<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Portrait of an LBX &#187; Hong Kong</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/tags/hong-kong/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com</link>
	<description>老百姓記 -- a search for humanity in China (by bicycle)</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 21 Jan 2011 01:12:40 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.0.5</generator>
<image>
  <link>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com</link>
  <url>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/favicon1.ico</url>
  <title>Portrait of an LBX</title>
</image>
		<item>
		<title>Change of Pace: Hong Kong Visa Run Number Two</title>
		<link>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/</link>
		<comments>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Apr 2010 13:55:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Evan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[All]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Evan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hong Kong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shenzhen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visa]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/?p=3198</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Evan NOTE: This is about a stretch of a few days I had after Hainan and before Guangxi, where we are now. It&#8217;s a new style of writing for me. Hope you like it. We just finished riding like hell through the inner mountains of Hainan, a gravelly, steep, sweltering experience that forced Andy [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Evan</p>
<p>NOTE: This is about a stretch of a few days I had after Hainan and before Guangxi, where we are now. It&#8217;s a new style of writing for me. Hope you like it.</p>
<p>We just finished riding like hell through the inner mountains of  Hainan, a gravelly, steep, sweltering experience that forced Andy onto a  bus on a mountaintop. It was beautiful but gruesome, the biggest  physical challenge so far (to be chronicled in a post). After the  hardest bits, Andy’s axle snapped unfixably, and so he bused ahead while  Alexis and I took a day and a half to finish the 150 km into Haikou,  giving us a long time together to discuss out personal issues on the  trip, resolving many interpersonal conflicts that had arisen, discussing  revolutions we would or would not like to incite, and just generally  enjoying the ease with which our giant legs carry us over vast  distances.</p>
<p>We find Andy in a hotel in Haikou at 6pm nursing a bottle of whisky.  No surprises there. I know that Pete is in Hong Kong enjoying the Rugby  7s with thousands of drunk white people who speak in funny accents.  Andy’s mishap is going to allow me to make my necessary visa run two  days earlier than anticipated, which means I can be a drunk idiot again  for a day too. Great. I make plans on the spot to leave Haikou as early  as possible, be in Zhanjiang before noon, then Hong Kong before  nightfall on Saturday.</p>
<p>I wake up in the pitch dark room. It’s 8am. Crap, I overslept. I pack the bike  quietly, but Andy and Alexis wake up anyway. They want to come with me.  We eat at the giant outdoor dim-sumery downstairs and race across the  city as fast as Andy’s broken bike will roll. We decide at the ferry  terminal to take a bus the whole way. It’s now 11, and the bus takes 5  hours. My plans for debauchery are disintegrating. We barely get our  bikes on the bus in time. The bus takes us to the a ferry terminal where  truckloads of pigs and busloads of LBXes are loaded. We fight through  throngs of drably attired Chinese to the heart of the big ship that  carried us to the island in the first place when we were on a train in  the hold. A short old woman wearing a matching brown long sleeves and  pants peasant outfit sits next to us holding a baby to whom she speaks  in unintelligible dialect. She, like nearly everybody else, eats a bowl  of instant noodles. Minutes later, she spends about five minutes undoing  all that chewing as she fills a red plastic bag with vomit that  undulates up in evenly spaced waves. When she stands up, the bag breaks,  and her vomit spills all over her baby and her pants and the floor. She  walks away. Nobody is phased but us. Pete sends me a text from Hong  Kong. He’s stumbly drunk at 1pm &#8212; in a different world. Jealousy ensues.<span id="more-3198"></span></p>
<p>Thankfully the boat ride ends fast. We get back on the bus and roll  slowly. Next to me sit an old peasant man, wearing dark black suede  shoes and postured timidly. He’s lived through the worst years of this  country, and he’s learned that being timid is the way to survive. Next  to him a young man sleeps in the most aggressive posture I can imagine  one can manage while sleeping. He’s got spiked hair and a bright blue  nylon jacket that reads, “Fashion.” His clean white athletic shoes  contrast sharply with those of the man next to him. I hope his future  will be better than the old man’s.</p>
