Wednesday, July 25, 2012
1984
Reading "1984" is my latest timesuck.
A really cool thing about being with a bunch of intellectually-minded high schoolers is that you can actually have conversations about literature without people going "wait, remind me what a book is again?"
I'm getting lots of great recommendations. The general consensus is that I should read everything Steinbeck ever wrote (except all the guys hated "Grapes of Wrath"), but everybody hates Dickens because of adjectives.
Vanessa calls "1984" her "comfort book". I'm half way through, and I have no idea how this book can possibly be comforting. I also can't see any possible positive ending.
ACADEMIC UPDATE
正在取得進展
I passed the Midterm. I feel that I got a far better grade than I deserve. The teacher left the grade sheet lying out on the desk, with the list of all the grades we've gotten in the past week. No one got lower than an -A on anything, it seems that the only three grades they ever give is an A+, A, or -A. So we students have decided that A+ is actually good work, A is average work, and -A is bad work. I got an A on the midterm.
The rough draft of the final project's essay is due on Friday. I'm kicking myself for picking such a hard topic. I have to have 750 characters. 300 is easy. 500 is a stretch. 750 is a nightmare. The final draft is 1000. I still have to do interviews and the survey, but progress is being made!
RETURN TO SHANGHAI
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View of Shanghai from Oriental Pearl Tower, Photo by David Nielson |
I went to Shanghai!
> Best part: getting to go up in the Oriental Pearl TV Tower http://www.travelchinaguide.com/attraction/shanghai/oriental_pearl.htm .
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Blue skies in Shanghai! Photo by Claire Balani |
> Worst part: spending hours walking around the Waitan and NanjingLv in 44C (111F) heat. I have a sunburn.
Tired on the Shanghai tour |
[Smithsonian Magazine has a 360 degree view of the Shanghai skyline, including the landmark Oriental Pearl. http://microsite.smithsonianmag.com/content/Shanghai-Panorama/shanghai-1.html
~Posted by Pam]
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
CAMERON AT CHINESE SCHOOL
Cameron's program director sent us a newsletter emphasizing the rigor of the Mandarin program. The students begin classes at 8 AM and spend five hours per day at school. Four hours are for language study and one hour is for cultural explorations, like tai chi, calligraphy and touring historical sites. (Photos courtesy of NSLI-Y Suzhou Newsletter #1)
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That's Cameron in the center, learning what is described as "the iconic and tranquil movements of this ancient exercise". |
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(Cameron is 4th from left) |
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Poet Zhang Li made this Suzhou bridge famous in the 8th century. |
Under Maple Bridge, fishermen's flares confront my weary eyes.
Outside the city walls lies Hanshan Temple;
Late at night the sound of its bell reaches a traveler's boat.
~Posted by Pam Hughes
Monday, July 16, 2012
HUMANE EDUCATION
We Skyped with Cameron today and saw her well-manicured green fingernails. She also shared an interesting anecdote about a recent interaction with a local boy.
As has been described here, Cameron has been visiting regularly with some dogs outside a pet store near her apartment in Suzhou. Her favorite seems to be this little white one, whom she has named XiaoBai Snowflake.
Over the weekend, she stopped by to give the dogs water and pat them in their crates. Two young boys, around eight years old, were nearby, and she saw one dump kitty litter into a dog's water bowl, laughing. Well. Anyone who knows Cameron can guess what came next: a lesson in the humane treatment of animals!
In her best Mandarin, she told the boys that what they did was not good and that it could make the dog sick or even die. They were visibly skeptical that the animal could die from drinking the contaminated water. But she made sure they saw her dump it out, and use a lot of water to rinse out any bacteria, before filling it again with fresh, clear water.
Soon after, one of the boys pushed a stick through the cage of XiaoBai Snowflake and began poking her with it. Cameron again corrected him, in a kind but firm manner. He protested that he wasn't hurting the dog, that she liked it and was having fun.
Cameron stopped him and asked him a simple question: If someone poked you in the side with a stick, would you like that? Would that feel fun to you? He looked stunned, as if such a thought had never occurred to him.
The boy walked away with his stick and then, after a while, came back to her. He held the stick far out in front of him, and then threw it away dramatically, saying something like, "I don't want this, no, no, I don't!" Then he bent down and began petting the dog he had been tormenting. He seemed happy with his decision. And so was Cameron...
Some readers may not know that Cameron is working with a renowned primatologist at the conservation division of the San Diego Zoo. Dr. Chia Tan is studying how to save a rare species of monkey that survives in only one forest in China. It is one of the most endangered animals on earth.
In addition to studying its habitat and other issues critical to the species' survival, Dr. Tan is creating a conservation education project for schoolchildren in the local community called Little Green Guards. She is targeting eight-year-olds, whom she believes to be at the perfect age to learn new ways of relating to animals. (You can read about this project on Cameron's zoo blog here: http://chinazoos.blogspot.com/2012/05/awesome-person-dr-chia-tan.html )
The aim is to help the next generation of Chinese develop a connection to animals beyond utility, and inspire them to preserve those species they can. Their theme is : 播撒博爱之种,促进物种保护! (Sowing the Seeds of Love to Promote Species Conservation!) The Chinese-led campaign to save the Giant Panda has inspired the world and offers a shining example of what can be accomplished when the Chinese people set their mind to something important.
Cameron is very excited about the opportunity to support Dr. Tan's work. Currently, Cam is helping to build conservation libraries at three primary schools in Guizhou Province and will develop a curriculum on preventing forest fires, (with Ling-Ling the tiger playing the role of our Smokey the Bear). When she returns to California, Cameron will make a video for third-graders for Dr. Tan to deliver on her next trip to China.
