Thursday, May 26, 2011

Going Home 我回家了!

May 21, 2011

Yesterday was my last day of work at the China Entrepreneur Club. Looking back on this experience, I can see how blessed I was to meet so many amazing people and do so many incredible things. It was both Claire and my last day, so I hope that Amy will be alright working by herself for a while. I am pretty sure they will hire a new intern for the summer, so she won’t have to be alone for too long. The people in my office all work very hard, and it is this work ethic that has left a deep impression on me. I am going to miss it a lot, but I know that I will be able to see them all again soon! Before I left, I took the postcards that I brought with me from Seattle and wrote each of my co-workers a little note. I wish there was more I could leave with them, but a postcard and a memory will have to suffice. The media team at Haidian Church had a little going-away party for me during Thursday night Bible study, so that was pretty fun! We ate a ton on food and, like always, had fun with the language barrier and laughing about all the mistakes I was making. My English Bible study is going to take me out to dinner on Tuesday night, so I am excited about that! It is beginning to actually feel real now. I am going home soon. Things are winding down.

Preparing to leave, I have been thinking a lot about the things that I miss about America and the things I will miss about China. So, here is my short list of top 10 things I miss about the US/China:

Top 10 Things I Miss About America

10. Western-style toilets and enclosed showers

9. Cheese

8. Driving my car/relatively safe traffic conditions

7. Facebook, Youtube, & other social networking sites

6. Walking down the street without having to worry about stepping in loogies/baby poop

5. Freedom of assembly

4. Real coffee

3. Fresh air

2. My friends and family, of course

…And the #1 thing I miss about America is…

1. Speaking English and having people understand what I am saying!


Top 10 Things I Will Miss About China

10. Riding the subway

9. Baozi 包子 every morning for breakfast

8. Eating with chopsticks

7. Having “tea breaks”

6. KTV Karaoke (卡拉OK)

5. less than $1 DVDs

4. Incredibly cheap everything

3. Bargaining

2. My host family, co-workers, and church friends

….And what is the #1 thing Sarah will miss about China?!?...

1. Speaking Chinese and having people actually understand most of what I am trying to say! J

Ok, so I will go home this next Wednesday, May 25th so I need to start packing. And I have a 惜别会(farewell) Karaoke party today. Unfortunately, many of my co-workers have a long weekend meeting to go to, but I still think a rather sizeable number of people from elsewhere will be able to come! Until my next China Adventure…再见!

Chinese Word of the Day

盼望 Pan wang: “hope for” “long for” “look forward to”

Verse of the Day

John 3:17 “For God did not send his son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him”

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Reflecting Upon Beijing

May 7, 2011

                 As I am entering my last few weeks of this trip to China, my “China Adventure” I want to reflect on some of the things that have impacted me during this time. First, my host family has been wonderful! I couldn’t have asked for a better family to live with than the Xu’s! In the four months that I have stayed with them, we never had any conflicts and they have gone out of their way to be more than accommodating. I am very thankful that they have provided for me so well: my food, room, toiletries, transportation, etc.  They would agree that I get along with them very well. Xu Mingyu was worried that cultural differences would inevitably lead to some conflicts, and he was prepared to handle them in a very frank way. None really arose though, so I think we were both surprised. I have discovered that the number one way to maintain peace in the face of cultural differences (or any differences for that matter) is a willingness to listen to the other person with an open-mind and open heart. I think we both just found each other’s points of view very fascinating. We all wanted to learn from each other. If you have this attitude, you will learn a lot and it is very easy to avoid conflict. In my experience “different” does not always equal “wrong.” Ask questions, have a dialogue, you may be surprised.

                Next, taking part in the different activities at Haidian Church has definitely been a highlight of my time in Beijing. The media team that I volunteer with (Abe, Meng, Wei, David, Lidan, Su Lei, Isabel, Rick, and others) has really been a lot of fun. Even if I am not working on the English blog or another project for the church on a given Sunday, they are still cool people to go eat lunch with and practice my Chinese. We have had some very insightful and thought-provoking English lessons recently. They learned the word “booger” and then impressed me with the sentence “Would you like some green tea or my boogers?” … One of their shirts said “FCUK” and they thought it had something to do with the United Kingdom. I promptly informed them this was not the meaning, and that maybe you shouldn’t wear such a shirt to church again. Yes, I have had such a great impact on the media team! They are just a great group of people that I feel honored to have met and hope to work with more in the future when I return to Beijing.

