Category Archives: International

Learning a Language. Just Because.

While taking three courses this term is doing wonders in helping me recuperate after burning out last term, I’m beginning to itch for more.

Now, weekday summer courses and distance education courses don’t really fit in with my plans for this year, and I was wondering what I could possibly entertain my brain with over the summer when I hit upon UBC’s Continuing Education language courses. Bingo! They have 17 languages for me to choose from and best of all, none of them are for credit. Try as I might not to make grades the focus of my academic career, it’s pretty hard not to worry at all when midterms, papers and finals roll around. A non-credit course will let me learn something new, just for fun, and without any stress. Can we say “deal”?

Learning a new language just for fun. Haha, I’m excited just thinking about it.

People are always learning languages because they’re useful, because of globalization, et cetera. Me too. I learned English by default (useful move on my parents’ part, it being the international language of communication and all), and I’m currently working on my Chinese because I’m conditioned to feel I should, being Chinese and all. I took French for four years in secondary school because I thought it was more useful than Spanish or German (my other options), being Canadian and all. Not that I’d lived in Canada at any point that I could remember back then — nor can I remember any of my French. Oh, wasted years.

So this is the first time that I’m going to be learning a language just for the heck of it. It’s got nothing to do with my cultural identity, I don’t know anyone who speaks the language (but I will!!), I’ve never been to the country, I can’t foresee how this is going to be of any practical use to me in the future — and I am completely and utterly pumped for it.

Toronto Travels

The end of Reading Week is drawing nigh and I can happily say that I’ve been having a blast. Since I originally had no midterms or too many major presentations due after Reading Week, I decided to visit some of my closest friends from Hong Kong who are staying at UofT. It’s been fun, it really has been a break, and I’ve even finished off some work assignments while I’m at it.

And I got a co-op placement for the summer as a customer service representative which I am pretty pumped about. No more applications for a while!

A few of my Toronto highlights include discovering the easier, cheaper access to dining out that my friends have. I’ve tried Korean, Indian, Thai and Taiwanese so far, and am just delighted that there is K(orean)town, Greektown, Little India, and Little Italy besides Chinatown.

I also did the touristy thing of going to the CN Tower and getting a good view of Toronto from above… It really is quite huge when you see it sprawling out in every direction. Everything was very flat though — I’d miss Vancouver’s mountains if I were away for any long period of time. There was ice on the lake, which was quite lovely.

We’ve also been watching good things: we saw the musical of Dirty Dancing yesterday and it was so much fun. The first half didn’t have as much singing as I was expecting for a musical — I suppose they focus on the dancing there — but the second one was very energetic. I’ve been YouTubing the finale song and kind of want to see the movie version of it now.

I now really like Slumdog Millionaire too, and rank it as one of my favourite movies.

The people, though, are the best and the real reason why I came. Quite a few people from my year came to UofT to study so we had a high school reunion yesterday and it was so much fun. In fact, I’ve enjoyed myself just as much as I hoped I would when I first thought of the idea, all thanks to my best friends who have been housing and feeding and spending on me for the last few days. All props to them. I really have had a holiday. <3

Shoes Off My Premier!

This recent article about someone who threw a shoe at the Chinese Premier while he was visiting Cambridge, probably to copy the shoe thrown at George Bush while he was visiting Iraq, maddens me.

Wen Jiabao a dictator?
Wen Jiabao, nicknamed “treasure of the country”, like George Bush?
Wen Jiabao
, known as “the people’s Premier”, one of the nicest politicians in power and someone I am actually proud of — God knows how rare that is — invade the UK at any point in recent history?

Oh no, no, I think not.

Protest as much as you like, but please keep your actions within measure: as coloured as my vision may be, I don’t believe this was worth an insult of such degree. Unless the guy’s family and friends were killed by the Chinese government, of course — then I’d sympathise.

For crying out loud, did anyone ever give George Bush pet names like “precious one”?!

Didn’t think so either.

Multicultural Accents

Canada, land of multiculturalism, where everyone is welcomed.

