3/24/2009

Tuesday September 26, 2000

Met my new chinese friend Daniel today and we went to Beilin museum - "The forest of steles museum". He is very intelligent and knows a diversity of things, from calligraphy to buddhism to physics (his major). It was windy, fall today, leaves dropping and slightly overcast by this afternoon. As we wandered from building to building he translated and taught me, using a mixture of english and chinese. I saw the original stone texts of the IChing. It was surprising and overwhelming, and I had such a wonderful guide - he corrected my grammar and just kept teaching, idioms, common words and usages.

He is active and energetic, always telling me xiaoxin [literally, little heart, which means "be careful"], for I am always lost in fascination with all that is around me, forgetting there are steps and cars.

As we passed one tablet he pointed out the large characters zhu yin - the song of bamboo when the wind blows through them, knocking them together. I am understanding more and more the depth of chinese, of knowing another language. The brevity and expressiveness of characters is uncaptured in english. It is truely a poetic language, visual and seductive. I was caught by these two simple characters, I heard the sounds, clacking, knocking of the bamboo without any of those words describing the noise. But it is all conjured up in two simple words - bamboo song.

I asked Daniel why chinese people don't come here, aren't studying, living by and with these ancient texts. He said in modern times it is out of date, though he understood me. I told him I felt that those two characters were the most important and real meaning of life and existence. "Nature is everything and man is part of nature," he said nodding. So I asked why all the studying, the money. He said it's modern china, they owe it to their country to modernize. I ask why.
"Because we have to catch up to you, we have to improve our country."
I responded, "It isn't improvement, all the meaning is right there in those characters. In the States its all running aroud, always doing something, all distractions from the real life."
"But one has to modernize"
I asked again, "but why?" No animosity, both of us were very excited, cheeks rosy with anticipation of our conversation, implications, and the fall air. And his whole face lit up as he understood my questions and logic and meaning. And he told me a tale that this reminded him of:

There was a fisherman lying on a bench and a rich man came up and asked him why he was lying there. The fisherman asked what should he be doing? "Go and work in the field!"
"What should I do in the field?"
"Plant vegetables."
"And what do I do when the vegetables are grown?"
"Sell them in the market and get some money."
"And what to do with the money?"
"After you have money you can take a rest."
"And so here I am already resting."

And my friend told me also that china needed to make money and later they can rest and come back to these steles when they have modernized.

I know that at times a culture has to be active and at times passive. China is active and chasing right now, but it has all its secrets in plain sight. how to live in a period of such majestic philosophy. yet it was only for the intellectuals. the rest of the country was fraught with famine, disease, draught. how can one know the truth? Today I also saw zhong yong - the Middle Path.

[Looking back at this from 2009 and where my life is now, I can hardly believe I got to stand in front of this carving, I had forgotten that I'd seen it in person]

September 24, 2000

I just heard men's voices giggling like girls and some strange exclamations. I looked out the window and on the balcony across the lane I saw two men, one bent in the corner over something and the other laughs and steps inside his door peeking out. The first man stood up and the other pointed out. He smiled and threw something over the balcony. I stepped forward to look down and see the body of a large rat, accompanied in my head with the sound of the splat, flat on the ground. It will lie dead there for quite some time I suspect.

**

Evening once again. I bought a beautiful new red bike. I wonder what has made me decide to get a nice new bike after two were stolen. I think I was careless with the last two and this one I won't be because it's so obvious. Perhaps this is rediculous logic though.

Thursday September 21, 2000

I lost my bike yesterday. Carelessness, I left it outside the computer center for a few days. I went in to use the internet today and tried writing a letter but it broke me up with bitterness and I couldn't send it. As I left I walked along the path between the gardens, eyes all full of tears and crying heavily inside. I wondered what I would do if I met someone at that moment. I would tell them I lost my bike, laughing because I felt like such a little girl, crying because I lost something precious. But really I have a broken heart.

I think of home, of the rooms, my rooms, of new york and all else. Now I can understand how prisoners can walk through their homes and look at everything those days and nights away, as in The Stranger. With time and a small effort I too could conjure up my house in college, possibly the house on Tuttle Rd [my first].

I smell coal outside, briefly. I think of eastern europe and wonder about love.

Wednesday September 20, 2000

Tonite there was a funeral in the street. They parade the street with cymbals and trumpets, chaotic and noise and utterly pleasurable to my ears because its devoid of perfection, it is simple and honest, not formal and empty.

3/06/2009

Saturday September 16, 2000

[Another letter home]

Last night I went to Hua Shan. Shan is mountain and Hua, well, its something along the lines of brilliant magnificent splendid (or so my pocket dictionary tells me). But the mountain tells me no different. I made a pilgrimage this weekend, not knowing it beforehand. It swept me up when I passed beyond my third or fourth exhaustion, around 2 or 3 in the morning. but anyway, the beginning...

