Travel updates yet to post...
October 2009 - Hong Kong
October 2009 - Sun Moon Lake
November 2009 - Wulai Day Trip
November 2009 - Yangmingshan Day Trip
November 2009 - Beitou Hot Springs Trip
November 2009 - Seoul
November 2009 - December 2009 - Japan Amazing Race Take 2!
More adventures to come in 2010 I'm sure...I may not know where or what...but I'm sure I will have unexpected adventures just as I did in 2009!
Highlight of the year - definitely my time away from home in Taipei. My second home. Where I found I could stand on my own two feet, make new friends, do things in a different way. Best life experience of 2009, and quite possibly my whole life thus far!
Looking forward to 2010!!
Thursday, December 31, 2009
Sunday, October 04, 2009
Trip down memory lane...
I went to visit my old 'hood' in the Min-Sheng community on Saturday 3rd October. I was filled with excitement and anticipation, as I have actually been looking forward to this moment for like the last 10 years at least! Dreaming about what it might be like to walk the streets I used to walk everyday. To see how much things have changed...or not! Visit the old bookstore that I used to buy all my books and do all my readings, and buy all my stationery. (Ok, s0 I spent a lot of my childhood in the bookshop. It is Taipei afterall! It's a book city!) Go to the park where I learned how to ride the bicycle, where the family would 'attempt' to play badminton together. Eat the silken tofu dessert that was a weekly tradition at home. In fact, the motivation for this Chinese Study experienced stemmed from attempting to make a visit to Taipei this year just to walk down memory lane! And that just developed developed into - why don't I just give work a miss and come to Taipei to improve my Mandarin! (I'm so glad my thoughts developed further than just taking yet another 'holiday'!)
My mum's friends that used to live 1 street away from us kindly gave me a lift to the area (I haven't quite worked out the buses in Taipei...and the Min-Sheng area is not accessible by the MRT) , and treated me to lunch at this adorable Italian pasta cafe that is apparently quite a popular spot. People from other parts of Taipei come here to eat at this cafe as well! Out of all the pasta places I have tried so far, this was actually really good!
So I digress...
It was a very surreal experience walking down memory lane. (And i'm sure the 4 hours of sleep i got from the night before has nothing to do with it!) Interestingly, everything looked almost exactly the same as it did 16 years ago, except it felt as if my world contracted. The apartment block we used to live in, didn't seem as tall and grand as it once stood. The bookshop didn't seem so far away from home like it once did. My elementary school was only a 3 minute walk away from home, not the 10 minutes it seemed like it used to take! The wet market definitely looked smaller than before. It used to feel like such a journey when my mum took me to the inner parts of the wet markets. Like I said, in my memory, everything seemed so much grander and larger! Obviously, my concept of the world has also expanded in the last 16 years, and as an 11 year old, everything just seemed really big! I realised at that moment, how small my world was when I was just a 10/11 year old kid. Everything just revolved around going to school, tutoring centre, piano lessons, dancing lessons, the bookshop and local eateries. My world back then was just a 0.5km radius from home!
So it really didn't take me long to walk down 'memory lane'. It was rather disappointingly short! And to think I almost planned a holiday just so I could walk around the block for 15 minutes!
I have to say, that area hasn't changed much at all in the last 16 years. Some shops have changed, but most things are still as I remembered it. The only thing I did notice is that, the area has indeed aged. It used to look so new and modern...now, not quite so!
My old primary school was 'open' too. So I went inside to walk around. It was a cool feeling =) I enjoyed it very much!
Now for some photographic evidence!
The south entrance of my old elementary school. I used to enter/exit out of there everyday during Year 1 & 2!
The north gate of my old elementary school...I used to think it was so far away from the classroom. It's actually not that far at all!
I remember this was one of the first parks I ever visited back in 1989! I'm disappointed to see that they don't have the same swings like they did 20 years ago!
"Health Footpath" sounds silly in English. But they have these 'footpaths' made up of stones that is supposed to give you health benefits if you walk on it regularly. Mum used to make us walk on it once a week when we lived in Taiwan 15 years ago.
Random street around the area...
I am pretty sure I will be going back to my old hood later to take some better photos! The Saturday I went was rather gloomy...so everything turned out quite grey...
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
My thoughts about living in Taipei
I know this update is supposed to be about other 'things' I have seen in Taipei (as mentioned in the last post), but right now that feels like such a 'chore' so I am just going to ramble on about what living in Taipei is like...just my thoughts!
Taipei is certainly a city that grows on you.
That is the conclusion reached after chatting to my fellow 'overseas chinese' classmates. And it almost certainly mirrors the sentiments felt by my own Dad when we were living here about 18 years ago.
Why? Well upon first impressions, Taipei certainly doesn't have the charm of other big asian cities such as the more familiar Hong Kong or Singapore. I remember when I went to Hong Kong 2 years ago for the first time in many years, I thought it was just an amazing city. Somewhere I belong. Somewhere I can live and just fit in even though I don't speak Cantonese.