<p>We arrive in Zhanjiang at 6. My dream of attending Saturday night’s  festivities fades. I pack up my necessities and make a list of what to  do in Hong Kong and Shenzhen. First on the list: get a new visa. I leave  Andy and Alexis for what will be at least five days, the longest  anybody’s been marooned on this trip.</p>
<p>I take the 8:30pm bus to Shenzhen after a dinner of Muslim noodles.  The young, all-male bus crew all speak Cantonese, the Italian of Chinese  dialects, and they refer to me as “Langzhai (handsome fellow)” and  speak Mandarin with a rolling accent. This reassures me for reasons I  can’t put my finger on. I send Pete a message promising him I’ll get  drunk with him on Sunday morning. He responds incoherently. Nobody is  near me in the back row of bunks. This will be a good night of sleep. I  read a chapter of The Romance of the Three Kingdoms and pass out, mind  easy.</p>
<p>I wake up suddenly at 2:30am. I touch my pocket and realize my  wallet is making me uncomfortable. I put it in my bag. I realize I  should do the same with my passport. My passport. My passport. No, not  possible&#8230; where is it? I search my thoughts. We’ve been too many  places, and everything is blurring together. No, it’s in the inner  pocket of my handlebar bag, where I put it two days ago in Hainan, the  place I can never be without it, unless I leave the bike. I panic. The  bus ride is 7 hours, and I’m over halfway through it. I can’t make  another round trip and still turn my visa in by Sunday night. I can’t  see the 7’s. All is lost. No! I can have it couriered. No, it’s a  weekend, and I have no address. I can make Alexis bring it. No, I don’t  hate him that much. Wait, buses come all the time. A driver can bring  the passport. Yes, that will work. It has to work. I tremble a while by  myself at the back of the bus, seeing doomsday images pass before my  eyes. Suddenly I remember something! Yes, that&#8217;s right! Andy brought me  the passport before the bus left. Of course, Andy knew &#8212; he saved the  day! I fall asleep reassured.</p>
<p>It’s 5am, and the bus isn’t moving. “Sleep until the sun comes up,  Langzhai,” says the fat member of the crew, “we’re not in a rush.” It  occurs to me immediately that Andy didn’t brought me the passport, and  that my psyche invented that vision to keep me from going insane. I ask  the five Cantonese men if they know other bus drivers who make the  route, and if a driver would be willing to carry documents. “No problem  at all, Langzhai,” says the tall, skinny one as he fetches out his  company’s card with the number of the morning shift driver.</p>
<p>I skulk into a 24 hour Hong Kong style diner across the street and order a milk tea. I  read two more chapters of Three Kingdoms while checking the time every  five minutes. At 7, I call Alexis. He’s cold as a cucumber, calm as a  killer, takes my instructions, and moves quickly to package the passport  so it looks like just some documents, no anger at all, no questions,  just doing what needs to be done. This is why I count him among my best  friends. At 8, I call the driver. All is arranged. I move to a Starbucks  next to the border at Luohu, text Pete with the news, and settle. The  last text runs my phone out of money, and I freak out assuming Alexis  might need more information. I run to three stores before I find a  recharge card. I call him, but his phone is out of money too. Evil  forces are operating against me. Thirty minutes later Andy calls me, and  everything worked out. Alexis borrowed the phone of the old woman who  drove motorcycle taxi to find the driver. “It’s on a blue bus,” he tells  me.</p>
<p>Thankfully Lily has sent me a long translation to do about  corruption in the steel industry and how politics will ruin the lives of  four businessmen. I decide that maybe fate is helping me despite my  wishes, since it’s better to make the money to pay for my expensive visa  while drinking coffee than spend money to destroy my liver. At lunch, I  walk to the Indian restaurant across the street. Two different haggard  old women crawl out of alleys imploring, “Massagie massagie!” I wonder  who follows these women into dark alleys at noon for depraved acts with  what must certainly be scaggly, hideous prostitutes?</p>
<p>Pete texts me at 1pm. He’s already tipsy. I remember the letter I asked Justin send to me from my old  company last week and that I need to find Marissa, my host here and the girl I had him  send it to. Crap, why so many complications? I call Marissa, and she’s  coming back soon. Too much rugby for her, and she has to work tomorrow  anyway. It’s Sunday? People working&#8230; schedules? It&#8217;s been ten months  since I had a job, and I&#8217;ve forgotten all that.</p>
