
Let's see, the worst part of leaving? I'm not sure. To be honest, I wasn't afraid to leave. Being an artist in the States is not easy. I think the worst part was my daughter's first REAL tantrum thrown at the Los Angeles Airport about 20 minutes before the flight was due to start boarding. She'd never thrown a fit like that before and I remember thinking, "What have we done?"
The best part has been making friends. I know that sounds clichéd, but watching my children bond with the very people I was also becoming attached to was pretty amazing. One day a week I spend time out in the rural areas taking photos and practicing my Mandarin... For the most part, they have forgotten I'm a foreigner, or at the very least, realize I'm not some desperately lost tourist. I see that as an enormous honor.
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I wonder if you realized that I also have always been considered an oddball? (Extreme introversion, too dreamy, not having a traditional American upbringing.) I, too, had difficulty integrating myself with the instructors & some wives because of my shyness. I suppose working at the academy all day provided me with enough social interaction to get by, however. Sometimes I rely too much on my husband. He truly is my best friend, but because of that sometimes I just turn off possible relationships with other people.
I respect the fact that you kept your distance from the instructor group that you didn't want to be a part of. Being young, male, immature and mostly interested in drinking and girls made them difficult to be around at times.
I did enjoy the few conversations that we had in the lobby. I think I might have been intimidated by your talents and the fact that you are a mother - something everyone expects me to be at my age, but something that scares me profoundly.
I hope you don't mind me commenting so much here, I just find that your entries inspire me to share things with you.
Yes, I realized you must have been considered somewhat of an oddball yourself, and I would have liked to have gotten to know you better, but I never had time, or if I did, it was never during the same-time you had available...
Rod and I are also best-friends, but, if anything, he's shyer than either of us put together. Being in China with the job he got stuck in (he didn't want to be an assistant manager, but he realized that they needed someone whith a little more maturity and experience than what was readily available and, for the most part, all of the other instructors who fit the bill were already showing signs of burn-out or had turned in thier notice, so he took the job, his boss ran and he got caught in the crossfire).
I think, when you're ready to have kids, you'll be a wonderful Mom.
Since moving to the city proper, I've realized what a rare gift our family's experience in this particular neck of the woods has been and have felt driven to write about it. So many people hate Shijiazhuang because they're looking in the wrong places. No, this is not somewhere you want to go if you're a tourist, but if you want to learn a ton about day to day Chinese culture, this as a good place to start. The people are less jaded by arrogant travelers and more open to remembering that you too are as human as they are. I'm glad that my stories have inspired you in any way... It means a lot to me that you said something...
friendship