Friday, May 16, 2008

Beijing Zoo

So the Beijing Zoo is quite large. However, given the number of animals they have, not so much. Most of the animals, they have a great number of them, living together in a space far too small. I felt bad for those giant apes in spaces the size of my Chinese dorm room... NOT GOOD. Plus the way the Chinese behave at the zoo is bad because they provoke the animals and tease them and try to get their attention so they can take a million pictures and blind the poor animals. Kids and adults bang on the glass and try to feed the animals (sometimes human food!) and they litter in the animal's habitat. They yell at the animals and scare them.
I felt really bad because the orangutan, who was of course really smart, wanted to go into to his outside habitat, but the door was locked. He got right up against the glass and inspected the locked door through the glass, and he poked and prodded at the door, and I was SURE he would get it open... he was getting so close, but then these annoying people came and annoyed the poor animal and he went to sit in the corner. Poor thing was in this little cramped dark room that is literally smaller than a dorm room. I wanted to help him open the door so he could go outside, but it was locked of course, and silly me, I hadn't brought some bolt-cutters with me to the zoo.
Then there was lots of kangaroos, which was neat. They were all laying lazily in the sun, and the one near me had a joey that was in the mother's pouch, head first with only his big kangaroo feet sticking out. There were hippos and rhinos, too, which are kind of rare to see in zoos, so that was neat, but at the same time I felt bad gawking at these huge wild animals who lived in a space too small for even a human to comfortably live in. At least I was nice about it, though, unlike many fellow spectators who will do just about anything to those poor animals. The Beijing Zoo apparently has no rules about pestering the animals.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

only in china

So today after my Chinese exam, I said to Lauren, "what do you want to do now that we're done," to which she replied "I don't know...let's go to the Great Wall." Only in China can you say funny things like that and mean it. And we went to the Great Wall today, and climbed it (again). Only this time, we went to Badaling, and it was so much better than the first time I saw the Great Wall.

I'm almost done with my LAST paper! And then, no more China-school!!! I will never be forced, against my will at times, to study Chinese ever again. That's comforting.

Beijing Zoo tomorrow... YAY.

By the way, the pandas in Chengdu are all okay. I wish I could say the same about the people there...

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

EV71

In case you don't know about the new disease in China, here's the official report sent out by the US Embassy:

Enterovirus 71 (Ev71) Outbreak In Central ChinaAmerican citizens are advised of an ongoing outbreak in China of an intestinal virus called enterovirus 71, or EV71. This virus causes a variant of hand, foot, and mouth disease. There are no specific precautions for this other than the general hygiene recommendations for living in China.

Over 3300 cases and at least 22 deaths have been reported in Fuyang City in Anhui Province. All of the deaths were children less than 6 years old and most were under 2 years of age. A few additional cases have been confirmed in Hangzhou City in Zhejiang Province. Hubei Province and Hong Kong have also reported a few cases.

The symptoms of EV 71 are similar but more severe than the common hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD). Typically, it starts with a generalized illness, poor appetite, and sore throat, followed by a fever, rashes on the hands, feet, and buttocks along with mouth ulcers. HFMD is often confused with foot-and-mouth disease of cattle, sheep, and swine. Although the names are similar, the two diseases are not related at all and are caused by different viruses.

Infection is spread from person to person by direct contact with nose and throat discharges, saliva, fluid from blisters, or the stool of infected persons. A person is most contagious during the first week of the illness. HFMD is not transmitted to or from pets or other animals.

For more information here are some useful links at the U.S. CDC:

HFMD page: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/enterovirus/hfhf.htm

Non-polio enteroviruses
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/enterovirus/non-polio_entero.htm

Viral ?aseptic? meningitis
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/revb/enterovirus/viral_meningitis.htm

I need to get out while I still can...

I've noticed that a lot of majorly bad things, like international-news-worthy things, have occurred in or concerning China since I first arrived here in January:
1. numerous and continued outbreaks of violence in Tib*t and Sichuan provinces, among others,
2. Olympics-related world drama,
3. the freak blizzard that turned many parts of China into disaster areas for several weeks
4. the recent earthquake in Sichuan that has killed thousands of people,
5. this new disease epidemic: EV71, which has already killed thousands of people

And then there's me with my bad luck in terms of health: I have had my fair share of infections, ranging from something like pneumonia, to a major infection in a blister on my foot, to an infection from shaving my armpits in less-than-ideal conditions (my dorm room bathroom!), and these mishaps have cost me majorly in US dollars, but at least I'm still alive. My minor concerns are nothing compared to what I see and hear about everyday here.