Visually, you can see that: everyone looks like they’ve come from a different country and no one ever seems to think twice about it.

Why, then, are these completely different people all expected to speak English with a Canadian accent?

It’s not just if people don’t speak English as their first language — I’ll get to that later — but if they don’t speak with a specifically Canadian accent, they get looked at funny. It throws people off to hear me pronounce “water”; it throws me off to get the same reaction for over a year.

“I’d like a bottle of water, please.”
“Sorry?”
“Water.”
“What?”
“…Wodder.”
“Oh, water!”

If ever you hear me in person and want to know, my “British” accent is not put on but the Canadian one is. It just makes life easier and less embarrassing and time-consuming to say things like everyone else.

Part of me rages, though, at why people won’t accommodate me at least a little bit: I’m already using Canadian vocabulary, so can we please try a little harder if I pronounce things differently? It’s not like people can’t do it: those same Canadians who commented wildly on my pronunciation while in Canada didn’t have a problem when visiting the U.K. Sure, they weren’t used to the accents there, but they got by.

I think the difference is simply that people had different expectations: they expected British people to speak with British accents and were more ready to accommodate trying to understand that. Water? Not a problem.

Why, then, can we not extend that expectation to so-called multicultural Canada?

I always feel sorry for people who don’t speak English as their first language — not because I have this weird idea that English is the only language worth learning, but because sometimes other people give off that vibe.

Speaking accented Cantonese myself, I’ve been on the other side of the language barrier (like anyone who’s ever really learned another language), and I really hate it there. It’s so very frustrating to not know what or how to something, and I’m always so very grateful when someone really slows down and tries to understand me. After the initial shock that comes with meeting someone who speaks differently, I’ve been told that actually, it’s not that hard to understand me. I’m pretty sure these people weren’t just being nice, either, ’cause they’re the ones who’ve stuck around and still listen without many problems most of the time. The ones who don’t want to listen? They give me condescending looks and walk out of my life. Not my loss, but it still bugs me: just because I may not be able to speak Cantonese like a Hong Kong local doesn’t mean that I’m incapable of speaking anything. My English, if you only knew, is more than fine.

So I challenge you: the next time you’re about to mock someone’s accent — and you know if you’re doing it out of friendliness or not — or complain about how impossible it is to listen to that prof, ask yourself if you really tried to understand. Instead of realizing in the first class the possible language barrier and switching off all effort to understand for the rest of the term, try listening for their particular idiosyncracies and patterns of speech, rather than what they’re “supposed” to say. Of course it takes more time and effort, but that’s what communication is about: someone speaks and someone listens, not condemns for being different. If they’re making the effort to speak, it’s only fair to make the effort to listen. And you will probably find, as I have, that if you keep at it a while, it’s really not as difficult as you think.

Let’s take multiculturalism to the auditory level. After all: of the hundreds of thousands of different languages, dialects and accents out there, why is it that you criticize someone for not having the one you happen to speak?

Jetlag

Is the worst. I’ve been up since 1 am (after sleeping for two hours) because I just can’t fall back to sleep even though my head is throbbing and sleep is all I want right now.

Once upon a time, when I was not living in Vancouver, I could fly over here and switch timezones on the way so that I had absolutely no jetlag when I arrived. This lasted until September of 2008 when I came back for my second year of study and ended up being awake at 2 am, unable to sleep until 5 when I got hungry and got up. I did, however, have a week to adjust. I absolutely refuse to come back to Vancouver more than two days early during the winter break, though — winter break is short enough as it is so I guess I’ll live with the jetlag.

I am going to go discover food. And then I am going to try and go back to bed, before getting back up at 6 am. Last night, when my brother was trying to send my friend back to UBC, we circled around the same ten blocks or so because Translink busses and many cars were either crashing or getting stuck in snow. No idea when the bus will come tomorrow morning and I’ve got to be on campus by 9. My my.

Lesson learned? Please don’t scrimp on snow tyres if you plan on driving through the snow — a car is never meant to be a “saving” or “investment” anyway, so you might as well invest in your own life and safety.