                And speaking of returning to Beijing, I have officially been accepted into Beijing Language and Culture University (北京语言大学) for a semester of intensive Chinese language study. So, if everything works out as planned, I will be coming back to Beijing from September of this year until mid January. I am a little worried about my current student loans. I hope that the banks will let me defer my loan payments while I am gone. And just so you know, my college fund is always open for donations. J Feel free sponsor my next China adventure. I will provide you excellent PR on this blog and sing you a Chinese song if you do! It would be such a great investment! I think that the total for tuition, dorm rates, and plane ticket is only around $6,000—pretty good compared to PLU. So what do you say???

                Anyways, last but not least, my co-workers at CEC have been a lot of fun to work with. Claire has been so patient in teaching me the ropes. She is a really hard worker and is very smart. Sometimes her English is better than mine. I will miss working with her. Even when she is really busy, she still has a relatively calm demeanor, which helps keep all of our stress levels down a lot. Celina has been really encouraging in reaffirming that I am doing a good job. Sometimes I feel like I am unqualified to be working at a place like CEC, but she has helped me realize that my work really has made a difference in the organization. My supervisor, Amy, is really good at what she does and she is well-liked in the office. I am really thankful that she gave me so much time off when my family visited. She has helped me become better professional writer. Before I came to CEC, I was very good at writing academically, but now I feel more confident in drafting professional invitation letters and emails. Overall it has been a really good experience interning at CEC. Some of my other colleagues (Zhu Wenting, Tammi, Xiao Chi, Jessica, Maggie, Helen, Kevin, Paul Zhang, Wu Laoshi, Jefferson) I have also gotten to know fairly well. I didn’t know many people outside of my department because we didn’t work very much with the other people, plus my language skills made small talk during tea break a little difficult. However, the Annual Summit brought us all together and they got to know me a lot better. And I must say, my Chinese improved a lot on that trip! Overall, CEC has been a good place for me to have my first “professional” job at. The vast majority of my co-workers are fairly young college graduates under 30. They work hard, but are also very easy-going. I wish my Chinese was better and I had more free time because this is a good group of people who I could really see myself becoming close friends with outside of the work setting.

Chinese Word of the Day

选项 Xuan Xiang: "Option"

Verse of the Day

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 “Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.”

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Annual Green Summit in Qingdao & Celebrating Easter

Again, I am sorry that I am a week behind on my blog... Enjoy!

April 24, 2011

                 Today is Easter and I just got back from Qingdao, so I have a lot to fill you in on! The big conference China Entrepreneur Club has been planning these past few weeks turned out pretty well. I hope all the participants thought so as well. Everyone at CEC has worked tirelessly, and so I am pretty exhausted myself. I think all the hard work paid off though.

                The 2011 Annual Summit of China Green Companies was held at the Shangri La Hotel in Qingdao, Shandong Province. It is an event which brings together some of the most elite scholars and business leaders in the world to present different viewpoints and ideas about how to solve some of the big problems China is facing in regards to being environmentally and socially responsible. This year’s theme was “Responsibility and Innovation in a Shifting World—Our Solution.” (See agenda here: http://www.daonong.com/green2011/news/2011yichengE.html) I got to meet people from The Nature Conservancy, the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP), UN Global Compact, AmCham-China, China Greentech Initiative, the Go Green Initiative, and various other organizations who wanted to be pioneers of new business culture in their respective industries. I even got to meet Will Bowen who started the campaign for a "complaint-free world." Not surprisingly, he was a very encouraging person to meet.

