kaifeng


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This is my friend Rosemary, and a very, very gorgeous painting from a show at Heda.

Well, I’ve been back from China for over a year, but I looked through my pictures today and I still had a ton of amazing ones I hadn’t posted, so here’s some more!

So luckily I never got seriously ill while in China for 10 months. I did get sick to my stomach a few times after accidentally swallowing tap water while washing my hair. However, I did have a few sinus infections.

One day in January I realized that my sinus infection wasn’t going to go away on it’s own. So I called my Chinese friend Rosemary (that’s just her English name) who is a nurse, and asked her to help me get some antibiotics. Now, I’ve had enough sinus infections over the years to know the difference between a virus and something bacterial, so I knew that I needed antibiotics. I’m also allergic to most kinds of antibiotics, and had a list of the two that I can still take. However, I don’t know the Chinese names for them, Cipro is not exactly something in my dictionary, OR that I could find on-line.

So Rosemary took me to the hospital the university campus that I taught (and lived) in. There are no clinics in China, just hospitals. This one was small, barely bigger than a clinic. It was gray concrete, and appeared mostly empty. We went in through the front door and went right into an examining room. The doctor was standing near his desk, talking to some women who had come before me.

Rosemary walked right up to him and started talking. She translated for me that I had a sinus infection. He took a quick look at me and said that he wanted me to have a chest x-ray to make sure I didn’t have pneumonia, but that this hospital didn’t have an x-ray machine. I insisted that I didn’t have pneumonia, just a sinus problem, and needed antibiotics. He pointed in the direction of the pharmacy and then turned back to the other women.

We went to the pharmacy and asked for Cipro, which they had. I asked if I needed a prescription and they said no. Then they gave me a box of ten days worth and charged me 3 yuan (36 cents). Then I bought some Ibuprofen and paid twice that.

I remarked to Rosemary that it was very odd that I didn’t need a prescription, but she didn’t think so. I then told her how much Cipro costs in the States and she didn’t believe me.

As we were walking away she told me a story about an exchange student from Germany who had studied there before my time. She had to have an appendectomy, and had it at that same hospital. She didn’t speak any Chinese and the nurses didn’t know any English, so one day they contacted Rosemary to have her translated. Apparently, in China it is thought that after you have surgery you need to get up and move around a lot, so that you don’t get constipated. However, the German girl wouldn’t get out of bed the day after her surgery so they needed Rosemary to make her do it.

I told her I couldn’t believe a hospital that wasn’t equipped well enough to have an x-ray machine would do appendectomies and she told me that in China health care is very good because doctors have to treat so many patients.

A few days later I got better, so the Cipro must have been real.

—-

A couple months later I went on a trip to Xi’an (where the Terracotta warriors are) with Rosemary and a bunch of the foreigners. Xi’an is probably not much larger than Kaifeng, where I was living, but it is much more built up infrastructure-wise. While I was there I came down with another sinus infection (they are quite frequent with me, I have a whole lot of allergies and nasal issues).

I went with Rosemary to a few small pharmacies that are everywhere around China trying to find more Cipro. None of them had it, though they did have amoxicillin (which could kill me). Eventually we found a very large pharmacy downtown that had it. However, they wouldn’t sell it to me without a prescription. So we asked if it was just in this part of China, or if you needed prescriptions everywhere. The pharmacist said that you technically need a prescription everywhere but the more backward places don’t care.

So we asked how we would get a prescription, and they said to go up to the second floor of the building and talk to the doctor up there. We went to the second floor, and found a receptionist-like window with a sign saying “Prescriptions - 1 Yuan (12 cents)”. Rosemary talked to the woman behind the window (presumably a doctor) briefly, giving her my symptoms and my age. She filled out the tiny peice of paper, and we went back downstairs and got some more $.36 Cipro and I got better again a few days later.

xiao nan men

This is the small south gate (xiao nan men) of Kaifeng. It’s not actually the most south region of the city, it’s just where the bottom of the city used to be. I’m not sure if the gate is from the Song dynasty or just a recreation of the one that was there durring the Song.

dog meat

The lettering on the cart says “Five Spice Hot Dog Meat”. I wish they meant “hot dog” like hot dogs in the states (which they have here too), but they don’t, they mean actual dog meat. (The meat is in the closed container to the left.) I have been told by Chinese people that dog meat is healthy in Chinese medicine, but then again, they say that about everything.

gecko

So one day I was putting on a jacket, and I put my hands in the pockets. In my right pocket, I felt something squishy. It was this guy.

I had last seen him hanging out on the wall near my coat rack, I guess he got cold or something. I eventually got him off my pant leg (which he had clung to for like 1o minutes) and put him outside.

cigarette claw game

Yes, so this is a claw machine filled with cigarettes. Indeed, the only claw machines I’ve seen in China have had cigs.

So… it’s mostly children who play these, right?

Wow, they must really start early in China.

Also, apparently the sign on the machine says that if it gets jammed you can’t get your money back. I am not surprised whatsoever.

cherry blossoms

Bet you didn’t know China had cherry blossoms.  They were out in April, but they’re gone now.

cultural revolution

I went to the Kaifeng Museum, which kind of blows. Apparently Zhengzhou stole (not literally) all the good things that Kaifeng had. I only went because some of the other Americans said they have this tablet that’s left over from the synagogue that used to be in Kaifeng but was destroyed in a flood. However, they won’t show you the tablet for political reasons (Judaism isn’t one of the government’s “approved” minority religions like Islam). But the museum did have this nifty painting of the Cultural Revolution reaking havoc in front of Long Ting (the Dragon Pavillion), a massive building in the center of Kaifeng that’s pretty nifty.

gas station

The high detail in certain parts of the pic make it look blurry when down-sized, but when you zoom in, it’s in focus.

mosque

People in the US don’t really realize there are a lot of Muslims in China. At least, I had no clue. However, there are a lot of Muslims and mosques here. They’re generally really pretty.

car ride

People like to ride around in carts a lot.

The pet market again.

A woman and her cat

The pet market again.

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