A group of four of us, Derick, Kirsten, Jeanette and I, flew to Sanya, South China early in the morning on Christmas Eve. A few months earlier we'd all made these plans together. Some of us were wanting to get out of town and simply forget Christmas this year without our loved ones near, and Jeanette was having a milestone birthday the day after Christmas. So this trip was dubbed "The Christmas That Wasn't and 30th Birthday Blowout!" This girlie just wanted to get her a$$ in the water and toes in the sand, and pay a little tribute to the Zac Brown Band :) I took so many pictures in four days, I'll let them tell the story...
So, as I mentioned, Sanya Beach is known as the 'Hawaii of the Orient.' It was looking like Hawaii with this giant pineapple plaza. Sometimes those Chinese architects are just outrageous :) |
...because nothing says 'Christmas' like a bunch of Chinese lanterns and Co^^ie flags! |
Which is why Jeanette and I put on our reindeer antlers (or moose horns) to take a stroll on the beach. In China, anything goes. I mean ANYTHING. |
See?! I mean ANYTHING goes! I have no words for this... |
There's just something about grown Chinese people frolicking in the waves with oversized kiddie beach toys...how can you not laugh at this?! |
I looked up from my beach chair, and O M G, there sat a grown a$$ man smoking a cigarette, and drinking a beer IN WATER WINGS! How can you not laugh at that?! |
Seeing Bruce and Scooter beach combing in the surf in their 'matching outfits' about sent me over the edge ;) |
We enjoyed a tasty lunch on the beach- and so far the vacation was off to a fabulous start. It just needed to be about 10 degrees warmer with blue skies. |
This couple was just too cute; I had to snap a pic. |
and dem' Chinese babies are soooo cuuuuute! |
Now, the Chinese, they love to snap pictures....of themselves....repeatedly....posing in all sorts of awkward, contrived positions.... It was just comical walking down the beach, watching them.
This looks natural, right? |
Or this pose, with the selfie stick? |
Or the one in the hat? Or the other one frolicking in the surf with her scarf blowing in the breeze :) |
Or this one- she had a whole crowd gathered to take her pic! Such silliness. |
Christmas morning Jeanette and I treated ourselves to brunch, then headed to the beach. |
It was at least a little warmer, mid-70's, but still cloudy. |
I looked up from my beach chair, and this guy looked like he was using a tuning fork on this other guy's ear. Whaaaatttt?! |
I'll be danged; you CAN get your ears tuned up! I'll pass, thank you. My mother told me to never put sharp instruments in my ears. |
Instead, Kirsten and I decided to build a sandman, it was Christmas Day, afterall. |
And of course, the Chinese beachcombers never miss a photo op :) |
MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM SANYA BEACH, SOUTH CHINA! |
That evening we ordered pizzas in, and watched my favorite Christmas movie...can you guess? I had to keep at least one tradition alive :) |
We all chipped in for Jeanette to ride an ostrich for her 30th birthday. Seriously, how many people can say they rode an ostrich for their birthday?! Happy Birthday, Jeanette, you've become a treasured friend already. Here's to your next thirty years, pretty lady! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFwKen080XY |
These next photos of me feeding an ostrich are hysterical- My faces! lolllzzzz
Please be gentle.... |
Oh, God, is he gonna bite?! |
I can't understand what you're saying.... |
...but are you sure this really is safe?! Does it hurt?! |
Oh. My. Good. God. Pleeeeeeease don't eat me! Seriously, what is up with my face??? I don't even know.... |
Must get back to my happy place, among the orchids :) |
Because here, in the park, I shall cherish every tree and piece of grass which entertains me to joy and happiness. Chinglish makes me happy :) |
How about Jeanette's frozen smile?! |
I thought the view was amazing, you could see clear down to the ocean and Yalong Bay. I'd take a swinging bridge over feeding an ostrich ANY day of the week- no beer involved. |
We strolled through some beautiful gardens... |
And a misty rain had settled in briefly at the top of the mountain. It added to the Chinese ambiance. |
We had a serious hankerin' for some western food, and we ended up at this sports bar that was recommended by our hostel host. |
The birthday girl got her birthday wish- margaritas and a Western burger and fries :) So tasty.... |
Check out his 'hiking shoes'! |
The mirrors on the doors are to ward off evil spirits. It is believed if the 'evil one' were to see his reflection in a mirror, he would flee and not enter in to their home. |
Likewise, we saw many 'boxes' along the dirt road where chickens were sacrificed...it is a common tradition to make a sacrifice every 12 days. |
It was a very sobering sight with kids playing among the feral pigs, dogs, cats, chickens, rats, and filth. |
In spite of the living conditions, they are self sustaining, essentially cut off from the outside world. They farm the valley in mostly rice paddies. |
They harvest the fruit trees like papayas, mangoes and coconuts... |
They grow banana trees... |
They catch fish in the reservoir, and use the damned water to flood their rice paddies. We hiked along side the reservoir, as we made our way up the mountain... |
...to their main 'cash crop'...groves of betel nut palm trees, carefully irrigated and tended to. These betel nut groves account for 95% of Hainan's national crop. Here's an article about the industry: |
They live in mud encased bamboo huts, while they work the betel nut trees. |
The towering palms were beautiful |
We continued our hike up the mountain... |
Where we had a beautiful view, just sitting in nature :) |
And the only sound was a waterfall rushing over the mountain rocks |
I have been all over the world, and I will NEVER pass up an opportunity to stick my head in a waterfall! |
...or to play in the water with a stranger I don't know, who was wearing only his boxer shorts and a smile :) |
Soaking wet, climbing rocks, in a beautiful place- Happiest Girl in China right there :) |
Selfie time! |
Something I have become more acutely aware of, since I took off for China on my own a few months ago, is that people are simply people. There's nothing to fear in leaving home; in fact, there is so much to be gained. When you are stripped down of your creature comforts, your support network, your daily habits and routines, and your 'home base'...you suddenly gain a deeper awareness of self, and you are forced to simply BE in the moment. We spend so much of our time in our heads. We have this constant mind chatter that is always planning, organizing, mulling over past hurts, trying to make sense of our lives, stressing about the future....it's endless. It's exhausting. It's pointless, really, because it robs us of the beauty of the moment. Much of the time it leaves us feeling depressed, or sad, or empty inside, because so much of that mind chatter is self critical. Why do we spend so much of our waking energy stuck in this negative loop?