I think with this young boy in Suzhou, Cameron got a taste of the impact she can have, and reinforced her passion for how, someday, she might apply all she is learning about communication and culture in China. By planting the seed of empathy in that child's mind, Cam may have just slightly altered the trajectory of his life regarding animals, and opened a door to a lifetime of relating with animals differently than his parents did. The harvest may be amplified by all the people he might impact with his new awareness throughout his life.
To me, this small incident speaks volumes about why we let our little girl travel so far away from us. Cameron is destined to make this world a better place, in many ways, and it seems likely that one of those venues will be supporting the growing movement for animal welfare in China. Through such work, all the talents and energy that make Cameron Cameron could come together and contribute to meaningful change. Isn't that what we all hope for our children? The chance to follow their bliss and live lives of meaning and passion?
~ Posted by Pam Hughes
As has been described here, Cameron has been visiting regularly with some dogs outside a pet store near her apartment in Suzhou. Her favorite seems to be this little white one, whom she has named XiaoBai Snowflake.
XiaoBai Snowflake, Photo by Cameron Ishee |
In her best Mandarin, she told the boys that what they did was not good and that it could make the dog sick or even die. They were visibly skeptical that the animal could die from drinking the contaminated water. But she made sure they saw her dump it out, and use a lot of water to rinse out any bacteria, before filling it again with fresh, clear water.
Soon after, one of the boys pushed a stick through the cage of XiaoBai Snowflake and began poking her with it. Cameron again corrected him, in a kind but firm manner. He protested that he wasn't hurting the dog, that she liked it and was having fun.
Cameron stopped him and asked him a simple question: If someone poked you in the side with a stick, would you like that? Would that feel fun to you? He looked stunned, as if such a thought had never occurred to him.
The boy walked away with his stick and then, after a while, came back to her. He held the stick far out in front of him, and then threw it away dramatically, saying something like, "I don't want this, no, no, I don't!" Then he bent down and began petting the dog he had been tormenting. He seemed happy with his decision. And so was Cameron...
Some readers may not know that Cameron is working with a renowned primatologist at the conservation division of the San Diego Zoo. Dr. Chia Tan is studying how to save a rare species of monkey that survives in only one forest in China. It is one of the most endangered animals on earth.
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Guizhou Snub-nosed monkey (Photo courtesy of Xiaoping Lei) |
The aim is to help the next generation of Chinese develop a connection to animals beyond utility, and inspire them to preserve those species they can. Their theme is : 播撒博爱之种,促进物种保护! (Sowing the Seeds of Love to Promote Species Conservation!) The Chinese-led campaign to save the Giant Panda has inspired the world and offers a shining example of what can be accomplished when the Chinese people set their mind to something important.
![]() |
Chengdu Research Base for Giant Panda Breeding |
Cameron is very excited about the opportunity to support Dr. Tan's work. Currently, Cam is helping to build conservation libraries at three primary schools in Guizhou Province and will develop a curriculum on preventing forest fires, (with Ling-Ling the tiger playing the role of our Smokey the Bear). When she returns to California, Cameron will make a video for third-graders for Dr. Tan to deliver on her next trip to China.
![]() |
Little Green Guards of Guizhou |
I think with this young boy in Suzhou, Cameron got a taste of the impact she can have, and reinforced her passion for how, someday, she might apply all she is learning about communication and culture in China. By planting the seed of empathy in that child's mind, Cam may have just slightly altered the trajectory of his life regarding animals, and opened a door to a lifetime of relating with animals differently than his parents did. The harvest may be amplified by all the people he might impact with his new awareness throughout his life.
To me, this small incident speaks volumes about why we let our little girl travel so far away from us. Cameron is destined to make this world a better place, in many ways, and it seems likely that one of those venues will be supporting the growing movement for animal welfare in China. Through such work, all the talents and energy that make Cameron Cameron could come together and contribute to meaningful change. Isn't that what we all hope for our children? The chance to follow their bliss and live lives of meaning and passion?
Cameron at age 12 |
~ Posted by Pam Hughes
Sunday, July 15, 2012
How do you say "MANICURE" in Chinese?
My host sister, one of my fellow exchange students, her host sister, two of their friends and I all went to two restaurants and a nail salon on Saturday. (Yes, THAT is how much of an effort I am making to get these people to like me. I spent Saturday at TWO restaurants and a NAIL SALON.) My fingernails are now perfectly rounded -- and green. I'd honestly never realized what stubby, misshapen, ugly fingernails I have until I spent hours with people who care very much about having sleek, long, perfectly painted nails. (The woman who painted mine was pretty horrified by my hangnails!)
These pictures are mostly from the second shop (which sold super fancy, expensive chocolates).
Wearing Jianing's glasses
By canal near salon
American exchange student Amy
Host sister Jianing
Monday, July 9, 2012
OLD TOWN SUZHOU
Photo by Cameron Ishee
There's no such thing as smoking breaks in China. You smoke and work, or you don't smoke.
Photo by Cameron Ishee
People really do use boats in the canals
like cars in the streets!
The urban core of Suzhou is informally called Old Suzhou or Old Town Suzhou (central blue rectangle). Suzhou Industrial Park (in green), where Cameron lives, is on the east of the Old Town, and Suzhou High & New Technology Development Zone is on the west.
The Chinese news agency Xinhuanet.com published this about Old Suzhou in 2010.
~ Posted by Pam Hughes
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