was going, in a week, to board a plane to Canada where she was going to go to high school. I had to ask her if she even wanted to go given her ignorance of Canada which seemed to reveal a lack of interest. She said it was her parents idea to go.
  • In a salon class, I asked the students what education was supposed to do, and they told me it was supposed to do all these wonderful things to make people so wonderful and thoughtful and able to live a productive life I then asked if the Chinese education system provided these things, and the students say it provided none of them. [Not to say that the Western system is doing that much better. Our system is pumping out infantilized adults who glorify in their craziness and lack of morals]
  • As the 637 shuttle bus was approaching our stop one morning (I didn't take the e-bike on account of it raining), I saw an impatient and stupid Chinese driver who was following the bus decide to pass it on its passenger side. I didn't let this happen because I walked onto the road to board the bus. The driver seeing this and not wanting to wait, rapidly steered his wheels so he could pass the bus on the other side
  • Is the Western way of driving any better? In some ways, I can say it isn't because you can feel confined in traffic when you follow the rules, and if it wasn't for courtesy from other drivers, you can be stuck a long time trying to make a turn. In China, you can expect drivers to give you some courtesy, but unfortunately the courtesy of a driver to another driver does not redound to drivers giving pedestrians courtesy and so you have drivers thinking it is okay to pass a bus on its passenger side when it is trying to pick up passengers, and drivers thinking it is okay as well to cut off pedestrians so they can make right or left turns.
  • Because Tony was hogging my Ipad on the train, I was able to read, on my Ipod, Nicolás Gómez Dávila aphorism # 2453: A prolonged childhood—permitted by industrial society’s current prosperity—redounds merely in a growing number of infantilized adults. I am sure I have commented on this aphorism before. And I hope I said that I agreed with it, that I mentioned I had seen the evidence of it with my own eyes, and that I was certainly one of these infantilized adults myself. And I probably can't take any solace for myself from the fact that I do feel some shame on account of this being so.
  • I had the runs in July. Every morning, I sit on the toilet in order to rid myself of the liquidy workings of my stomach.
  • The last Sunday of July, I went with Tony to Shanghai to visit with the reigning two-time Shanghai Expat of the year Paul Rudkin. The three of us went to the Shanghai Railway Museum, then Mister Pancake, then the Shanghai Maglev Museum and finally Paul's pad near the Longyang Road Subway Station. That's what we did more or less. For the next bunch of bullets, I will relate the interesting points of the day.
  • It was hot and humid for us in Shanghai. I asked Paul how he liked summer there and he told he hated it. It was his first summer in Shanghai after having spent many in Korea. Tony was complaining a lot when we were walking around in the outside. I had sweat sting my eyes although it was Tony's whining that was more annoying. The humidity made us all lazy and so the trip had to social and not so much of a sightseeing tour.
  • The two museums were okay, though I wouldn't recommend them if you weren't a train fan. It was our second visit to the Shanghai Train Museum and our first to the Maglev Museum. The Shanghai Train Museum didn't contain many English signs. The Maglev Museum did and for its price – free – it was worth a look.
  • The sights very much worth seeing in Shanghai in summer were the girls. Lots and lots of lovely legs did Paul and I see. Talking about these sights, I learned from Paul that Shanghai men have a prejudice against girls who are not from Shanghai. Paul told me about a time that he was with a Shanghai colleague when a girl who was a real looker came into their presence. Paul pointed out the girl to the colleague but when the girl spoke, the colleague was really turned off by her Anhui accent. The Shanghairen wouldn't contemplate going out with a girl who wasn't from Shanghai, no matter how good looking she was.
  • I learned from Paul that the 16th line of the Shanghai Subway had a problem. The planners underestimated the number of riders and built train consists that were only about three cars long. They can't add cars for at least 22 months because the cars built were of a special gauge and size and the manufacturers couldn't fit the orders till then.
  • I have been told that only three lines in the Shanghai Subway system make money.
  • Compared to Shanghai, Wuxi's metro seems nicer. Wuxi's system is less crowded and less dingy; it's cars and turnstiles are more modern.
  • I was able to use my Wuxi subway pass in Shanghai.
  • Paul told me that he was very frustrated with his attempts to get around the Great Chinese Firewall. The powers that be, he says, are making it harder.
  • From an article by Theodore Dalrymple in Taki's Magazine: If I had my way (which, fortunately for the world, is rather unlikely), I should make it a criminal offense to take a child to a MacDonald’s restaurant. If someone were to tell me that children love those restaurants, I should reply, “But that is precisely why it should be a criminal offense.” Theodore Dalrymple is one of my favorite writers on the Internet and I take Tony to MacDonald's a lot. So that passage is a slap in my face. But I deserve and I should at least try to make Tony learn to eat Vegetables.
  • One Monday, I stood in nude in my humid apartment and my body glistened with sweat from my forehead to my stomach. I tried to point this out to Jenny. “Look at me!” I said, but she said I was fat. “But look at how I glisten!” I said. “Well, that's because you're fat!”
  • A day of sweating in Shanghai put the end to my runs and my shits became more solid.
