Blast from the past

On Contagious, we wrote letters to ourselves in our small groups reminding ourselves of what we learned, which one of the small group leaders took to post to us half-way through the year. I’d forgotten about this, until a letter arrived for me with the address written in my own handwriting. I opened it up, and realisation dawned…

Here, minus some personal stuff I wrote that’s just between me and me (and me and God, of course), is what I wrote. If the stuff about the guinea-pig seems random to you, it’s referring to a sermon illustration Pete Woodcock used!

26th August 2007

Dear Me,

Don’t forget what you learned on Contagious about the Resurrection. You are in Christ, so be what you are. Following Jesus is not like asking a guinea pig to fly – you are a bird, not a guinea pig, so soar like an eagle for the Lord.

You are dead to sin and alive to God, so you have resurrection power to be free in Christ rather than a slave to sin!

God bless, and remember the resurrection.
Mine sincerely,
Caleb

PS How did things work out with finding a job?
PPS How’s the novel going, and the material on thinking Christianly? Get on with them!

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China Trip – Days 7-8: From Beijing to Xi’an

Part of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China exactly one year ago (well, I’m falling behind slightly, I’ll try and catch up).

Extract from my journal:
Saturday 3rd to Sunday 4th March 2007

Due to having been on the overnight train from Beijing to Xi’an last night, I forgot to write my journal for Saturday, so have a bumper edition to write today!

Saturday was a cold, rainy day in Beijing, so it was a good job we were doing things like visiting museums and shopping, rather than visiting the Great Wall. First up, we visited the Capital Museum, which had various exhibitions chronicling the history of Beijing in an interesting but with rather jingoistic fervour. We also saw a mini-opera, which involved a nun and a monk falling in love. The next museum was the Military museum, full of guns and tanks and stuff – again, with a rather biased spin on things!

We then headed to a run-down corner of the city which is scheduled for demolition (to the indignation of those who live there, but does the Party care about their opinion or welfare?) to an entrance to the Underground City – the network of tunnels built during the Cold War for people to retreat into in case of nuclear bombs being dropped on the city. The tunnels run for miles and are largely disused. It was very interesting in a rather disturbing way, though the parts we saw didn’t seem deep enough to me to be much good if a bomb was dropped directly on the city.

Off to the shops after that, and I bought some Chinese language reference works, and ate a late lunch of dumplings. After tramping around in the rain, I enjoyed relaxing in the warm and dry of Starbucks with hot chocolate and a croissant – ahh, blissful!

Next we headed to Beijing station to catch the overnight train! We were reunited with Joy and Siobhan – Siobhan had felt ill and stayed at the hotel, with Joy to keep her company. The station was an interesting cross between what I’d expect of a train station and an airport. Thankfully we were travelling “soft class”, and it was rather fun to be in a compartment along with Jay, Dan and Joy.

When I woke early in the morning, we were speeding through twilit mountains, which gave way to plains with industrial workings and eventually cities. I even spotted a steam train! What a contrast to Shanghai, where I saw the maglev train shoot past – a contradiction typical of China. We arrived in Xi’an in time for breakfast, stepping out of the station to see the restored city walls ahead.

After breakfast at the new hotel, which is rather nicer than the one in Beijing, we went to the Stele Museum, which is full of these stones and pillars with Chinese writing carved on them, some of it very ancient. We then went to the chaotic bustle of the Daoist temple and the nearby street market. Forget the Westernised shopping streets of Beijing, this felt like real China.

We headed over to the Muslim quarter, including seeing the Chinese-style mosque, which you can look around for a small fee. There was a large group of Muslim ladies, mostly middle-aged, there who were very friendly. They were particularly taken with Patrick, and took turns to feel his muscles – not a sight I ever imagined to see in a mosque! I also bought a chess set in the market.

Tonight is the Festival of Lanterns, and fireworks crackle and bang outside the window as I write. Some of us went to the South Gate to see the festivities, which was great fun, though I had to make my own way back after losing the group in all the vast crowds of people! Tourism isn’t as much fun as a solitary pursuit. And now here I am, back in the hotel, ready for sleep!

