Above is one security entrance to my apartment complex. Banners and lanterns put up!
Above is a building near the wall of Xian. Very colorful and beautiful!
There are decorations going up all over the place - red laterns, lights, banners and sheep statues (it is the year of the sheep - of which I am a proud member!). We were downtown last night near the Xian wall where they have put up many decorations and will have a big celebration on the 19th. The sheep statues are very beautiful but my phone wouldn't take decent pictures of them so maybe I'll go back again.
Since our holiday from school (which started on the 12th) the weather has been pretty nice. Fairly unpolluted skies and spring-like temperatures. The actual Chinese New Year is on the 19th, and as we get closer to that date the streets are getting quieter and less crowded as people go home, wherever that may be, to be with their families. I'm told it's one of the most peaceful times around here (however many shops are closed which makes it more challenging...). Well, peaceful if you don't mind the firecrackers. They are LOUD, and I'm told on the 19th it is almost continuous from sun-up on. But for right now, it is only the occasional burst of noise... But I am leaving early morning on the 19th for Vietnam (cheap flights on that date), and will be heading to an island off the coast called Phu Quoc. I will be there for 10 days before returning back here. A colleague at school told me about it, and it sounds like a great place to relax, swim (scuba dive) and read books. All, of course, accomplished while sitting in the sun or under a tropical tree. I've found a small little hotel near the beach and they speak English (or at least a little) so that should help. I've heard the food is great.
I'll be back in Xián on March 2nd in plenty of time before school starts up on the 7th (yes, a Saturday). But not to worry, I'm going to an AP conference in Suzhou from the 7th to the 9th so I get a small break there.
So somehow I have managed to survive the first half of the school year (well, actually, the new year this year is late so we have gone beyond the half-way point). My thoughts and emotions fluctuate on almost a daily basis as to what the future may bring. The one conclusion I have come to so far is that you don't want to try to predict what will happen in China. Because it will surely change. There are many things that are truly amazing here, and while many parts of the culture truly perplex me, I also find may things truly magical. I only wish the language were easier to learn - I feel like I still know next to nothing.
I am going to go out for a walk in the park now. And then later I am tutoring a student in English who is getting ready to take the English proficiency test they must pass to study in the US. Seeing a student outside of school has been a real eye-opener to their lives...
And so I wish you all: Chun jie kuai le.
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