Stripped down, we get back to the basics, like really 'seeing' our surroundings, and becoming attuned to each life giving breath we take. This is why I say I am the happiest girl in China. It has been a painful process getting here. I have friends and family who don't understand my motivations. I am not sure I had an answer for them at the time. But I realize now, how much we are burdened down by our own pain. It took me leaving all of that behind, even if for a year or so, to gain a clearer, healthier perspective of my self and my life. I was not happy where I was; and I was really stuck in the mind chatter.
Please don't get me wrong. I loved raising my children, all five of them. Though that time in my life was extremely chaotic and stressful in it's own right, just the busy-ness of a household of seven of us, I can say it was an especially happy time in my life. I loved being a wife and mother. I loved creating a warm and safe home environment. I loved cooking for my family. I loved supporting the kids in their endeavors. My ex and I were very involved in every aspect of our children's lives, and we all did a bang-up job. We have five amazing children, who are all successfully making their way in the world, several with families of their own. But once that chapter of my life- 'motherhood'- was essentially over, and I was 'empty-nesting', I found myself caught up in the mind chatter more than ever. As a result, I flipped my world upside down in a big way, before I came to China.
Now, I am an eternal optimist at heart, and I have to believe there is goodness to be found in every situation and circumstance. There are life lessons to be learned, and at fifty-one years old, I know I am not done with growing or learning. What I want to learn now, more than anything, is simply a new way of BEING. I want to choose happy, and I want to feel better about myself and my present situation or circumstances- whatever they may be. I believe happiness is living, fully present, in the moment. It is a new way of BEING.
So I say, people are just people. No matter where you are in the world, look around you. There are people in pain, people who are lost, people working, people who are absently existing, people who are in love, people who are laughing, people who are tired, people who are lonely, people escaping through addictions, and people simply going about their daily lives. It doesn't matter if you don't speak their language. We are all connected in our humanness- in our hopes and wishes and dreams. We smile, we laugh, we hurt, we cry- we are humans. We really need to do a better job of attending to and caring for one another, and it begins with ourselves. I have discovered that my mind chatter- my hurts, and defenses, and my own emotional baggage- keeps me from really living a life fulfilled. It is the humanistic therapist in me that wants a life truly fulfilled. Holding on to any negativity is contraindicated to self-fulfillment. So how does one go about finding that fulfillment? I am not really sure, but I know that it all begins with being in the moment, and quite simply, smiling.
I find myself smiling a lot in China, more than I have smiled in a very long time. I smile at simple things, I smile at curiosities and things I do not understand, I smile when I wake up to a blue sky (which can be a rarity living in Beijing!), I smile when I enter the classroom, I smile on the subway, I smile at people walking their dogs, I smile every morning seeing grandparents walk their little grandchildren to preschool. There really is much to smile about in this world.
So these are the things I pondered, as I sat on the rocks, in the jungle, my hair soaking wet from the waterfall, and I listened to the people and their stories all around me. Soon it was time to leave this moment, to put on my shoes, hike back down the mountain, and back through the village.
And then, it was like I received confirmation from the universe, that I am right about this 'smiling and living in the moment' thing. It was as if all the children in that broken down village came out into the street to see ME as we were passing through. I crouched down to their level, smiled, and laughed, and invited them to play with me.
And there, you can see, is the happiest girl in China.
So while this trip began with the dread of my first Christmas away from home-
my head filled with the mind chatter of my mistakes, and hurts, and shortcomings-
of Christmas traditions blown apart... in a tiny village with children, I began to feel
that veil of self-recrimination and self-doubt lift. What an unexpected gift.
Life is beautiful.
Each and every moment is beautiful.
So, I choose happy.
Jeanette and I placed our dot to signify 'home', and we caught a plane for our next adventure :) The frozen tundra of Harbin, North China, here we come. |
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