<p>I finish the translation right at 4, hands jittering from my third  Venti Americano since 7am. I call the bus driver, who tells me, “I’m  here!” He’s ahead of schedule. I run like hell to the corner, where an  orange bus is parked in front of the diner. What the hell? I walk calmly  up to the door and ask for the documents for Mr. Wei. The young man in  his twenties smiles wide, “I thought you were Chinese,” and hands me the  brown envelope, in which my passport is wrapped in the map of Hainan.  Thank God for friends, I think. I give him 20 more kuai than he asked  for to try to reverse my karma, don’t ask why the bus isn’t blue,  and call Marissa. She tells me she just walked across the border, four  hours later than she said she would, but whatever. I jump in a cab to  cross the city, find her sitting on the steps of the border crossing at  Futian, take the envelope, exchange some trivial courtesies, and off I  go. I tear open the envelope from Justin, and my old business card he  scavenged from somebody in the office falls to the ground. Good old  Justin, he didn’t let me down!</p>
<p>I stumble across the border with my two Orlieb panniers digging into  my shoulders and sleeping bag bouncing off the back of my thigh. 7-11,  there you are! I take a deep breath and realize that I’m free again.  Every time I come to Hong Kong, it’s like dying and walking into heaven.  I celebrate with a bottle of sugar-free Oolong tea, and board the train  toward the city. As I sit on the train switching my Hong Kong sim card  into my phone, I look up and see the dismal wall of gray towers marked  up with those ugly simplified characters, and revel in the fact that  it’s further away with every second. I text Pete. He responds, “Welcome! I’m  drunk on pimms at rugby&#8230;” The rest is unintelligible, and I know I’ve  missed a good day.</p>
<p>In a flash, I make the right switches and am in the Tsim Sha Tsui  subway station. I ask a jovial looking policeman wearing glasses for a  “photo machine.” My English is deteriorating noticeably, but he  understands and gives me instructions in that lolling, whimsical Hong  Kong English that I love so much. I find the Photo-maton, crank out four  visa shots while listening to a gaggle of drunk English girls  discussing how great the rugby was, feel a little disappointed, and  shoot out onto Carnarvon Street, working past three Pakistani men  screaming, “make a suit! make a suit!” into Mirador Mansion, walk past  the old Indian man who sells those delicious potato samosas and head to  the sixth floor to the Fujian Guest House.</p>
<p>That goofy Fuzhou woman with the long hair and flip flops who talks  in long, loud bursts of saliva, remembers me and just like last time  tries to overcharge me. After a good five minutes of yelling, she gives  me the old price but puts me in a window-less room with bunk beds next  to where she is sitting. I get on the phone with the owner, who tells me  she can process my business visa by Tuesday noon. I give some cash, my  photos, my passport, and the business card to the woman, who has now  pulled a 180 and is very warm to me. Whatever, crazy bitch. I take a  shower and hear her yelling at somebody else in Cantonese. I text Pete,  and he tells me to meet him at the Globe bar in Soho on Hollywood  street. When I emerge, I find the woman has been yelling in Cantonese at  a young Indian guy, who says to me in an amazed voice, “you speak  Mandarin?” I say yes, and you speak Cantonese? “Yes! Do you want to hang  out with me,” he says in his thick accent, but I politely decline,  descend, pick up some snacks in the 7-11 downstairs that’s full of Africans and cut  a B line through the herds across Tsim Sha Tsui to the Star Ferry. It  is now after 7 and completely dark.</p>
<p>Ah, the Star Ferry at night. I move to the bow and enjoy the easy  rolling motions as I stare across that beautiful Victoria Bay full of  boats at Hong Kong island all lit up and inviting. I suddenly become  aware that I’m exhausted, but I feel completely at peace with the world.  I being to ask myself why I don’t live here. Why am I in China? Is  there a value to being uncomfortable all the time? Why not just live live the Hedonist Hong Kong life?</p>
<p>Boom, we smack the central pier in the middle of my thought and are moored up in a minute. I  rush up and out straight south and up onto the elevated walkways. Around  the walkway are hundreds of groups of dark-faced women of all ages  sitting in circles on blankets, talking or filling in what look like  lotto scratch-off cards. Ah, yes, it’s Sunday, and all the Filipina  maids have off. I wonder at this sight a minute longer and then rush  through the big shopping malls full of ritzy stores and long, rich  streets until I’m at the entrance to Lan Kwai Fong, which is beating  already. I realize that Pete is drunk, and I’m not, and so I snag a big  Heineken from the 7-11. The dark faced Indian guy with the big afro from  the Thai restaurant we ate at last time with Dreyton hails to me, but I  run up the steep hills, guzzling my brew as fast as I can. I must catch up.</p>
