Endgame

Back in the home of the brave, things are fun so far. Today was disgusting, but the freezing rain was falling on a sunburn, so I won’t complain too much.

Ithaca has been a pretty sweaty place recently in a few ways. Finals loom, and my senior friends are drowned in projects. I’m inconvenienced by it myself, in that I’m not very good at figuring out things to do alone and people don’t have much time to entertain me. Saturday was an exception, another party in the chamber of D.O.O.M., this one in honour of hors d’oeuvres. As the hour approached, Eve and the crew took an absolutely unfeasible break from their schoolwork to make bread and cheesecake-stuffed strawberries and bruschetta.

Angela is a mutual friend of Eve and me who tends to arrive early to these affairs to help with the setup. This was the first time I’d seen her on this visit, so there was the usual amount of hugs and yelling. Beyond the usual was a series of expressive eyebrow movements and upward-inflected grunts, giving me my secondary job at the party: Angela’s wingman. Primary job, as always, was comic relief. Angela is an excellent wingperson, sort of a Top Gun character. My exploits at this party, on the other hand, included:

  • Loudly plotting a way to approach a group of people, three feet from that group
  • Waggling my eyebrows at Angela on hearing that a certain fellow was single, with said fellow looking directly at me
  • Slinking away from this destroyed conversation and leaving Angela to resolve the situation

Somehow I maintain a fairly solid group of friends in Ithaca. I think it’s because Canadians are considered cool by default here.


Sunday was the first real summery day of the year, and everyone on campus was out on the quad. There was a group of slackline walkers that my friend Tay and I were happy enough to sit and watch.

“You know,” I said to Tay, “it’s kind of the endgame around here these days, isn’t it?”

She wasn’t sure what I was talking about. That made sense, because really I was talking about myself the night prior, but also something more that I felt and couldn’t really put my finger on.

“I mean, you can burn whatever bridges you want. What’s left, 40 days? And then it’s all over anyway. You don’t have to be nice to people you don’t like anymore. You can say whatever you want. The future isn’t coming.”

Tay was unconvinced and probably didn’t really care what I was talking about. I was unconvinced myself, knowing that I hadn’t really gotten to the core of what I was trying to say.

“Endgame,” I said.


Later that evening, with my sunburn established and barbecue in my stomach, some of us young punks were playing catch out on the yard of Hudson Heights. The moon was low in the sky in the way that people tell me doesn’t actually make it any bigger, and it’s just an illusion, but it was huge and I don’t believe them. The kind of wind that only blows on summer evenings blew. Angela and I took a moment to look at the moon. I thought about the party, and the slackliners, and how absurdly much I like to play catch. I thought about the way the moon wouldn’t be so low tomorrow, would just be another moon, and the only thing we could do was be outside and remember to look at it while it was there. Another future that wasn’t coming.

Endgame, I thought.

I didn’t say it out loud, because that would have been weird.

some polaroids from the weekend

Shanghai for the Sane

Tongli was more or less a bust, a dead town turned into a tourist trap that’s expensive and a pain to get to. It sucked, and I got rained on, but extended leisure was good for me. I returned to Shanghai with my brain feeling a lot less like something that might get its picture on a box of cigarettes, and got back into the tourist vibe. I have more pictures than words about the rest of the trip, which you can see some of here (as well as a quick impression of Tongli here). Shanghai is a city I could live in if I spoke any Mandarin. Who knows…

Shanghai

God, what a city. My friend Eve asked me to rank each city I had visited on a scale of 1 to pineapple, pineapple being, obviously, ideal. Pixian is a squash of some sort, Chengdu is a nice tangerine, and Shanghai is a straight-up honeycrisp apple (off the charts, if you’re not following. It might have just been a me and Eve thing).

After my last night in Chengdu with Johnny and his friends, I slept about four hours and then in fits on the plane. The first thing that happened, staggering into Shanghai, was I met a bunch of Canadians. Small world, hey? I was sharing my hostel room with 5 of them, and there were 5 more next door (side note on hostels: I’ve stayed in a grand total of 6 in my life now, and liked one of them). Anyway, we decided that the thing to do was of course to get drunk. Recall that I was one day out of Pixian at this point and getting drunk was still definitely in my ballpark. Down the street from the hostel was a convenience store where you could buy nothing but cigarettes and Tsingtao. At this store, beer cost about 60 cents a bottle.

Well.

I made some friends that night. One of them was an early riser named Diego, who wanted to go to the Shanghai Museum the next morning. It was on my list as well, and I figured I ought to go with company while I had the chance. The crew of Canadians was leaving at the end of Sunday, and as Diego had said pointedly a few times, they still didn’t have train tickets. Diego struck me as the long-suffering leader of the very raggedy group, and was frustrated in the extreme by no one wanting to get up in the morning to go to the museum. After another four-hour sleep, just he, I, and another guy, Brian, were off. We got “pancakes” at little spot on the way that I’m not sure whether to call a restaurant or a street vendor. It was set in a building, but had about four square feet of floor space. The woman inside seemed comfortable enough, and made what I think is my new favourite street food. I went back twice. The pancakes were really a sort of fried wrap thing with eggs in them and bacon and spicy red pepper sauce and hhhhhaauuuuugh. China is great in that way, the street food and cheap little restaurants are always amazing.

We ought,” Diego mentioned, “to get on those train tickets.” Brian nodded and gazed thoughtfully into the distance.

The museum had cool things in it, but I was at maybe 8 hours of sleep total and a fair bit of alcohol in the past couple of days, so a lot of them scared me. Even now, though, they’re pretty creepy:

Some scary masks.

As we left the museum, Brian got some texts from the rest of the group. They had woken up, apparently, and gone to get lunch at a very famous dumpling restaurant. They had a half hour wait ahead of them, but if we went to meet them, we would be just in time to not have to wait. Things were working out the way they rarely did, I thought, not knocking on wood. When we got to our meeting point, the crew were nowhere to be found. Diego made some calls, frequently repeating “where” and “train tickets”. They had already eaten. We had noodles at the nearest restaurant, which turned out, in true Shanghai style, to be quite good. There were also some good walks taken during and after this quest for lunch.

Yuyuan

“Guys, we need to get train tickets.”

At this point, I thought we had spent more time talking about buying train tickets than actually doing it could possibly take. I was wrong. Around an hour later, I left the group at a ticket office, trying to figure out who had brought ID and money with which to purchase tickets, and who had not, apparently hoping the tickets might be free. Often, on this trip, I’ve wished I had other people with me. One is probably too few for this kind of thing, but now I also have a handle on a number that’s definitely too many.

I didn’t do much else interesting that day, being pretty close to dead on my feet. Things had gone a little bit too Fear and Loathing, and it was time to get my life back under control. I went to Mao Livehouse, a music venue that is apparently pretty hip. There weren’t many people there, probably thanks to it being Sunday, and there were just a few people playing some acoustic Chinese/American hybrid music to an early close. I got some new stickers, so that was cool.

The next day, I would head to Suzhou for a bit of R&R.