Blog » 2007» December

Blog

Read about our experiences and encounters with folks and give us your feedback.

Archive for December, 2007

Video, finally!

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

I have been taking video this entire trip, you however be asking where it is.  Alas, the process of buying editing software, downloading and installing (which under most circumstances would sound easy, but in the hinterland of China it can takes weeks) purchasing and installing extra RAM, spending hours net bars with thunderstorms of cigarette smoke, fixing my video camera which was broke for about 3 weeks, and figuring out how to compress and put all the files on-line I have finally started to become more regular with posting videos to the newly titled “Video” page.   So go  ahead and take a look if you would like.  I have one longer video titled “China and the Environment: A cyclist’s Perspective” which you as of right now must download, hopefully I will be able to embed it in the near future.

I also hope to keep more up-to-date with daily encounters, activities, and events that we participate in so keep checking back regularly.

Adam

Drew: Dec. 7, “Advent Reflection”

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

“But the angel said to them, “Do not be afraid…”  -Luke 2:10

  In the West signs of Christmas are undoubtedly everywhere: Christmas lights, Christmas decorations, Christmas sales, Christmas displays, Christmas music…you would have to lock yourself in a basement for the month of December or live in Montana to miss it.   Here in Southern China we don’t have that many reminders.  But, as the season of Advent came upon FueledByRice we happened to be surrounded by ancient Christian tradition at the Maryknoll House in Hong Kong.  We were able to participate in some Christmas decorating by dressing a real tree and helping Fr. Sean set up the hundreds of nativity scenes from all over the world that make up Maryknoll’s fascinating collection.   For me it was a comforting bath of familiar culture as well as a good reminder that even though there’s no snow, we are in the Christmas season.

  Back on the road I had some time to reflect over my humming tires about the Christmas story.  One of the first messages the angel brought to the characters in the nativity was, “Don’t be afraid.”  The shepherds got it first thing, and I can imagine why after camping in a rice patti in the black of night.  Come to think of it, seeing “the glory of the Lord” shining around you at any time might be startling, but there’s a special terror to being out in the fields at night.  Either way, the message from God starts, “Don’t be afraid.”  Mary and Joseph also get this same message from the angel that appears to them.  It might be dismissed as a greeting or small encouragement, but I tend to think this simple admonition is at the heart of God’s message: “Don’t be afraid.”

  One of FueledByRice’s main messages is along similar lines:

  • Don’t be afraid of other people because they may be different or far away or associated with some uncooperative government.
  • Don’t be afraid to go outside your comfort zone.
  • Don’t be afraid of the big challenges.
  • Don’t be afraid when the wind is dark, and a heavy world is crushing you…

  What’s wrong with fear?  It makes us do things we wouldn’t do if we weren’t afraid.  Our defenses are up in fear; we are prepared to protect ourselves using whatever means necessary or possible.  Fear clouds our judgement.  Fear makes us dangerous. 

Jesus’s close friend John writes that fear is not a part of love.  He says there is no fear in love because perfect love drives out all fear (1Jn4:18).  Earlier in the gospel he tells us Christ came because God loved the world so much…  So connecting the dots we see Christ’s advent was because of God’s love, love and fear don’t mix, God says Don’t be afraid.

  It’s a good message for us today.  Love more, fear less.  In a world where fear is being used as a tool for manipulation, both by terrorist groups and democratic governments, we do well to prepare ourselves to face others in love and not in fear, so we can act in ways that honor our fellow humanity rather than in ways that bind freedom and demean life’s value.

  The celebration of Christmas is a celebration of God’s love toward humanity and our love for friends and family and even strangers, sometimes.  Whether or not you may be in the practice of celebrating Christmas, allow this message from the angel in the story to be spoken to you this Advent season: Don’t be afraid.

FBR Featured on KwangSub and Suji’s Blog

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

Attentive readers will recall the Koreans with whom we rode for about a week in Hunan.  These Koreans, who on top of being beautiful people are great photographers, have done us the honor of putting together several photo albums of us.  If the number of photos already in the album on this website isn’t enough for you, I would encourage you to check out their site.

