Ping Pang

From the image stream:

Drinking beer with a couple of aussies arguing about football, footie, cricket. One of them, Doug, I knew from a long while back and so there’s really no surprise. I lean back and just let the scene wash over me. Horrible remixes of pop music from 5 years ago. Smatterings of conversation: some I can understand, some I can’t. Pool balls clack. Nothing all that unconventional really.

A street food pancake for what equates to about 15c. It’s huge and hearty, just a little ma la spicy. We walk back to our apartments via sleepy streets and talk about life.

There’s this crazy chinese lady yelling scat over the top of a french cellist. A trumpeter blasts out muted improvisation over two Chinese _qin_s. I whisper about how I recognize the jazz standard they’re loosely basing this piece off of. Returned whispers mention that she’s reciting a classic Mongolian poem.

We travel to a place called Sanlitun and walk through the most international parts of Beijing. A mall courtyard blasts techno music and we end up eating at an american steak house. I don’t know if anyone really wanted to, but the surreality was too much. Later we get Coldstone.

We go out for Korean food and everyone is again amazed that I can use chopsticks. Speaking Chinese is one thing, but using chopsticks is so very unexpected.

Playing ping pong in a separate meeting room/kitchen/ping pong room just outside the lab. Chen Liu shows me how to play Chinese style, and I show them all the things I know. I get my ass handed to me, squarely, but it’s still good, good fun. A few days later I teach the girls how to play US style. It’s a hot day and I’m sweating. Every time someone gets excited it’s an explosion of words too fast for me to follow. High fives, however, are pretty universal.

Thursday, 21 May 2009

Oh, CO 89

So after weeks of yelling at people that if they give me swine flu before my trip I was going to go climbing through their family tree with a hand saw it turns out that someone else on my flight to Beijing, CO 89, had it. We’re currently on informal, self-imposed quarantine. Nobody is sick and we’re well past the point where, had we been exposed on the flight, we would show symptoms. It’s more a matter of safety and hype that I hope blows over kuaidian-like.

In the mean time, I’m going to be working on having archives and comments here. That and staring at my feet.

Monday, 18 May 2009