                The first day we left the China South Train Station at 8:30 in the morning for a five hour trip to Qingdao. The ride wasn’t so bad. The seats on this train lay back way further than airplane seats, so that was nice. When we got to our hotel (北海宾馆), Claire and I dropped all our stuff off in the room and headed over to Shangri La for some last minute preparation. I printed out all the bios of the foreign guests with the hope of trying to keep them all straight when we welcomed them the next day. That went alright except for I mixed up the British Ambassador to China with a guy from PricewaterhouseCoopers. Oops. That was a little embarrassing, but oh well. Not a big deal.            The second day I got to go with some of the business leaders to tour some of Qingdao’s local enterprises. We saw a train factory called the CSR Qingdao Sifang Co., Ltd., as well as the Qingdao National High-tech Industrial Development Zone, and Jiaozhou Bay New Industrial Zone. I met a really nice lady named Jill Buck from California who is the founder of the Go Green Initiative. I think she’d be a great person to come speak at PLU sometime. I gave her the Chinese name Bai Yuli 白玉丽 which mean “beautiful white jade.” I was quite proud of myself! I am slowly becoming Chinese, haha! And something really funny happened during lunch that day. Everyone was toasting to each other when this Chinese lady, quite animatedly proposing a toast, accidentally spilled her glass of wine all over this French delegate. He played it off cool, but it got all over is hair, forehead, and left a huge stain on his shirt! It was so hilarious. Everyone was laughing so hard. I wish I had got it on video. It was a good day.

                I didn’t actually get to participate in much of the actual summit itself because I was busy running around doing random errands and assignments. The most interesting workshop I had the chance to participate in was a forum discussion with Alibaba founder, Jack Ma. The title of the panel was “A Lesson from Alibaba: Upholding Values in the Face of Conflict.” It appeared on the news a couple months ago that Alibaba’s CEO and some other senior management stepped down for a gold fraud that occurred with some of their traders on their website. This was very impressive because even though they did not directly instigate the fraud, they still felt that it was the most morally upright thing to do to take responsibility for their employees’ actions. If only the Wall Street bankers that threw America and the rest of the world into economic turmoil would do the same…A good quote from Jack Ma that I read in an article lately had him saying,

“For successful business leaders, if their goal is to be rich, they can become very rich. But then what's the point of having all that money? When you have 100 million U.S. dollars, I think that's more than enough for you and your children. Once your net worth exceeds a certain point, that's not your money anymore. It is society's money. It is the money society has given to you, and you should take responsibility to allocate the money in a good way.”

All in all, it was great to be a part of such a high profile event, though. I brought my stack of business cards and got rid of them all. This was a great networking opportunity. The last night of the summit we got to go to see an amazing violin performance by a world renowned artist named Lu Siqing. And Qingdao is known for its seafood, so that was quite a treat!

                Easter at Haidian Church was a lot of fun! I helped out with Sunday School with my friend and CEC colleague, Celina. It was pretty funny because when I first started working, she invited me to come to her church, unaware that we already went to the same church. It has taken this long for us to actually see each other on a Sunday! We handed out colored hard-boiled eggs in little baskets to people on the street and to those coming out of church. I was actually surprised that people were shouting through a bullhorn “Jesus is risen!” But, no one seemed to object or get into any trouble. The church has speakers that project the sermon into the street. And this is a legal Three-Self church, so it seems that China is more open in some respects that I thought. However, there have been some recent crackdowns on the largest home church in China known as the Shouwang Church (see the story here: http://www.christianpost.com/news/police-block-chinese-house-churchs-easter-worship-49967/). Apparently, unable to meet in their regular place, they planned to meet in a park. Police were there to meet them and arrested and blocked many from participating (and continuing to participate) in this illegal church. So, Christians still must be very careful. But anyways, after handing out eggs, I went to the media room and wrote a blog about the Easter service and then just hung out with the other volunteers for the rest of the day. It was very relaxing and fun after such a crazy business trip to Qingdao.

Chinese Word of the Day

Fu huo 复活: "resurrect, bring back to life"

Verse of the Day

Luke 12:47 "The servant who knows the master’s will and does not get ready or does not do what the master wants will be beaten with many blows."