They have actually made individual albums for each of us.  If you speak Korean, let us know what they’re saying about us.  When we get around to it we’d like to do them the same honor.

The Wonderful Adventures of Big Land (from HK)

Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

They ask me if I’m tired and I say yes.  They tell me what I’m doing is amazing and I say “thank you very much, but its really normal,”with a head nod and a shy smile, bashfully attempting modesty, guiltily accepting the complement as justification. We speak in small words and language helpers like “well”, “I suppose”, “that’s great”, and let long acoustic breathes flop into our big meanings like ice cubes in a tall glass of water, melting, always fills you up, always cools down the awkwardness of silence that burns ears. Aahhh 

We’ve been in big land ever since the wedding in Guanzhou when all of a sudden we were in the company of more white people than I’ve seen gathered in one place in 3 years.

In Japan, I knew my limits, and rested meekly on the foreigner crutch that allowed me to be aloof and ambiguous. In Asia, you can laugh when you’re embarrassed, or pretend you don’t understand when you don’t have anything to say.

In big land with its big ideas like carbon emissions, and non profit organizations, and one child polices, these tricks make me look silly.

 I found myself standing on the red carpet of a hotel banquet room coiling and looping with story book fantasia: glitter and confetti and ribbon and a bride sparkling in white and waitresses refilling whiskey flasks and people hunting for other people to talk to. This could be Hong Kong at night spinning on curvy sky ways, tubular lights making car trails, captured at the peak of speed, in a quiet postcard that moves like a bus in a floaty pen streaming down a snowy road where little people tidy little houses.

 I found myself twirling and turning trying to catch the clink of wine glasses toasting and the shriek of whispers shooting sharp tunnels through unprepared ears and the pillowed muff of heels piercing the cush carpet beneath them and the round body above them and the shrill staccato of confident lobby diners from the non-wedding world where people are free to be mute and untouched. The underworld of magnified sound padded me carefully against the onslaught of human interaction in big land. I kept my head steady for wind changes, ants carrying their eggs before a storm.

This is an eco system and I am an ant ducking for cover in carpet bush. Everyone is a predator.

I always get flabbergasted whenever we go to a big city like Shanghai or Hong Kong I feel like Alice looking into a world that makes little senseStreets glow like computer animated cartoon characters that appear 3D I cannot tell if they were drawn or graphically created And one seems realer than the other 

 I find it hard to fit my writing into the vast space of a cityI am spread thinWords appear in comic bubblesThey are not their descriptions They paint cartoon pictures of the people who speak them in this magnified setting of meeting new people and making new friends”。 We scramble to project positives images of ourselves because this is what people will remember of us First impressions pressed into the presence like a name in a gravestone   

We are in Hong Kong now and it is big. Jim has little patience for neon lights and the crowds and the trams and the billboards with the big models and their big abs shooting sexy laser beams with big omnipotent eyes. He’s a Montana man who dragged elks out of the woods before he could grow a beard. Buildings will never replace mountains.

I grew up in Xiao Dao Guo, that’s small island country to mainland Chinese. This does not suffice for the Hong Kong island people whose colonial past has spread out the whole world at its tiny finger tips.  One Nation, Two Systems. But this system, on the Hong Kong side, is much much bigger.

Globalization has the tendency to make small countries act big, or, in my country’s case, developing nations believe that they are developed.

The Bahamas and its relatively stable political climate draws in armies of international tourists imprinting pink feet on its tiny shores. 

Hong Kong has one of the busiest sea ports in the world and is fifth in attracting international passengers to its airspace.

The Bahamian dollar is pegged to the US dollar, and the economy leans on the service industries of tourism and banking. We manufacture nothing and have very little natural resources and skilled labor. We import everything that we cannot produce ourselves. We fear the Free Trade Area of the Americas gulping us down with its highly skilled, lesser demanding workforce, a long island ice tea that only kicks in when you stand up.

Hong Kong’s factories which initially built its wealth, are quickly being swallowed up by the cheaper, harder working, dispensable Chinese workforce. Now it is Hong Kong’s job to manage the huge amount of money generated in the mainland and its drudge task force of worker ants.

