Winners of the Women Inspire Women 2008
Travel Writing Contest
| FABULOUS RUNNER-UP -- $25.00 prize Written by: Rhoda
Netburn After the Marriage |
| FABULOUS RUNNER-UP -- $25.00 prize Written by: Tracey-Ann
Mayor She Gets Off a Bus in Beijing, Eventually Newly in China, I’m an English teacher, alone, in sprawling Beijing. I’m heading for the best place to orientate myself: Tiananmen Square. A vast pause in the otherwise frenetic city: children fly kites; backpackers pose for photographs; pedestrians stroll. I like to travel greenly, keeping one eye on the environment, so no taxis for me. I don’t want to dump my share of exhaust fumes onto Beijing’s already smoggy shoulders. Feeling adventurous and worthy, I board the number 2 electric bus, heading for “who knows where”, but passing Tiananmen Square on the way. A bus is so much more real, I tell myself with pride, this is how Beijingers get around: I’m not just a visitor, I’m a local. The bus picks up more passengers. The temperature rises. The journey speed plummets. So, this is how real Beijingers spend their time, squeezed in by the busload and sweating. I soon make another discovery: a bus in Beijing can never have too many passengers.
I sit penned in my seat. The conductor kindly nudges me every time the bus passes through a ticket zone and I pay another 1RMB. I decide she must be a wraith, how else does she negotiate the lack of space? I stay on the bus, hoping it does a circular route but at the end of the line I am shrugged off, somewhere, an hour outside the city centre. I don’t think foreigners make it to this part of Beijing: everyone’s stopping to stare at me. I cross the road and cars wait for me. I trace my route back until I find the bus stop. I do my fair share of staring; negotiating the pavements, chequered with the grubby blankets of makeshift vendors; smelling the burnt sweetness of roasting potatoes; grinning at the locals dozing in the sun, their bicycles casting shadows. I watch this new-found Beijing as though I’m an explorer just stumbled upon an unknown land. She’s not just the tourist-packaged sites, but an incongruous jumble of ordinary lives. She’s stray dogs, shy smiles, street-cooked pancakes and curious glances; she’s a shifting, imperfect thing— The bus arrives. It’s the same one that brought me here and the driver eyes me as if she can’t decide if I’m stupid or suspicious. I take my seat on the bus, primed for action and minus my foreign reserve. When I’m back at my original stop, I put my head down, growl a bit and elbow my way out. I land on the pavement buzzing with my secret glimpse of Beijing. The doors hiss shut behind me. The passengers stretch to fill the space. |
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