I was expecting the same feeling...or sensation to happen when I arrived in Taipei. No. It was somewhere familiar yet foreign at the same time! I was rather conflicted. In fact, to be totally honest with myself, I didn't like it when I first got here. The heat, the pollution, the traffic, just how the city is organised (or not) really frustrated me! I just wanted to desperately like it because well, I am stuck here for 3 months+!
But now that I have been here for almost a month, I can say that it is a city that grows on you. You will not like this place immediately like you may with the fancier and more glamorous cities like Hong Kong, but somehow you do find this city 'charming' in other ways. Having said that, I can't see Taipei reaching the 'top holiday destinations' any time soon, but as a place to live in Asia...I think you get a good deal here!
I am trying to 'word' how Taipei grows on you, but I am struggling. I think maybe you just learn to love its faults as well as the good that is in this city. Maybe it's just the little things you discover in the city as time passes...Something that can't be found in guidebooks on a fly-in holiday visit...Maybe by the end of these 3 months I will be able to articulate what exactly makes Taipei an attractive asian city...
But so far I can say...I am loving it!
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Mandarin Training Center Experience so far…
Having completed my oral/reading and writing test during registration day, on Orientation day (2nd September) I found out they placed me in Intermediate Reading & Writing. That was OK until I picked up the text book and read it. I was not happy at all! I flipped to the last page and I could read it perfectly OK. The vocab in the text book wasn’t particularly hard or anything I haven’t heard of before. I was a bit puzzled as to why they placed me in this class, but there was nothing I could do until I turned up to my first class.
When I turned up to my first class I told my teacher I think they placed me in a class that’s too easy for my standard. And I didn’t come to Taiwan to do ‘easy’ for 3 months! She recommended I sit through some of the more advanced classes to see if it suited me or read their text books. I did exactly that after class. I went supposedly ‘2’ levels up to read through the Newspaper Reading (1) & (2) text book and thought the standard and its purpose probably suited me better than ‘writing’! (I now regret saying I wanted to learn how to write...should have just said I wanted to improve my reading speed or something like that!) My aim was to try to transfer into Newspaper Reading (1).
I spent the next 2 school days rocking up to uni at 8am to try and transfer into the Newspaper Reading (1) class. I didn’t care what time it started I just wanted to sit through 2 hours of their class to see if I was suitable. Who knew that it was so hard to just sit in a class here because people don’t move!!! (And teachers don’t let you listen in unless there’s space, fair enough because the rooms are small) I did meet 2 people that wanted to transfer from their ‘intensive’ newspaper reading class to a ‘regular’ class but even they had difficulty because nobody was moving out of their class! I then decided to sit through ‘Business Communications’ as it is supposedly a harder level than Intermediate Reading and Writing. The content in that class was really boring, and was full of foreigners that didn’t quite speak Chinese as fluently as people in my current class that I just decided to return to my class. I figured what I get out of a language is less about the classes I take but more what I put into it myself in the spare time. Plus, my writing really can do with a lot of improvement so its not like I won’t be learning anything in the class they placed me into. It's just that, I really wanted to learn some Classical Chinese that I used to learn during my highschool Chinese school days which I never paid attention to! Now I'm just stuck learning about practical things like MBA, Credit Cards, Convenience Stores, The Internet...
Having gone through this MTC experience, my conclusion is that they don’t do a very good job of really testing your abilities, especially for Overseas Chinese as most of us didn’t study Chinese at university, but probably speak it at home, have studied Chinese in some capacity in the past and is more or less fluent but just need brushing up (like myself!) Or maybe I just got the short straw of the stick…maybe some other Overseas Chinese students got placed into something exactly that they wanted?! I don’t know, but having spoken to others in my class, it seems like a lot of Overseas Chinese were placed in ‘Beginners Chinese’ even though they could just sleep through class and pass. I get the feeling they really try to satisfy foreign (non-Chinese) students though, probably as a good marketing exercise, and they rely on their local reputation as a Chinese language school for local Taiwanese. If there’s a survey I can do at the end of this course, I will definitely mention something about their entrance testing system, or providing information about available courses to study!!
Apologies for spending so much time complaining about the testing system and my class schedule, but I just needed to get it out there so I don’t keep repeating this story to all my friends (some have probably heard it for the 3rd time now!)
Well I decided to stay in my class for a few reasons, and I guess the biggest reason is because I liked my class mix. If I am going to hang around Taipei for 3 months and see these people everyday, I should really get along with the students in my class! When I glanced across my class of eight, I was happy to see that most of us looked over the age of 24! And I just found out on Friday that I am not the eldest one in my class!! In fact, 2 are older than me and above 30!! (Not that I could tell at all, I still can’t guess fellow Asian ages) We also come kinda from around the world – 2 from the US , 2 from Australia (myself included), 2 from Indonesia , 1 from Thailand and 1 from Sweden . At first I thought we were all Overseas-Chinese, but again I only found out on Friday that the Thai girl is not Chinese, but I am so impressed she speaks Chinese fluently! There are 2 guys in my class (the other aussie and the swede), and despite being in the minority, their responses to our teachers questions usually results in laughter by the rest of the class. Enjoyment & entertainment factors are definitely important when you are in a small classroom situation. Btw, I LOVE small classes, they are so much more effective than large classes!
