Real L2 at the Local (Skate Spot) (by Janan Chan 陳臻)

This week’s blog post includes a linked audio file. Just click on the link below if you would like to hear the post read aloud. Scroll down to read the text.

https://soundcloud.com/bild_lida/real-l2-at-the-local-skate-spot?utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

Creative Expression

During a trip to Hong Kong to celebrate Chinese New Year, after months of lockdown, I relished the local skatepark near my father’s apartment where I could skate with other like-minded people. Returning to a more remote area of Shanghai where I lived and taught, I conceded that I would have to go downtown to find skate spots. However, on a walk down a street between two universities, I saw remnant telltale signs of skateboarders: a tucked away mobile metal rail; a tall stair set; and a stone platform with a waxed edge. I felt less lonely knowing there were skaters close by.

Skateboard” by Croswald9 is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.

I returned one weekend on my board and found many other skaters. I would learn that all of them were students from the two universities I taught at or another university nearby. As a beginner without Mandarin, I felt nervous and acted standoffish. However, the skaters were friendly and approached me first, asking at which school I was a student. I replied that my Chinese was not good and I was an English teacher from Canada. They asked around, laughing, as to who among them had the best English. 

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