Sunday, September 24, 2017

Big Trouble in (VERY) Little China

Nǐ hǎo!

A little flu, a little rain, and not much to do tells me I should do the blogging I've neglected...

Some background...
Seven weeks ago I moved to Shenzhen, China, on the southeast coast and adjacent to Hong Kong.  In 1979 it was a moutainous fishing and farming village of about 30,000 people promoted to city status and declared a Special Economic Zone the following year.  The military blasted the area down to size and the government started experimenting with ideas of "reform and opening".  Today it is a very modern planned city with a population proper of over 10,000,000 ranking 4th in China.  Also, it is ungodly hot and humid.  Like I am drenched through and through, sweat dripping from me after a short walk, salt stains on my dress shirts by the time work is done.  It is considered the Silicon Valley of the nation.  Authorities use the city as a laboratory and export successful ideas throughout the rest of the country.  There are countless huge shopping malls.  It is known for its amusement parks, and there are beaches as well.

I work at a British international school called Green Oasis School as the Whole School Head of SEN (Special Educational Needs), a Head of Department responsible for any additional support to all students from Year 1 to Year 11.  A lot about the job is similar to my position in Morocco, except that I'm also middle management.  I have a young teaching partner (think, teacher's aide), the lovely Litchi and I am getting another teacher in January.  My only complaint is that half of the staff are Chinese and the other half from the U.K. - I can't understand a word anyone says!

I live in a 54.5 sq. m. 1-bedroom apartment on the 23rd floor of a 31-story building.  It is a good bit smaller than the average Shenzhen apartment yet a lot more expensive, but it's all about location, right?  It is in what's called Shuiwei village, a very short Metro ride either way from the Central Business District and the HK border, a mere 5 bus stops from work.  Shenzhen caters to a huge expat population, so living a comfortable Western lifestyle can be readily had (at a price).  The view is pretty cool.  I love the light show from the skyscrpaers in the CBD every night!

Anyway, some more about that apartment...
It has a few features that I would say are somewhat unusual.  The teeny washer (no dryer) is on the balcony:
The kitchen is 12 sq. ft:
The bathroom shower has no stall; the water just flows across the floor into a drain.  It's called a wet room or wet floor and is common here.  Smh...
That rates a very close second in my book, but the best just has to be the glass wall between my bedroom and living area.  A view from my living room:
I'm thinking peep shows to help defray the cost of my rent?

I'll leave you with that disturbing image as I get ready for next week, the last one before I go to Japan for the National Week holiday.  Tokyo, Kyoto and a day trip to Hiroshima are on the docket!

Zài jiàn!