My apartment, in China, is probably a bit different from yours in the US.
Are you ready for the tour?
It’s a decent place with a lot of
‘character.’
Park your bike in
the shed amongst 200 other cycles and the jolly old men playing Ma Jong at the
end of the row.
You spot the adjacent building and its squat doorway, but
hesitate to go in as the unfinished concrete, low-ceilinged entry looks like it
was abandoned long ago. Fear not! Cross the threshold with a firm stomp and the
low lights will illuminate.
As you climb the stairs black and red stamped numbers crowd
the concrete walls and make you feel nervous. Far from their imposing
appearance, this ink advertises various companies who can do service work on your
apartment unit- ostensibly free advertising on what you thought was your
personal space.
You’ve reached the 3rd floor and thus arrived at
our unmarked apartment on the right. Notice, the key inserts into the lock
sideways- how neat. Welcome home! First order of business, always, is to leave
your shoes by the door- most likely on the elaborate shoe rack. Slip on your
cheap plastic house slippers instead- you don’t want to trek any of the
omnipresent Beijing dust into your safe haven. Now hit the lights- but wait a
minute, there are no light switches in any of the rooms! You finally discover
that the long colored lanyards hanging from the ceiling near each of the doors
will do the trick.
Head to the narrow kitchen with the luscious fruit (mini
pears, ground cherries, dragon fruit & watermelon) you purchased from the
smiley stall owner down the street who asked to learn prices in English but was
to adorably baffled to repeat the price back to you. Reach past the imposing
cast iron wok, large cleaver knife and broken battery-powered stove to grab
your specialty fruit soap- crop pesticides here are that prevalent and harmful.
While in the kitchen, don’t worry about recycling your plastic water bottle. Someone
will dig through your trash later when you deposit it into the receptacle-
brilliantly welded onto the back of a bike- and return your plastic for petty
cash.
Now take a stroll to the indoor porch area to check on your
laundry. Push past the assortment of old dusty furniture and trash items your
landlord has left behind to feel the dampness of your hanging clothes. Warm sun
happily streams in through the pane-less window, and as you glance outside you
spot a wily vine with a pretty looking squash growing on your neighbors shed
roof below you.