Arrival
I am in Singapore.
The flight was not too bad. I was
able to get aisle seats for both flights.
Virgin Airlines was quite good.
The plane was new and the seats were great. I was able to use my Bose ear phones and was
able to hear easily.
Singapore Airlines which I took from LA to Japan (11 hours)
to Singapore (7 hours) was very nice. I
had brought sleeping pills to help me rest.
They worked great. I slept
mostly. When I could not sleep, I had
access to several movies that I had not seen.
On the flight from Japan to Singapore, the flight was mostly empty, so I
was able to stretch out over several seats.
I arrived in Singapore wired. I
unpacked when I arrived at the hotel.
The hotel caters to an international group. They serve breakfast from 6 to 10. I of course are down there by 6:15 and sample
many foods that I would never eat at home.
I have had different vegetables each morning with sea weed and mushroom
that I don’t recognize. I like the
expresso machine which I visit several times in the morning. Some dishes I have resisted sampling such as
eel and cod. I may get braver later.
The hotel sits near the Singapore River which carries a lot
of mud out to sea. I wonder if they know
they are allowing their wealth to wash away. It poured rain during the morning
of the first day and dripped much of the afternoon. The air is soupy and mildly warm. I am told that it is cooler than it has been. Most of the population is away in July and
starts to pick up in August; therefore, it is easy to get a cab. Later, it will become more challenging and I
will need to get the bus to get around.
I have walked some along the river, but today I begin to
look for apartments. Liron who works at
the school is advising myself and another new employee in find housing. She is a charming Israeli with extraordinary
competence. It is fun to watch her
handle technology. She calls the agents
for the apartments that we are looking at.
She is great at providing exactly what kind of information the agent
needs to consider renting to us. Best of
all, she knows the areas that are most accessible to buses. She said that with the rain, it was important
to be near the busses because you could get drenched before you even made it to
work.
July 11
Today another school employee and I began the search for
apartments. The first one I looked at
was great. It is furnished and right in
the center of the expat area. It is
expensive by our standards, $3200 per month.
The school will subsidize part of the money and it is within my
means. I am looking at a couple of other
places as well.
Most places in this area have strong security. This building has a pass for each floor and
no one can go to a different floor without permission. I who have often not locked my doors am
finding this a bit challenging to imagine.
The other teacher is worried about finding a place within
her range so she is looking at other sections of the city. I went with her to China Town to look at two
different places. The first was similar
to the poorest of tenements for $2300.
The agent who showed it drove a fancy Lexus and carried two separate
phones. He kept telling my Jewish friend
that he had always wanted to go to Israel.
He would pat me on the shoulder and purr, “And how about you, Sara? Are you looking for a place?”
He showed us two studios that were hardly bigger than my
office at my last school. One of the
studios was in a large apartment that had been broken up into tiny, tiny studio
apartments. When we first walked in, we
were taken with the huge central room.
It had a couch and granite floors.
The purring agent gently explained that, the only space the 3 studio tenants
were allowed to use were their baby studio that was less than 200 square
feet. Later, my friend and I laughed
about it. Can you believe that they were
charging over $2000 for a closet!
The hotel where we are staying has a buffet for breakfast
and for dinner. It is a great excuse to
try all the new and different ways to eat.
Twice though I found the food too hot.
I am sampling things I would not have imagined eating. While trying to avoid deep fried foods, I
have had noodles, squid and many things that I could not pronounce. I try to remember the ones that I liked so
that I can ask for them in the future. The
foods have a very unique smell. I will
look for words to describe it. Mostly,
it just looks and smells different.
I don’t know what the temperature is, but the humidity is
very heavy. You sweat just walking a
short distance. I plan on becoming
accustomed to it because I will not have a car and will need to be out and
about.
July 13, 2014
Yesterday was an interesting day. I visited the Arab Market in the morning
after breakfast. The market opens at 10
and all the shops are right on the edge of the very narrow pedestrian
street. Arab Street is famous for their
fabrics. There is a wide range of
fabrics available. Eventually I will
probably need to get some linen and have some clothes made for me. I am a big girl and there is little in this
city that would fit me.
I am told that it is assumed that you will bargain for the
price. It is not my style to do that,
but I am sure that I will learn from others.
