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What are the things you think you must do if you travel to or live in China?


Tara Braska

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Just very curious about what are the things if think you must do when travel to or live in China ? And what is the reason. For me if I were a foreigner I think I would go the metro and see how crowed it is in the rush hours. Because I know that China has a huge population, so I wanna get a chance to see how is the feeling living with this big amount of people. I remember when was in New Zealand, I am really curious about what does people use in the local Chinese restaurant to eat, chopsticks or forks, and found out most of them don't use chopsticks, just like Chinese people eating steak using chopsticks in Western restaurant.  

 

Curious for other people’s answers.

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Personally, I've been trying to prioritize seeing the UNESCO world heritage listed tourist sites


The UNESCO sites are a mixed bag. Sure, many of them are amazing, but tourism has destroyed them. Many of them were "restored" beyond recognition; the entrance price very high; and the number of tourists that come turn it into a circus inside the dead atmosphere of a museum. Definitely go and see the Great Wall, but avoid Badaling. And the weekend and any holiday, unless you would rather see crowds; then do go to Badaling.

But with a country has huge and varied as China is, the list is endless. I just met a guy today who rode a motorbike 500 km in one day right through the Taklamakan desert. The way he described driving through it was totally surreal.

 

Go into the Tibetan areas and talk to some of the monks. At Seda (色达), you can also see a sky burial. If you really want, you can live in a monastery for a while (that is, if you are not in the TAR, and it isn't March).

Go to a Chinese club where everyone just stands around trying to look cool drinking and playing on their phones and bored looked prostitutes dancing on a platform next to them; then laugh at the absurdity of how they all look.

 

When a friend comes from home, take him (or her) to a nice dinner filled with strange looking parts of the animals and wash it down with bottle of baijiu (the best pairing being of course 二锅头).

Go to Jiuzhaigou, but ditch the buses, and hop a fence and camp in the backcountry. A friend of mine did that for a week after talking to one of the local shopkeepers in the valley who showed him where to go.

See Xinjiang before it changes anymore.

Get invited over to someone's hometown for the Spring Festival. On the eve, spend hundreds of kuai on fireworks.

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It's not that the toilets are especially interesting, it's more that they are strange and add to the feeling of displacement - especially the lack of privacy. I remember using such public toilets in a small street in Beijing, fortunately when I came in there was no one inside but as I was pulling my pants up afterwards a few Chinese women came in and stared at the foreigner (me), very awkward :shock:

 

Note: there are some squatter toilets in my home country, it's not difficult to find them in very old homes, and in the countryside, as each 'town hall" - even if it's just the main hamlet of a group of hamlets - must provide some public toilets,  and many built a few squatter stalls more than half a century ago and never cared to upgrade them. But they usually have a neat porcelain floor receiver with plumbing and flushing and perfect privacy... actually for young town people it must still feel quite exotic to use them now that I think about it  :lol: . But now the law requires providing toilets for the handicapped as well, so the old public squatter toilets may soon disappear...

 

Anyway, as a newcomer speaking not a word of Chinese, everything is an adventure in China - from taking the bus by yourself to finding and using public toilets.

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I've not had the pleasure of visiting China yet, but may i ask a rather embarrassing question to those of you who have?

 

If you're using the squatting toilets for a while......not for a wee.....do your legs and feet ever go numb? I am worried as i have IBS anyway, but also once i was squatting on my own toilet, trapped (there was a spider on the floor, i was barefoot -i know how pathetic that sounds, but well...) and waiting it for to move enough so i could run past it. I ended up being on there for about half an hour and i nearly fell over when i got off cos my legs were so numb.

 

With my IBS i'd be rather embarrassed if that happened somewhere like a Chinese squat toilet.

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Sometimes legs go numb, it's also related to leg strength as well. 

 

Best to think of the positives: the pressure of your leg against your abdomen cleans out the appendix, lessening the risk of appendicitis, posture is similarly more evolutionally efficient.

 

As all those who eat 人肠 at hotpot restaurants testify, this leads to healthier and cleaner innards. 

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Ha ha, speaking of scenic squat toilets, can anyone beat this view? It was taken at a monastery a few hours drive from Lhasa. I actually had quite bad 拉肚子 that day, so didn't have time to dwell on the lack of privacy (there must have been a couple of hundred pilgrims doing the rounds that day, but luckily I managed to finish up before attracting the attention of any Tibetans).

 

I have a pretty strong stomach, so have only got diarrhea a handful of times during my travels, but each time has left a strong memory, long after many a temple has been forgotten. It's strange, the things you remember...

 

Oh, and don't worry about the photo, it's not "real". Just like the raising of the US flag at Iwo Jima photo, it's just a restaging for the sake of capturing the moment for posterity.

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