The weather right now is probably as good as it’s going to get, crispy morning air and the occasional leaf falling and just the right layer of clothes. Plus enough wind to blow away some of the pollution and see blue sky in Xian. So on Friday in my second class three boys packed up their books saying they were going to Hua Shan and sorry to the teacher. I immediately packed up my books too and went with them.

With three other korean girls we took a train to Hua Shan. That makes 7 of us, two boys from switzerland, one from italy, the korean girls and me. The train, 2 1/2 hours, was about 1 dollar for no seats. We girls were gallantly shifted from seat to seat by men who were traveling about 36 hours south to Xiamen. For them 2 hours is nothing. But the white boys got to stand in the aisles.

Arriving 15 km from Hua Shan we took a taxi which didn't drop us off at the mountain, but at a restaurant in late afternoon. Hua Shan is one of five sacred mountains in China, 2500 meters or so high, taoist temples along the way up, caves high in the granite rocks with chains and cut-out foot notches to pull yourself up with characters painted on the rocks telling names and stories. There are a few ways of getting up to the top, the easiest being an Austrian-built cablecar. The next easiest being hiking up the 6 km of sheer cliffs during the day. The last option is hiking up at night and arriving at dawn to see the sunrise. Needless to say we took the last.

A few things to set the scene: it’s china first of all so hiking means cemented path with several gates to pay at (they figure when they've gotten you to pay 80 kuai you won't go back so they'll charge you another 20 a few hundred feet later). Second on the set is that last tuesday was the second biggest festival known in translation as the Mid-Autumn Festival. In true pagan spirit it’s on the full moon and everyone sits outside with candles and sings. So on this friday we had a nearly full moon.

There is of course tradition, which is to arrive in Hua Shan and sleep a couple hours in a room for too much money and then start hiking at 11 or midnight and that gets you there around dawn. The korean girls could sleep but we westerners were too excited to be out of the city to take a nap. Plus I was with swiss boys who insisted it was unnecessary for them to rest before climbing a mountain (to their credit they arrived at the top an hour before my italian friend and I, and a full three hours before the korean ladies).

While we waited the evening out we drank tea and met some very very drunk chinese who insisted we drink some bai jiu (white liquor made from something terrible and tasting even worse) and made friends and so on.

At 11 we began by passing through several of those red sloping roof gates that make china so picturesque, paying at each of them. Then through a temple and then the upward climb.

It's magic as soon as you forget about being a foreigner (for they make you pay more). The moon the moon the moon, nothing does what the moon does to the world when it’s bright and blue on the skin of mountains peeled away from the bushes and trees of its surface. Crossing white chinese bridges with massive white boulders beneath and only the sound of water reflected off the earth to tell you it’s there. I discovered on the train that two of the boys were photographers, and when I remarked as we walked that it was like walking in a negative one of them let out an audible breath, for this is really what it was like. It was so bright there was simply no need for flashlights. There were shadows were there should have been light, and where there should have been shadow it was like the underworld was lit up in blue water.

As for the path, made out of white granite rocks, like hansel and gretel they lit up the trail unnaturally - or super-naturally. But make no mistake, even a semi-paved trail cannot make the climb easy. For the first 3 km it’s a steep path upwards, with plenty of small shacks and stone pavilions with chairs and tea and apples and cucumbers to nibble. At some points the path is right in your face it’s so steep. But then comes the stairs. The last 3 km are steps cutting into the mountain with chains along the sides to pull yourself up with. There's no real break in the steps, just turn the corner and face several more hundred feet of stairs going straight up. The first set of stairs is at least 200 feet to a reststop, and to stop in the middle of them is death. It’s a shock, for even knowing that there are that many stairs is incredulous and you think they must be the end but they are not, not at all. The great fear is of looking up for then you just can't imagine taking another step. but you do.

With a recipe like this - all these stairs and all night long and altitude and the mountains rising up on all sides and the singular fact of the moon, well, it's no surprise that it turns into a nearly hallucinatory experience of pure beauty and loss of self, fully absorbed by the natural world around you. For the chinese are decidedly pagans and no church or temple will do what the natural world will do without being asked, on its own, you there or not. The chinese just know to go there.

We climbed and we were not alone, for it is china. And there are people everywhere all the time! At one point, at the sheerest point, with steps only the width of half of my shoe, at 3 in the morning, I was waiting in a line, step by step, with chinese before me and chinese behind p. Somewhere above us were the swiss boys doing credit to their country.

