Tian Qi Shan–Do you have a picture of heaven?

Describe heaven?  What do you think it looks like?  The mountain I climbed in Tonglu was called Tian Qi Shan, meaning Heaven Place Mountain!  The misty fog was heavy Sunday morning when started our climb, all 200 teachers, children and spouses!  It was like a sidewalk up the hill with steps and stops to have tea, look at coy fish, run through the bamboo forest, take pictures of children and adults acting like children.

Heaven do you picture it in the clouds, well then I was there.  The light poured through like shimmering crystals onto the sparkling river flowing in and about the mountains.  The light bounced and played on the tall grasses growing out of the cliffs.  Amazingly beautiful.  The Chinese ink watercolor landscapes I had seen over the years had clouds weaving in and out of the pictures, little did I know today I would see the inspiration for these paintings.  I took picture after picture trying to savor the moment, research for future paintings.

Today I read up on ink paintings.  One artist described the paintings as having a life of their own.  He was commissioned to paint four dragons and did, but left their eyes off.  The buyers wanted to know why.  The artist said if he painted the eyes it would come alive.  The buyer persisted and the artist painted two sets of eyes on his finished dragons and to the buyers surprise the dragons came alive and jumped off the paper.   The artist refused to add eyes to the other two dragons and the painting is as it was, two dragons no eyes.  An artist that can create the moment, the feeling, the life he feels can make the viewer feel that same moment in time.  Today I will paint a landscape of heaven, the heaven I saw in the mountains.  Probably no dragons though.  They might come alive and mess up my apartment!

Suzhou, the Venice of the Orient

Our trip to the suburb of Suzhou (pronounced Sue Joe) started on Saturday morning 7am, at the train station and boarding with Alice.  There are ten of us going, I am the only western teacher.  Suzhou is west of Shanghai and about an hour on the bullet train.  We are picked up by a driver in a nice large van and taken to the Blue Tassel International Private School.  The principal cordially greets us and gives us a delightful tour of the K-12 school premises.  A canal meanders through the grounds with an orchard and gardens for the children to enjoy.  The dormitories are set up four per room.  The art class rooms are wonderful.  I walk into one art room, a young boy is practicing his Chinese calligraphy and I am amazed at his determination with such a large brush.

After our tour we have a wonderful seafood lunch at the fisherman’s wharf on one of the lakes in Suzhou.   Large fish in platters were the main dishes, with shrimp, crabs, snails and a variety of other morsels for tasting.  Wine in an urn was uncorked and poured for all.  Little did we know it was 70% proof, tasted like ever clear with sugar and burned all the way down till we toasted each other.  Much toasting is a Chinese custom!  I began to toast with hot tea!

Next we drove around Suzhou looking at all the canals, homes and lovely landscape.  Suzhou is compared to Venice, and considered the Venice of the Orient.  We picked some tangerines and took pictures at a rest stop by the waters edge.

Then it was on to supper.  I had not eaten much at the seafood luncheon, so the principal said he would take us to a more vegetarian place for supper.  Off we went in the van following his suburban.  Onto the freeway as our driver was trying to keep up with the principal going 140 kilometers.  This was much too fast and I suggested seat belts.  I believe this was the time I recall saying “oh, my god we are going to die!”  I think Esther replied something about me going to my creator!  We exited and drove for miles in the dark, came to a detour and made a right turn down a single lane road that wound through a village and back into the dark.  We came to an abrupt stop behind a parked flat bed truck loaded with big white bags.  Three men were standing next to the truck, maybe it was broke down. Who knows?  At this point I don’t care for dinner and just want to go home.  We had to get out of the van and wait till our driver could turn it around, because he might run off the road and into the levee and didn’t want us in the van.  My colleagues were star gazing now, amazed they could see them in the night sky!  Stars, you’ve got to be kidding?  Back in the van back tracking to find the restaurant. The principal is determined to get us there “hell or high water!”  He questions a stopped biker and she calls her friends who immediately show up and lead the way.  We do actually find this wonderful resort for dinner where we had thirty dishes of food, including turtle soup, crispy goose feet, steamed chicken feet, thinly sliced liver and gizzards, duck bill soup, shrimp, black tofu, steamed pumpkin, and a variety of other tasty bowls of things I couldn’t name.  I’m glad we arrived, no longer lost and defiantly vegetarian!

