Pointy Bamboo Sticks- A lesson in perseverance

I wrote this short little narrative a little more than a year ago while I was still living in China. Living in a new country, I pretty much felt like a toddler at times. I didn’t know how to feed myself, how to go places, or how to communicate. That all changed, of course, over time & by the end of my trip I often felt like I had more in common with my Chinese friends than any American I met on the road.

I’ve had a lot of people email me lately about China. They’re thinking of going or are going & they are really curious about my experiences. It’s so hard to just write something about something that took up such a big chunk of my life. Where to even start?

So here’s something I wrote while I was there.
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barbecue in nanjiao gongyuan changsha

I took forks for granted. I tried to practice using chopsticks before I left America, but usually gave up quickly. When I arrived in China, I became accustomed to waitresses, friends, and even fellow foreigners laughing at my frustrated facial expressions as I tried to trap a piece of slippery eggplant with two pointy bamboo sticks. The area of tablecloth between my mouth and the shared dishes became a landing strip for cabbage, dumplings, and other slippery food escaping an imminent trip into my belly. It was just not happening.

Chopsticks became my biggest enemy. I easily picked up certain “Chinese habits” required to survive in this city, but every time I sat down to eat, I was reminded that I was still completely out of my element. I couldn’t feed myself without getting a lap full of rice; I might as well have been a toddler. I felt the judging eyes of every native chopstick user in the vicinity. My embarrassment deepened when restaurant workers began sympathetically offering me a spoon.

changsha hunan hotpot

As weeks passed, I became more comfortable. I started to refuse the spoon out of pride, and my Chinese friends began to notice my improvement. But my hands were still sore after every meal. I still had to look at and constantly adjust my hand posture, and every movement was a very conscious, deliberate action to get that delicious morsel into my mouth.

But today was different. After seven weeks of awkward chopstick use, I sat down at one of my regular eateries and ordered a hearty plate of spicy eggplant and fried rice. Half way through my meal I realized I had not thought about my chopsticks once. I was using them naturally. My hand picked them up, placed them in the correct position. I was scooping up the tiniest pieces of fried rice and delivering it to my mouth without a mess.

I began to smile uncontrollably. I looked up, and the kind restaurant owner, who had witnessed those weeks of embarrassment, beamed with pride. She noticed too.

That’s the thing about living in a new place with a new culture & new language. Even the smallest things can seem like the hardest things you’ve ever had to do in your life. Like trying to find out how to order fried rice from the restaurant next to your apartment. Don’t freak out. Just wait. Before you know it you’ll be living in China like you were born there.

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a bahamian adventure

After this busy, busy year, I was sooo happy to take a week off & go to the Bahamas with my best friends! We started at Cape Canaveral, where my friend Kurt works at the Kennedy Space Center. We were lucky to have the opportunity to tour the Center & see the final launch of the space shuttle Endeavor. That stinkin’ rocked!

After that, us girls hopped on Royal Caribbean’s Monarch of the Seas & took sail to the Bahamas. I took one camera & one lens. I really wish I would have invested in a waterproof casing for my camera. We went snorkeling & my mind was blown by the variety of wildlife we saw!

Here’s a bit of what I saw. Enjoy. I’ll be in the bathroom itching my sunburn. :D

cape canaveral beach at nightplant shadow at nighterin at kennedy space centerkennedy space center tour kurt playing volleyball on the beachcape canaveral beachfunny beach picturecute pictures at cape canaveralcape canaveral beach photosbeach portraits at cape canaveralbeach portraitkennedy space centercococay bahamas photoscococay bahamas at low tidecococay bahamas picturescococay bahamas beautiful white beachlaying on the beach at cococaynassau bahamas queen\'s staircaselicense plate in bahamasunique bahamas textureardastra gardens plantsred flower at ardastra gardensreading on the cruisesunset in the bahamas

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FROM THE ARCHIVE: Beijing Boy

Oh how I love getting lost in Beijing. This one is from the first week I was in China, back in September 2009. I love how fierce this guy looks with his cigarette.

beijing boy on a bicycle

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Why I take photos & why you should too/the importance of family photos

DISCLAIMER: This post might get kinda long winded. And I might ramble. Sorry about that, but I think this is important.

I always have a hard time explaining why I love photography & why I never want to stop taking photos. It really comes down to how wonderful photography is at preserving memories & recording history. It gives me chills to think that in 200 years someone might look at my photos. I’m like a real-time historian. I think it is the COOLEST THING EVER that I can look through my family’s photos & see real life moments that I couldn’t experience. Relatives I couldn’t meet. The people who helped shape my grandparent’s lives & ultimately my own.


^^ My great grandmother & her sisters. Don’t they look fierce? I love it.

I was at my nanna’s house the other day & we were looking through some of her old photos. I love looking at old pictures with my nanna & asking her about them. It makes me so happy that they exist. I can meet great uncles that died in WWII & great grandmothers that I never had a chance to meet. I love all of them, even the ones that are blurry. And the ones where no one is ready.

You know what’s awesome about her old photos? I never once looked at them and thought “Wow, that photo isn’t that good.” or “dang, great grandma could stand to lose some weight!”. Why are we less critical about old photos than we are new photos? Okay.. here’s the big bomb i’m going to drop…

BECAUSE THE MOST IMPORTANT THING ABOUT FAMILY PHOTOS ARE THAT THEY EXIST.

Yeah, you heard me. The most important thing about family photos is that they exist. Not that they are exposed right. Or that everyone is smiling. Or that you are all sitting on a vintage couch in a wheat field during sunset. I don’t care if your family photos are taken with a $5 camera you bought at Goodwill. Just. Take. Photos.


^^ My beautiful nanna. This might be one of my favorite photos on earth. Look at her shoes! And that fridge!

My next point..

WHEN YOU TAKE PHOTOS, YOU ARE TAKING THEM FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS. NOT YOURSELF.

If you are waiting until you lose 10 lbs to have your picture taken, shame on you. If you are waiting until you lose 100 lbs, shame on you.  Get your picture taken now. Your kids & grandkids & great grandkids won’t look back on that photo & care one bit about how you look. They will be thrilled beyond belief that they exist. Future generations will care much more about your photos than you ever will.

Last but not least…..

PROTECT YOUR PHOTOS.

Make copies. Put a disk in a safe deposit box. Give a stack to your mother. If your house burned down right now would you lose precious photos you couldn’t recover? Find a backup solution as soon as you can.

You are probably wondering, “Alex, what in the heck spurred this random outburst?” Japan. Or particularly this story about survivors trying to find their lost family photos.

It’s a story about how soldiers & locals have been collecting all the photos they find. Volunteers are cleaning them & displaying them, hoping that they are claimed by relatives. People stop by everyday hoping to find their family photos.

From this CNN article, “”When I saw his face among all this, I was shocked but so happy,” Hideto Abe said as he picked out a photograph of his longtime friend. His friend went missing after the tsunami. Abe said he will give the picture to his friend’s brother.”

Sigh. Photos matter.

Look at this photo. Really, SEE that photo. Think about it. Then go take some more photos, even if you don’t want to.

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today i enjoyed the weather

bumblebeefree lens feetmurfreesboro woods with sun flarefree lens leavesstones river national battlefieldcreepy limbs

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