You know you’ve been in China too long when…
Posted on May 6, 2013 in Fun Stuff | 0 comments
- Putting leftovers directly into a plastic bag seems normal
- You can’t access your own blog
- Steak with rice sounds just fine.
- You start referring to yourself as ‘laowai’ or ‘foreigner’
- You have to pause and translate your phone number into English before telling it to someone.
- Someone ‘draws’ a character on their hand and you understand.
- You see nothing wrong with standing on a white stripe in the middle of a highway while cars whiz past you at 90kph
- You know words in Chinese for which you don’t know the translation in English.
- You convince yourself that it doesn’t matter how dirty the cooks’ hands are, cooking will fix it
- You start to buy an XXXL T-shirt in a store when you returned home
- People ask you how young you were (几岁) when you moved to China
- You start shaving your eyebrows and stop shaving everywhere else
- You think American clothing is very plain
- Everything you are wearing was purchased in China
- You don’t know the conversion between CNY and USD
- People ask you where you are from and you say the Chinese province/city where you live
- Your English has a Chinese accent
- You can speak at least one other dialect aside from Mandarin
- You can’t understand why the waitress brought you a fork and knife instead of chop sticks
- You send back ice water for hot water
- You throw out your self tanners and carry an umbrella in sunny weather
- You talk about movies and music in terms of things that are popular (in china) and things you heard are popular in America
- You like ankle hose with sandals and a skirt
- Your favorite beer is named after a place in China
- You think all occasions should be celebrated with baijiu 白酒 and beer
- You think Great Wall wine is high class
- You add 7-up 七喜 to your wine
- You married a Chinese person
- You consider not buying diapers for your children
- You play ping pong and badminton on a regular basis
- You hear someone say “laowai” and look around not realizing he/she is talking about you
- You can’t remember how to drive a car
- You think a balanced meal must have rice, noodles or mantou
- You like rice for breakfast and eggs for dinner
- Your Chinese friends ask you to bargain for them
- You don’t look before you cross the road
- You talk to strangers while you are using the bathroom
- You have never heard of any of the new English songs at KTV
- You get excited about mid-autumn festival but forget about Halloween
- You write the date yyyy/mm/dd when you sign your name on English documents
- You think of months in terms of 1-12 instead of Jan-Dec
- You drink gan mao cha 感冒茶 (南方) or banlangen 板蓝根 when you have a cold
- You think women must be married by 30
- You don’t think it’s weird to speak to other westerns in Chinese
- You have a stock pile of deodorant and other western luxuries (because you don’t know when you’ll go back)
- You talk about the China before there were so many foreigners here
- You remember China before Starbucks
- You know why Qingdao beer is spelled TsingTao and think it’s odd other people can’t pronounce it
- You know what CAN, PEK, TAO mean
- You make fun of Chinese people who speak funny Mandarin
- fish hanging up in your living room draining the blood out of it into a dish doesn’t seem so strange anymore.
- The footprints on the toilet seat are your own.
- you know the first couple questions every Chinese will ask you.
- You press both up and down life buttons
- You aren’t aware that one is supposed to pay for software.
- You feel cheated if you don’t receive a full head and shoulder massage when getting a haircut.
- You regard it as part of the adventure when the waiter correctly repeats your order and the cook makes something completely different.
- You are not surprised when three men with a ladder show up to change a light bulb.
- You look over people’s shoulder to see what they are reading.
- When shopping at Carrefour some laowai stares you down for catching you looking into his basket while you wonder to yourself what laowai’s eat.
- You have a pinky fingernail an inch long.
- You start to watch CCTV9 and feel warm and comforted by the governments great work.
- You have absolutely no sense of traffic rules.
- You start calling other foreigners Lao Wai.
- You think no car is complete without a tissue box on the rear shelf and a feather duster in the trunk.
- When looking out the window, you think “Wow, so many trees!” instead of “Wow, so much concrete!”
- Someone doesn’t stare at you and you wonder why.
- Firecrackers don’t wake you up.
- You wear out your vehicle’s horn before its brakes.
- Chinese remakes of Western songs sound better than the originals.
- You realize that smiling and nodding is Chinese body language for, “Go away; leave me alone.”
- You think of “salad” as diced apples in mayonnaise
- Your handshake is weakening by the day.
- You compiled a 3-page list of weird English first names that Chinese people of your acquaintance have chosen for themselves.
- You and a friend get on a bus, sit at opposite ends of the bus, and continue your conversation by yelling from one end to the other.
- You cannot say a number without making the appropriate hand sign. And you can just use one hand instead two hands to give the number like chinese
- You start recognizing the Chinese songs on the radio and sing along to them with the taxi driver.
- You feel insulted when you enter a restaurant and only three waiters welcome you.
- Your friends can’t understand why you haven’t memorized your QQ
- You eat soup with chopsticks
- You get on the bus and sleep right away.
- You enjoy wearing flip flops on all occasions.
- You get your haircut on the sidewalk.
- You have grown used to the picture quality of pirated VCDs.
- Badminton and ping pong are your main forms of exercise.
- Thanks to karaoke, you know who has the most singing talent in your building.
- You use the word “Ayyiieeaaahh” every few sentences to convey surprise, pleasure, pain or anger.
- You watch an american movie on HBO, with sub-titles, and try to read them.
- You talk louder than is necessary.
- When you can’t imagine a meal without yi wan mi fan! (a bowl of rice).
- When you go back to your home country and you find it odd that when going out to a restaurant, you don’t have 5 wait staff welcoming you at the same time.
You find it strange when everyone’s food at a restaurant is brought out at the same time.
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