<p>After 10 minutes of little back roads, I’m staring at the Globe, and  my beer is done. For a minute I revel in the beauty of the signs on the Hong Kong businesses. They jut out proudly and exude a feeling of permanence and pride &#8212; it&#8217;s something I never feel back in the mainland. I snap out of it, walk into a 7-11, and pound another beer. Pete is late, so I walk into a little  Middle Eastern restaurant, grab a hummus, and shoot the breeze in French  with the bald owner who&#8217;s playing Serge Gainsbourg. I head back to a 7-11, buy a Guiness this time, and  then I hear from down the street, “VILLLARRRRRUBBBIA!” Pete comes  running after me, wearing that light blue USA shirt we both bought at  the Olympics with a towel around his head. He’s with another Pete, a  tight Northeastern guy wearing a polo and shorts who reminds me of the  business school kids from Georgetown and a chubby guy wearing a lion  suit. “I’m from London, and I’m in investment banking, and that’s all  the boring details I’ll tell you about myself. Call me Lion,” says the  lion in his posh British accent. Fair enough. Pete’s three sheets to  the wind and talking raspily in his high mischievous voice, the one he conceals when he’s  in his usual Connecticut WASP mode. We have some high times, but  neither of us is in the mood to talk to the gaggle of typical American  girls at the bar. I pound two more beers, and we agree that he should  stay in my bunk bed instead of going back to China tonight.</p>
<p>We walk back to the Star Ferry. If it was warming when I took it  sober, it’s downright blissful now that I’m a little drunk. We decide on the spot  that we will live here one day, no matter what or when. I realize that I  like Pete more every time I see him. We buy Nestle ice cream cones at  the African-loaded 7-11, slip past the Fujian woman, and pass out in the  bunk beds. Pete wakes me at 6am, takes the bag of gear Andy and I are  offloading from the trip, and slips out of the room.</p>
<p>I wake up some hours later, enjoy some free internet, and walk out  to pay the woman. She hits me with googly eyes, even though she’s easily  ten years my senior. I talk to her a while. She’s lonely here, and has  to spend all her days cooped up in a little hotel, with no friends and  all her communication being yelled. I feel sorry for her, but nothing to  do. I spend the entire day buying bike gear and 1200 HKD worth of  books, classics and novels for research and for personal use, most  importantly all written in beautiful full form characters. At night on a  recommendation from a friend I head to Chungking Mansions, the  notorious Chungking Mansions, wind past hundreds of Africans, Indians,  Pakistanis, and clueless tourists to the E block elevator, which takes  me to the 7th floor and a mysterious Indian restaurant full to the brim  of brown people. I, the only white person in the room, sit alone next to  the door listening to all the languages and smelling the sweat and  curry in the air, while eating the best Indian meal of my life and  reading the introduction to Long Yingtai’s book about how the revolution  destroyed the lives of so many Chinese people. I cherish this moment.</p>
<p>The next morning I wake early, fill my bag with the 10 kilograms of  books I’ve bought and take the early star ferry to Hong Kong. I wish I  could take this ferry every day and ever night. I know this will be the  last time I smell salt water for six months, and I try to soak in the feeling, almost meditatively not thinking of anything else. Then I ship the books back to my  mom’s law office in Baton Rouge from the central post office, and walk  up and through the HSBC building. It was here a little over a year ago  that Klaus, my crazy German partner, and I opened the bank account for  our company, Easting International, the company we dreamed of over a  week of revelry in my apartment before a long hike through the snow  covered hills of Zhejiang, but which we’ve never actually operated. This  time I’m in shorts and a tshirt, and all the suits of various  ethnicities are staring at me like I don’t belong. They’re right. I bust  down Des Voeux Road, take down a delicious breakfast of salmon and eggs with  a croissant, and head toward Mercer Street and my final objective for  the Hong Kong trip.</p>
