Our second day in Hong Kong, we spent
the morning visiting the Big Buddha. We had to take the subway to a
place where we caught the bus to go up to it. The bus drive was about
40 minutes, and went through some very pretty mountainous-ish areas.
When we got there, it was very
impressive.
A lot of people around us were praying,
so I was careful to be respectful. It made me happy that religion
inspires such devotion, and that people are willing to spend so much
time and money to make monuments like this for their beliefs.
We went down the stairs again and
walked around the monastery there.
And then took the bus and the subway back to our hotel. All in all, this little outing was
probably my favorite thing I did in Hong Kong.
After this we just got our stuff
together to take the ferry to the mainland. This bit was somewhat
traumatic for me (AKA this is where the rant starts). I had been
assigned to a school with 6 other girls. I had several of these girls
at training, then flew over with them and spent all my time in Hong
Kong hanging out with them. I felt really comfortable with the group
and was excited to be teaching with them. However, right before we
left for the mainland, our head teacher called us together and
explained that the school had not gotten as many students as it had
been planning, so three of us had to switch to other schools. She
wanted to switch me and Camila to the same school, since we had been
good friends, but Camila was adamant about staying. I ended up being
switched with a girl I didn't get along with as well.
As you may imagine, I was not
particularly happy about this. I didn't know the girls in my new
school, and I have had less than wonderful experiences with roommates
before. I was also jet-lagged, hungry, and very far away from home.
So, I sort of burst into tears, had to be comforted by three
different people, and switched schools a second time. All this was
happening while we were gathering together and going through customs
and crossing over to the mainland and driving to our apartments in
Zhongshan.
I wasn't even quite done switching. My
new group had 15 girls and 4 apartments. I was assigned to one
apartment and sort of tried to start figuring out who my roommates
were, but then someone wanted to switch so they could be with their
friends, so I volunteered to switch so they could be happy. My
apartment itself turned out to be lovely (more on that later), but I
wasn't so sure about my roommates. They didn't seem to talk very
much.
I was feeling pretty sad and lonely
until all of a sudden my room-roommate looked over at my stuff and
said, "Wait, you're reading the Book of Mormon in Japanese too?"
And it turned out that:
We have the same umbrella
She's also learning Japanese
She has the same favorite Korean Drama
as me
She wants to transfer to BYU next fall
to be a Linguistics major doing Asian languages
Her boyfriend is in the same mission
as a very good friend of mine
Her name is Rachel (So it must be
fate. This is my third roommate named Rachel in three years)
And then I felt much better. It turns
out that God knows what he is doing. I should probably stop doubting
that.
I am so glad you got your blog going. It was fun to see all your pictures and hear your adventures.
ReplyDelete