Friday, December 30, 2011
Chinese lessons
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Gavin's first love
Gavin, I promise that this is the only time I will post on the blog about your love life...
Gavin has his first love. Many people know that we got into a Chinese public school because Gavin was friends with a little girl - English name Crystal. She has been giving him the cold shoulder since he arrived in Beijing. It has made him kind of sad. We talked about it one day, and came up with the idea to invite her over to play (we had done this before and it was a total flop, but Gavin was up for a second try). It has worked - she is now really friendly to him in school.
She got Gavin a Christmas present (pencil and eraser), and Gavin is now over-the-moon. He asked me the other day why girls like princesses, and I told him how girls like to play house and have dolls, etc. He said, "My dream is to marry Crystal." I asked him why, and he told me, "...because I love her." He talks about marrying her all the time now, and when she gave him a Christmas present he insisted that he make her a princess out of Magic Nuddles.....here is his princess.
Kelp and Mung Bean soup....Yum???
The darkest day of the year is behind us
I so could have celebrated Christmas during Chinese New Years!
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Christmas celebration continues...
In a nutshell we went to an amazing Christmas Eve gather at night to a home in Beijing suburbs...it was like being in America - large beautiful houses, dryers, dishwashers, ovens...I didn't want to go home!
The highlight for me was the drawing table that they set up to entertain the kids. Gavin was drawing various anatomy pictures and handing them out to the guests....I saw a virus dominated body, a virus using a host cell to breed more viruses, an xray of a hand, the digestive system, the respiratory system, etc. It was funny.
When we got home at night Gavin wanted to help me wrap presents - so I brought out all of the presents, and Sam, Gavin and I wrapped them all.
Christmas day we opened all of the presents and dashed off to church....it was a very dramatic cab ride to church........We were in the cab over 1 1/2 hours, and he still couldn't find the location. What worried me even more was that he seemed to be doing the opposite of the directions given to him by people in the neighborhood. I ended up demanding that he stop the car at what seemed to be a construction site....not knowing if we'd be able to find another cab, but preferring to walk whatever distance necessary to find a better solution....all the while Gavin me is asking questions like... "Mom, why are you mad at the cab driver?"...."He's a bad man, right mom?"
I was really frazzled by the time we arrived at church (2 hours later), and pretty much bawled on and off for the next 3 hours. At church we were invited over to VT house for dinner.....that happened after we sat behind her in church and we made a TON of noise.....she is a saintly woman.
She has 5 kids, and has a very fun house.
We had an amazing Christmas dinner of Turkey, pumpkin pie, mashed potatoes, stuffing, green bean casserole, and fruit salad....Chinese people do not eat Turkey so it is a super special, really expensive treat here in BJ.
Free Gifts
Christmas Eve Breakfast
Our First Christmas Card - Thanks Gavin!
Indoor laundry
So can anyone spot the Christmas tree in this picture???
When life gives you cockroaches....make chicken feed!
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Religious Activity in China
The church is alive and well in Beijing at least. There are 3 wards - 2 expat, and one for Chinese nationals...the government does not allow you to mix. I don't even think that their ward is allowed to be in the building when we are there. It is the same other than we have a lot more televised things.
I have been surprised that they have had Christmas songs playing in retail shops - mentioning Jesus Christ. I was in the Chinese equivalent of Target several weeks ago, and on the music they were playing "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" but instead of saying "Santa Claus", the music was saying "Jesus Christ" is coming to town. Tommy and I had to chuckle, but it seems like there some degree of religious freedom....at least people do not worry about it anyway.
Chinese bathrooms and a funny Sam story
Conterfeit money in China
Chinese take vending machines to a whole new level
My first haircut
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
Pressures of Chinese Living
Wages is China are dramatically lower than they are in the U.S. professionals make between $600-$900 per month. The numbers just do not add up. The more that I have talked with Chinese people the more I am finding out that the cost of living is so high that children are living off of their parents savings. It blows my mind that parents who have grown up with wars, starvation, communism are so eager to spend $75k + for their children to buy a car or are willing to give the downpayment for an apartment (I think downpayments are around 30% of the value of the property).
For those not lucky enough to have wealthy or frugal parents - the parents then become an additional responsibility.
The people here are talking about how afraid the government is about being over thrown by the people because people just can't survive the current conditions.
Gavin's obession with the human body
Gavin is absolutely obsessed with the human body. At least once a day he makes me crack open a medical book and read to him about everything you can imagine...and many things you never want to think about.
I have tried to skip past the technical points....and now he is wise to that. So if he doesn't think my reading is consistent with what he sees on the page - he taps the section and says "read about it, mom!"
Today he wanted to learn about reproduction. I was relieved when he focused more on the baby looking like a "monster" then the mechanics of how the sperm gets to the egg!
Christmas will be celebrated on Christmas!
Thursday, December 15, 2011
Boys have adjusted well
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Do we really have the best government??