I surpassed physical presence several times, over and over again. We asked ourselves what our legs would feel like tomorrow, and eventually asked ourselves what our legs felt like right now.
At one point p and I sat down on the steps and talked about china with confusion and awe and ideas and more confusion. We were looking out between the crack of the mountains on either side, both of us blue, clear air and chinese people passing, continually commenting on the laowai [foreigners]. We discussed how china is so huge it incorporates everything, turns everything chinese. And it was spiritual in the bathwaters of blue negation, a swamp of reversal.

And when I started climbing again step by step the thought occurred to me that this is what a pilgrimage is, and I had never really thought about it before, but it means to do something beyond yourself for the sake of whatever is beyond you. And it was religious from that point on and really I felt no tiredness or pain anymore, simply rising with the mountain.

When we got to the 10-foot-long stretch of level ground right before the last set of stairs, we were greeted by policemen who check your ticket to make sure you paid. I didn't even have the energy to laugh, I just searched blindly through my pockets and moved on.

When we paused to wait for others I would become very cold and shiver and feel sleep coming on like a shadow under light approaching its apex, to collide violently with my senses and set them in slumber. But I held off until the end, the top of the mountain, where p. and I met up with the swiss boys and we ate chicken roll on chinese bing.

I was the first to lay down on the steps. We slept the rest of the darkness away, fitfully for we were wet with sweat and upon stopping the wind swept away all our body heat. Even with long underwear wool socks 4 shirts a jacket and a thermal tied around my head, it was freezing. I don't know how long I slept but when I next sat up everyone was holding their bags and curled up on the steps like cats.

The sun rose and it was delirium. It seemed that I had all the crises of a real transformation, though later in the blasted sunlight all I was left with was silver threads and a memory of the tapestry.

The three boys climbed back down and the korean ladies took the cablecar down and I rented a bed for a few hours (there are hostels up top - stone and small between the rocks and cliffs). I couldn't leave the mountain so soon after such an effort (psychically or physically).

I got up around 11 to the deafening sound of chinese tourists up on the mountain for the day via cablecar. I walked around a bit and decided to slip into some bushes to sleep off the rest of my exhaustion. The chinese will sleep anywhere but in solitude it seems. I saw one guy in a ditch beside some stairs in mid-afternoon. But I managed to find some dirt and small purple flowers and trees to scatter shade on my skin and I napped for several more hours. I woke up and sat on some chairs and listened to a few businessmen urge each other to speak some english to me while I made my lunch (chemical soup, aka, ramen noodles). After a few minutes of listening to them, I turned to them and told them they could ask me themselves as I could speak chinese. Shouts of laughter and great satisfaction on my part, followed by a not so interesting conversation about money.

When the chinese were quiet enough I heard someone playing the flute deep down below the ravine.

Halfway through my walk down the mountain I felt a lightness pervade me. I ate chocolate sitting on a boulder. Dropping off to the right were more white boulders with water so clear you could only tell it was there by the noise and the dampened part of the rocks. My knees were weak beyond functioning but I didn't care because I met a beautiful tiny old lady who lives in these rocks, white hair pulled away from her wrinkled tanned face and fastened neatly in a bun and a black leather band an inch wide running all around her head.

Her eyes were black shiny marbles tucked under stretched flaps of skin and she spoke a dialect I couldn't understand. But we smiled and her eyes scattered light against the rocks and against my face. She gave me a glass of hot water, as I'm sure it was all she had. She kept stepping out on the path and looking up at the mountain.

And I came slowly farther down, down down steps and stopped to sit in a chair and had tea with a beautiful girl woman who spoke very slowly and clearly about china and huashan and her family and food and her life. We drank and talked for 15 minutes and she wouldn't let me pay for the tea.

Coming down the mountain the workmen sang loudly against the rocks and steps and offer to carry my bag sweetly. We talk slowly because its all a dialect but we manage to communicate while the spring down the steps in soft chinese shoes and rubber strong legs, giving and taking with the mountain as it sees fit.

And now back in Xian, showered and munching on peanut butter and crackers.

3/05/2009

Saturday September 9, 2000

I went to the market, so amazingly crowded and huge, everything one could possibly need is there. I parked my bike outside and entered the stalls, the aisles, the shoes, bras, jackets, bedding, wires, teapots, stockings, towels umbrellas cups water filters speakers lights clocks rugs fabric pillows food tea brooms incense, shiny red decorations, paintings. All modern, no old kitsch at this market. and on a saturday you can believe there are a million million things and people. It's such a good feeling to be swept up in the mass of people, to be in China alone -

-(interrupted by yet another call to teach english) -

alone and on my own, unaware of myself because there's no one next to me to make me feel conscious of everything. No need to smile in admittance, no need to share, articulate. It all falls back on myself, deepening because it is not lost to someone else.

Thursday September 7, 2000

I wake this morning to hear "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" on the loudspeakers around campus. The music announced breakfast, lunch and dinner.