It has been over two years since the end of my Rotary Exchange in
Taipei, Taiwan. I often think of that year as the best year of my life and what
a shame it was for me to peak at such a young age. At the beginning of my
exchange I could barely speak any Chinese. I could say "thank you"
and "I want coffee" with poor pronunciation. By the end of my
exchange I could say "I want my coffee black and hot" with mediocre
pronunciation. Perhaps the biggest disappointment of my exchange was that I
didn't return to the States with the ability to discuss the housing market and
tax reform in Chinese. My dream to become fluent during my exchange was far-fetched
I had never studied Chinese before my exchange and ten months was not nearly
long enough to obtain that desired level of working fluency. Chinese sounded
nothing like any other language I learned before. This made it nearly
impossible to simply pick-up words. I didn't understand how the language
worked. I had no knowledge of radicals, or stroke order for characters, or how
the Chinese possibly use a keyboard to type. "How could they possibly fit
all of the characters on a single keyboard?" It took me nearly 3 months to
start to grasp how the language worked. Due to my host families’ hard work and
my Chinese teachers I did learn some Mandarin. As time went on the rate that I
was learning increased. By the end of my exchange I was not even close to being
fluent but it was a start. Thanks to
the impromptu speeches at Rotary meetings I'm now comfortable speaking Chinese.
My preference to speaking and listening has been a curse while taking written
placement tests and a blessing in class discussions.
Upon my return to the States I continued
to study Chinese at George Washington. After spending nearly a year in Taiwan I
was confident that the elementary Chinese class would be well below me. My
ballooned head deflated after I failed my first two quizzes. The problem was
that I needed to write in Simplified Chinese instead of the Traditional Chinese
that I learned while I was in Taiwan. It wasn't an easy task but I managed to
get a good mark and pass onto the next level. Fortunately the following year I
could continue my study of Traditional Chinese. Unfortunately over that summer
all I did was install air-conditioners and apparently reading the Chinese
labels off of the boxes wasn't enough to keep up my language skills. After
returning to the classroom it was obvious who had spent time in China over the
summer. My competitiveness kicked in and I worked hard to catch-up, because
nothing gets my goat like someone being able to speak Chinese better than me.
My Chinese book accompanied me everywhere including the ice-baths after cross
country workouts. During this last year I realized that in order to really
improve my Chinese I needed to return to Taiwan or go to China. I decided to do
both. I applied and received a generous grant from the GW Sigur Center to study
Chinese in Taiwan this summer.
I’m back, I've returned to the R.O.C.
I’m back, I've returned to the R.O.C.
Hey JLP,
ReplyDeleteI'll miss hanging out with you, but at the same time I'm so happy you're doing this. I can't wait to follow your stories and updates, and will be anxiously waiting for your return.
Stay in touch!
-Paul x
Return to the ROC (: clever clever (:
ReplyDeleteJohn!! So I'm in Kyoto right now, and two of my roommates at the hostel are from Taiwan! On top of that, one of them goes to Normal! It's a small world.
All I can say to them in Chinese was "I like big beautiful houses," "I ate pineapple," and the word "that." Thankfully, they spoke English, so we bonded over the video I made for Taiwan (which I totally have to share with you) and as traveling Asian women in Japan.
Hope you all the best (:
-Soo