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/29/senate-votes-to-let-military-detain-americans-indefinitely_n_1119473.html
If they are passing legislation like this it is because they feel they need it, and intend to use it.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. Benjamin Franklin
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Price of things
We have a Christmas tree!
Sam didn't get to participate much because Gavin made him stand guard over the decorations so that Jack wouldn't poach them. I tried to make up for it by letting Sam put the star on the top of the tree.
3 Boys, 3 Different Reactions to Seeing Tommy
First Haircuts
The Favorite Jacket
Tommy puts the boys to bed
The First Snow
Visiting Gavin's Class
Cutie Pie Jack
The Spring School Uniforms Are Here!!!
Chinese websites that make life cheaper and easier!
The online place to shop
http://www.yihaodian.com/1/
http://www.taobao.com/ (should set up a gifubao account, but things are 1/2 the price)
http://www.dangdang.com/ (cheaper version of Amazon.com)
http://www.amazon.cn/
http://www.vipshop.com/gz.html
http://www.jinmiao.cn/
Location Services - can help you find places in your area
http://www.dianping.com/
The Chinese Craigslist equivalent
http://www.58.com/
http://www.ganji.com/
Finding people to work for you
http://caijj.com/about/qjjsfbz.html
http://www.jjbang.com/
http://www.ganji.com/
http://www.zhaopin.com/
Groceries Delivered
http://www.tootoo.cn/
Cheaper Air Travel (kids get 50% discount on domestic flights)
www.CTrip.com
Yahoo Groups that answer all kinds of questions and where you can surf past postings for answers
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Beijing_Mamas/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/beijing_homeschoolers/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/beijingladies/
Beijing Cafe is also supposed to be good. You need to be invited by a friend and the request has to be accompanied with your bio.
Online to buy electronics
http://www.jingdong.com/
Everyone chats through a service called QQ. So if your children are in school that is often how you will find out about events, homework, etc.
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Wow! Is this animal park for real???
http://www.globaltimes.cn/NEWS/tabid/99/ID/660699/Live-feeding-continues-at-Badaling.aspx
Sunday, November 20, 2011
My www.GovAtHome.com website is officially blocked in China!
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Chinese people and their government
Government turns on the heat
to
Gavin gets out of going to school...
Sacking the nanny
We did find a babysitter that I really felt loved our boys, but she was so incredibly lazy. She would arrive at 7:30, and the first thing that she wanted to do was make herself breakfast and eat for an hour, then she'd play with the children a little, make lunch and eat for another hour, and then take a nap. She would then play with the baby a little and make dinner and eat for the last hour of the day. So I would be there feeding all of the boys, getting them ready for bed, etc. with my nanny sitting and eating at the table. When she left the house - it still look like a bomb had exploded. I felt like I had a guest, not an employee in my home. It was very stressful. So I let her go. I am now on the search for another nanny....and the quality of candidates is so bad. While I was at the agency Jack caught a glimpse of our old nanny in one of the rooms. He wouldn't leave the door and was banging and banging on it. Then he'd leave for a minute and run right back and bang and bang on the door.
I feel like your relationship with your nanny is like choosing a boyfriend. She wants to come back and work for us - do I take her back or move on???
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Air Quality App for iPhones/iPads
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/id457237326?mt=8&ls=1
Take a look at these moto mittens
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Pee "accident"
Children go to the bathroom outside in China. As embarrassing it is to admit - I love it....especially considering the cleanliness of the Chinese bathroom. Today Gavin and Sam were peeing on a tree, and Gavin peed on Sam. He told me that it was an accident....although I have a hard time believing that from the scope of damage to Sam's pants. Gavin was very upset when I made the boys switch pants. Here is Gavin with the babysitter refusing to go to school today!
The curbside sort
You see these sidewalk piles all over the city to sort and deliver packages. Maybe my Taobao order is in there somewhere!
How people get into the school
In Beijing you have to own a property in an area for a specified time period (3-5 years) in order to send your child to school. People do not need to live here for their children to send their kids to school. If that wasn't hard enough to do, not everyone is allowed to purchase property wherever you like. It is often determined by who employs you, where you grew up, where you went to school, etc. It makes it difficult to grow beyond your social status enherited by your birth. In the photo is an apartment building where people have purchased small units in dumpy apartments so that they can send their children to the best elementary school in Beijing....and most likely the best elementary school is China
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Same product different quality...
....I have heard a lot of people talk about how China needs the U.S. to buy their products. When I hear comments regarding the lack of quality goods in China I think about how false that statement is. China needs Chinese product that is currently being shipped to America. You have 1.3 billion people - none of them have a dryer, many do not own automobiles, etc. It just seems that there is a lot of demand in China that isn't being filled.
Chinese education trend
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
China a country in transition
China is a place where it seems that you can see life changing right before your eyes. You walk through shanty towns and road side stands where product arrives on bike to get to a library where you have giant touch screen computers where you can read news papers. It is very bizarre.
Local vendor gives us a lift to school in a motorized wagon!
What do alligator skin, beef penis, and sea cucumbers have in common
Hair in the Peanut Butter
Make sure your visas are current because you do get stopped by police!
