It’s been a great almost eight months here in the Middle Kingdom. Now I hop a plane to Washington DC for my next adventure.
As a side effect of studying in China I got opportunities to visit Thailand, Mongolia, Russia, South Korea, work for Australians, Canadians, Mexicans and Americans at the Olympics, be part of history, and be at the center of the world.
There’s not something or somewhere else I could have done or gone to experience anything like I have in China. Images of the smiling road-side food stand guy, the four foot tall old lady collecting plastic bottles, donkey carts rolling down streets outside shiny office buildings, the orange smoggy sun setting over the mountains will all stay with me.
In a time and place with so much and so little money at the same time, there was celebration. The world came to China for the Olympics and the people were ecstatic. Things went off without a hitch and China and its 1.3 billion people are better for it. This country, with one sixth of the world’s population, is on the verge of becoming the world’s newest superpower.
But my time in China was, at times, far removed from international controversy, from Tibet demonstrations, from One China Policy arguments, from communist questioning.
Sitting in my Chinese class at Tsinghua University I was literally surrounded by the world. In my class of 12 there were students from America, Australia, Colombia, France, Italy, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Peru, South Korea and Vietnam. No where else could I have experienced a mix like this. No time else in my life could I have interacted with my peers from around the globe.
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