Monday, February 23, 2009

Today guanxi saved my butt...

Today I went to the Community Service Center seeing if I could apply for the volunteer job that all the old retired people have: the Community Volunteer. 

I walked into my neighborhood service center, asked if I could be a 'red sleeve standard volunteer.' "Oh sure!" the boss said. Really? It's that easy? The response was basically, yeah why wouldn't it be? And a guy came in with a notepad to get my information. But, will Beijing people care that I'm a foreigner? "No, why would they? It's great!" Another woman said to someone else, "There are so many foreigners who live here, and all to busy to volunteer, this is great!"

So I follow the guy with the notepad into another room. We sit down and he starts taking my information. Getting down to it, and then 

he (Mr. Guo) asks: "Are you registered at the police station?"
me: "Well, here's the thing... I ... umm, I'm not registered. But that's because when I signed the least I immediately asked the landlord and the leasing agency where the police station was so that I could go get registered. 'oh, you don't have to do that' I'm pretty sure I have to, I had responded. 'No, the landlord will take care of that for you.' Well, I think I should go with him to do it. 'No no no!' So, they told me this, but it's my own fault, I should have gone to get registered, but I didn't know where the police station was and I was already registered to be in Beijing at my old address--my friends place... So I just didn't do it."
Mr. Guo: Oh... this is bad.
me: I understand.
Mr. Guo: Let me think about a way that we can make this work... we're going to have to go the police station. But Geez!! Two weeks! You're gonna get fined!
me: Yeah... I know.
Mr. Guo: Well... let me think about a way to make this work... you go get your passport and documents.
me: Alright, I'll be right back.

So biked back to my house to get my passport and lease agreement and then came back and found Mr. Guo.

Mr. Guo: Ok, I'm going to call someone at the police station, he'll be able to figure it out.

So he starts calling, but no answer. And he says, is Yang Xu at the police station today? Another man replies, no he's at home today. "Ohh Oh Oh." And gets out his cell phone to call Yang. No answer. He turns to me and says, "That's ok, I'll just say I let him know the deal, and it shouldn't be a problem." And we start to head to the police station, Yang calls back. 

"Yang Xu, Hello hello. I have a foreigner here... he moved into the neighborhood and I'm going to go to the police station and get him registered. But... (then he started to talk really quietly) there's a problem... he's been here two weeks and hasn't registered... Yeah.... Ok." And hung up the phone. He turned to me and said, "our guanxi is pretty good at the police station"

So we biked to the police station... and while we were waiting he was very antsy.  He eventually said something to one of the workers and then said, "well, it's 11:30, I've got to go, I have something to do. But you'll be fine, just say Yang Xu and you shouldn't have any problems... Call me if there is a problem." And he left.

After a little wait the woman took my passport filled out my information as if I was registering on time... I got my new registration slip and my passport back--no fine, no problem. 

I'm guessing the man Yang Xu is the station captain. The community branch I went to knows him pretty well, so this guanxi, the Chinese word for this kind of relationship connection saved me an afternoon of waiting and probably a 150 USD fine. While I made a mistake and didn't register on my own, I still was saved by the connections of this Community Service Center. I think that guanxi exists in all cultures, but the amount it is used and built on here in China seems to be more than in the West. There are just these favors which run into play, it does not necessarily have to be political, just who you know where that can help out along the line. Pretty interesting thing that saved me from my own mistake.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Everyone rides it, but no one knows where they got it...

So I bought a new bike yesterday. It was a tough call. I spent the day before asking around about where I can possibly get a secondhand bike. It just makes sense to get a second hand bike--they're decent bikes and cheap. Really cheap. Of course they're all stolen firsthand bikes--sold for nothing.

So everyone has a secondhand bike, but no one seems to know where they're sold. Literally everyone has one. Most answers I got were, "I don't know." That flat out, don't want to tell you answer. Then some would say, "They're just not easy to buy right now." Around the time of the Olympics, police really cracked down. And apparently the fines are still in place. A store could be fined 500 RMB for selling a 50 RMB bicycle.

And as I was asking around looking for a place that might sell a secondhand bike, I got to thinking. I decided that, rather than support thieves, I could buy a new bike. That way, I thought, I was demanding another stolen bike. My logic was that even my one action might help the entire trade.

Unfortunately the economic way of thinking kicked in... The bike's going to be stolen whether I buy a new one or a used one, so definitely should buy the used one for 50 RMB, rather than a new one which starts at 250RMB--even thought that used one was once somebody's new one, before it was stolen.

Found a place that looked profitable. I tried to find out if she sold them, no. Where does everyone get them? "They must have all bought them before the crackdown last summer." Yeah... I'm sure that all these people have been riding the same bike for over 6 months. That's unbelievable. Are they all far outside of the city? "No, they cracked down there too! My brother lives outside the 4th Ring Road and doesn't dare sell them!" She told me about the fines that are still in place.