Before we left we got a one year multiple entry visa, but it only allowed us to stay for 60 days before we needed to leave the country. I just couldn't do that with 3 kids that are so young. So the first thing I did upon arrival was to discover what options I had.
F Visa good for 6 months. A company essentially sponsors you and you can stay for 6 months even though you are not working. Goverment fees are about $150 per person, processing fees from a copy will run you $700-900 per person. We negotiated because we had so many kids. We paid $500 per person - totally $2,000 and we will have to pay it again in April.
X visa good for 6 months to 1 year depending on the school. You can get an X visa for attending university and language school specialize in this. To process the visa is much, much cheaper around $300 USD per person, but requires a full health exam.....you have to decide if you want to do that in Beijing. We didn't end up going this route because I could never figure out how to get the dependent visas processed for my children. It is possible, but it takes a lot of time and possibly some expensive trial and error. You need to get Apostille Stamps on the Birth Certificate from the Secretary of State where each child was born. Then I needed to translate them (I ended up having to do this step anyway), and possibly notarized....but who would notarize something in a foreign langaguate, and then it had to be stamped by the Chinese Consulate in the US that has jurisdiction over the state where you documents were stamped. So for Gavin that was the Chinese Consulate in LA, but for Jack and Sam it was the consulate in D.C. That process could have taken months, and by the time we paid the courier fees, I decided it wasn't worth the risk. I could never get a clear answer on the exact process - ever school gave me conflicting data....and their responses conflicted with what the Chinese Consulate wrote on the subject.
I wish I had been here on a student visa. There was one school that offered a 12 month visa (Daisy 84727866, 13801308396) which would have been amazing to be part of...and would have saved us a lot of money. There was also a cooking class at Beijing International Youth Research Institue (contact Huang Laoshi at 8454-4690) that I felt was tempting.
That class only required you to attend one day a week while the others require almost daily participation.
I didn't want to risk not having my paperwork in order because I have been stopped twice in the first month in Beijing and asked for my papers. There are enormous banners hung throughout the complex where I am living that request foreigners register with the local police station within 24 hours of their arrival.
The second time I was stopped I was walking with a Chinese America.....who was not asked for papers. It is interesting being caucasian in China because everyone is so....well Asian. You really stick out, and when you are in a police state that can be uncomfortable.
Things that have surprised me...
2. Government employees get a huge delivery of rice each year as part of their pension benefits. 3. Chinese people do not have voicemail
4. I think organic is really organic in China - It takes different than store bought.
5. People living in storage units in my apartment building...next to cars that people have paid over $100,000 for. Social injustice aside - it says a lot about the poor in Beijing.
Likes and dislikes so far..
- great vegetables - the flavors are so incredible. I do not know what I am going to do when we move back to the U.S.
- amazing food - nothing like it is in the U.S. 100 times better.
- friendly people who are really kind. We are served daily by those that are around us. They help so much with daily living. I can't even begin to thank them for helping us survive each day.
- merry go rounds - You begin to realize that all of the litigation might keep us safer, but it also sucks the enjoyment out of life.
- visiting the supermarket - it is always a fun adventure watching the boys see something cool at the markets.
- learning new ways of doing things - I like to learn the strengths of each culture, and why they do certain things. In China for example, they drink a lot of soup, and they do it for the calicium that goes into the water from the bones. I didn't know that was the case.
- subways - clean, effieicent, cheap (30 cents per ride), close, and in English
- cheap labor - deliveries and repairs are fast. So are massages, etc.
- taxi - they are cheap - $5 will get you across town, $1.50 in your neighborhood.
- not having to fight the kids to learn Chinese
- exploring new places
- science museum - they have the most incredible science musuem. we go at least once a month.
- the clothing - the styles on the boys clothing is cuter.
- having someone cook and clean...I just point and say what I want her to cook and it is done
- long school days - an absolute necessity when I have been getting settled.
- accelerated learning on some things....my friend claims that her 2nd child after 2 months is playing more difficult peices than her oldest who has been taking piano classes for years in the U.S.
what I don’t like
- sewer gases coming up through the floor or our bathroom
- bathrooms are smelly
- not being able to read
- feeling behind or burdensome because I always need help translating
- dirty - Beijing has a lot of construction going on
- crap in my apartment that is broken but the landlord doesn't want me to throw it away, but at the same time feels entitled to leave in the apartment
- the weather - autumn is the only bearable season in Beijing. Winters are horribly cold, sandstorms come in Spring, and Summer is hot, humid and polluted.
- long school days - there is no family time
- pressures of Chinese living – maybe you can live up to them if you have one child and 4 grandparents and 2 parents working a child you can get them to perform at that level....as a single mom of three kids I am just happy to get through the day.....which reminds me that Gavin doesn't have his jump rope at school! Ahhhhh!
- mandatory 2 1/2 hour naps at school. Getting kids to bed at night is a problem.
- not having a dryer...cloths do not dry fast enough and get really musty smelling.
- there is no real oven