<p>I find the Fukien Tea Company exactly where our blog follower Lew  said it would be, number 6. It’s like something out of an old movie, big  brown tins full of tea stacked in cabinets on the walls, the type of  tea written on them in yellow characters. There are scraps of paper and  bags lying around everywhere. It’s kept very proper, but with lots of  clutter anyway, owing to the fact that they’re obviously busy and are  pressed to use every inch of the space. It smells old, and I exult in  the old fashioned nature of it. There’s a red flying horse adorning the  back wall. I ask the first old man I see at the desk next to the door if  they speak Mandarin, and his brother, in his 50’s with glasses and a  hearing aid responds, “No problem!” in that language and leads me to a  little leather couch at the back corner in front of which sits a  frequently used metal tea tray and red clay pot.</p>
<p>Mr. Yeung, the younger of the two brothers, sits me down, gets a  pinch of the Tieguanyin I asked about, and starts talking. And boy, can  he talk. He gets so into whatever he’s talking about at the moment that  he forgets to make the tea, often picking up the boiled kettle and then  putting it right back down again without pouring. I’m so enthralled  listening to him that I forget I’m on a tight schedule. He explains that  his father fled Xiamen back when the commies took over and came to Hong  Kong via Singapore. “All the old masters left after the revolution,” he  says, pointing out how his father knew the art of roasting Tieguanyin  the right way. “All that raw stuff they sell in the mainland now is  crap!” he says, and after tasting the fruit of his labors, I believe  him. He tells me how after collectivization, all Tieguanyin was sold by  the state, and so everybody outside the country had the exact same tea.  That situation wasn’t ideal, but everything went to hell after reform  and opening, he tells me. “There are no individual shops for that many  years, and then all of a sudden, everybody is a boss! How do you think  so many experts popped out of the woodwork all at once? Think about it a  second! It’s impossible!” He tells me that even the tea farm his  company has had a contract with for ten years frequently tries to rook  him. “Mainlanders have a lot of problems with the truth,” he says in  Mandarin, following it with a long drawn out, “HOOOONNNNESSTY” in Hong  Kong English for emphasis. He then tells me how he and his brother  follow the exact methods of his father and roast the tea for over 30  hours in a little factory not far from the shop. “It’s hard work, but  it’s the only way to make Tieguanyin the right way,” he tells me, and I  believe him. The tea tastes wonderful, deep, dark, and full of  character, but more than the taste, it appeals to my sense of  righteousness, since I know this is a piece of real China, the old China  that existed before the great swindle. Mr. Yeung tells me that he has  no children, and the sons of his brother have no interest in carrying on  the store. When they die, so will their roasting technique. I feel  profoundly sad and on the spot make a promise to myself to come back one  day before it’s too late to learn how the Yeungs make their tea so  their family’s work won’t have been in vain. I pray that I won’t forget  my promise, realize it’s almost noon, and buy a bag of tea from them  before darting to the subway.</p>
<p>I’m only just in time getting to the hotel to check out. The goofy  woman in the flip flops gives me my passport and tells me they gave it  to me cheaper than anybody else, only 1600 HKD. Lying becomes instinct  for some people, I guess. I run back downstairs, pick up two samosas  from the old Indian man who squirts mint sauce all over the little  styrofoam plate, and I stumble into the subway, where I call the visa  agent in Shenzhen. He can process my 6 month business visa if I give him  the passport today, he says, but since he has to send it to Beijing, it  won’t be back until Saturday morning. The fee for rush processing will  be 5500 kuai. I’m backed into a corner, and I agree reluctantly. I call  Alexis to tell him the news, but then I realize that I’ve just lost my  iPod on the subway. I consider the next six months without it, the  dictionaries and books I’ve stored on it, and then I take the train back  to Tsim Sha Tsui to buy another identical one. Money out, money out. It  never ends.</p>
<p>Finally, new iPod in stow, I board the train back toward Shenzhen.  As we approach that grey wall of authoritarianism, I ask myself why it  is that I keep willingly going into this country. It’s like knowing in  your mind that you’re walking into a building where a dog will bite your  balls, and as you approach, you notice on top of the building is a sign  in which a dog is depicted biting somebody’s balls. I groan and  remember the mission at hand and Andy and Alexis waiting for me in  Zhanjiang. I buy one last sugar free Oolong plus a pack of Drum tobacco  that comes with 60 papers in the Duty Free just in case we need to share a cig with an LBX buddy out in there somewhere, and enter on my  hard-earned 30 day business visa.</p>