Shanghai World Expo

This is the last Sunday for the world expo in Shanghai after six months of a highly successful show.  A taxi over the river and oh-my what a site, acres of prime real estate on the edge of the river covered with exotic pavilions.  I heard many Chinese families were displaced and moved to build the expo.  The old Chinese cultural homes were replaced with many world expo buildings.  It is impressive, as each country is represented by a building.  It took an hour just to get in, thank god it isn’t raining.  Right to the USA pavilion, and to the VIP line, show my passport and right in we go.  We pass up three hours of waiting in five minutes.  USA didn’t really go  out of their way to impress me, with a slide show of the country side and a movie of “Seed Folks.”  I did get a pink cowboy hat to wear and show my Texas culture.  Then I took many pictures of pavilions and visited a limited number.

Shanghai– Jade Temple

Shanghai is quickly accessible by the bullet train.  I was up early and in Shanghai by 9 am.  This was one of the best train rides ever, so smooth.  I remember riding the Santa Fe train between Dallas and Ponca City, Oklahoma as a child with my cousin Mary, my grandpa and grandma.  Back then the porters were African-American, this time Chinese stewardesses in purple outfits with cocked hats were our porters.   My new traveling friend Daisy made all the arrangements with her Shanghai friends showing us around.  What a delightful treat.

The view from the train was dank in color, mostly white, gray, beige and brick red.  Many factories with smoking chimneys dotted the landscape.  When there wasn’t a factory, I could see farmland in checkered squares of green.  All the land was in use, with apartment high rises filling in the gaps.

First stop the French Quarter, here the architecture was similar to the Louisiana French Quarter with a Chinese flair.  Then on to the art market, in a sectioned off alley way.  This was were I found my red bean in the “Love of my Life” blog. (If you haven’t read it, go read it!  It is short and terribly funny!) I also saw some nice art prints, mass produced acrylics and lots of fun cheap trinkets.  The alleys in the rain were more fun to photograph than shopping.  I took some artsy pictures.

Another taxi and to the Buddhist Jade Temple.  By now the rain is coming down in buckets so we eat in the vegetarian restruant located upstairs in the temple.  Daisy and Hazel, my Chinese friends had never eaten vegetarian mock meats so this was something new for them.  After dinner we walked through the temple eying all the Buddhas jade, gold and human.  I told the girls the story of the “Happy Buddha.”  The origin of my happy Buddha story is from being awakened in January 2010 by a ghost visit from Andy, my son who the previous October died from cancer.  He was in a long black rain coat, which I thought was odd but when you are asleep anything happens.  I got up and went to the kitchen to write this story down.   He told me in heaven there are many rooms and the one he was most excited about visiting was the “Room of Happy Thoughts.”  In this room he said all our happy thoughts are collected.  When we die we can visit this room and see all our happy memories from our life.  He said my room and his were full of happy thoughts.  He told me to make a happy thought and it would appear right before him.  At 2 am I had no happy thoughts.  He kept persuading me to think.  Sitting at the kitchen table, I looked toward the lazy Susan where the salt and pepper shakers are sitting.  Next to them was a tiny happy Buddha figurine I had bought at the Crow Asian Museum in Dallas.  I held it in my hand and said “Andy, look a happy Buddha, that’s a happy thought!”  Then without realizing it I visualized it to eight feet tall in my head.  Then I heard Andy, yell in my head, “You just scared the shit out of me!”  There is a happy thought –giving Andy a fright.  I think I am still laughing about this.  My room of happy thoughts is full of happy Buddhas!

As we walked up a flight of stairs to see the Jade Buddha, which I wasn’t allowed to photograph, we came to a wooden Buddha relic.  It was full of coins.  The idea is to insert a coin somewhere in the relic without it falling out and you will be prosperous.  The three of us did this and my coin is next to a “Happy Buddha.”