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China Trip – Day 6: Tiananmen and the Forbidden City

Part of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China exactly one year ago.

Extract from my journal:
Friday 2nd March 2007

Once again I’m tired after a busy day! It’s great to pack in a lot, but I’d like a bit more time to rest occasionally. Today’s itinerary included Tian’an Men Square (including Mao’s Mausoleum), the Forbidden City, and the Summer Palace.

Visiting Mao’s mausoleum was a rather weird experience. The building is in the middle of Tian’an Men Square. We didn’t have to queue for long to get in: you have to hand it to the Communists that they at least can keep a queue moving! Outside, people were selling flowers to leave by Mao’s body. Apparently, when he died there was some disagreement between Moscow and Beijing over what to do with Mao’s body, so it took them a while to get started on preserving the body. Since it had already begun to decay, it is estimated that it’s around 90% wax.

The near-religious devotion to this dictator was rather creepy, and it was very strange to see the preserved body of someone who shaped history so much on display, someone who was undoubtedly a brave and intelligent man, but at the same time ruthless and willing for millions to die for the sake of power and the sake of his beliefs.

We then went into the Forbidden City. Unfortunately, parts of it are being done up for the Olympics next year, so we were unable to see them. What we did see was pretty impressive, though, and fortunately I was able to buy batteries at a fairly decent price. My camera guzzled through them though!

After a lunch of instant noodles in the Forbidden City (they seem to have closed the Starbucks – I didn’t spot it, anyway), we went to the summer palace. I listened to the L’Abri talk “The Importance of Asking Questions” on the way. The gardens were really nice, and would be peaceful if not for all the tourists!

This evening we went to the Peking Duck restaurant, which was delicious. Great fun, especially all the waiting on you. Had some good conversation with Dan about the meaning of life and stuff! Some of us then went to a night market near the Beijing Hotel, where Richard and some of the other lads ate grubs (no scorpions available!), as well as visiting a chopstick shop, before getting a taxi back to the hotel.

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China Trip – Day 5: Ming Tombs and Great Wall

Part of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China exactly one year ago.

Extract from my journal:
Thursday 1st March

Today we went to the Ming Tombs and Great Wall. We had a tour guide who talked about lots of stuff on the way, but I was more interested in listening to some L’Abri talks about Narcissism by Andrew Fellows. It made me appreciate Greg’s commentary more, though – he says a lot less, but it’s almost always worth listening to.

The Ming tombs were fairly interesting, but you couldn’t see the tombs themselves, and so while we were left with more admittedly very nice Ming architecture, the novelty of such buildings is beginning to wear off a little. The statues guarding the imperial road into the valley of the tombs were very cool – oversized soldiers and courtiers, plus animals both real and mythical.

Lunch was in a nasty tourist trap place where they try to sell you various tat at exorbitant prices. This package tour to the tombs and wall is probably the most touristy thing we’ve done, but we could at least comfort ourselves that we aren’t as bad as the American tourists we saw all with name-tags who ordered plates of chips for lunch! What’s the point of coming half-way round the world to eat fries?

Then we were off to the Great Wall. I knew it was commercialised, but still wasn’t quite expecting the small town’s worth of shops, hotels and restaurants clustered around the entrance. But once you walked along the wall for a bit, you could escape the sight of such things, and the hawkers selling postcards and souvenirs became fewer and farther between. And it was amazing! Spectacular mountain views, with the wall snaking across the peaks. How much work was put in, how many lives were sacrificed to create it? How many lifetimes spent manning it? I’m very glad to have seen such an amazing feature, and walked on it.

I also bought a few bits and pieces for friends and family. A Mao hat for Comrade Swithun, a local folk wind instrument for Becky as a birthday present, and some postcards. Unfortunately, I left my camera on the coach and won’t be able to get it back until we head out tomorrow morning, meaning I can’t recharge my batteries ready for visiting the Forbidden City. Hopefully they’ll last…

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China Trip – Day 4: North to Beijing

Part of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China a year ago.

