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中文的课

This past week was filled with endless Chinese classes and a lot of character memorization. Every day I have class from 8:30 until 12 and it is conducted entirely in Chinese. As I mentioned last week, I am only allowed to speak, read, and write Chinese (with the exception of family and school related tasks). I am currently living in an apartment with two of my classmates. It’s a lot of fun because we get to cook all our own meals, make our own schedules, and speak Chinese together. It is just the right size for the three of us and my erg (it takes up nearly the entire living room)!

I am including some more pictures from Shangri-la and Tiger Leaping Gorge because I still can’t get enough of it.

<3 Elizabeth

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Tiger Leaping Gorge!img_3863

The tiny swing bridge we had to cross to see the rick where the Tiger leaped.

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On top of Snow Mountain with some friends

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No Sleep for the Weary

Hello everyone!

Sorry for the delay, I am now finally connected to a VPN after traveling to nearly every corner of Yunnan province. After a week in the rural home stay, I traveled to Shangri-la. Shangri-la is a fictional place described in the 1933 novel Lost Horizon by British author James Hilton. It is believed that this place describes northwestern Yunnan and as such in 2001, Zhongdian County in northwestern Yunnan officially renamed itself Shangri-La County. While we were visiting the area, we went to the largest Tibetan Buddhist Monastery in Yunnan. It has over 1,000 monks and we got to speak with the head monk who is considered a Dali Lama or living Buddha, it was really quite fascinating. I also went with a couple of friends to the famous Snow Mountain and took a cable car up to 15,000 ft. It was super hard to breath and extremely windy, but the view was incredible!

After Shangri-la, I went with a few friends to hike Tiger Leaping Gorge. It is a canyon on the Jinsha River, a primary tributary of the upper Yangtze River. It is one of the deepest and most spectacular river canyons in the world and its inhabitants are primarily the indigenous Nakhi people. After hiking the gorge, we took a overnight train back to Kunming. It was a little squishy but definitely an experience to remember!

I am now back in Kunming and starting my last month here in China. I have signed a language pledge so I can only read, write, and speak Chinese with the exception of school commitments and talking to family. It has only been a few days, but I can already tell my speaking skills will increase immensely.

I hope everyone is well and stays safe with all the election commotion!

<3 Elizabeth

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Monks at the largest Tibetan Buddhist Monastery

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On top of Snow Mountain, at 15,000 ft

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Making friends with goats at Tiger Leaping Gorge

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Tiger Leaping Gorge

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On the top bunk in the overnight train

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Out in the Country

你们好!

This past week was spent learning a lot about China’s ethnic minorities. We visited a village of the Bai (white) people. They are not actually white , but it is a prominent color in their clothing. It was incredible the amount of dancing we did this week, everyone, even the children know all of the traditional dances. We also went to a Daoist temple on a sacred mountain for a night. I was the only person in my group willing to wake up at 5am to practice Taiji with the monk on the mountainside, it was definitely a memory I will have with me forever. I was also in a rural home-stay in the village of Shaping. China has continued to surprise me, and this time I was amazed by the far out reach of its development. I was expecting an extremely rural town in terms of a lack of technology but I found quite the opposite. Sure the village is significantly less developed than the major cities, but it had paved roads, numerous cars, running water and my home-stay even had a 50 inch+  flat screen tv, meaning they obviously had electricity. Every household also grew corn for animal fodder and although it seemed to be quite counterproductive, all of the corn was de-kernelled by hand! This meant a fair amount of blisters. I also got to do a lot of planting and hoeing. I even herded my family’s cows! Despite these advancements, the bathroom was an outhouse so I’m definitely grateful to be back in the city now. We have one week left of our group travel, next stop Shangri-La!

<3 Elizazbeth

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After reaching the top of the sacred Daoist mountain.

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The monk with whom I did early morning Taiji.

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Having fun in Dali.

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The three pagodas of Dali.

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Enjoying the view with some friends.

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Picking tea leaves at a tea plantation.

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Learned how to roast my own green tea!

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The Bai ethnic minority in traditional clothing.

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Everyone here has a cell phone.

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Went to a bilingual school, Mandarin and Bai.

img_3248My rural host family’s shoes.

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Hiked up the Bai secret mountain.

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Loving every moment of it!