Showing posts with label China Girl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China Girl. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2014

My Childhood in Brothels

I will update this post with real photos from the home and courtyard I wrote about when I find them. I swear they were on my external hard drive last month, but I can find no trace of them now, which makes me very sad and nervous. I will try and track them down on my parent's computer! 
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I'm worried that the older I get, the more I'm forgetting details of my missionary kid days, because those days are becoming a smaller and smaller percentage of my whole life. Plus, I'm one of those people with virtually no memories before age 7 (for no apparent reason - nothing particularly traumatic happened), which was definitely one of the most interesting times in my life. On top of that, it's hard to track down pictures of specific memories, even though my mom was stellar at taking them because it was a time before people documented every moment. So basically, what we have to work with is a patchy memory and a flare for dramatic storytelling in place of visual representations. (Click here to read the first installment from my series on memories of growing up in China).

Some of the things I remember take new shape as I reflect on them now, as an adult. For example, I spent a lot of time around prostitutes, and it was pretty perfectly normal to me then. I didn't really know what a prostitute was as a younger kid anyway, which probably helped. As you probably know, "my childhood in a brothel" does not refer to me having been a prostitute or pimp or otherwise involved in prostitution itself. I did, however, essentially live in a brothel.

At the time, my family lived in a very small town in-the-middle-of-nowhere, China, and the one thing beside an incredibly high number of brothels in town was an army base. They kind of went hand in hand. In fact, one of the reasons that my family ended up moving away eventually was because the police chief in town required my dad to engage with prostitutes in order to stay in his good graces. Kind of a deal breaker for missionaries. Rumor had it that when that police chief eventually moved on, his "parting gift" to the town/base was a 100 new women.

My family made a home in the old post office in town, which had been turned into a motel/brothel/rental space. The living situation was set up similar to a traditional Chinese home, with buildings on three sides and a large gate on the fourth side of an open courtyard. The gate faced the street. If you turned to your right upon entry, there was a wing of motel rooms, several of which were converted into bedrooms for my siblings and I. Straight ahead from the gate, across the courtyard, were two large living rooms in a second wing. One room was the entire home of a Chinese family with three daughters, the other was the living space for my family, including our kitchen in the hallway. Sometimes we'd have to leave for several months in the winter when the water pipes froze solid.

Once, when we were watching a movie, we heard a blood curdling scream, and ran out in to the shared hall to find our neighbors skinning a dog alive to eat (you don't want to kill it too early before eating or drain all the blood, because blood in the meat tastes better). Another time, my dad found a man who had hung himself in the alleyway behind those rooms. In the corner between the motel wing and the living room wing, there was a dirt lot that was the communal outhouse for most of the time we lived there. There were three make-shift walls of linoleum for some privacy (no roof), but one of the guys in the compound would take his radio out with him so that you knew the outhouse was occupied. That outhouse - rather, hole in the ground - gave a whole new meaning to not wanting to get out of bed to pee in the night, especially in the winter. Furthermore, that corner of the lot was in perfect view of a guard shack on base up on a hill across the road. Sometimes the guard shack blew over in the wind, and one time, we got a gun pointed in our faces when we were playing in an abandoned house near the base and stuck our heads over the wall. Eventually, my dad turned the outhouse corner in to a greenhouse where just about nothing grew.

Behind the living room wing was a mysterious abandoned factory full of gold colored dust that we frequently broke in to and marveled at. There were also a lot of dog and cow carcasses and a 5-foot high tunnel that stretched a third of the way under our block - we never could figure out what it was for. It was a great town to explore as kids. But anyway, back to prostitution....

The left hand and final wing was the brothel where the landlord occasionally stayed and where the ladies lived. I can't remember being particularly sternly warned away from them, but we definitely got the vibes that we weren't welcome to just chill over there, not least because they weren't particularly friendly. Even from across the courtyard, I could tell that their rooms were very sparse, basically just a bed in each.