Extract from my journal:
Wednesday 28th February 2007

If I didn’t need to keep up with my journal to make sure I have a record of the whole trip, I’d go to sleep right now. I’m tired, especially after losing the others and having to walk back to the hotel from Tian’an Men square by myself. But I’ll get to that later…

Anyway, back to the beginning: today we flew from Shanghai up to Beijing. It’s noticably colder here, both literally and metaphorically. It doesn’t have the same bustle, the same energy and veneer of modernity. Still a very big and impressive city, but it has a more Communist feel, even amid the preparations for the Olympics.In the afternoon after arriving here we went to the Temple of Heaven, where the Emperors used to go and offer sacrifices as a propitiation to the Gods, to intercede between Earth and Heaven. It’s a beautiful site, in its way.After that we went to the Lama Temple – “Lama” as in Dalai Lama-type religion rather than large South American white animals. It was bigger and less busy than the Jade Buddha temple, and had writing in Tibetan as well as Chinese.

Dinner was good, and I got into deep conversation with Jay about the meaning of life and stuff. We visited Tian’an Men Square – Tian’an Men means “the Gate of Heavenly Peace”, which is pretty cool. The National Congress is going on at the moment, and the square was closed – we could only walk around the edges. Red Guards were marching around the place.

It was after this that I got separated from the rest of the group. We went into a cybercafé in a building which was once a train station, and I was the last to finish on the computer. The others had gone on to wait outside, but there were two exits, and somehow we managed to miss each other. I made my way back to the hotel, hoping they were just ahead of me. Fortunately it wasn’t far and was fairly straightforward to find, and I had a map with me, but it wasn’t exactly a highlight of my trip!

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China Trip – Day 3:Birthdays and Memorials

Nick the birthday boy in the Yu GardensPart of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China a year ago.

Extract from my journal:
Tuesday 27th February 2007

Began the day with singing “Happy Birthday” to Nick when he arrived at breakfast, after getting Dan to delay him. Left on the bus for a hectic day rushing from place to place, starting with the Yu Gardens, which are in this traditional old Chinese home built according to the rural ideal, the idea of representing nature within the town. It looks amazing, and is surrounded by bustling streets of shops in imitation old-style Chinese buildings. I bought a dumpling for lunch (quite nice, but only passable as a midday meal), plus a couple of souvenirs for Becky and Hannah.

We also went to the Martyrs’ Cemetery – an ugly, abstractly designed place with a museum in a glass pyramid. Normally only old Communist veterans go there, so they were rather bemused to have a coach-load of Western students turn up there. They weren’t going to let us in, but Mr Fun, our coach driver, told the people at the gate that we were the delegation of the Albanian Communist party! It was quite sobering to think how many people died for the Communist cause: do not mock the power of ideas; ideas change the world and take lives.

We then went out to a hill outside Shanghai with a cable-car lift and a Catholic Cathedral, and then back to the city to wander around before dinner. We then went to this amazing “circus” show, which had various stunts and acrobatics. All very impressive, especially the finale, which had eight motorbikes going round and round in a spherical metal cage!

I’m really tired now. The constant rushing and walking has been a bit wearing, and I hope future days are a bit more relaxed. Off to Beijing tomorrow. I’ve got a slight problem in that I seem to be getting through the space on my camera rather quickly.

More photos:
China Trip 031China Trip 033China Trip 035China Trip 046China Trip 055

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No Country for Old Men vs There Will Be Blood – fight!

I just got back from watching There Will Be Blood, which picked up a couple of Oscars at the weekend. It’s a very good film, wonderfully shot and thought-provoking: it’ll take me quite some time to digest this meaty meal of a movie. I much preferred it to the Coen Brothers’ No Country for Old Men, which beat it to the Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay Oscars.

On comparing the two, this article in today’s Times sums up my thoughts and feelings pretty well. In particular, it gives a good appraisal the weaknesses of No Country for Old Men:

But I simply don’t know what the last half hour of this Oscar-winner means. It’s a bloke’s film in the crudest sense of the word. The desert landscapes are framed like paintings, and the plot hardly breaks sweat. But for the life of me I could not picklock a meaning from the last chaotic, whimsical, in truth, desperately-looking-for-an-ending, reel. It creaks with significance, but I left the cinema not entirely convinced that the glittering plaudits it has won are entirely deserved.