The Jade Buddha was in a lavish room and roped off.  As I stood there looking at it, I noticed two women ask the guard for a bottle of yellow colored oil and then payed for it.  They held the twelve ounce bottle between their hands in prayer fashion and said a silent prayer.  When they were finished the guard came and took the oil, walked to the alter, opened the bottle and poured it into a bowl with a burning flame.  The prayer was now in the oil and would be carried up to the flame and away in the smoke to the great Buddhas in the ethers.  It was a lovely way to pray.

Next we went to the Bund which is a walkway along the river.  I couldn’t believe how beautiful the lights decorated the buildings.  (Images that could be oil painted by G. Harvey)  We walked with our umbrellas up to a shopping mall that resembles old Chinese architecture.  Rain soaked we taxied back to the hotel and tumbled in bed.  Tomorrow the world expo.

High School Sports Event

October 26, 2010

Friday was our high school all day sports event.  The students were bused across town at 6:20 am to the Sports Pavilion.  This pavilion is like Cowboy Stadium in Dallas for all the major sports events.  The high school rented it for $8000US, so cheap!   I think about renting Denton stadium for AHS graduation, in comparison.  The western teachers did not have to attend until 3 pm.  Some of us signed up to run a relay!  Yes, that would be me!

The week before the art club painted masks for the opening ceremony.  It is pomp and circumstance when it comes to ceremonies in China.  They like flags and each class had a huge individually created flag to march in with.  Students had different  T-shirts to separate classes and grades.   I had helped one group from the public school paint shirts in my room last week.  They were quite smart in design and I was given one.  My art club won first place for the most creative opening ceremony look!  Go Art Club!

Tess, another seasoned western teacher, Dan and I took a cab to the event.  Dan, Johnathan and I represented the IB teachers against the Chinese public high school teachers.  We are not in the best of shape for running a sprint, ok I speak for myself.  Johnathan is fast but after the hand off I jogged to the next runner, causing us to be in last place.  The public teachers had a couple ringers, like olympic runners that are teachers.

We won a lamp for our efforts.  That lit up my day!

Art teachers, art museums and the Pi Lu and Ling Gu temple

October 14, 2010

In our school many of the rooms are set up, but they are never used. I see Chemistry labs, woodworking labs, art labs, taxidermy rooms, and so on.  Jonathan, my British colleague says it for ‘show.’  I found a couple of really lovely art rooms with sculpted busts, easels, spot lights and an array of still life items.  No one is allowed in them as they are locked and even double padlocked.  I asked if I could use the rooms, and I get answers like the IB program is taking over and this is for the government public school program.  Yet they sit unused.  Last week on my way to class I noticed this art room was unlocked.  I walked in, and low and behold there was a young man painting a 24x 60 landscape in oils.  His palette had an array of colored dollops of paint nicely organized in a rainbow of hues.  I was so excited to see a real painter and began to chat yet he spoke no English.  Come to find out, after I snagged my art student Joy to translate, he is the government public art teacher.  His name is John Ching Wong and a most handsome man at that.  He invited me to his second floor office, which had a sign printed Art Department Office in English and Chinese.  Finally I have found real art teachers.  Inside he and two colleagues had their desks.  The other art teacher Mr. Drew a short older man with a scruff of a beard shook my hand and pointed to a beautiful watercolor seascape with sculpted gray rocks in the foreground.  It was magnificent.  He painted it.  (Pat Wolf, my watercolor teacher from Taos and Ann Sauve, my Colorado watercolor buddy would be amazed at his expertise.)  I need to take lessons from him, now!  The third man was the music teacher and translated our conversations.  They found out I throw pots and were quite interested in having IB buy a wheel and kiln so I could teach them.  There may be some art trading going on in the future if I can do some negotiating.  When I see John now, he makes a point to say hi or wave.  I have art painting teacher friends!