There are mouths all around tonguing crevices that tickle when touched.

But small country turn big doesn’t want to be touched. Doesn’t want the particles to drift. Wants to keep itself a subject – a being, a one and only. Leave the niceness to the big countries with the big aid like the US.

It is not an easy task for a mainland Chinese person getting a tourist visa to enter Hong Kong. Immigration officers turn away women who look more than 5 months pregnant fearing that they might intentionally remain in Hong Kong to make sure their babies are born there so that the child may have the right to better social health care and educational systems.

In Bahamas, we are constantly worried about Haitians stealing our jobs, exhausting our healthcare, and committing crimes, all of these accusations unproven by statistics, but highly feared.

But this is the big world. Or the small world under a microscope that unwraps it and all its cells out onto the sizzling sand so that one goes hungry for small wanders like purple oyster shells spat out onto the sea shore, and babies who wonder precariously away from the peripheral vision of their parents.   I am lying on the sand and my vision of the families playing at a beach near Mayrknoll is sideways. I feel lonely because I want to play with the children, but their parents and nannies are there. And I don’t want to be weird. This is not the mainland where children run rampant, invading our campsites and pulling us into their schoolyards to play. I have to scurry the sand for imagery.  I have to sulk.

This is big land and I am Glorified Individual. I have to walk with a click and suck the sound like a cup of coffee, my morning comfort. It’s become a habit here in Hong Kong. I have to lean my head forward, peaking at workers smoking in alleyways, exposed pipes on the backsides of buildings, cracks of white paint on the ceiling above my bed, floods on the 5th floor of a shiny mall, accents that don’t match faces. Did you know that there are Indians of Mongolian and Caucasian races?

In big land, I find myself comforted by the parks that are inhabited at any given moment by 80% immigrants. There are Indian or Pakistani men with greasy puffs and stonewashed bellbottoms smoking on the walls. There are beautiful Filipinas and Indonesians picnicking on plastic tarps beneath footbridges and on the edges of buildings. This is abnormal to me until I get kidnapped by a friendly Indonesian at a park beauty pageant for domestic workers, who explains to me that this is how they hang out. She takes me to a street stall to get coconut rice and curry chicken for $10 HKD. You know you’re in big land when you can get cheap ethnic food on the street corner.

I used to hate when the Japanese used the word “ethnic” to describe foreign food in Japan. They did not describe French food or Italian food or American food as ethnic.  Only the more exotic places, or the lesser developed country foods: Thai, Indian, Jamaican.

Peter noticed that they included Mexican and Italian food on the menu at Ruby Tuesday’s in Hong Kong, whose motto is “Simple Fresh American Dining.” 

One of my favorite slam poets, Chinese American from Oklahoma, Beau Sia, once argued in a poem that spring rolls ought to be classified as an American food.

This is big world, where identities come pre-packaged in combat boots, opaque leggings, bleached puffs, and kimono sleeve A-line jackets. At the mall at the top of The Peak, there was a store that sold “cool Japanese style” drinks. I can’t wait for my country to become a fad.

I like Kowloon better than Central. The restaurants there are more raw. There is still fish being squished and scaled in buckets out on the street. You can still get slimed if you’re not careful. There are night markets where crafty market ladies don’t take crap from bargainers. The Indian restaurants here are owned by Indians. And the interior is not decorated but for internationally renowned white plastic chairs. Sit and eat and make sure your glass is clean before you drink the water.

There is peace in the tranquil oasis of Mary Knoll, the 1920’s brick monastery that’s opened its doors to us for a week. It is on the other side of Hong Kong Island, behind several mountain ranges, where the land rolls out its tongue to the ocean. There are beaches and coconut trees here and it reminds me of home again. 

Nassau’s northwest shoreline is lined with mansions locked up in gated communities mainly inhabited by full-time and part-time foreigners hiding away behind coral reefs and sand hills, escaping their neon tubular lives. This part of the island, against the white sand and the sky-reflected sea, is pastel colored, happy colored. Most people are in good moods here. Even the construction workers move at the speed of the coconut trees, their bare black backs shining like polished lacquer in the unblocked sun. Pupils dilate in sun this bright.