There Will Be Blood, on the other hand, while leaving you with a lot to think about and many complexities to untangle, particularly Daniel Day-Lewis’s character, gives you some clear and solid themes to chew on, rather than leaving you scratching your head as you try and work out what it was even about, let alone what it might have been trying to communicate.

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China Trip – Day 2: Shanghai Sightseeing

Part of a series of posts detailing my adventures in China a year ago.
The view from the roof of out hotel, looking out on the Bund and PudongFrom my journal:
Monday 26th February 2007

We rose early this morning to leave at 6am to walk to Lu Xun Park, where the tomb of Lu Xun, the father of modern Chinese literature, is found, and to see Chinese people up and about early doing things like tai chi there. The park was really busy with people out exercising and dancing and things, and the walk too and from there was our first real glimpse of the streets of Shanghai. It also helped work up an appetite for breakfast!

In the morning we went to the Temple of the Jade Buddha, which was interesting and impressive. A really busy place, with ordinary people there to worship, often by burning incense, so it has a very distinct smell. But it was also rather sad to see people literally bowing down to and making offerings to idols, no matter how beautifully made those statues are. (Though even then, some of them look rather alarming!) Upstairs in one of the side buildings was a real tea shop, where they made us tea and had us try all different sorts. I bought two tins of different teas. For lunch we had a vegetarian soup of mushrooms and noodles which was fairly nice but I couldn’t finish it.

Later we went to the house where the Chinese Communist Party was founded, which has been turned into a museum and sells things like Chairman Mao watches. Then we went to the Shanghai Museum, and saw sculptures, bronzework, clothing and other artefacts from across China’s many areas and long history.

This evening we wandered around for a bit as Greg tried to find a particular hotel; it had been refurbished, and wasn’t particularly wonderful – they didn’t have any rice when we got there! Some of the group had gone off to meet a friend of one of them who’d offered to take them out for dinner, but we had some interesting conversation in our rather smaller group, discussing family and marriage and compensation culture. We walked back via the Bund – tomorrow is Nick’s birthday.

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China Trip – Day 1: Arrival in Shanghai

While in China a year ago, I wrote a journal of what I’d been up to each day just before I went to bed. I’ll post edited extracts from that journal, supplementing it with pictures and additional memories as I go along.

From my journal:
Sunday 25th February 2007
Dan, Nick and Siobhan as we arrive at Shanghai airportHere I am, in China, in Shanghai! I can scarcely believe it. I’ve been so busy in the run up to the trip – CU mission, preparing for my election campaign, interviewing Russell T Davies, getting work done – I’ve had little time for eagerly anticipating that I’m actually going out to China with my Chinese class. And now here we are! We’ve just had our first meal in this vast country and walked on the famous Shanghai Bund.

Our hotel it just off the Bund, it’s amazingly well places. The sense of size and space as you walk along beside the Pudong river, old Western-style colonial buildings on one side, the space-age new distict on the other, is almost overwhelming.

The view across to the space-age looking Pudong area, from the bridge next to our hotelDriving into Shanghai from the airport was a long drive, eventually entering the city on flyovers suspended high between soaring towers and blocks of flats, before coming off the freeway and round and round and down in vast looping circles to ground level. With the glittering lights of high-rise buildings extending off in all directions, Shanghai looks like what a metropolis should be. But once you get down into the depths, it’s more rough, ragged and varied than the first glittering impressions may suggest. Old Chinese buildings and tumbledown areas nestle between the skyscrapers.

Our first meal in China, in a restaurant not far from our hotelIt’s odd having lost eight hours of the day, and the flight was long and tiring, though fortunately I was able to sleep for quite a long time on the plane. Despite the length, the journey was exciting, especially when the map on the plane’s tv screens began to match that of the Shanghai area in the biography of Hudson Taylor I was reading!

Our hotel, Broadway Mansions, is pretty amazing – right next to the Bund, and far grander than anywhere I’ve stayed in my life before. It’s two to each room, and I’m sharing with Jay, who’s a nice guy. But I’d better stop writing and sleep, to be ready to enjoy our adventures…

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