The art museums in town are small but unique.  The contemporary museum houses many oil paintings of Chinese representational peasantry life, scrolls of traditional ink landscapes and calligraphy plus a variety of modern art.  They had two of the worst Picassos’ I have ever seen.  I hope they are on loan!  The old provincial museum across the street had a magnificent collection of serigraphs by a local artist.  They were a combination of decorative almost Aboriginal in design compositions of everyday Chinese life, some very humorous in bright colored opaque inks.  I would have bought a dozen of these, if they were for sale.  Anna my art student had accompanied me on my quest for museums.  We were fortunate to see a sign to the Pi Lu Buddhist Temple, and off we went many blocks through some dank alleys.   Walking by a beggar man with no legs leaning on a dirty sofa cushion on the edge of the street, I realized how fortunate I am.  Anna is Buddhist and this temple was a find for her.  She and I heard chanting and proceeded to the center of the temple.  As we walked in many people were kneeling on sloping pillows chanting and praying.  We watched and walked around the building then climbed all the stairs to the top to view the golden Buddha in the main room.  This was a site to see, the ceiling was lavishly painted in a bright colored design to enhance the Buddha’s presence.  10,000 Buddha’s restaurant was housed on this level.  The smell wafting from the door way was that of old fried grease and soapy dirty water.  We weren’t hungry nor would we be for hours after smelling this odor.  As we walked the bald Buddhist men in saffron robes made their way to the courtyard, I couldn’t stop staring at them.  They were intense at staring back at me as well.  Guess neither of us had seen anything so amazing.  Then many local women removed their long robes to unveil their street clothes and walked out and on their way home.  Was this women’s prayer day at the temple?  Anna had taken me aside and she showed me how to pray Buddhist style.  On your knees, hands together in prayer, bow placing your hands down on the pillow next to your knees, then flip your hands over and back up into prayer mode.  Do this three times and each time pray for something, like security, prosperity, happiness whatever you want.  It was a lovely way to pray.  She was excited to tell her mom about the temple and would bring her.

Taking photographs is an obsession.  Iris, another art student invited me to Purple Mountain for a photo shoot.  We met in front of the school last Saturday morning and to my surprise, her mom couldn’t come so her dad’s driver took us.  She presented me with a gift of green tea from a nearby tea grower, in beautiful golden tins.  What a treat.  We photographed Dr. Sun Yat-sen’s mausoleum having walked some 350 steps to the top.  Dr. Sun Yat-sen is a revolutionary hero of the people.  He was instrumental in removing the emperors from the Chinese government.  Next we rode a charming little open air tram to the Ling Gu Temple and Pagoda.  A Buddhist temple yet no longer used as such, more like a museum with dioramas of the revolution.  Iris is a quick walker and hurriedly climbed the circular stairway to the top of Ling Gu Pagoda.  The sun was shining and many of our photos have wonderful cast shadows through arch ways and decorative windows.  Iris captured children sliding and climbing up sculpted walls.  I liked photographing the old people in their traditional clothing.  Lunch time, more Chinese family style food served at the food court near the temple.  Iris’ mom and dad met us there and we had the best eggplant, potato and green pepper dish along with seven or eight other dishes.  Another feast!  Iris’s dad wanted to know how long I had been using chops.  Six weeks, I replied.  He thought longer.  For me if you’re hungry and eat with sticks, you must learn how quickly so you can cram it down and not starve!  I am nimble with the chop sticks!

Autumn Moon Festival at Confucius Temple

September 22nd was the Autumn Moon Festival, celebrated by eating moon cakes.   A moon cake is given to friends and is a pastry with a variety of fillings.  I’ve tried a few and some have lotus or bean paste inside.  One had a honey, brown sugar gummy bear texture.   They taste somewhat like a Fig Newton.  Cute as a button, they have Chinese characters stamped on top.

