-Living la vida Laowai- (2013 Throwback)



-Living la vida Laowai-



Wikipedia describes Laowai as a commonly used Mandarin Chinese word, and a shorter, informal version of wàiguórén 外国人 ("foreigner").
Laowai is not intended as a negative word. Of course you may hear expat stories where the word has been adapted to be used negatively by some. Sadly, this has become human nature. I am currently not an expat, and my story is not a story about international racism. However, my story is about being different. My story is about being an outsider, and loving every minute of it.



I was born and raised in Victoria Australia. I am an English Language Tutor. I love what I do, I get to meet a fantastically diverse bunch of people, and I probably learn more than I teach. A little over a month ago now I began looking for a quiet office space in the CBD to accommodate some new Melbourne based learners. After browsing through sublet advertisements on Gumtree, I had come to the conclusion that I was probably going to end up in a broom closet next to the restrooms of a Legal Chambers, where the land lord had placed a semi-constructed flat pack desk, an over swiveled swivel chair, and a poster reading "hang in there. I picked one ad at random, and arranged a visit via email. I arrived at the address, took the elevator up 5 floors and stepped inside a lovely looking office suite. I was shocked to learn that I had arranged to view an office inside a Tutoring Center, there was even a stack of IELTS books by the reception desk. Needless to say, I moved into my new Melbourne office a few weeks ago. I share a suite with a wonderful company called Energy Bean Tutoring Center. Energy Bean is probably best described as a Chinese Australian Tutoring Centre, as it caters mostly to the needs of international students from mainland China studying at various levels in Australia.



It's fair to say the official spoken language within my office suite is Mandarin. The signs are all in Mandarin, the posters are in Mandarin, the Energy Bean web page is in Mandarin, I noticed that even the label and fine print on one of the whiteboard markers was Mandarin. Despite not knowing a great deal of the language, not once have I been treated as an outsider. Despite running a similar business, not once have I been treated as competition. I was instantly treated like a partner. After only three weeks I feel like I have been part of the Energy Bean family for a decade.



Last night I was invited to the Energy Bean Anniversary Celebration. The speeches, presentations, and games were all in Mandarin, and I felt how some of my intermediate students must feel when I ramble on and forget to articulate, and just like them, I was politely nodding and pretending I knew what was going on. Perspective is one heck of an eye opener. After giving up on my high hopes of becoming a fluent Chinese speaker by carefully listening to the speeches, I sat back and enjoyed the culture shock. When the games began, I watched Energy Bean staff and students light up with joy as they participated in competitive group activities. It was so entertaining from a spectators point of view. I couldn't even being to guess what the objective was, but their smiles and laughter spoke louder than any words in any language. Energy Bean's very own hard working receptionist kindly explained what was going on, and it turned out there was a lot of method to the madness unfolding before my eyes.



I felt guilty that I couldn't fully understand the festivities despite all the hard work that had gone into the evening. Everyone else probably felt guilty that I was unable to participate because they made sure not to make me feel as though I was being excluded, being sure not to alienate me, and make me feel like an outsider. As a result I felt like I was on an adventurous international vacation, but it became clear that I was actually witnessing Australia as the multicultural paradise that it should be.



In my opinion, I have become a better ESL teacher by spending some time as an outsider with people who instantly welcomed me, and let me in. I believe there are no minorities based on heritage and race. The only true minority group in this country are those ignorant few who consciously chose to shut everybody else out. I truly feel sorry for them. They don't know what they are missing out on.

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Comments

  • The reason I'm reporting this is, it looks like we may be moving from our awesome centre in the future, and going somewhere new. Feeling sentimental.

  • Thanks Sewar for the kind, encouraging words.

  •        Hi my friend, as one of your friends who enjoyed the thrilled story, I want to be among the many who are congratulating you on having such a life, and wishing you the  best from now  on.    There is nothing else quite like working with different people who come from different cultures, really the challenge is always waiting there. I am sure that you have shown such marked ability at your work, as a matter of fact, there are great things ahead for you, I can tell.

           Finally, to be honest with you, I am so glad that I am on your friends list. God bless you my friend.

  • Thanks for the great comments so far!

     

  • You may say China has already made so much progress so far, and it's already the second largest economy in the world. But they need much much more. They find they still need to learn from those developed countries.

  • I know such a Chinese company in Canada. They are trying to help the Chinese there who are learning and living in Canada.

    Nowadays, English language is so popular in China that English exam is included in the national college entrance examinations. That doesn't mean they don't like Chinese language any more. In fact, they know they have wasted so much time in the past, and they want to catch up with developed countries. First, they need to learn the languages people speak in developed countries. Among all the languages, English is most popular for the Chinese who are trying to learn a foreign language.  

  • [How did you type that 外国人?Copy and paste or you ... giggling.]

    I'll come back reading this blog carefully, I am working under the supervise of my boss now...ugh~

  • Cheers for commenting Noas!

  • Interesting blog. It's nice to read that kind of experiences that you had. I guess I can empathize with your situation because when I was in South Korea, all my colleagues tried their hardest to help me and made me welcome. The most unfortunate thing was that my Korean barely passable and some of them are too shy to speak in English. I'm sure after a few weeks or months, you will pick up more Mandarin words. 

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