<p>I find the LBX with the Beijing accent whose number I found on the  internet at Starbucks waiting for me just as he promised. He’s young and  with a good looking girl who says nothing. He explains while fidgeting  with his iPhone that his company has connections with the police in  Beijing, and that they’re going to have to apply for a housing  registration first, and then they can have their connection sign the  approval form without having to go through the red tape. I give him my  passport, and he disappears into a taxi. This is by far the most tenuous  connection in the long chain of events that will allow me to finish  this silly bike trip without exiting the country again. I am again  thoroughly exhausted, and order another Venti Americano. I open my  computer and sign onto chat. Marissa finally  responds to my text and tells me she’ll be home at 6. I buy a tea pot at  the giant store next to her house and go find her Chinese-Italian roommate  Alessandro, with whom I have dinner and play Halo on XBox for hours, the first time since college. My  mind is swimming through fatigue-driven emotional despair, and all I want  to do is walk aimlessly through the streets. Finally at midnight  everybody goes to sleep, and I open my bag to go to sleep. On top, just  below my new iPod, I see my old iPod. I never bothered to check my bag.  “That figures,” I think to myself before passing out cold wrapped around  an uncomfortable sofa cushion.</p>
<p>Time passes slowly in Shenzhen, but I manage to keep sanity by  drinking profound amounts of Tieguanyin, translating, and cooking &#8212;  lots of omelettes and a giant dinner of red beans with sauteed  vegetables, which Marissa and her Mexican roommate find too spicy. It&#8217;s the first time in six months I&#8217;ve cooked my own food, and the taste of my own red beans makes me think about home, filling me with dreams of the kitchen I&#8217;ll cook in when I have my apartment in New Orleans. I think about the can of red beans I ate in Big Sur this summer before starting this crazy trip and how they gave me the same feeling.</p>
<p>On Friday, I get a call from the young guy’s female colleague in  Beijing, and she insists that I wire the 5500 to her account before  she’ll courier me my passport. I think to myself that I’ve been duped,  but I remember that this is how I did it in the past, and I have no  choice but to trust them. I rush to an ICBC across the mega boulevard in  front of Marissa’s apartment and get the wire out just before the bank  closes. Angels are watching over me, I swear. Marissa and her roommate  come back late, and we go out for a night on the town, which begins with  a bottle of wine in a Pizza Hut and winds through several boom-boom  clubs where I see all the short skirt bar skanks for whom Shenzhen is notorious.  This will be the last time I see any such thing for six months, and I  enjoy the experience for its relative novelty.</p>
<p>The next morning, I wake up hungover to the doorbell ringing, and  miracle of miracles, there’s my passport, stamped with a new F visa  valid to September 30, my birthday. It all worked out! My heart flops  over with relief. I spend the rest of the day cooking and talking with  the girls, and then I fight through the Tomb-sweeping festival crowds at  the Luohu bus terminal to buy a seat on a night bus to Zhanjiang. After  the ticket is purchased, I leave to find something to drink, but all I can find is more old women trying to pimp alley whores  on me. Oh this dreadful place. When I return to the terminal, I see a sign that reads,  “Hong Kong / Luohu Bus Station” pointing in two different directions. I  want with all my heart to walk across the border and never again go back  into the wilderness, but I remember the mission, and begrudgingly my  feet carry me toward that hellish bus station.</p>
<p>The night is sleepless, made worse by the semi-hourly puking of the woman sitting in front of me, but finally I arrive in Zhanjiang at 5am,  where I grab a just-steamed red bean bun and take a three hour nap on the  floor in between Andy and Alexis, before they wake me up and tell me  it’s already late. After a cup of coffee, it’s back out again, onto the  open road on those loaded touring bikes, the whole reason I went through  all those shenanigans in the first place, and for the moment, the last  goddamn thing I want to do in the world. I grind my teeth and pray that  life will become more beautiful, and soon.</p>
