Hong Kong reminds me of duality. It has an official dual existence, one country two systems. More, though, it feels like a duality. British and Chinese melded together but separate, a close cousin to Blade Runner. And my purpose here also exposes a duality: freedom and adventure travel, but also escape from life and normal existence. It's a place to go to find a new start.
What dualities
exist in your own life? Are you mother and lover, child and parent,
business and personal? Do you have disjoint lives, the one at work and
the one at home, or maybe the one you share with family and the one you share with friends? Do you sometimes feel alone even when surrounded by people?
Food
in Hong Kong is a delight for the senses, more an adventure than a
necessity. At dinner near the night market it's sloppy and dangerous but
interesting. You can choose your crab or lobster from large plastic
buckets filled with water and crustacians. Maybe it is my choices that
make food an adventure?
I get dim sum the next
day. I have to ask for hot chili oil, and then they bring me a tiny
thimble of it and I have to ask for 3 more. This is not Szechuan. Are
they insulted by what I am doing to their food, as if I am poisoning
their favorite child? But they are amused by my gusto for their
creations. Food here is different than Beijing, as are the people. Food
in Beijing seems designed to assault the senses, while here food is
finely crafted with delicate flavors, The difference, maybe, between
spicy buffalo wings and nouveau cuisine? The people here are different
too. There are still rich and poor, but it lacks the obvious class
divisions in Beijing. Beijing reminds me of the class divisions in
feudal Europe after true Franks conquered Gaul, with a distinct ruling
class and several lower classes under their sway. Or maybe the
antebellum south? It leaves me wishing that the Cantonese had won the
Chinese civil war. But maybe that's why they didn't? They seem focused
on living and enjoying life, unlike their warlike brethren to the north.
What
do you think the Mediterranean would be like if Germany had won World
War II? The thought seems brutal to us, impossible even to ask. But
Hitler was only a man. He would have died eventually, as Mao Zedong did,
and German rule would have softened eventually.
These
precocious musings must yield to further adventure. I only have 24
hours left in Hong Kong. I visit several shopping areas, then meet up
with an indirect friend who is also in HK. Her plan is to go to Victoria
Peak right away, but I convince her that she has enough time and more
adventure by joining me to a Aberdeen fishing village and a floating
restaurant for lunch. We separate and then I go to another part of the
island that has a local market, and finally make my way to Victoria Peak
for dinner.
2 comments:
One of my favorite cities.
Wonderful insights. Love Hong Kong. Not been there since the change over.
Is Stanley market still there - I think it was Repulse bay?
Enjoyed Kowloon - slightly different but wonderful. Star ferry? Tiger Balm Gardens? So many wonderful things there.
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