As I recall, there were about 3 women who were there regularly. They did a lot of laundry and their clothing was fancy and scanty in a town with nothing to do and nowhere to go. They "slept" a lot during the day and seemed generally grumpy and miserable, perhaps because their lives must have been incredibly monotonous. Looking back, it's strange that I never thought to ask more questions about them.

When we moved on from that house, we did a walk through of another brothel that was becoming an available space. This one was a second story to a shop on the street. As I recall, there was a very large wood-floored central room with several smaller rooms branching off of it. Someone in our family - probably me, given my general nosiness - tried to explore one of the off-shoot rooms and was quickly shooed away as it was "in use". It was embarrassing and strange. Once again, I didn't totally get all the logistics of how sex work operated, but I understood that what was going on was kind of hush-hush and not altogether upstanding. I just couldn't figure out what all the sleeping during the day was about.

We ended up finding another place that hadn't been used as a brothel, to my knowledge, but some aspects of the lifestyle remained in my life. Wet hair, for example. As I mentioned before, sometimes the pipes would freeze or we wouldn't have running or hot water at home for some other reason, so we'd go to a public shower house, which could easily have been mistaken for a dungeon and which had slime of every imaginable kind lurking in the corners. It still gives me the heeby jeebies to recall. No one used hair dryers, but my mom always wanted us to cover our heads on the way home, and I hated wearing head scarves, which was unfortunate in a predominantly Muslim area.

Again, no one really spelled it out in so many words at the time, but it turned out that wet hair was associated with prostitutes because they were the only ones who bathed so regularly as to often have wet hair. In China, people don't shower daily, and when they do, it's at night, which is a habit that I continue to hold as an adult in the U.S. Another thing about hair and prostitutes in China - hair salons are the most common cover up for brothels. Often, the store front is a sham of a barber shop, and behind a curtain or in a back room is where the real business takes place. I always wondered how one was supposed to know where to go if you wanted an actual hair cut?

To me, there's still a strange sweetness in the whole hair thing, though. I distinctly remember being about 8 years old and admiring the long, straight, black hair that all the Chinese women had in the women's dorm that my family lived in on a Chinese college campus. I remember thinking to myself that when I grew up, I was going to have hair like that. I'm not sure I realized you couldn't just grow the hair you wanted, but either way, those long black locks have remained one of the few childhood style ideals I've carried into adulthood. I continue to find the hair of Chinese women exceptionally lovely and I like my hair black the best. [image]

Another thing that stuck with me was all the pink florescent lighting. In english, we do call areas with a high concentration of sex work "pink/red light districts", but I don't know if that's as universal or prevalent in the rest of the world as it is in China. But why all the pink bulbs in bedrooms? Ambiance? Some hidden meaning I've never heard of? Some sort of feature disguise? I'm not sure, but they used the heck out of pink lights and the glow still makes me uncomfortable, even if it's out of context.

Fast forward a few years to my other deepest ties to prostitution in China.
I went on a summer missions trip in eastern and southern China, led by a dear friend. I was the only short-termer on the team coming from a different part of China instead of the States, and my Chinese language skills therefore differed from the rest of the group, so I had private tutoring sessions (including some spiritual vocabulary), and separate homework assignments.

I should get out of the way that I don't blame my experiences in this story on the leaders of the trip - they remain close and respected friends of mine. However, looking back, I wish I'd just put my foot down about something I felt strongly against, or had approached it in a way that was more in keeping with my views on missions. As it was, this turned out to be pretty much my worst experience as a missionary, which is saying a lot because I didn't consider myself a missionary for almost any of the time I lived in China. It was clear to me that I was there with my parents, who felt called to missions in China, where as I did not.

So anyway, on this trip we were supposed to get out in the neighborhood and practice our new vocabulary and whether real or perceived, I felt like I was supposed to be evangelizing too. There were two shops that I visited - one sold earrings, which I still have two pair of. The other was a hair salon with a few chairs in front and a brothel behind a curtain. I managed to make myself a fixture in the front room in the most awkward way possible. It was clear that they didn't really want to hang out with me and/or figured I didn't get what the whole establishment was about.

