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I'm enrolled in five classes here:
Asian Cinema on Global Screens
Cinema and Society: Understanding Europe through Film
Hong Kong Cinema through a Global Lens
Film Culture II: Trauma and Memory in Cinema
Cantonese for Foreigners
I've never been so overloaded with film studies courses as I am here in Hong Kong. As a production student at UCSC, I usually take one film studies elective, one film production course and a GE or a class that interests me, and that's it! We're on a quarter system at UCSC and we only take three courses per quarter. Here, we take minimum of five courses per semester, and since I came here to get a Hong Kong perspective on film, I tried to take all the film courses I could... which means ALL the film courses they offered. It's fun and I feel really engaged, but watching four films a week plus readings plus lecture gets pretty taxing. You watch the movie on your own time! There's no screening in class! What THE HECK?!
Studying Cantonese is difficult to say the least. I love love love my teacher Chow Bun Ching (if you're at all interesting in studying Cantonese, take her course! She wrote the textbook we learn from!) but the tones and syllables are incredibly confusing, and unlike learning French or Spanish, the words sound NOTHING like English ever. Which you'd think I'd expect, but I guess I was surprised by how difficult it actually ended up being. I feel pretty silly because whenever someone asks me a question in Cantonese, I have to slowly and carefully repeat the words to myself before I can understand. But the point is I'm trying! I can now order beef brisket soup noodles and a cold milk tea in Cantonese so basically, my work is done, class dismissed.
I'm currently sick with a head cold that I'm pretty sure I picked up in Mainland China. It was pouring rain over there and I used a broken half-umbrella for most of the trip. At one point, my friends and I biked around Guanzhou in the downpour (pictures to come!) and my feet were definitely soaked to the bone. But it was such an excellent time I'm not even really upset about it. I've purchased a billion oranges to fight off the illness along with drinking multitudes of my mom's Emergen-C and drinking hot tea and soup. I think it's working... The only thing that's troubling is the fact that I am going to Vietnam tonight and I have to be at least in decent health by the time I head out. We're doing a lot of physical activities like biking and kayaking and watching "water puppet theatre" (yeah, that's a thing) and I want to be able to enjoy myself. I also bought anti-malarial pills from the school health clinic so hopefully that's one more thing I don't have to be too worried about! I feel like a real adventurer ever since I heard that anti-malarials exist. Me? Doing things that might give me malaria?! I'm finally seeing the world!
Finally I've also had a lot of fun doing the Insanity Workout in the morning with some of the girls from my hall, walking to school and cooking for myself. I feel like I'm living a pretty health-conscious lifestyle here (though sometimes I drink too many lattes. School is hard and I'm tired sometimes!). If I could just beat this cold, life would be pretty okay! Though I have started missing my home in California quite a bit. Specifically, Trader Joe's food, my boyfriend and parents and friends and improv team, the beach, and the deer that live on the UCSC campus. Things make me nostalgic lately, especially thinking of my hometown. I'm trying to get as much out of my HK experience as possible, because I only have 48 more days here (yikes!) and I'm sure I'll miss HKU like crazy when I leave. So here's to enjoying the city, the culture, the minibuses, and the noodles that I won't get to see again after these last few weeks!
So that's what's been on my mind lately! Thanks for checking in on me!
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