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10 choses que je manque ou ne manque pas au sujet de la Chine

5 novembre 2007 par des histoires de succès d'affaires de la Chine

Par Shakil Khan

10 choses que je manque ou ne manque pas au sujet de la ChineC'est 7.40am à Londres et j'ai pensé que je ferais un poteau avant de se diriger pour le jour, va tellement ici.

10 choses que je manque au sujet de la Chine :

- 90 massages minute à la mouche de dragon pour autour de £10
- Vraie nourriture chinoise
- WiFi libre dans des café-restaurants
- Bonne à ranger après moi
- Gardes de sécurité à l'entrée à mon complexe d'appartement
- Visages de sourire heureux
- $2 lumières de Marlboro par paquet
- Taxis partout (la majeure partie du temps)
- 24 stations thermales d'heure/bains publics (jacuzzis/baquets chauds etc.)
- Mes leçons chinoises

10 choses que je ne manque pas au sujet de la Chine

Comme un suivi à 10 choses que je manque au sujet de la Chine, voici ma liste de 10 choses qui I ne manquez pas au sujet d'être parti.

- Crachement et cueillette de personnes leur nez l'en public
- Nourriture occidentale de mauvaise qualité
- Conducteurs fous de taxi
- Débrouillards de Dvd, de Rolex et de Massagee
- Poussant et poussant pour des taxis, dans les magasins etc.
- Service à la clientèle chinois
- Menus (dans le Chinois seulement)
- Le regard fixe de Laowai comme si je suis d'une autre planète
- Vitesse réduite du WWW
- Timekeeping chinois et exactitude

Être honnête il était tellement plus facile faisant la liste au sujet de ce que je manque et il y avait beaucoup plus que je pourrais m'ajouter, tandis que la liste au-dessus de eu me luttant pour un peu.

Shakil Khan, http://www.chinawhite.net/

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3 Responses to “10 Things I miss or do NOT miss about China”

  1. Jof Arnold Says:

    I totally agree with your list. However, I’d like to embellish on the negative ones a minute:

    - People spitting. For the reader who’s not been to China, their take on spitting is hocking up a big green one as loudly as possible… and this is whether you are young or old, male or female. Yuck.
    - Pushing and shoving, especially in crowds. Why can’t they learn to queue? Getting a train ticket at rush hour is something between a rugby scrum and a mosh pit.
    - Staring. A casual interest in tourists is to be expected, but not a crowd of 15 guys all standing still and staring at my girlfriend. She got very annoyed by the end of the trip.
    - Western medicine. It’s just better, no matter what the hippies might say.
    - Train stations. Miserable experience.
    - Lack of diapers. Little children have crotch-less garments to get round this issue.
    - Alcohol (especially spirits). The chinese take on vodka is utterly evil. It’s a kind of mix of paint stripper, methylated spirits, petrol and body odor.

    Otherwise, a really interesting place.

    Keep up the great posts.
    Jof

    (found this via Blog Friends by the way)

  2. Jerry Fox Says:

    These lists are interesting. My wife and I did a year teaching at Fudan U. - MBA students. We rode our bikes everywhere averaging about 30 miles everyday…so we covered the city many many times over.

    The “miss” list almost makes us sad…. We basically never ate out so we miss the markets and being able to get around so easily. The super friendly people. etc.

    On the negative lists… what can I say? None of that stuff really made an impression on us. The negatives to us were the air quality and the dubious nature of fish we wanted to buy and cook (we did not). I guess we were stared at as the only people on bikes using helmets and being (me) so tall, and sure there was pushing and spitting but they do not stand out for us. The very few times we ate out I took a long list of translated items and pointed to things we wanted and they would “may-yo” or “yo” the item and that would do it.

    Everyday we wish for at least a few minutes that we were there again.

  3. Daisy Isa Says:

    It is nostalgic going through your “things I miss” list. Might I comment on the “Things I don’t miss”. Customer service- Why can’t frontline people speak a little english. One would have thought that for a country receiving global attention speaking a 2nd language would be advocated. Did you also notice that they choose when to understand and when not to understand you. We were at the airport to catch a plane home and were told our seats had been cancelled cos we did not re-confirm it. We told them it was a return ticket and besides if re-confirmation was the rule, how come it was not written on the ticket? “No speak English” was all the manager could say and zapped! My advice to all tourist/Visitors ” PLEASE ALWAYS RE-CONFIRM YOUR BOOKINGS WITH YOUR THE AIR LINE 72hours before departure.

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