  • I had a big scare at the Shanghai Railway Station when Tony accompanied me to the WC. He disappeared on me in a split instant. I saw him, looked another way, and turned back to not see him. And for a minute I couldn't see him, and I looked around, frantically calling his name. I was never so relieved as to hear him respond.
  • Another writer I admire, though I only agree with him 90 percent of the time, John Derbyshire said he was supporting Donald Trump. His reasoning was that Trump wasn't a professional politician. Fair enough, I thought, and I tried to be more sympathetic to the Donald. But revelations have shown that the Donald had really hadn't been much of a conservative and had donated money to professional politicians on the Democratic side of the aisle. And I have thought of another reason to not support the Donald: he is from another class that rightly needs to be despised as much as the professional politician class: the celebrity class. The Donald is famous in the manner of Hilary Clinton: he has made a name for himself without accomplishing anything impressive enough to qualify him to be president.
  • Hilary Clinton is a member of two despised classes: the professional politician and the celebrity class.
  • I watch a lot of movies but I spare rare readers my reviews of them, for the most part. I recently watched a movie from 1972, Pocket Money, starring Paul Newman and Lee Marvin, which I enjoyed it a lot. Newman looked cool and I thought that he and Marvin had great chemistry. But the reviewers, I learned from the Internet, panned it. Shows what I or the critics know.
  • A typical day in July 2015. I wake up at 6:00 AM. I take Tony, via e-bike or bus and Wuxi Metro to his downtown summer school at 7:30 AM. We get there about 8:30 AM. If my work starts at 1:00 PM, I head back home where I have 90 minutes to do some things before returning downtown. I finish work usually at 9:00 PM. I take the train and then e-bike it or walk home around 10:00 PM. I go to bed before midnight.
  • More about that teenage female student who is going to Canada and whose flight to Toronto was to leave in two days. I asked her if she was excited. She said she wasn't in a ho-hum manner. I asked her if she would miss her friends. She said she was going to see them next summer so she wasn't sad at all. Asking her what she knew about Canada, she couldn't tell me who the Prime Minister of Canada was even though I had told her three or four times before.
  • This is what I found out about the details of her living arrangements in Canada. She will be accompanied by parents and a grandmother. Her meals will be cooked for her. So I figure she will not assimilate. Not that that is a bad thing, for Canada is a silly place these days, lacking in morals or common sense. But her lack of interest in Canada is coming from a materialist Chinese culture created by the excesses of Communism and Crony Capitalism. All she wants to do is play computer games and chat on WeChat or QQ. Confucian? She wouldn't know who that was.
  • Tony thought my e-bike had been stolen. I had parked it in a bike lane in the morning when I took him to school and so he was expecting to see it there at suppertime when Mom was taking him home. But what I had done while he was going to school was take the e-bike home and then park it in a different place. But his thoughts and concern were interesting.
  • Lacklustre company class. What to do? What to do? [Could it be that the Chinese speak such bad English because all the teachers they have, be they Chinese or native speaker, are awful?]
  • My mother told me that in a certain municipality in Canada, house owners, with driveways and without cars, are renting their driveways to those who have cars, and so the government is getting in on this but insisting that these transactions be taxed. When will they start insisting that garage sales be taxed as well? This is what government in Canada is now. Sad.
  • I like the days when I am able to use the e-bike to get to the Metro Station and back. It is much faster than walking home (though not as good exercise) and taking the shuttle bus. Charging the e-bike is a chore however because I do have to park the bike on the other end of the apartment complex, far from Casa K; and because I have to hope there is a empty spot where I can charge and park the e-bike. Despite the many cars in Wuxi, there are still a lot of e-bikes taking up parking space. This is especially noticeable at the Wuxi Metro Station where I often have to ride through a narrow gauntlet of parked e-bikes to find a parking spot. When driving the e-bike, I have figured out that the best time to make a turn is on the green left signal. When a car is tailing me in the apartment complex laneway, I hold my ground and make the vehicle slow down.
  • I find I lack focus these days. I cannot concentrate on what I am doing at the moment and I find I am looking ahead to doing other things; and when I am doing these other things that I had been looking ahead to doing, I find I am further looking ahead to doing yet more other things.
  • Working for wages and welfare dependency are both forms of slavery. While I am fortunate to have never been on welfare, I have been a wage slave all my life: a nigger by choice.
  • A student tells me that someone's wife owns KTVs and thus runs a prostitution ring. Jenny has confirmed that this is the case.
  • A rude action on the Wuxi Metro I would say is to lay oneself down on the seats and take a nap. I have seen this done at least three times including the second last evening of July. I thought to take a photo of the gentleman doing this and publish on my WordPress blog.
  • Tony really hates walking. On the last Friday of July when I took him to the Yanqiao Metro Station, he insisted that I park the e-bike close to the station entrance. It had been my habit to park on the other end of the parking area far from the entrance.
  • At the end of July, it seems like the trip to Canada happened longer than just a month previous. Do I want to move back there? It seems that I more I hem and haw about it, and the older I get, the less sense it makes to go back. I don't have the resources and the energy and the dumb optimism like I had when I moved to Wuxi from Canada, and previously to British Columbia from Winnipeg, or before that, when I moved to Winnipeg from Brandon.
  • July was a month of students telling me they had lots of summer homework to do.
  • No news about Greece as the month ended.