I surrendered. It seems there are some things that foreigners just can't figure out. None of my Chinese friends have bikes... and rather than try to find a place that might sell one to me, I gave in and bought a Chinese brand--the Shanghai Forever, ironically--for 360 RMB, with lock, basket, and bell included. I think it was a decent price. 

Well, it's decent until it gets stolen, at least. And once it's stolen, I'm definitely going to dig deeper for those bikes that seem to be reserved for Chinese only.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Pictures added!

So I took some pictures of my hutong apartment

Not many, more to follow as I get more things set up. I didn't take any pictures of the downstairs, because I haven't done anything with it.

Take a look. I hope it does the place justice! If not, you'll just have to come visit it for yourself!

And now my Chinese friends are telling me, I can't just keep working on my place... I have to get a job. So... I guess now that I have a place that's my own to live, might as well find something to do that will be bizarre and interesting.

Monday, February 9, 2009

I moved!

In my quest to become Old Beijing and immerse myself in the culture of Beijing, I have moved into a small hutong house.

I decided to move to this style of house back in December, started searching, but left for the US. When I came back to China I continued to search. Found several possibilities, one I was going to take... then I left for Guizhou with Dary. He's a friend of mine who lives down there. I went to Zunyi with him last November. He invited me to go down there for a pig slaughtering. I of course could not refuse that, so told the real estate companies I was working with, that I would continue to search for houses when I got back after the new year.

When I got back, I went back to those places. Started the quest again. The place I was looking at before was pretty nice, one room inside a courtyard house, heat, a/c, some windows, but it was just so out of the way of everything. Pretty far from any subway line and only one bus line that passed near it. They said ok... I said that I was just not seeing any I really liked. They said that we can keep looking. I went to another appointment with a different company. They were showing me really expensive places that didn't seem quite worth it... one for 1600 (or about 230USD a month) It had it's own bathroom, and it was huge, but it just wasn't what I was looking for. They kept telling me about ones that were just too pricy. I was looking for places around 900 - 1000 RMB (around 140USD)

I went back to the other real estate company, and they just went through all the places I had looked at with them, asking what was wrong with that one? It had a funny smell, I said. What was wrong with that one? To far away from everything. What about that one? It just wasn't the one I wanted.

Then one woman, probably a little exasperated with me says, "ha, I know a place you can look at... it's 600 a month... and just around the corner" And I'm thinking, I'm surprised they're taking a westerner to see a 600 RMB per month place, usually that means it's pretty dirty. She then says, "yeah it's on the second floor." And I think, that's bizarre. The houses/apartments in this area are all on the ground floor. There are very few apartment buildings, and the buildings here are no more than 6 stories tall. It's a culturally protected area, which means that nothing can be torn down.

So we walk out of their small office, down the street a little ways and into 后鼓楼苑胡同 (hougulouyuan alley, literally behind the drum tower alley). She points up to the second floor and says that's the apartment, and goes to get the key from the woman who is renting the apartment. 

We walk in, and the first floor is a small room, pretty narrow and maybe 50 square feet, it has a single bed with no mattress in it and a ladder running up through a hatch in the ceiling. This hatch is maybe 2'4" square with a sliding door that could be slid closed and locked if the 50 pound ladder wasn't in the way. This "door" leads into the first upstairs room. It is the same size as the downstairs room, around 50 square feet and also fairly narrow. This room has a shorter ceiling, it's only about 6' tall, so I can't stand straight up in here. From here, there is a step up into another room, which is only reached through a 3'4" square doorway. This third room is larger than the first two rooms at about 95 square feet. It has a bed, but no mattress as no mattress could fit up the ladder and through the two small doorways into this room. It also has a sink. The room sits with the wall to the north, and windows to the east, south, and west. Though the westerly windows are a bit blocked off, the east and south have great views of the rooftops of the Gulou area.

I start walking around as the woman is saying how great this place is. It has cable TV, but no heat, no air conditioning, the bathroom is really close, transportation is easy, and the shower place isn't too far away either. It sits right across from a small restaurant and above a small courtyard house with 4 other rooms occupied. I know while walking around this place that I want it. The second I walked up the ladder I knew I wanted to live here. I was just laughing and really happy looking at this place. The woman was laughing, too, seeing me that happy, when we were heading out of the apartment, in the upstairs smaller room, she pointed to a lightbulb on the floor, and said "It's even got a lightbulb here for you to use!"

I said I'd sleep on it, and called it a day. I came out the next day to sign the lease. The company tried to get me 500 RMB a month for the place, but it ended up staying 600 despite bargaining. At any rate, 600 is pretty cheap for being a three room two floor small hutong penthouse in the middle of the city. Even though this small penthouse doesn't have a bathroom, heat or a/c, I consider it quite a find and am really happy to have moved in.