<div class="tweetthis" style="text-align:center;"><p> <a class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two+http%3A%2F%2Fis.gd%2FH94fBn" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/twitter/tt-twitter.png" alt="Post to Twitter" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two+http%3A%2F%2Fis.gd%2FH94fBn" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://delicious.com/post?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/delicious/tt-delicious.png" alt="Post to Delicious" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://delicious.com/post?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://digg.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/digg/tt-digg.png" alt="Post to Digg" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://digg.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;t=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/facebook/tt-facebook.png" alt="Post to Facebook" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;t=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/reddit/tt-reddit.png" alt="Post to Reddit" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/su/tt-su.png" alt="Post to StumbleUpon" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/&amp;title=Change+of+Pace%3A+Hong+Kong+Visa+Run+Number+Two" title=".">.</a></p></div>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/04/change-of-pace-hong-kong-visa-run-number-two/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>5</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>In Hong Kong, Obama + Expo = Visa Woes</title>
		<link>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/</link>
		<comments>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Feb 2010 13:59:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Evan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[All]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hong Kong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[visa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[簽證]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[香港]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/?p=2748</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Evan I just wanted to write a quick post to let everybody know what&#8217;s going on with us. The more substantive posts about our LBX activities will be coming soon. Thankfully, the weather cooperated with us on our last three cycling days (all over 100 km &#8212; real killers), and we pulled into Shenzhen [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Evan</p>
<p>I just wanted to write a quick post to let everybody know what&#8217;s going on with us. The more substantive posts about our LBX activities will be coming soon. Thankfully, the weather cooperated with us on our last three cycling days (all over 100 km &#8212; real killers), and we pulled into Shenzhen right on schedule. Thanks to Andy&#8217;s friend Marissa and her roommates Arte and Alex, we had a comfortable place to rest in the old deep ditch (深圳). Yesterday morning bright and early we passed into the bright light of Hong Kong with a day to spare on my residence permit, on a dedicated mission to crank out some long term visas.</p>
<p>We had heard that six month visas were possible, and accordingly we cut a B line to the visa agency of Linda Hui. Mrs. Hui told us that US nationals could indeed process 6 month visas, and French nationals 3 month visas, but with one prickly little caveat: we have to leave the country every 3o days (每三十天都必須出境), no exceptions at all. In a panic, we ran to several other visa agencies, called everybody we knew, and generally freaked out. In the end, the owner of our hotel processed a 3 month, no required exit visa for Alexis for 400 HKD (~$51 USD). Being a US citizen, I was forced to accept a very bitter solution: 6 month tourist visa, 30 day stays, 1700 HKD ($220). This, of course, means that I will have to take a bus from wherever we are to Shenzhen every god$@*&amp; #*~&#8217;ing 30 days to walk across the border, buy a sugar free Oolong tea in a 7-11, and walk back across into Shenzhen. The words &#8220;arbitrary&#8221; and &#8220;wasteful&#8221; were flashing before my eyes as I accepted the stupidest of solutions before dowsing my anger with expensive beers (what was I just saying about &#8220;arbitrary&#8221; and &#8220;wasteful&#8221;?) with Andy and our old pal Drayton. <span id="more-2748"></span></p>
<p>Finally through a combination of various reliable sources, I came to find out that two factors are primarily responsible for this catastrophic stupidity. First, the Shanghai Expo is coming up in a few months, and in the spirit of international hospitality, China has decided to resume its Olympic visa crackdowns to make it as difficult as possible for foreigners to visit their stupid country. A very stupid conversation with the Fujian-native owner of our hotel revealed the second reason.</p>