The Moon Festival is a myth about Chang’e the goddess of the moon, and once a year she can come down from the moon to visit her husband and family.  The Chinese regard this day as a national holiday and to see the reflection of the moon in the lake is a good omen.  We went to Confucius Temple (pronounced Foo Zi Meow!) last night to view the moonlight, but alais the mist and rain clouded our vision of the moon.  The temple was an education in Confucius (Kong Zi) philosophy from 500BC.  The book I purchased discusses his personal and governmental morality along with justice and social relationships.  He is a leader in the teaching of benevolence.  As stated in my book;  “If the emperor is fond of benevolence, he will be unconquerable all over the world.   Now some princes want to be unconquerable in the world, but do not implement benevolence.  That’s just as someone feels extremely hot but is unwilling to take a bath.”   The lesson goes on to state if a person has the desire to help others, he will be kindly looked upon.  Is this not a lesson we should be teaching our children?  What a peaceful world it would be to have kind feelings or express goodwill toward one another.  Have I become a student of Master Confucius or maybe I was a student in a past life?

The temple was full of interesting legends, history, sculptures, stelai, one large drum, a gong bell and different presentations.  It was a plethora of information.

I so enjoyed the musical presentation by a Chinese singing, bell ringing and instrument playing team of Chinese ritually dressed young people.  The music was typically old style Chinese and I wanted a CD, where upon Alice said I could find this kind of music in the disc stores around town.  We also saw a stick puppet presentation by puppiters behind a sheet illuminating the figures  through it.  Now this was clever to watch as the wolf  attacked the man and the tree spoke philosophy with a mouth.   I believe this is for children, but the adults were mesmerized including Alice and me.  Sawyer smiled and laughed.  If you saw the movie  “Karate Kid”  released this summer, you will remember the puppet drama is the same.

We walked up and down the streets by the temple where vendors sold trinkets, which I bought many of.  The brightly lit stores lined the street full of people with umbrellas and wet feet.  It was a delight to behold.

Faculty dinner and the back door

The high school had a lovely dinner for all the new teachers, IB and the public school teachers the other night at a very nice restaurant.  One fun tradition was lifting your wine glass and cheering, each table would walk around and cheer you, then your table would stand up, walk to each table, toast and cling each glass.  We had six large tables of twelve each so it took some time.  The food was served with appetizers first, some vegetarian dishes, red wine and some kind of boxed booze, everyone said stay clear of that stuff.  It was 45% must be an “Ever Clear!”  Dinner was many dishes of meat, whole fish, a bowl of guts in a sauce, BBQ beef, pork and chicken.  All my meat eating western friends, did enjoy these dishes.  John and I waited patiently for the vegetarian food and it finally did arrive, but to our surprise was in chicken broth.  We just gave in and dipped out the mushrooms and set them on our plate and ate them.  We had a bowl of steamed weeds, that is the best description I can give.  John liked them, I could hardly get them down.  Reminded me of the seaweed soup I had the other day.  Every time I took a sip, smelled like fish and  just couldn’t eat it.  Melons came and we all enjoyed that.  Someone set off a major fireworks display on the front door of the restaurant, causing me to jump and check it out.  WOW this was spectacular and right on the sidewalk.  My sons would have loved this and gone outside to see the action.

My school has a back door entrance, mainly an exit to purchase food from the local street vendors, but you can see all kinds of activates, from men playing checkers, to ladies washing children and vegetables, to many types of food for sale.  I’ve had Thai food, steamed dough dumplings with different fillings pronounced bowser, milk chai tea and fresh fruit.

Coming back in from an excursion on the back street to the high school grounds, one finds serenity and peacefulness.  Yes, this high school has lovely gardens and a stream with fish.  It has many multistory dorms, for those students who come from a long distance to school.  Many buildings are open air including our teaching facilities.   It is a wonderful campus.

I sometimes like to stand by the stream and look at the fish or listen to the waterfall.  It is so calming and makes me realize how relaxing this is for my overtaxed, multitasking American brain.  Yesterday in the corridors of the first floor, students were learning Karate.  The master teacher was so fluid in his high kicks showing them how far and hard he wants them to kick.  Partnered up, one student would kick and the other held a padded hand paddle to kick too.  They would kick and laugh trying to get their feet up in the higher pose.  Each day is so delightful.