There is peace here, shadowed by a vague discomfort. A sense of incompleteness. Like I don’t belong here. The Pacific Islander maids and nannies pushing children with blonde ringlets in strollers and walking chestnut golden retrievers smile at me with familiarity, the same look I get from Ethiopians selling write-off Timberland boots on the street. I am one of them.

But not. Not a maid. Not a merchant. Not selling suits. Not an immigrant in search of a better life. Just passing through on a bike. My friends are Minnesotans who know the difference between fly swatters and robins. Their vocabularies are different from mine, but we share the same passions. I am caught between familiarity with the foreign English teacher and the immigrant, the first world and the third world, the concerned hippy and the dirty pretty thing.  Beauty smiles up at me from big brown eyes in shadowy sockets gaping down as I use its face to start a blog.

Shameless graphomaniac that I am, I feel the need to write everything down to claim it the way a photograph claims an image in a pose. Keepsakes, the authority of memory. A ticket stub that shows I have been there before. I want to scar myself with experience so that I have something to start with. So that people ask me to explain: “What do you mean by that?”  So that I always have something to say at a wedding.

In big world, I find peace in immigrants. Those assimilated in inner city grime. Their culture is still raw like an unhealed wound, still steaming. Immigrants from finicky countries that may or may not ascend to G8 status. Immigrants that still speak their own languages, that still have little Indias and little Mexicos and little Indonesias gathered in apartment blocks in snowy cities, the scent of their curry or their pita bread carried through the pipes.

Immigrants that form little countries labeled in neon signs hung above highlighted streets in big land. Immigrants who push blonde babies in strollers while their own babies speak their first words to them via an international phone card. Immigrants that may or may not have a chip on their shoulder, but still manage to smile, unassumingly at someone automatically distrustful of their intent.

Immigrants who live under the intense, laser-colored city sky, bracing their shoulders against a marching crowd, arming themselves in fashion, and taking pics in the park on a lazy Sunday afternoon, their fixed off day, when the blonde children are under the supervision of their French and Finnish parents.

 Immigrants that have to start from here, and build.  Their journals burned. Their visa pages shrouded in work permits and extensions. Their memories of homeland unsticking themselves from the scrapbooks of their marmalade childhoods.  This makes big land seem much much smaller.

在香港骑自行车

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

我们最近在香港带了一个星期了。来了香港以前我们都很担心。在香港骑自行车会怎么样?我们都知道香港的路非常窄的,车多,开得快。我们都以为在香港骑会很危险。原来,下渡船以后,我们在香港岛开始骑,但是不太危险。车多,但是开车的人都开得十分有礼貌的。超过我们的时候都不但不用按喇叭,还是不挤我们。 虽然我们紧张的在路中骑,但是我们真的就不用那么担心。

香港的山特别多。山的路还是特别窄。 我们在香港最后打算去“Stanley” 因为我们在那里有一个朋友,他说我们可以一个星期住在他家。香港人都知道从“Central” 到 “Stanley” 得爬很多山。我们开始爬山。有时候得吃苦,但是从香港的山上的路,风景特别好看。我们一边吃苦,一边看风景。情况不错!最后我们在朋友的工作的地方(叫“Maryknoll”)。那里的人特别热情。我们很高兴地受他们的欢迎。有机会在香港休息一个星期,我们都很开心。我们在开始我们的自行车的旅行的时候我们的感觉是真的准备好了再出发。谢谢Maryknoll,谢谢香港!

The propaganda doesn’t get everybody

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

“I hate the government,” said the young man sitting with us at the Muslim restaurant. We all paused uncomfortably. “Well,” suggested Drew, “if you change it enough, then maybe your grandchildren will be able to say they love it.” The young man shook his head. “No,” he protested, “my grandchildren will grow up in a different country. The government here is terrible.” This time it was me who spoke up. “It has been getting better,” I ventured, “compared to the sixties aren’t things much better?”