Plus I quite liked this teacher as she speaks Mandarin with that perfect accent I wish to attain and her teaching method is quite good. She also makes us not only read and write but speak in class, so we all get turns to express thoughts more coherently and eloquently in Chinese. (as most of us probably only speak basic Chinese required at home or to get around Taipei ).
And as easy as I thought this reading and writing class would be, its not. There are dictation tests here where you probably have to go through over 200 Chinese characters in ‘1 Chapter’ to be able to sit the test. Even for someone that supposedly thinks this level is too easy (me!), it still takes me a good 3 hours to practise writing all the words and sentences once, and you need to go through it at least 2 or 3 times more before you are ready for a dictation test. (I think the dictation test we had on Friday shocked my fellow classmates as most were not prepared for something that intense. I have the pressure of having said ‘I’m too good for the class’ to actually top every single test now. Should have kept my mouth shut on Day 1!) In addition to regular dictation tests, there’s an essay to hand in each week of about 500 words. I know 500 words doesn’t sound like a lot, but when you are out of Chinese writing practise it’s not easy! Again, our class was a bit taken aback with our teachers’ expectation, as some classmates didn’t hand in an essay of that length or in a proper 3-4 paragraph structure. And I must admit, I didn’t write my essay in its proper structure, my writing was more like this blog. Free flowing prose?!
There are ‘supplementary’ hours to take at the MTC too in which I will review later once I actually attend one of those classes. I’m looking forward to weekly Chinese Poetry lessons and watching Chinese films =D.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Taipei Week 1
Note: The entries posted below were written during my first week in Taipei!
29th August
It's been a very hectic few days in Taipei , so hectic that I haven't really been able to absorb all that has been going on. I may have only been here for 6 days now, but it certainly feels like more! Now that I have a moment to relax, here comes my rambling blog...
I arrived here on Sunday (23rd August) from a very comfy stopover in Singapore . I won’t dwell too much on Singapore , but I certainly think that Singapore Airlines is one of the best airlines ever! By the way, if you’re ever going to travel on the A380, make sure you are on the upper deck! The advantage here is that there are less economy class passengers, and on a large plane like that, it makes a difference! Plus for once in my life there was no body next to me on the flight to Singapore ! I had a spare seat to dump my reading material! Singapore airport is also fantastic, just wish I didn’t arrive at such an odd time so I could explore the place a bit more!
I have to say, the help that I received from people over the last few days has been amazing. One of my mum’s friends whom I haven’t seen in almost 8 or 9 years arrived into Taipei 1 day after me. As soon as she knew that I was here searching for a place, she gave me a call and offered to help me look. She was the one actually giving me advice and suggestions on what is good and bad, and helped me choose the room I’m currently in. (Her husband is an architect so she does have some knowledge of buildings!) When my housing situation was getting a bit dire, my mum’s church friends from the church I used to go to 16 years ago offered to pick me up from my hostel and stay with them for a few nights until I found a more permanent place. The uncle that picked me up from the airport also gave me pillow and blankets to use, and helped me move into my new place. He also read over my rental agreement, which of course was rather important! I may be able to read Chinese, but reading contracts is not my forte! And offered to transfer my rent money each month as I’m running low on cash here! (I will of course pay him back through some fancy overseas money transferring thing my mum is able to do) The hostel managers, who are just a bunch of young people a few years older than me were also extremely friendly and helpful. They also tried to help me locate a place to live with their networks and contacts, and when I was just by myself at the hostel, chatting to them about life in Taipei , why I’m here, just random topics made everything feel OK! (And no doubt my Chinese is improving too as I’m having to think in Chinese rather than English!)
In hindsight, I probably did not need to stress so much as all the help was being offered to me. But I learnt that when things are not entirely in my control, I do tend to lose my cool and tense up! I also learnt to humble myself and just ask for help when I need it. The whole independent single girl thing I had going in Sydney , just does not work quite so well when you’re in a non-English speaking foreign country on your own for the first time!
This is how much you get for NT$99 (AUD$3.70)
I was missing my burgers one evening...and luckily for me there's a 'Mos Cafe' (not sure where its from) just near my place haha
Celebrity Spotting: Ariel Lin singing live!
30 Aug
I am beginning to enjoy Taipei life. Having a place to live really makes a huge difference. I realised the weather doesn’t get to me as much as it did when I first arrived, that’s because I’m not running around during the middle of the day looking for a place to live. There’s also a bit of a breeze now, unlike the stifling air I arrived into when I first got here.
As I have been so busy recapping all other aspects of Taipei life, I completely forgot about my registration day!
Mandarin Training Centre Building
There are more photos to come! I just need to get used to my dad's laptop!
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