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Go and see the world, for it is too wonderful to be missed!
8月27日

Aussie story 7 - Coffee, tea or ......

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Aussie story 7 – Coffee, tea or…..

"Hi, would you like to have coffee, tea or juice?” With a professional (PR) smile, I started to waitress for the first time in my life.

Nah- hold on, don’t call the immigration office because I was not doing that for money illegally. It is a ministry event that CBC holds once a month. As its name “street café” suggests, the event aims at outreaching people in Chinatown by inviting them to stop by and chat with the talkers about the gospel over a free coffee. A live band will be set up to provide light and relaxing music in the background. What a creative and fun idea!

During the sermon, Pastor Turner pointed out the blessing that CBC received being a multi-cultural church at the heart of the city, that it would be easier to reach different people from various nationalities. It's true as there were people coming in from Aussie, China, Korea and even Turkey throughout the afternoon - glad that our group is combined of locals, Chinese, Koreans, Canadian and Indonesians, I was also excited to greet the Turk with the only Turkish word I could recall (i.e. Merhaba => hello)!

It rained heavily on the day so instead of setting the tables outside, the cafe was arranged indoor. Eventually about 20 people had come and some of them showed interest in joining the coming Bible study group.

It was a totally new and interesting experience for me in supporting the ministry as well as serving as waitress (it took me a while to remember what people need, e.g. how many spoons of sugar, white or dark coffee, with or without mike, etc. ^_^" ). Feels good to share the energy with the group. 

Aussie story 6 - Yan can cook, so can you!

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Aussie story 6 - Yan can cook, so can you!

Question 1 - How to make a frozen chicken taste fresh?
Question 2 - How to avoid overcooking lean pork while making sure it is eatable?
Question 3 - Should I put water in the wok to soak the meat?
Question 4 - What kind of sauce goes best with pork and chicken?
Question 5 - What stuff should I put to make a soup with apples and pears?

The question list goes on each week as I continue to make attempts to cook real food. It's a shame that I did not get much chances to cook way back home. After the first week, I felt the great need to sustain my health with a better diet. So I decided to go away from the tasteless (and more expensive) frozen food sold in supermarket, and started experimenting cooking in the Chinese way.

Luckily there is a market in the connecting district (10 mins by bus) that sells fresh meat and vegetables in the Chinese or Korean oriented stores, and most of the time the prices are lower than the big supermarkets. I usually go there on Monday to buy the fresh materials, then prepare the dishes and brown rice for the following days. Hopefully I can master the skills to cook properly soon through trial-and-error. One small step in cooking, one giant leap for Ada! :P

If you have a cookbook for dummies, you are more than welcome to send me one. **grins**



(Left) - First trial: Fried chicken slices with peas. Chicken still tasted like frozen after defrost. Sauce: Maggi sauce + sugar + powder. Probably overheated and too oily - got soar throat after eating the dish.






(Right) Second trial. Fried fresh chicken slices with 蒜心. Sauce: 香草瑞士汁 + powder + sugar. Tastes better than last trial. Fried egg and onion. Instant noodle with cucumber.

 

Aussie story 5 - From alienation to a united community

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Aussie story 5 - From alienation to a united community

I was so surprised to learn that, after taking my seat in the church, the speech for the Sunday service was "from alienation to a community of togetherness".

Two weeks had past since I first landed here. In the first week, I observed that the white students and Asian students are very separate. It is not common to see a mixed group of people coming from different cultural backgrounds. It is understandable that people love to stay with their own kind of people for easier communication.

It would go too far to call it discrimination as most of the people are fine. They are just indifferent. Most people are willing to answer if you ask them questions but they may not be eager to develop the conversation further nor knowing who they're talking to.

Having said that, alienation does exist and I personally experienced it in the second week. In the four courses I take, there are only very few Asian students - less than 5% I guess. One day, I went to the lecture room and took a seat by the side of a row. The girl next to me put a strange look. She talked with her friend in the next seat, then they moved away and sit somewhere else. I was a bit shocked by their behaviour because University students are supposed to be more liberal-minded.

Was it a coincidence that Pastor S. Turner picked this topic for the week? It was the second time that I joined the service in Central Baptist church and I just realized that the topics for the Chinese session and English session are different. It was striking to me when he mentioned, "....(non-Australian citizens may feel) like an alien in a foreign land" - he was speaking my mind in exact wordings!

The speech was based on Ephesus 2:11-22 about the union in Christ. I remember someone had told me no matter where you go, you could always find home in God's place. It is so real and the comfort is truly felt! I attended the international student fellowship two days ago and it was great to meet other overseas students. We feel alike in some ways, which makes me happy because I am not the only alien on this planet, ha ha.

