…this is just a tribute!
Finally this blend has reached China. Only 1 year after the rest of the world!
An international family living and learning together overseas.
Last week we made a mid week journey up to Beijing. Prior to the show we were wondering if we were crazy. It meant leaving straight from school to catch the train, drop our bags at the hotel and off to the venue. The next day we would catch the first train and go straight into work. To be fair we were as tired as expected, but the traveling was simple and straightforward, we had tested out the journey to the venue and the show was AMAZING! We would do it again in a heartbeat.
The show was in a smallish venue and we were lucky to be standing just one row back from the stage. It was one of the first concerts where I could actually see the band and I am so glad I could! It will be hard not to sound cliché, but they were full of energy and you could really see and feel their passion for the music.
The music was fantastic. At one point three of them came down into the middle of the crowd to do a song and they sang without microphones. It was so beautiful and I loved how the crowd was actually able to quiet down and listen.
Another highlight was when lead singer, Wesley Schultz stopped singing and asked everyone to put their phones away, to just be there. On one hand it felt like being told off but more importantly showed his strengths in his beliefs. In the February issue of Time Out Beijing he shared his thoughts on this:
I understand that there is an impulse to have our phones out in nearly every possible place imaginable – at dinner, waiting on a line, at a wedding, on a beach, on the toilet – pretty much anywhere. But it doesn’t mean that this impulse is something we need to act on. The problem with people having their phones out and recording video at live shows is multifaceted. One: the footage itself is generally poor quality (the sound especially) and rarely gets re-viewed. Two: the assumption is that people who are on Facebook would want/care to see your concert footage – they don’t. Three: by putting your phone into the air and recording the show you are distracting folks around you from being directly engaged in the show, and instead of focusing on a tiny TV. Four: most importantly, you are distracting yourself from the show itself.
I think they are such valid points and I found myself looking around and thinking at the beginning of the show how different concerts look today than say 10 years ago. When you look around you just see a sea of phones and cameras.
Finally I loved watching the members of the band interact with each other. As the show ended they gave each other congratulatory hugs, which I thought was so sweet. They also walked around the stage picking up set lists and guitar picks and chucking them out into the audience. Two set lists were carefully folded into airplanes and shot out into the crowd. We didn’t have any souvenirs to take on with us but the memory of the night will resonate with me for a long time.
Mrs T
Living abroad often presents situations, which back in your home country are simple mundane tasks. We have recently been challenged by: grocery shopping! It is not to say that in China we can’t find a grocery store, it is just that it is a bit harder to find your way around one when most things are written in a language you can’t read and many of the products are things you have never seen before.
Locally we have a few options; the most convenient would be E Mart. It is walking distance and sells all the basics. However the quality of the fruit and veg has proven to be less than reliable there is very little in English. When shopping for something like meat being able to read the labels is very important. We tend to rely on E Mart for the simple basics like toilet paper, cleaning products and beer.
Also locally we have Metro. This is a Costco-like store that sells local ingredients as well as many of the familiar English and American brands. We usually do a big shop here once or twice a month to stock up on things like Kerrygold Irish butter and Organic Valley Milk. We have even been known to pick up a bottle of HP Brown Sauce there.
Besides these two options we have used an order and delivery service called Aaron’s Kitchen. It is a great company that provided quality western products that may be hard to find elsewhere as well as good quality meats. They require a week in advance for your order and that is where we have been getting our meats.
We recently found ourselves with an empty freezer and as we could not place an Aaron’s Kitchen order (due to the Chinese New Year Holiday) we turned to Metro to get some chicken. The butchery was bare of any meat so a frozen whole chicken was the best we could come up with. We were a bit surprised when we opened the packaging to find THE WHOLE CHICKEN, head, neck, feet and bum.
For two teachers raised in suburban families this was something that was a bit out of both of our comfort zones. I enlisted in the help of my TA. She laughed at my fright as she gracefully chopped off the head with blood gushing everywhere.
Though the chicken was ready to roast the thought of his little eyes looking up at me over the beak was a too much to forget. In the end the chicken served its purpose as I made a big pot of stock.
At this point we were quite desperate to get some good quality meat so we could do some home cooking. Some of our co-workers had been using a service from the St. Regis Hotel – The Butchers Block, so we gave it a try. The order form was easy to read and use. We emailed our order on Wednesday and it was ready to collect on Saturday. The service at the hotel was fantastic, we were even given complimentary drinks whist we waited for our products. We couldn’t have been more pleased to see 7 chicken breasts, 7 English pork sausages, 1 kg of minced beef, beef brisket and a mixed grill of lamb, tenderloin, bacon, sausage and chicken.
For 435 rmb (£43 or $71), it was expensive by Chinese standards but well worth it for the peace of mind it gave us.
Mrs T
The Butcher’s Block order form