I remember their tired smiles and quiet scoffs - who was I? It was obvious to everyone, including myself, that I was in no place to question their lifestyle of desperation. I can't even articulate how awful that whole scene was and the tangible joke of it. For many prostitutes in China, they choose their jobs because it's by far the most money they can earn and they have children far away whom they send support to. I'm ashamed that I attempted to make them explain to me why they were there. I didn't pose it quite like that, but I certainly went in with a missionary agenda, and I hate  that style of missions. I detest that model of thinking that I know better than them and that somehow I'm going to love them out of their situation, when really, I wasn't loving them at all. We were all enduring a terrible hour at a time for the sake of some idea I felt compelled to live up to, or at least try. In reality, they didn't deserve to be treated as my guinea pigs, and I had no way of comprehending anything about their situations, especially at 15. It was one of the most ridiculous, naive, and conceited things I've ever done. I don't know how to describe further what those several visits were like, or why I feel so negatively about them.

I believe Jesus can work through idiots and the culturally insensitive, but I also know that Jesus would not have tried to jam two unfitting puzzle pieces together for 15 minutes and then check it off his list. A part of me is repelled by the logistics of the trade of prostitution, but a lot of me is just sickeningly sad remembering the vacancy and callousness of the woman I met caught up in it. It makes me think of that Nirvana song, "Jesus doesn't want me for a sunbeam", when in reality, I know that Jesus wants every one of those ladies as his sunbeams, and wants me for a sunbeam too, even when I abuse his name and what he truly stands for. 

Friday, November 29, 2013

All I Want for Christmas is a Lesbian Cafe Bento Box

When I was 16, I socialized at a lesbian cafe. At the time, I was living in Urumqi, China, and my best Chinese friend was a girl I'll call Danielle. Danielle and I had gone to Chinese pre-school together when my family lived in Urumqi in the 90s, and she was bossy as all get out. That probably only bothered me because I was bossy too, and used to being the center of attention as the only non-Chinese in my class.



We lost touch after pre-school and then we moved away for 5 or 6 years to other parts of China and the U.S., but upon returning to Urumqi, my mom happened to run into Danielle's mom, who ran a small grocery store. As moms are apt to do, they had soon conspired to get us back together, and as it turned out, we totally hit it off. I can't remember how exactly we re-met, but I do remember appreciating being treated like a friend, rather than milked as an English tutor.

We didn't hang out at either of our houses very often, but instead ran around town window shopping, or bemoaning the shut-down of the best CD store. Sometimes she would bump into her friends, and we'd talk to them for a while or share a taxi on the way to our next destination. She first took me to the lesbian cafe for their great bento boxes. I can't remember what we talked about, but the food was good.

The next time we went to the cafe, we sat next to two girls, one of whom was Ugyhur and had clearly been crying. She was with a friend, and we started talking to them. Come to find out, her girlfriend had just broken up with her. She and her friend told me how they would take their punk, pants, and false eyelashes to school with them in bags and change there, then change back before going home. They were astonished that I was neither a smoker nor a lesbian, since they had heard that all Californians were both. I mentioned to my dad one time where I often hung out, and he said, "oh, the Lesbian bar?" Being a 16 year old missionary kid, that detail had totally escaped me, despite the fairly obvious markers. It's become one of the only even remotely edgy things I did in my entire teen career. That and the fact that my boyfriend was Catholic, which I also didn't know when we started dating.

The third time at the cafe, we met up with another friend of Danielle's, and Danielle brought her laptop to play this Korean drama about a gang of young and violent boys that was hard to follow, but she thought it was amazing and really wanted her other friend to like it. We all ended up talking over it for most of the time, but I could tell she was in love with it, the way you are with your favorite song, full of fear that your soul will shrivel if your loved ones reject it.

She sometimes wore her hair in the krimped-afro-mullet that was popular in China at the time, and I tried to make my hair do that too, but ended up giving myself a hack-job of a bob in the bathroom one night out of exasperation instead.

