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Posted

Options for eating out in China:

 

1. McDonald's;

2. Gutter Oil;

3. Luxury.

 

Not really true (at least in Kunming.) Plenty of smaller, mid-scale places that make tasty, family-style food using decent ingredients. I think you have overstated the situation in the interest of rhetoric, in the interest of proving your point.

  • Like 3
Posted

I have been to one place in Kunming, the French cafe, and they tried to scam me. Street food was amazing though, plenty of fresh fruit. Maybe you have been to restaurants I haven't seen, or ...

Posted

#62 -- @Angelina --

 

Maybe you have been to restaurants I haven't seen, or ...

 

Not to get the thread off topic, but I've lived in Kunming most of the last 7 or 8 years. Would it really be so surprising if I've been to restaurants you didn't get to try during one brief visit as a tourist?

  • Like 4
Posted

Sure, it would make sense.

Plus in my post I said it's difficult to find exceptions, never said they don't exist, you took it out of context and left out the second part. Maybe if you have been in Kunming longer you are more familiar with the exceptions, or maybe you can argue that what I call exceptions is the majority.

This is a nice thread, let's not get off topic.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted
I haven't left China yet but after this semester I will be returning home. A year ago I thought that after I finished studying that I'd like to stay here and work but after some time I finally decided that I need to go back home (not for good, maybe later I'll return). But it's mostly because I can't help but always feel like an outsider. I don't think people really want to be my friend except for that fact that I'm not only a foreigner but I'm a foreigner from the US oh and also from NYC. I don't like lying to people that I'd like to be friends with so I can't tell them I'm from any non-English speaking country because I would feel awful.

It's true that most Chinese people will always see you as an outsider to some extent, but it's most definitely possible to assimilate, in fact it tends to be something that happens gradually over time (though of course this is much less true for people who tend to stay within expat social circles and don't learn the language).

 

There are also many that begin with the quest to learn "great American English" sigh. This is usually the ice breaker into making friends but even people I have known for a while I feel like they just like me because I'm a strange foreigner and everything I do is so cute. Oh look at how cute she is ordering a meal. Oh look how she speaks to the cash register lady. I feel like my age has been greatly stunted and I don't get taken seriously at all. I'll admit I'm very childish but ordering food shouldn't warrant a look of amusement.

Again, this will naturally improve over time, along with your Chinese level. People at my first job always used to say I would 卖萌 when I spoke Chinese (even though I wasn't doing it intentionally). People at my second job never said that. I asked a friend yesterday whether she thought I 卖萌ed when I spoke, and she told me no, although she thought all her foreign colleagues did.

 

On the other hand, she said the way I spoke seemed to lack confidence because I used too many “就是”s and “那个”s when I was pausing for thinking time (I don't think anyone who speaks English with me ever gets that impression). Bottom line: people will percieve you a certain way based on your speaking patterns. You can change those speaking patterns over time, but it takes practice.

 

And maybe a bit off topic but I miss having "girl" friends. I like having guys as friends yes but I've met a lot of guys that got very creepy very quick. Also can't help but feel like my guy friends are only really friends with me because they think I'm a dating potential for something new and exotic. My friend actually asked me a while back "do you want to try a chinese?" :shock: .

I guess I have the opposite/equivalent problem, which is that the vast majority of my Chinese friends are female. I think the only way to get around this kind of problem is to make more of a conscious effort to make same-sex friends as well. (Also if your "friends" are being creepy, it might be best to cut off contact with those friends - find some different ones of either gender. Not all opposite-sex friends will act that way!)

Posted

#66 -- Thanks for the follow up, Joshua.

Posted

1239 days and counting! Who's leaving!?!!

 

I enjoy reading these posts though. Keep 'em coming 8)

  • Like 3
  • 1 month later...
Posted

Thank you, The Pigeon, and best of luck to you and yours back in the States.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Thanks, Roddy. I'll post an update once I'm settled statestide. I'm sure there will be lots of things I will miss about living in Beijing.

  • 1 year later...
Posted

Am a big fan of this thread, found it super interesting. Was wondering if there was any updates from people who posted in here before, did anyone come back? Regret / delighted with your decision? etc.

Posted

I have left China for another destination in Asia, same industry, and couldn't be happier. Don't miss it for a second to be honest, think that would be different if I went back to Europe where many things are so different, for better and worse. 

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