I don’t often find myself often defending the Chinese government. Most people I talk to couldn’t place politics further from their minds. No one cares. Even when I ask them leading questions about odd or unpopular government policies, the Chinese hesitate to offer any negative appraisals of local or national politics. They read the propaganda, accept whatever it says, and leave it at that. Affairs of state and politics are for people with government salaries to worry about. So it goes with most of China. But our impassioned young man felt differently.

Let’s name him Joe. When he’s not at work he dresses, like most other hip, upper-class Chinese, in a hip, upper class style. When he first approached me in the restaurant he had his baseball cap tucked into the epaulet of his well-worn, imitation U.S. Air Force jacket, which he wore over a plain T-shirt, stone-washed jeans, and brand new work boots. “Excuse me,” he said in very passable English, “are those your bicycles outside?” Intrepid readers will already undoubtedly have guessed that the five heavily laden cycles outside to which he referred did indeed belong to the group of which I was for that evening and every other one in recent memory a part.

Upon learning of our trip, its length and our intentions, Joe was noticeably impressed. He talked about his own desire to do a long bicycle trip, and made a reference to Thoreau’s Walden, the part where Thoreau says that we all can choose how many lives we live, and emphasizes the importance of gathering as much experience as possible through living many different styles of life. Even for a college graduate, Joe demonstrated a particularly erudite sensibilities and a crisp intelligence. He also could not say a single positive thing about the Chinese government.

When he first asked us about our bikes, we had already finished eating, and he had barely ordered. We invited him over to our table, and his plate of fried noodles soon arrived in front of him, but despite our frequent encouragement, he didn’t eat any, so excited was he to discuss China with people who brought an outside perspective.

He told us about the first time he learned of the Ti@n@nmen incident (where more than 200 civilians were killed by PLC soldiers trying to break up pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing). “I was so shocked, so shocked, I really could not believe the government could do something like that,” he told us. But in fact it seems that his questioning attitude and skeptical view of the government originated from a sense of justice. “As a small child,” Joe explained, “I saw many poor people, but there were also rich men. The poor had things terrible, but the rich man just had more and more money. I thought this thing wasn’t right, so I thought about it often.” One of Joe’s childhood friends had similar views, and with each other to rely upon, they both developed attitudes that were, for usually propaganda-fed Chinese school kids, amazingly independent.

As an independent thinker in a country that is not open to all strains of thought, Joe realizes he’s at risk. “I can talk about these things here with you,” he says of his rants against the government, “but if I write it down or put it on the internet, the government will watch me.” He wrote down his email address for us. “It’s Google,” he says, “I don’t like what Google did in China, but I use it anyway.” Here he was referring undoubtedly to Google’s agreement to self-censor their China operations according to government demands. Sometimes it’s difficult, for both would-be ethical companies and individuals, to maintain completely clean hands.

“I love America,” Joe tells us as his noodles get cold, “not the government or the military, but I love the American people, and the idea of America.” We have to admit that the ideas behind the constitution, and indeed the whole of the American people, are an admirable bunch, even if the actions of its government and legislature aren’t always the most well-considered. But Joe didn’t praise the U.S. for too long before taking the Chinese government to task. “You don’t know what it’s like to live under the government. You could be killed at any moment,” he claimed. He went on to tell us about a recent college grad who was looking for work in Guangzhou, but did not have a permit to work there. He was taken in by the police, and through an unfortunate twist where the unstoppable wheels of bureaucracy turned brutal, was beaten to death.

Stunned though we all were at this tragic twist in his tale, we tried to point out that following the young man’s death, the system of local work permits was reformed, so it seemed that bad as things may be, it was still possible to change the system. “But this man’s parents and family,” Joe pointed out, “things are awful for them. But who will take responsibility? Who will pay? Noone!” “Maybe you can change the system, though,” we tried to reason with him. “No,” said Joe, “I am not brave enough.” He explained that he felt responsible for his mother, and would not want to jeopardize her retirement by putting his future at risk. Brave or not, he certainly had plenty of ideas of how to reform the system.

Joe currently works for an international company in sales. This certainly explains his great English, but it also demonstrates a quandary for people wanting to be hypercritical of the Chinese government. Whatever abuses the Chinese government continues to commit or has committed against its people, it has also lifted more people out of poverty in the last thirty years than have ever been enriched similarly in all of history. It is in part because of Chinese government policy that Joe is able to work for a company that does business over seas and get his information over the internet.

