First morning in New Zealand

I just had the following exchange in a superette, where I went to buy soy sauce for my breakfast eggs.* I ended up buying these cookies as well, though I’m sorry to report they’re a bit stale (even though the sticker says they’re good till June).

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Smiling Asian man behind the counter: Hello.

Me: Good morning.

Man (ringing up my purchases): $12.60. Where are you from?

Me (handing him a $20): California.

Man looks blank, smiles apologetically, shakes his head.

Me: By San Francisco?

Man (nodding, handing back my change): I thought… because you look Asian**…

Me: My parents are from China.

Man: Ah, your parents are from China. So they speak Mandarin?

Me (putting change into my wallet): Mandarin, and Shanghainese.

Man (switching to Mandarin):Β Do you also speak Mandarin?

Me:Β A little.

Man:Β What country are you from? I can’t place your accent. [I guess San Francisco didn’t mean anything to him?]

Me:Β America.

Man:Β Ah. Which state?

Me:Β California.

Man:Β Oh, California. So you live here, or…?

Me:Β I’m traveling.

Man: Ah.Β What part of China do your parents come from?

Me:Β Shanghai.

Man:Β Ah, Shanghai… it’s supposed to be beautiful.

Me: I’ve never been there.

Man: Oh! Well… enjoy here.

Me:Β Thank you!

Man:Β Thank you!

Me:Β Bye!Β [Zai jian,Β “bye” in Mandarin, is literally, “See you next time!”]

Man (smiling and waving):Β Bye!Β 

I’d gone out this morning because I had to see the sky. When we arrived yesterday the clouds had me almost speechless — here’s the view from our place, yesterday evening:

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I found out there’s a little reserve a kilometer from where we are (by the way, we’re staying in Point Chevalier, a suburb on the west side of Auckland; it happens to also be a peninsula). The reserve doesn’t seem to have much to it, but it was a pleasant place to sit. This kayaker pushed off while the gulls and I watched.

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There was a sailing club, with a kids’ class in noisy session. By the time I left the reserve they were about to get into the water. I heard one of the kids yelling, “It’s FREEZING!”

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I’d brought my sketchbook but forgot all my markers, so I used a ballpoint I bought at a university shop in Singapore.

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It is a bit strange, actually, being back in “the West” after a month and a half in Asia. So far the people we’ve encountered here have been extremely nice — I was almost weirded out by the friendliness of the Customs folks at the airport*** — but things feel different. People seem loud somehow, not that Asians are so quiet (and anyone who thinks so can go stand next to the Japanese tour guide I encountered at Akaka Falls in Hawaii!). In fact, there are so many Asian-owned businesses in our neighborhood that besides this morning’s grocer, there was also yesterday’s baker and the super-friendly owners of the newΒ gelato/snack shop, and two construction guys I heard speaking Mandarin to each other. And our host is third-generation Kiwi-Chinese. After Singapore, the cool, non-humid air is amazing, butΒ the streets feel empty and the shops and homes seem huge. We’ll see how the adjustment continues.

*I’ve always enjoyed soy sauce on boiled eggs, but it wasn’t until I went to Singapore and had kaya toast that I considered pairing soy sauce and eggs with sweet toast. You know how everyone has their own personal culinary dictionary of what’s good to eat versus what’s gross? For the curious: I put soy sauce on boiled or poached eggs after they’re done, unless I’m making lu or tea eggs. I put soy sauce on fried eggs either during cooking or after they’re done; my dad invariably adds it during. However, I would never add soy sauce to scrambled eggs after they’re done, or during cooking — only beforehand, as I’m beating the eggs together, and only if I’m making Chinese-style scrambled eggs, or tamago.

**In our recent travels, when the (Asian) locals ask where I come from, they say it’s because I look Asian. In the US I would say of myself and other Asian Americans that we areΒ Asian, not that we look it, so their language seems odd to me. But in thinking it over, I realize it makes sense. As Asians in the US, our Asianness is unchangeably mapped onto our bodies; the implication is that looking and being are one and the same. But in Asia, when someone finds out I speak American English or live in the US, their discovery is that I am not as I look. By the way, some people say that in-Asia Asians can tell Asian Americans just by looking; my experience has been that that’s not so; I get taken for a local almost everywhere. I guess that means that for Asians as well, looking and being are also assumed to be one and the same — until they meet someone like me.

***They even washed my hiking boots! For bio-conservation reasons, not cleanliness. The boots were muddy from Hawaii. But they did it so cheerfully! In my experience the Immigration officers in the US and London are least friendly, but the ones here actually smiled and laughed. I don’t think I’ve seen that anywhere.