Saturday
3rd March, 2018 1815
There
were a lot more fireworks last night for the end of spring festival
than there were for Chinese new year's eve. Lanzhou is a city which
definitely has odd priorities, far removed from Chizhou. I never
bothered going out, I was honestly numb in the forefront of my brain
and only remained awake as long as possible so that I wouldn't be up
at 0300 today.
As
it was I nodded off on my desk at a time I know not and woke up after
who knows when, at which point I tottered off to bed. It really has
to get easier because I certainly can't get any younger.........if
only.......
Joan
asked me for a favour today. She needs help finding material for her
thesis. I was somewhat taken aback considering when she visited last
month she received news she had failed. I admit to not being au fait
with how degrees work here but logic dictated to me that if she can't
get one due to failure then submitting and defending a thesis is
surely akin to a heavyweight boxer losing on a knockout, coming round
and then saying let's fight the remaining rounds because the audience
paid for twelve?
I
will in due course get to the bottom of it and have indeed sent
plenty of links to her, the topic being ambiguity in English. As a
native speaker of course it is relatively easy to discern the
difference between need and knead, lead and lead or the versatility
of a well-known expletive
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wIiutYIP9Rw)
but of course for a non-native speaker it understandably becomes a
problem of labyrinthine proportions – particularly with Chinese as
they have no past, present or future tenses in their language. They
say “I go to the cinema” to indicate they went yesterday, they go
every day, they are going now or they are going next week. Quite how
they actually communicate successfully is frankly beyond me but then
I am not in charge of their national tongue. It does however explain
perhaps why they only have around a third as many words as English
does. Even then, when I read comments on Facebook I realise my
students are still better than many UK-born posters!
So
today I have not set foot outside. It took until mid-afternoon to
even start to feel normal again, and again, I had neither the desire
to cook nor in this instance take a walk and find a restaurant. I
made two soft-boiled eggs. No bread in the flat so it was just that
for my daily sustenance. I may well do a Sunday roast tomorrow if the
lady up the top still has decent potatoes.
Then
of course it is Mealtime Monday. Provided BHG have another box of
them, it will be fish fingers, mash, proper peas and homemade
parsley sauce now that Steph brought some from the USA. Also, now I
have baking powder from her, I may dabble in making a Madeira cake.
Doubtless they will want custard but I am beggared if I will let them
take the leftovers with them this time! I am quite partial to Madeira
cake with plonk or port.
By
the time I teach again on Wednesday I hope the toilet situation will
have been resolved. In a shining example of how not to
schedule works, east campus are half-way through refurbishing the
only ladies and gents in the main teaching building. Admirable as
replacing primitive sloping concrete holes with flat porcelain
fittings may be (they are all squat loos), when I left on Friday all
they had were said loos. Previously at least each aperture received a
modicum of privacy courtesy of a 2'6” high partition (no door, just
two sides so often I walked past someone sitting on their heels
having a dump and text messaging at the same time) and plumbing which
as yet simply dribbles instead of flushing as it did before.
The
entrances were covered by builder's synthetic sheets draped from the
ceiling to foil prying eyes which passed but I noticed the girls had
already managed to part one of the fixings to theirs which meant
anyone going to the gents could grab an eyeful through the open
doorway. And no, as tempting as the thought may be, I did not
suddenly develop a weak bladder every break time.
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