At the same time, because the Chinese government has created conditions in which people like Joe can flourish, it has also created a condition that imperils its own existence. That is, one in which folks with money and sway and independent minds have the information and reasoning to become upset by their lack of self-determination, the presence of injustice, or the state of the environment.

As you can well imagine, Joe doesn’t enjoy working for the man. Instead he would prefer pursuing a degree in international relations. He regrets the presence of war in the world. Joe tells us he could make a positive contribution to a peaceful world by helping countries get past their differences. But he realizes it will be an uphill battle. In a reference to Milton’s Paradise Lost or perhaps simply to Christian theology in general, Joe mentions that before men there was no peace, even between angels. Regardless of what the angels do, I am glad to know that logic and empathy still have the ability to shed light on murky situations and speak truth to power.

MiddleEarth

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

I do have a ring I wear around my neck, but as of yet I haven’t been able to elicit any magical powers from it.  And it certainly isn’t the focus and burden of our journey, as is the ring in the epic tale by Tolkein about a misfit band of travelers crossing vast terrain full of dangers.

 But, we are five travelers and we are journeying across distant lands far from home in a place called “ZhongGuo” (which is the Madarin form of China which could actually be translated, “middle earth”).  And, like the band in the Lord of the Rings we grow weary from time to time…

And so for the last week we have found ourselves in Rivendell.  In this Rivendell instead of elves we have retired priests, and we’re not deep in ancient woods, but rather high on a hill.  We have spent the last week at a place called Maryknoll on Hong Kong island.  Here we have had all the luxuries of rest and relaxation and plenty of food that the hospitality of friends has to offer.  In the morning our balcony is flooded with light as we gaze out over the lush treetops to the vast expanse of the ocean stretching out around the cove…  During our feasts of pork chops, or potatoes, or hamburgers, or stir fry, or cold cereal!, our kind cooks will come in asking, “Do you have enough?”  Here it is peaceful and we have plenty.  We are blessed!

The generosity we have received from good-hearted people has been humbling, and our time here in Hong Kong has been full of undeserved kindnesses.  The cooks let Jim have his way with the kitchen and we ended up with homemade bread, fresh chocolate chip cookies, and peanutbutter and chocolate fudge.  The Hong Kong chapter of the SJU alumni had us out to dinner at the Royal Yacht Club and treated us to a memorable evening of banter and discussion, as well as a great view of the city at night.  Brother Sebastian gave us a personal tour of his drawing studio (where he writes and illustrates comic books that highlight social issues and offer positive responses).  Later he took us out to Ruby Tuesdays where we took advantage of his half-off membership card to remember Western burgers and enjoy the last crumbs of delicious dessert.  In between all of this we managed to get visas for Laos and Vietnam, help decorate for Christmas, interview with a television station, swim in the ocean, attend mass, watch movies, play music, eat food, sleep in, eat more, and generally enjoy ourselves and the view. 

Our time at Maryknoll was a much-appreciated period of refreshment during our trek across ”MiddleEarth” towards Europe; it was our Rivendell of rest. 

Thank you Maryknoll staff and priests for your generosity and kindness to FueledByRice this past week!  You are a blessing — may God bless you in kind.

Spoiled Rotten

Wednesday, December 5th, 2007

Deprecated: preg_replace(): The /e modifier is deprecated, use preg_replace_callback instead in /var/www/html/0708.fueledbyrice.org/public_html/blog/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 74

Really it comes down to Kevin Clancy.  I mean, we could assign blame all over the place, but I think it would be best to light the burner under Kevin, and of course Kaishan.

  You see, we were doing just fine, sweaty and dirty, rolling into slimey places we loved because they were cheap (never mind that we shared sheets with the last who knows how many visitors, or the occasional worms under the mattress covering a hodge-podge of broken boards strategically placed to make a bed.  Never mind that.  Right?)  We were on a roll and getting used to dirty bathrooms where one showers above the squat toilet, which serves as a drain or walls that may have been white at one time now a comforting grimey brown.  All of that was becoming a very normal part of our daily lives; but little did we know, we were headed for a big-time change… (okay, so we had an idea, but indulge me here).