We would talk about our boyfriends. Mine, at the time, lived on the other side of the world, and her boyfriend was Ugyhur, which was a big deal to some people since she was Han and particularly in our city, those two groups were at each other's throats, but she didn't seem to think it was strange at all, and I was proud of her for that. She called me one night, very drunk, sobbing and telling me that she felt so empty in her life and didn't know what to do. I never felt like I was a missionary, but that night I wished I had had the words to give her some - any - kind of hope. I couldn't translate the few things I could think of to say. It was one of the most raw moments I've had in any friendship.

She spent the summer in a city in Southern China, and we video chatted once. She brought me back some limited edition Beanie Baby teddy bear, that I left when we moved back to the States for good, which I now kick myself for, like I have over so many other beloved objects that seemed not important enough in mayhem and emotional hibernation that is packing for an international move.

My friendship with Danielle shattered a lot of my misconceptions about China, even as someone who grew up there. She made me have hope for Chinese millennials. We would talk about why young Chinese men and women didn't care more or act more about the oppression of the government or their prospects for the rest of their lives, and neither of us had answers for it. I wish I been able to see how similar American millennials are.

My family found out pretty suddenly that we would be moving back to the States permanently, and we were gone within a month of knowing it. Danielle and I hung out a few last times. I took her to my dad's cafe where we I ordered spinach salad, which she thought was pretty strange. On one of the last nights before we moved away, she and I went out, and it was one of the times where we ended up picking up some random person she knew and were driving around with them. She kept asking me what I wanted to do before I left China, she wanted to me to do something I'd never done before. I felt very uncomfortable because I had a feeling she was talking about having have sex, going to a rave, doing drugs, getting drunk out of my mind, or all of those things together. I said no again and again, and finally she just dropped me off at home late at night with a sick and sad feeling in my stomach. That was the last time I ever saw her or heard from her, and now I kind of wish we'd at least had a beer.

I don't know why she liked me or why she opened up, especially since our language barrier was apparent when true friendship took shape, but she was patient with me, and I miss her. I don't have any photos of us.

After I'd been back in the States for about a year, the first Urumqi riot broke out, resulting in many deaths, and later a complete shut-off of the internet that persists today as far as access to most international social media. My biggest regret in life, as dramatic as that sounds, is losing touch with her and my other Chinese friends. I try to email them whenever I come across some snippet of contact info buried in my computer or email history, but they always bounce back 

Saturday, March 19, 2011

The Dark Side

The subject of this post isn't quite as ominous as the title. Mainly, I wrote a guest post about Third Culture Kid (TCK) issues here. It really made me dredge up some feelings about being "homeless" that I haven't considered in a while. Thankfully, I think I'm over the biggest culture-shock bump, but sometimes (especially with being poor and having a difficult time figuring out what to do with the rest of my life; certainly not only a TCK struggle) I feel like this kid (from here) looks - aware of potential, but a little discouraged. And off subject, how could this photo not remind me of my favorite Superbowl commercial from last season? / It's rainy and grey today, but I just have to say that I'm looking forward to a yummy dinner, in love with a pure-hearted man, enjoying my classes (!) and a myriad of other good things. I'm thankful. And hey, thanks for reading! :)

Sunday, November 21, 2010

The Middle Kingdom

China, that is. Man, it's a funny one.  It's fashion is making great leaps forward, but it's political freedoms seem to be sinking to the bottom of the deep blue sea. // One thing I've been missing a lot lately is the BEST RICE in the whole wide world. I had it up in a tiny town in the mountains of Gui Zhou province. I might even shoot BBs at small animals if you promised me some of that rice in return (fear not, I probably couldn't hit them). Ah, heaven! // Here is an interesting article about the "great fire wall of China" in a recent issue of Wired. I didn't know much about the Falun Gong before reading this article, but as it turns out, it's a bit one sided. I'm constantly amazed at how much more I've learned about the inner-workings (injustices) of China now that I live in the U.S. I think that the Chinese government covers up all its scandals so well that sometimes living in China feels peachy. I distinctly remember wondering why my Chinese friends didn't feel more wronged by the way their country treats them at times. It's a problem I can't fix, nor even get my head around. Take for instance, some of these wacky headlines, all to be taken with a grain of salt, I imagine. But for that matter, how many of these are unheard of in America? Thanks to Tanya for the sources. (Disclaimer - I haven't read most of these, sorry for anything odd in advance.):

Anyway, I love that country, despite its weirdities. Here is some of my favorite literature about/based in China if you are interested. I feel like I'm forgetting some, so maybe I'll have to make a follow-up post another time. 

