As I begin typing this entry I am sitting in my new Chinese apartment, for which I still do not know the address, listening to the remaining sounds of the Chinese New Years celebration, which began over four hours ago. While slightly annoying, as fireworks are continuously booming all over the city loud enough to set off car alarms, I still have to smile. I AM LIVING IN CHINA!
This past week and a half has had plenty of trials, but triumphs as well. Starting with over 36 hours of traveling to get to our hotel in Shenzhen, only to realize that while our bodies said it was the middle of the night, the clocks here said otherwise. When it was all said and done we finally collapsed into what I can only now assume is a typical Chinese rock hard bed. Seriously. The concrete floor in your basement has more cushion than any mattress I have discovered here.
A day and a half of paperwork later including a bizarre medical check in which Rob and I were ushered into room after room where goodness knows what test was coming next and nobody spoke two words of English, and we were ready for apartment hunting!
We had set our budget at around 5000 Yuan, which seems like a lot for we got, but is definitely on the low end of what’s available here. Hence, apartment after apartment after apartment we traipsed our exhausted family through were nothing I could imagine my family living in. Even considering hiring someone to clean them, there was still the rotting doorjambs, battered walls, rudimentary kitchens, and nasty furniture to deal with. After significantly lowering our expectations, we finally found an apartment we agreed would suit us. It was, if nothing else, big enough and in a really great complex. However, when I met with the landlord, realtor, and my interpreter to sign the lease we found out that the landlord refused to rent to a foreigner. After listening to four Chinese people argue about whether or not I was permitted to live in what I was thinking more and more looked to be an UNfavorable apartment, we left with no apartment. Two hours later, my realtor showed us an apartment that nobody had yet lived in. Brand new, well done, nice neighborhood. Even a cute kitchen…..albeit no oven or microwave and I feel like a giant in it every time I hit my head on the cupboards and range hood that are installed at least eight inches lower than in any American kitchen. We agreed, signed the lease, and moved in!
Our next task was to fill our new apartment with new apartment things! This called for a trip to WalMart!
Yes, this is a picture of the inside of one of the eight Wal-Mart’s that exist in Shenzhen, China! Scary place! Actually, my guide decided that this Wal-Mart was too busy so we went to a different one. I will admit the next one was better, but still felt like I was pushing a cart through a subway station at rush hour. It was here that I realized that while 90% of what we buy in the U.S. is from China, you can still get almost all of it cheaper in the U.S. that you can in Shenzhen. At least if you are shopping Wal-Marts. But I was able to get enough stuff to get us through a few days until we could find shops selling other goods cheaper. I should tell you though, that near the end of our trip to Wal-Mart I remembered that I needed an electric heater since apartments here do not have heat systems and it still gets down to the mid 40’s at night. We found the one option available and tossed one on to the cart. That evening we ended up all sleeping in Aiden’s room because we were all FREEZING! Task number one of the next day was to find a second heater!
So we filled our new home with enough stuff to live semi-comfortably and the following days have been filled with exploring our new surroundings and searching for those items that we did not get at Wal-Mart. Only now, I have no escort, guide, car, or translator so it is not uncommon to head out intending to find an iron, or highchair, or some such thing and accomplish nothing more than discovering a new place to eat. By the way, today’s discovery was a fancy grocery store in an extremely ritzy part of town (next to Cartier, Rolex, & Swarovski), that sold turtles and alligators in their meat department! We had intended on finding IKEA to pick up a highchair. We didn't find IKEA, but the experience was interesting anyway.
We have also found that we live right next to the Shenzhen Botanical Gardens and Expo Center.
That whole sculpture is made of real flowers! Everything in the city is decorated for New Years and the park is no exception. The most thrilling part of finding this park, however, was for Aiden. He found a playground with sand! I imagine Rob and the boys will be spending a lot of time here in the months to come.
There are literally hundreds of things we have yet to figure out. But for the time being, we are quite pleased. We have a great home to come home to. Every grocery store I’ve been too carries Huggies, Pampers, and formula. When all else fails, cookies fill the tummy just as well as anything nutritious. And when I wake up in the morning this is what I see out my 18th floor bedroom window.
wow!! i could read up on you guys all day! keep the blogs comin'! post some pictures of your apartment too! and the picture of the four of you with the luggage... that should be your new fb picture! that's a great one. love you guys and pray for you all the time - and mya asks to pray for aiden every day :)
ReplyDeleteamanda
Oh, so amazing. I am probably the closest to you in time zones. And I hope I can come visit. I have actually seen plane tickets round trip from my little town to various places in China for around 600.00. It's cheaper than flying into the lower 48. Please keep posting pictures. I love learning about where you are. I am praying for you. When do you start work? What an incredible view. God has certainly turned your path in a fabulously unexpected direction. I expect that once you plug in over there you will find many believers and Americans.
ReplyDeleteI love this!!
ReplyDeleteHello T42's,
ReplyDeleteIt's great things are going okay(I know not perfect)for you. And of course I'm so relieved you're doing well. I'll try not to ask too many questions : ) but kept meaning to ask you how many hours will you be teaching once you do start working? The scenery outside your window is beautiful! But I'm assuming you still have harder then concrete mattresses: ( I'll bet you've thought about Dr. Beno a time or two. I'll have him fly right over,k? The other pictures in your blog are great. I might try to 'copy' the family picture if that's okay. I'm hoping you weren't working on the blog at 2:a.m. I know that you're 14 hrs. ahead of us. It's fun to think about the time of day you're in and wondering what you're doing. Really crazy-the you're living in our 'tomorrow'. I will continue to pray for health,safety,wisdom in dealing with the different culture and most of all the you sense His presence!
Love you! Mom
Wow, I give you so much credit! Congratulations on your move! May God be with you in the days and weeks to come! When do you start your work? I hope you continue to keep us all posted on your "Adventure"!!
ReplyDeleteWow, I give you so much credit! May God be with you in the days and weeks to come. When do you begin your work? Thank you for keeping us included in your "Adventure"! We will be praying for your adjustment.
ReplyDeleteHello T-4-4's,
ReplyDeleteIt's awesome things are going okay(I know not perfect)for you. And of course I'm so relieved you're doing well. I'll try not to ask too many questions : ) but kept meaning to ask you how many hours will you be teaching once you do start working? The scenery outside your window is beautiful! But I'm assuming you still have harder then concrete mattresses: ( I'll bet you've thought about Dr. Beno a time or two. I'll have him fly right over,k? The other pictures in your blog are great. I might try to 'copy' the family picture if that's okay. I'm hoping you weren't working on the blog at 2:a.m. I know that you're 14 hrs. ahead of us. It's fun to think about the time of day you're in and wondering what you're doing. Really crazy-how you're living in our 'tomorrow'. I will continue to pray for health,safety,wisdom in dealing with the different culture and most of all the you sense His presence!
Love you! Mom
WOW! I can't believe I missed that you were moving! Looking forward to following along the journey! -Kelly
ReplyDeleteAwesome Blog!!! I will be checking on it more often!
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