Kevin and Kaishan messed up our world by a simple invitation.  It was innocent enough, and quite nonchalante — something like: “We look forward to seeing you all at the wedding in GuangZhou and we’ve got you a couple rooms for the days you are there.” 

We tried to protest.  “Kevin, we can find our own accommodations.”  But no, Kevin and Kaishan had to insist that we stay in one of the fanciest hotels by the waterfront in GuangZhou for not one, but two nights.  And, I might add, for free.  Well, if there’s one thing FueledByRice goes for more than dirty and dirt cheap, it’s free.

We pulled up to the hotel early afternoon, right in front with our bikes–much to the hotel clerks’ collective chagrin (I think they were looking for “Audi” or “Mercedes” on our rides and couldn’t figure out how one drives a two-wheeled contraption in such proximity to this landmark hotel)–and we were giddy with our disbelief and anticipation.  Are we really staying here for two days!! 

In hindsight I recognize these as the beginning symptoms of the rare Chinese Enspoilitus, but we were too dazed to understand the implications…

So, after finding a place for our bicycles, we checked in and marveled at the mirrors, the carpet, the lights, the bathroom, the individually wrapped cups and complimentary toothbrushes, the hot hot shower, the western toilet — you know, the usual marvels of modernity– and prepared to purchase clothes for our participation in the wedding celebration.

Well, by the time the wedding feast came around the next day, we were pretty much a lost case.  We sat under chandeliers, surrounded by opulence, three glasses of different alcohol in front of each one of us (the baijio cup was mercifully small), a Lazy Susanna–that’s a fancy “lazy susan”– full of southern China’s tastiest delights.  We incredulously chatted with our English speaking table mates and sank hopelessly into the atmosphere of celebration as we filled our plates and satiated our appetites.

Speeches and toasts were made, gratitude was extended, and our first official “spoiling session” went off without a hitch.  Kevin and Kaishan managed to make their wedding into everyone else’s event, and the party continued late with live music at an Irish pub. 

  I think it’s still fair to blame Kevin for putting a microphone in Dave Harrison’s hands, so that we ended up being called to the dance floor several times throughout the evening (as well as any other names Dave could remember as he tirelessly and with amazing regularity made sure the dance was “happening” all night).

Well, after such an amazing hotel stay and party, you can imagine how we were losing our ability to think cheap and dirty, which is just like thinking clearly to us.  We were spoiled, thick.  But, as if that wasn’t enough, Kevin — again nonchalantely — mentioned that the Maryknoll retreat house on Hong Kong island overlooking the bay would be ready for us whenever we arrived and that arrangements were made for us to stay as long as we liked, three meals a day, all once again gratuit.  Unbelievable!  And the humility and air of hospitality with which he pulled this off would have sucked us in even if we weren’t already well on our way to being completely spoiled.

I’ve never come off a serious addiction, but I hear it’s bad.  Tonight I’m coming down a bit.  We’re back on the road, in the mainland, booked at a local cheap and dirty place, and I am washing my brain in the glow of a Net Bar computer to the sedative quality of the stale cigarette smoke hung atmosphere. 

Funny thing is, even though we’re getting back to normal cheap and dirty so I can once again think clearly, I’d do it all over again in a blink.  I think that’s one of the dangerous symptoms of being spoiled rotten.  You come back for more. 

Well Kevin and Kaishan, if you read this, beware: we intend to in someway return the favor… it may not be right away, but watch out!  And, thank you.

*Kevin Clancy is the lay coordinator for Maryknoll English teaching in China and just married Kaishan, incidentally one of his students when he was first teaching several years back.  Kaishan and Kevin now live on Lover’s Ave in ZhuHai on the southern coast of the mainland, just married.  I sang with Kevin in the men’s choir at SJU and Peter knew him from his involvement in the Maryknoll teaching program.  It was a pleasure to be part of the wedding and also enjoy Maryknoll’s hospitality.  Thank you Kevin!