I'll leave you with some of my favorite Asian or Asian-inspire fashion. Sometime you have to focus on what's good, you know? {from: fgr, suicideblonde, w5ran, dustjacketattic, robinpika}







Monday, August 24, 2009

082409

If you go a few months back in posts, you will see that I was getting carried away with my wedding posts. I was blogging everything wedding. Now it's food. Bare with me! I guess this blog is just one of shifting obsessions. ^^ It's so funny to me because I used to be so anti-cooking. Right now my mom is baking beef chops (?) that she soaked in curry and then grilled for a bit...mmm-m! I ran out of House and IT Crowd episodes to watch late at night, so I've started on NBC's "the Chopping Block" which is one of those ridiculous cooking shows where the host pretty much takes joy in harassing the participants into tears and profanities. Excellent.
As I was looking through foodgawker...again.., I saw this photo which reminded me of a Chinese dish that we called "the hay stack." It's very thin, fried potatoes (thinner than pictured) which are almost airy. They stack them almost a foot (in my memory) high on the plate.

While on kitchen things, check out this retro kitchen stove from Elmira Stove Works. They make fridges too and the sets come in more groovy colors. How fun?!

Thanks for everyone's encouragement for this blog via facebook and such. It makes me so happy to know I have faithful and excited readers, or readers at all for that matter. You guys brighten my day! /// I love the first day of school and not being the new kid or the youngest kid! I love seeing people hollering at each other from across lots. Our class rooms are freshly painted and I GOT A JOB! I think... more on that later. Haha. Tutoring english. :) I love school. I love school! /// I've only really been to one class so far; English 103 (Critical Thinking) with Mrs. Farley, my English 101 teacher from last semester. She can be so ruthless, but she challenges me and that's invaluable. Now that I know I will survive her, I can just smile at her li-hai-ness too. ^^ Woopie! The guy sitting behind me, Corrie, doesn't like Ayn Rand or Nietzsche. I smell war. *sly grin.
Pretty much all my friends from high school are now in college somewhere or other. Some are nearly out! It's fun to see everyone's dorm pics and share their excitement. Lalalalalala, being young is so great! Never stop learning, guys. :D /// My last night in *legal* kid-dom! :O
FB readers - view enhanced post.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

071809

My family gets home today and Jonas tomorrow. I can't wait!
I've been meaning to write about the Urumqi riots. It's not in headlines as much this week, but there is still no internet available in the city, so we haven't been able to contact people there. It's really hard to express how unreal it seems that the city I grew up in ('94-'01?, '07) was on fire and more than 150 people killed in the streets. I just can't get my mind around it. I know it's last week's news, but since I'm sure the unrest is still very real over there, I wanted to bring it to attention. The below photos (Boston Globe) give you a very mild taste of what's going on, and it will shock you even to see these if you have ever been to Urumqi. Basically, if you don't already know what's going on, the Turkish minority group living in Urumqi started attacking Han chinese people after two factory workers were allegedly killed in a factory brawl in Southern China. When the government did little or nothing to protect the Han, the Han formed their own gangs in retaliation. I know a lot of armed forces have entered the city, but rioting and killings were at full tilt for at least two days. Since the news has stopped covering it much, I imagine the fighting is mostly under control, but as I mentioned above, still no contact with people living there.



I can't dwell on that too long without getting depressed, so have a look at this. As you've probably noticed, hair pieces are very popular right now. How about this one? (It kinda disturbs me). I believe the designer (or is it the line?) is called Reid Peppard, in case you want to send him/her/them hate mail or the number of your psychiatrist.