There are great scarves and Malayian art that I am excited about. All will wait until I am settled.
Food is, as often the case for people, is an essential part
of the culture. It has been a bit
challenging for me. I have tried all kinds of foods since I arrived. Chicken is the primary meat. Beef cuts are often the poorer cuts of meat
and are very chewy. They have pork, but
it is served less often. Most dishes
have a sauce on them. I could do without
the sauce. I have figure out how to get
my vegetables. It is not a major part of
the dishes. I long for the
vegetables. My friend and I had a
special toast from this area. It is
lightly toasted bread with coconut butter in between 2 slices. It was tasty.
I rode the train/subway system yesterday. It is very clean and fast, but it is also
quite crowded. I came out of the station
on my return trip. I was planning to
catch a bus back to my hotel. I got
completely turned around and ending up in a very fancy, massive shopping
mall. I did not know where I was and it
took me a while to find my way out. I
needed to take a taxi back to the hotel because I had no clue where I was. When you take a taxi, you have to line up in
a queue (pronounced kū). Many people are
out of the city this month because it is hot, but during the winter, the queue
can have 15 people in it. People are
generally polite and wait in the queue, but not always.
July 14, 2014
I am chafing under this period of waiting. Not being a person who sits still without a
clear agenda or purpose, I was having trouble pulling myself together to decide
how to use my time.
So I have been sitting in my room reading about the places
to see in Singapore, the places to study tai chi, and the social networking for
women. The more I know, the better I can
use the time here. I found a section of
the city that was once the ocean front where many of the houses and store
fronts have been preserved. It is
fascinating that it is located miles from the shore now. It is indicative of how much land has been reclaimed
from the sea along the southern edge.
I went to the Singapore Quaker Meeting yesterday. The group is quite small. There are two couples that regularly attend
and a young Brit. We had lunch at the
center after meeting. I was so conscious
that I was of a different generation.
The others spent their lunch time staring at their phones and Ipads.
The meeting was held at the Overseas Mission Institute. It was explained that this is a starting
point for missionaries going into China.
It serves all kinds of Christians coming in to be oriented to working in
Asia. The facility is beautiful and
generally very quiet, but not this time because there were over 30 little kids
with their families there.
Afterwards, I stopped at The Great City, a local shopping
mall. I wanted to price sheets and other
items that I would need to buy. I was
amazed to realize that this mall had no department stores. The stores that were not restaurants were
mostly clothing stores. There were a few
specialty shops for phones and interior design.
I finally found a shop for just sheets, but they were over $200 for two
sheets! Ain’t going to happen. As I looked around, I realized that this mall
is like a social center much like the town center was when I was a child or how
the King of Prussia mall is today. It
was in sharp contrast to the little shops on Arab Street that were still specialty
stores, but shop owners run and less expensive.
I was told by other expats that if I wanted sheets and other
household items at a reasonable price, I would need to go to Ikea or to a giant
crazy department story in China town.
More adventures.
The other day I saw a dish on the buffet that I could not
believe. It was steamed chicken feet in
a special chef’s sauce. At first, I just
turned up my nose and went on, but before I left, my curiosity got the best of
me. I got a chicken foot out of the dish
and put it on my plate and took a picture of it.
My brother tells me that he remembers my mother cooking the
feet of chicken that she killed for dinner.
I don’t remember that. I do
remember Thanksgivings at Grandmother Lisenby’s when all her son’s gathered to
slaughter hogs.
I remember that not a piece of those hogs went to waste. The head was boiled and mashed for hoghead
cheese. The skin was boiled to make lard
and skins, and the brains were cooked with the eggs (I didn’t eat them). The pig’s feet were pickled.
When I was in France, friends of mine ate pig’s feet at a
very nice restaurant and loved them. So
my prejudice about eating an animal’s feet is based on the fact that it is out
of my realm of experience, and it will remain so. However, I am reminded that in many regions
of the world that people do not have the luxury of just eating the prime parts
of meat or more accurately, they have learned to enjoy them like my rural family
in SC. My tender stomach and I will
decline this opportunity.
Sara, I just wrote a long note that dissolved into space. Will just say, thanks for posting and keeping us close. Love to share in your ad-van-cha!
ReplyDeleteMuch love, Carol