In light of this, I think it's time I get out of here before anything else happens, to me or to China in general. But at the same time I feel like China's so big and has so many people that bad things like this are so common and are bound to affect many people, but the rest of the world rarely if ever hears about these tragedies. For example, I follow the China Daily, the English-language newspaper of China, and every week it seems that I read about a train accident, or a bus falling off a mountain road, or a freak accident along those lines... or there's the everyday tragedies in Beijing that never go reported and nobody cares. Like people getting hit by cars ALL THE TIME. Lauren and some of my other classmates have seen people run over by cars. Nobody stops to help or anything, people just keep driving or walking, whatever. Traffic laws are a joke and nobody gets in trouble for running a red light or just driving whenever and wherever you feel like. People tailgate closer here than I stand to some people when I'm talking to them, and I have seen the riskiest, most daring, most reckless driving here. People don't care about their cars or their safety so much as getting to their destination. Nobody wears seatbelts and when you cross the street you are ALWAYS doing so with the knowledge that you are in fact risking your life. And as I said, if you get hit by a car, poor you. If you call for an ambulance for somebody in an emergency, the ambulance dispatcher will only send a vehicle if you can guarantee a form of payment upon their arrival. A classmate witnessed a man having a grand-mal seizure and the ambulance wouldn't come because it was unsure who would/could pay. This is what happens when you have the world's largest population: people stop mattering. In Beijing you will get a ticket for parking your car in the wrong spot, but NOTHING happens if you hit a person with your car. NOTHING. I have confirmed this with all of my Chinese friends. These kinds of things terrify me.

It's time to come home. I know I get irate about the state of our health care system in the US, but at least I know that if there's a medical emergency, somebody will come to my aid - in the US the payment problems are left until after they save the person's life. But then there's always the people who don't seek medical care when they need it because they can't afford it, and that problem's the same in the US and in China.

I only have a few more days here and it feels weird. I am so excited to see my mom and Jake and Kev, and to finally be home again, but at the same time, I don't know what life is going to be like when I return. China changes you. That's for certain, if nothing else is.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Earthquake and other news

So the TBC staff told us all to send word home that we are okay because you will probably worry because there was a major earthquake in China. However, the affected city, Chengdu, is 1000 miles from here, and though I did visit it once, I am safe and far from that place. I can't imagine what it looks like now, that place is HUGE, and it sure has had "bad luck" this year first with all the angry Tib*tan activities, and now this? Oh my god, and I just thought of this, Chengdu is where the giant research and breeding center is for the pandas!!! I HOPE THE PANDAS ARE OKAY!!!

In other news, finals week is upon me and I have been busy as of late trying to see everything and also finish my papers and study Chinese. However, I will be boarding the plane on Monday May 19th, which is now officially a week away! This past weekend I visited the Summer Palace and the Old Summer Palace (in the same day...) and tomorrow I'm FINALLY going to the Forbidden City after my Chinese written final. I should have gone much sooner but it kept being cancelled because of rain.

Over the (Chinese)Labor Day holidays, I went with some Chinese friends to Jinzhou in Liaoning Province. We hung out at this amazing hotel right by the ocean. My friend Qi Xu has a good friend that is a big guy in the government of that region, so we didn't have to pay for anything. I have now seen first-hand the perks of the Chinese government... I won't say I wasn't intimidated. The whole time I felt a bit awkward letting this Chinese government man and his assistant pay for everything and show us around their city. Oh well, the hotel was amazing, but the food was NOT. I was stuck for four days in "seafood capital, China" let's call it. If you know me, you know of my fear of aquatic life, which extends to seafood. Needless to say I was very hungry and nauseated at meal times. We went to the beach early in the morning and the tide was low, so there was like this peninsula land-bridge thing that we walked out onto, and we took a boat to an island. We also saw various museums (I've had my lifetime limit of Chinese museums now), and we went shopping, during which time I stocked up on Pepsi Light (the inferior cousin of Diet Pepsi). The train we took to and from Beijing was very nice indeed, and super-fast, unlike the sad little train we took to the Great Wall at Qinhuangdao.

I can't wait to be done with these papers and tests. My plane is departing from the newly opened Terminal 3 of the Beijing Capital International Airport, and it's said to be the largest terminal in the world. The airport was big to begin with, but it was operating at full capacity and they needed more space before the Olympics... should be an interesting sight to see, anyways.