After the Sunday service, someone handed out a form for newbies. I picked one and filled in my contacts. As soon as I finished writing, someone nearby has immediately come and talked to me (so efficient!), and introduced me to other folks from the young adult fellowship. As a habit, the group usually go together for lunch after the worship, and coffee break afterwards just to rest and relax. I joined them and had an enjoyable time throughout the whole afternoon! Lovely.

Apart from church, God has also given me a new friend in class. On Monday, I prayed that I could make new friends in school. Interestingly, I really acquainted with someone in a 200-people lecture the next day. During the break, a white girl in the next row asked me about stuff on laptop purchase (as I used laptop in class to jot notes). I felt a bit strange why a white person would chat with me. It turns out that she's also an overseas student (from Spain) and knows nobody here (no wonder!). The good thing is, she had also worked before!!

Thanks God for giving me comfort and answering my prayer. :)

 

Aussie story 4 - OMG, it's flooding!

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Aussie story 4 - OMG, it's flooding!

Probably it's part of the orientation game to get lost in the neighbourhood and to deal with unexpected events in an unfamiliar household.

Today, I woke up early and put my clothes into the washing machine for laundry. Then I happily went back to my bedroom and started planning the route for sight-seeing in the afternoon. The peace was broken when water suddenly permeated into the room. I opened the door and geeeeeeeeees, the corridor (paved with carpet) was flooded with water flowing out from the laundry room!

Ekkkk. I made a stupid mistake to block the water from draining. Well but then, how should I deal with this crisis first? I've never used carpet before nor lived in a house with carpet - how? how? how? Put some newspapers to absorb the water but the carpet was too wet to be dried. Can't hold it up to dry as it's covered in one piece for the whole floor. Need towels - but there's no towel in the house! Put my bath towel and a couple of small towels on the floor, it took less than 10 seconds to get wet. Need more... I put on my running shoes and headed to the closest mall in the district (25-30 mins on feet). While I was searching for towel, I suddenly came across an extension lead - cool, perhaps I can try using the hair-dryer!

It had been more than an hour after the flood when I returned home. The corridor was still wet. Keep absorbing water with towel but it just didn't go away. Need wind. But the design of the house does not provide convenient ventilation to the passage between rooms, and there's no fan in the house .... Opened the main door and side door to let more wind come into the house.

In a Greek myth, Prometheus stole the fire from Zeus and gave it to mankind. As punishment, he was chained up and an eagle would come and eat his liver. Since he was immortal, the next day his body restored, but then he would suffer the punishment again and bear the pain repeatedly every day.

I have become one of the Titans in Olympus and was punished for my fault. Spent the whole afternoon hair-drying the carpet continually, once every 15 mins for a couple of hours. It was hard as the affected area is big. No matter how focused I tried to dry a specific area, and as it became a bit dryer on the surface, the efforts actually did not help much because it was still wet inside.

Eventually I gave up the rescue action and decided to let it dry naturally.
 

Aussie story 3 - Torch night and smelly morning

Friday, August 10, 2007

Aussie story 3 – Torch night and smelly morning

In one of the following nights after I had moved in, a sudden blackout took place in Marsfield around 8:00 pm. The whole district fell into complete darkness and the supply was not restored until the next morning.

There was nothing much you could do without light apart from going to sleep. Landlord decided to drive somewhere and hang out with her friends, i.e., her usual mahjong group. She left me with a big torch to put on the light. Instead of candles, I set the torch in the bathroom and had my most romantic shower ever (thanks God there was back-up power to heat the water) in semi-darkness.

Siu-B might be afraid or lonely, probably nosy combined. It sneaked into my room and walked around my desk. Sometimes it just stood still. I was wondering if it wanted to leave its own smell in my area.....

In the next morning, I was struck with a bad smell when I woke up. My room was filled with a strange smell, hmmmm - something like what you'd have for leaving a stack of unattended wet clothes after a long time. But my clothes were dry. I smelled them one by one and found nothing wrong about it. Strange.

My next inspection area was the floor carpet. I smelled it and it seemed to be fine until I got to the point near my desk! The smell was strong there! Oh-no, did Siu-B really pee in dark without my knowing?! Quickly used the air freshener to spray the carpet and the room. The smell seemed to be diluted a bit but it didn't go away.

However, when I went out the house, I found a pile of garbage bins sitting along the street. I guess they are to be collected once a week by the trucks. Was it the cause of the bad smell instead? Or was it Siu-B? I was puzzled for the rest of the day.

When I came home, the smell had spreaded further down the street to the corner of the road. By then I could confirm that the garbage had pleaded guilty, not Siu-B.

New situations seem to happen every day.
 