To get the taste of that out of your brain, look at these lovely (really) bracelets from Yes Vincent. I wonder what PETA thinks of the current feather craze.

And lastly, but far from least, my current favorite band (newly discovered by me, but whom you may very possibly already be familiar with), Tiny Vipers. This is without question one of my favorite album covers of all time.

She has a new(ish?... 2009 sometime) album that I haven't heard much of, but so far, my favorite song is "Dreamer." She's down in LA ($5 tickets!!!) in a few days and I am most bummed out that I can't go see her, but you should if you're any nearer/free-er than I am. She's bewitching. Have a listen...

Monday, February 2, 2009

I went to The Big Picture on Boston.com for the first time in a while today and was reminded of Chinese New Year! We didn't celebrate it here, so I'm not sure when the exact date is, but it's good to remember that that was my home not too long ago. I love how this photographer captured some of the less glam faces of Chinese New Year. Sure looks like home to me. My mom let out a groan (of longing) when she saw this jiao zie (dumpling) photo.









Carpooling home from school today we had 10 people in our 8 person van. Pretty much a blast. [My brother is out on the swing set right now and had the phone on the scaffolding - is that the term? - and was just looking at it, talking to his friend on speaker phone]. When we dropped off my brother's schoolmate Sam and his brother Steven, we got to go in to their house and see their new kitties! One of the kitties is named Tif, short for Tiffany, and is one of the most gorgeous cats I've ever seen. She lookes like a tiger and has sort of marbled red-gold and brown-black fur. They said she was a Bengal, but I don't know if that's really a breed of house cat. Kxkx.

This is my top pick from the Superbowl ads, though I must admit the Doritos one (not by SCAD :( ) was pretty awesome too.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

  "Nan chi si le!" Chinese for "tastes gross to death!" It's like saying "you're killin' me!" but in Chinese you can apply it to most nouns or situations. I can't remember what Diana was referring to, but her use of that phrase made me laugh. I was over at her house with my family and chinese friend, Apple. Diana is my sibling's chinese tutor, and today she made jiao zi, or dumplings, for us.  She is 70 years old and fled from her home on the main land of China at the age of 12 because of the communist uprising - her father was on the "wrong" side.  My mom is encouraging her to write down her life story, but Diana is convinced no one would read it. Quite mistaken, as it is fascinating! She watched the plane runway blow up in the streets of Beijing right where her plane had just taken off.  She learned to dye white cotton with soil made red by the clay it held so that she could flatten herself on the ground during Japanese air raids and blend in with the ground. Everything she says belongs in a museum. 
  Eating home-made jiao zi today reminded me of all the food I miss most in China. During my summer trip in Tian Jin in 2007, I went with some students to a hun duin resturant that still makes me a little faint (it was inexplicably good) when I think about it and realize it is thousands of miles out of my reach. Hun duin are like jiao zi, or dumplings, but their skins are thinner and the filling isn't cut into such small pieces.  I was also reminded of what I call "pocket sandwhiches" which we discovered in my "home city" of Urumqi.  It's street vendor food and resembles a pita pocket. You can choose whatever fillings you like and the vendor will pack the pocket full. My favorites were cubed chicken and potatoe, and shredded beef with green peppers, if I remember correctly. I must go back some day. ^^

  Yesterday evening I was sitting by the fireplace drinking some superly yummy cream soda that Jordan and Jonas brought over and my dad came over and spouted this quote, "If you are not a liberal at 23, you have no heart, and if you are not conservative by 53, you have no brain." Of course not a hard and fast rule, but it's thought provoking and makes me smile inwardly at my youthful ideas. At the same time I minorly resent that all my feelings on politics and everything really, may be pre-assigned to me by the rings that I run in, if you know what I mean.

  I have too many fantastic things on my computer not to share something every post! Here is a drawing by a student from the school I am hoping to attend next fall, SCAD. This one is for Jonas, a bit, because he likes kitties so much! :)

 

  Have a restful weekend, everyone! ^^
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