<p>&#8220;France and China are good friends right now. The US and China are not good friends. Your president met with that person from Xinjiang, eh, you know, the one with the Falungong, and we&#8217;re not happy about that.&#8221; Me: &#8220;are you talking about the Dalai Lama?&#8221; &#8220;Yes, that&#8217;s the one! Our president, Hu, Hu, Hu, eh&#8230; Hu Jintao! Yes, Hu Jintao, he&#8217;s very angry about that, and now it&#8217;s very difficult for Americans to get visas. Just a month ago, I could have processed a 6 month or even a 12 month visa for you with no required 30 day exits, but now it&#8217;s impossible.&#8221; My mental ticker started flashing words like &#8220;petty&#8221; and &#8220;inane&#8221; in big bright letters.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s so hard to describe my relationship with China to people who aren&#8217;t here. It&#8217;s so crazy to love a place so much and at the same time loathe its system with every fiber of my being! As I tell Alexis all the time, China is our cruel, cruel mistress, the one who makes us miserable to the core but whom we can&#8217;t bring ourselves to throw out because we are so intertwined in the allure of her endless, profound mysteries. Am I dramaticizing the visa process a little too much here? Probably. That said, this stupidity is about the one millionth straw of resentment piled onto the back of what we already bear in the greatest love-hate relationship of my life.</p>
<p>Incidentally, I found out after I had already paid for the dumb 30 day entry visa that I could have processed an F visa, flown to Shanghai, paid 6000-7500 RMB (~$880-1100 USD) in what absolutely must boil down to a straight bribe (in the good old days you could extend your damn F visa for a few hundred RMB through a sketchy dude who&#8217;d take your passport to Qingdao&#8230; where are the low-cost corrupt officials when you need them?) to extend it 6 months to a year. At the outset of our trip, we knew that our biggest hassle, more than the physical strain, the cultural overload, the maintenance of the bikes, food poisoning, and unintentionally malevolent Chinese hospitality, would be the $*#@&#8217;ing government, and oh boy, but they have not let us down. It&#8217;s absolutely mind boggling to think that the price I paid for my top-notch touring bike, $1100, is the price I may have to pay to be legally permitted to finish the stupid trip. GAAAAAAAH!</p>
<p>Thankfully though, Hong Kong is &#8212; as always &#8212; absolutely what we needed. This city is without doubt objectively (that&#8217;s right, I said it) one of the best places in the world, but the fact that I always end up coming here after long stretches in oppressive commie-land just makes it that much better. It&#8217;s as though we have been eating stale white bread laced with dog poop for months, and then suddenly we cross a magical border and are fed chocolate cake. Again, that&#8217;s over-dramatic, and rural China is actually a wonderful place, but seriously it&#8217;s just plain nice to be the hell out of there for a while. As I write this post from the closet room with a view over the harbor I&#8217;ve rented in Mirador Mansions, I&#8217;ve got a belly full of samosas and hummus and am still slightly hungover from our high quality beer rampage last night through Wanchai where we ended up smoking hookah with a group of drunk Polish mink farmers. All in all, we definitely lead charmed lives, and 99% of the time, I couldn&#8217;t possibly wish for life to be any different from what it is now. And with that, I&#8217;m going to finish my bottle of Naked fruit juice and run out to revel in more Cantonese glory!</p>
<div class="tweetthis" style="text-align:center;"><p> <a class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes+http%3A%2F%2Fis.gd%2Fh6IZMF" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/twitter/tt-twitter.png" alt="Post to Twitter" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://twitter.com/home/?status=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes+http%3A%2F%2Fis.gd%2Fh6IZMF" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://delicious.com/post?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/delicious/tt-delicious.png" alt="Post to Delicious" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://delicious.com/post?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://digg.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/digg/tt-digg.png" alt="Post to Digg" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://digg.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;t=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/facebook/tt-facebook.png" alt="Post to Facebook" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;t=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/reddit/tt-reddit.png" alt="Post to Reddit" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title=".">.</a> <a class="tt" href="http://stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title="."><img class="nothumb" src="http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/wordpress/wp-content/plugins/tweet-this/icons/en/su/tt-su.png" alt="Post to StumbleUpon" /></a> <a class="tt" href="http://stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/&amp;title=In+Hong+Kong%2C+Obama+%2B+Expo+%3D+Visa+Woes" title=".">.</a></p></div>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://www.portraitofanlbx.com/2010/02/in-hong-kong-obama-expo-visa-woes/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>3</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