Aussie story 2 - Finding the way

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Aussie story 2 - Finding the way

Thanks God I found my new apartment quickly on the second day upon arrival and moved in last Sat. The process was pretty smooth - In my first school day, I started to check the notice board in the campus about room renting. Just when I was looking at the board, a HK girl came and she posted a new advertisement on the board. I asked her to show me the room and I like it right away. So here I am, sharing an apartment with other 2 HK girls (my landlord). It’s close to the campus and takes about 15-2
0 mins by walking.

Usually I won’t leave the house after 5:30pm because it will be very dark after sunset - need to carry a torch even to take only a few steps out to trash the rubbish. On the first day I moved in, I dropped off the bus in a wrong place in the evening after returning from a nearby shopping centre. Eventually I found the road where my apartment is located, and walked up and down the hills in dark.

There are street lamps but the light is dim. As I walked on I started to feel scared. It was virtually completely dark and the area was in dead silence if no car passed by. Worse was that I could not see the number on the houses nor recognize my flat. I was filled with a strong sense of unsafety when the road was not looking like what it should be anymore. Just at that moment someone’s driving back and parking the car in front of a house. It was a mid-aged housewife. I asked her about the direction and she kindly offered me a lift and drove me back to my place. Perhaps God had sent her to help me.

The up side though, the sky is clear here. I can see stars above the roof at night. :)
 

Aussie story 1 - G'Day, Kangaroo Republic!

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Aussie story 1 - G'Day, Kangaroo Republic!

Nine hours is not too bad for a long haul flight. As usual, I did not manage to sleep on the plane. It made me even more tired to wait in a long queue to go through the customs and security check.

Australia applies strict rules on what passengers bring. Despite I declared that I had not brought in any Chinese herbs nor Chinese food, I was asked to open my lugguage for checking. There was a girl in another line who had brought in a bag of dried beef and pork slices from Aji Ichiban (優之良品), she tried to eat as many as possible on site after being caught...... Probably there are too many Chinese in Sydney and the customs office pays particular attention to Chinese passengers. They also hand out leaflets to list out what are being banned, of which include herbs and wood /plant oriented medicine, dried animal food, etc.

When I walked out from the airport, I was captivated by the sight of a clear blue sky - what has been long missed in HK! It's winter now and it's cold in the morning and at night. However, the sunshine is strong during the day and it can keep you warm and comfy most of the time.

I was greeted by my aunt and Mrs Chan upon arrival. My aunt is my father's elder sister, while Mr Chan is my father's lifelong friend and his family has migrated to Australia since I was 12 years old. Macartney, Mr Chan's son, picked us up and drove us to Chinatown.

My orientation took place at Chinatown inside the city. After having lunch in one of the Chinese restaurants (kind of Hong Kong's chai-chang-tang), the ladies took me to buy a SIM card, a calling card and travel pass for bus rides. Things are so so expensive especially when the exchange rate stands high. Interestingly, my aunt managed to bargain a better exchange rate at HSBC, it's the first time I learned that exchange rate can be negotiated with international banks like that! :D

They showed me the streets around Chinatown and some of the major train stations, etc. Unfortunately I was too tired to remember all the new information and details. Having a welcome dinner with Mr Chan's family, my aunt and I returned to her home. That's my first Aussie day - super tired.

 

Egypt - overview of the trip

Monday, May 28, 2007

Egypt: Overview of the trip

May 5: Group tour - Depart from Hong Kong.
May 6: Group tour - Cairo & Giza pyramids
May 7: Group tour - Aswan, Abu Simbel (Nile cruise)
May 8: Group tour - Aswan: Kom Ombo, Edfu temple (Nile cruise)
May 9: Group tour - Luxor: Valley of Kings, Hatshepsutel temple, Memnon colossi, Karnak, Luxor temple (Nile cruise)
May 10: Group tour - Hurghada: Red Sea
May 11: Group tour - Cairo: Egyptian museum & Khan El Khalili market
May 12: Group tour - Alexandria
May 13: Stay behind alone - Dahshur pyramids and Egyptian musuem
May 14: Stay behind alone - City tour in Cairo
May 15: Transit stay in Dubai. Depart at midnight.


 

Egypt 1 - The pyramid adventures

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Egypt 1: The pyramid adventures

Magical spells, treasure hunts and mysterious legends are so often associated with the pyramids that sparkle unlimited imaginations in adventure stories and movies. Yes me too - I felt like being Indiana Jones when climbing into the pyramid!

Upon arrival in Cairo on the first day, the group immediately set off to the famous Giza Plateau. The Great Pyramid of Khufu is the largest of its kind in the world (140m tall) and has been widely covered by the media. Next to it lies the pyramid of his son, Khafre (second largest one - see pic). Khafre's pyramid retains part of its original limestone casing on the top of the construction. I have never realized that the original surface of a pyramid should be white and smooth. Pic - Red Pyramid (right)

Ok, so I took my first pyramid adventure in Khafre's (I could have picked Khufu's if I am free from acrophobia...) There are two entrances to go in, one opens about 11m up the face of the pyramid while another opens at the base. The latter is mostly used by tourists today.


Pic - pyramid of Khafre (left)

We bent our bodies to go through a narrow descending passage (about 1m x 1m in height and width), followed by a horizontal corridor, and climbed up another passage to reach the burial chamber, where an empty sarcophagus is placed. The experience was interesting but it could have been more tasteful without the mobs of tourists.

It was not until the second last day when I visited the Red Pyramid in Dahshur that I felt the excitement of adventure. Built by king Sneferu (Khufu's father), the Red Pyramid was generally regarded as the first true pyramid and is the third largest in size.

I arrived in the morning and there were less than 10 tourists at the spot! I climbed up the external wooden stairs to reach the entrance, which is located 28m up in the northern side of the pyramid. Passed through a 62m long narrow passage (approximately 1m in height & width) that is inclined downwards at an angle of 27 degrees, followed by a horizontal corridor.

The corridor leads to a 12m-tall chamber. It looks very different from the interior of Khafre's pyramid (a flat rectanglar chamber). The chamber has a vaulted ceiling, supported by stepped corbels on both sides.
Down the way I went into another chamber. A wooden staircase was installed to help the visitors climb up to the third and final chamber, the burial place in the pyramid. It looks like a cave craved out of red rocks. There is nothing in the burial place apart from a smell, which is probably caused by poor ventilation. I was suddenly captivated by the sense of time and existence. I slowly touched the wall and felt as if I was there 4,500 years ago.

It is noteworthy that the pyramids and tombs were being prepared by the pharaohs themselves while they were still alive. When you come to think about the vast efforts, money and time they had spent on "digging their own graves" - so did the ancient emperors in China and other countries, the search for immortality and eternal life is once again revealed and it appears to be a natural-born desire across races, time and boundaries.



Met another individual traveler, Shi Ling, at the Red Pyramid and we joined each other for dinner that night. She comes from Taiwan and had been back-packing in Egypt for almost a month.






The oldest form of pyramid - The Step Pyramid of King Djoser. It is also the first stone architecture in the world. Prior to this, buildings were constructed by wood, reeds and mudbrick.





Bent Pyramid (Sneferu) seems to be an experiment of early building of pyramids. It began with a slope of 60 degrees but it would bear a high risk of collapse, so further layers were added and the angle was changed at an less severe degree.



 

Egypt 2 - The phantom of the museum

Egypt 2: The phantom of the museum

Can't remember when I started falling in love with museums. Perhaps as I grow up, my enthusiasm in talking to a stone is higher than that with a living person.

A quality museum should provide the best selection of items that bring out the most valuable essence of one's historic
al and cultural heritage. Five years ago I took an opportunity to visit the British museum during my transit stay in London. It was a pity that I only spent one morning and did not know how to enjoy a museum visit. Despite of its disgraceful acquisition of items from other countries, the museum opened a new world to me and I promised myself that I would not leave the treasure land empty handed again in my next museum visit. So there I was - the Egyptian Museum in Cairo (http://www.egyptianmuseum.gov.eg/).

Over 120,000 items were collected spanning from pre-historical period to Greco-Roman time. Highlights include the royal mummies museum where Ramesses II is housed; the objects of Tutankhamun's tomb which was only discovered in 1922 at the Valley of the Kings - there are 7 layers of protection for King Tut's mummy, with four shrines in the outer and three coffins inside the last shrine. The layers were laid inside one another. The innermost coffin was made of solid gold (see pic). Inside the gold coffin, the king's mummy was found wearing the famous death mask which covered his head, shoulders and upper chest.

The elaborated, refined and colourful jewellery collection held tourists as breathless as their owners did. Accessories certainly played an important part in the royal fashion and it is not difficult to imagine how much people cared about their appearance by the traces of make-up on the portraits.

While the "must-see" items are put into the limelight, let's not forget about the many other "low-profile" display rooms which provide no less pleasure to the visitors. I enjoyed seeing the collection of Egyptian god figures, the ancient writings, the daily tools and musical instruments, the Coptic and animal mummies, the Nubian solider figures and so forth. It is so relaxing to read the description and study every item in details.

At the end I spent a total of 7 hours in the Cairo museum (firstly visited in a group and returned on my own in a later day) but I could only finished the first floor, compromising a 30-min quick tour on the ground floor before the museum closed! It was the most tiring day in my trip.

I was told that the Egyptology students need to spend one year to study the museum for their course. When I wandered in the museum, I did see students working hard to memorize their notes at different display corners. Fine arts students also did their drawing in resemblance of the items, as well as TV program shooting objects....

As researches and excavations continue to take place, new discoveries are expected to appear and more items will be added to the museum. I hope it will be cherished and continues to support the studies of scholars and Egyptologists in the world.