Yes, occasionally you can still see women with bound feet here. They are quite old and it is rare to see someone with bound feet. They have a very distinctive type of walk and very tiny feet, so it strikes you as quite strange if you happen to spot someone. I was up north in the Bei Chen neighborhood one day sitting on a bench and a little old lady goes shuffling by me with her bound feet. It was so unique. They have to wear special shoes made for them. I have seen bound feet only three times in the five years I have been in China. The women appear to be in their 80's to 90's. A 90-year-old woman would have been born in 1919. That sounds about right historically, because in the 1920's, and even earlier, the government was sponsoring programs to put a stop to foot binding. It is a very painful process started at a young age. The young girl's feet cannot develop properly because they are broken and tightly wound up, so they cannot grow big. The result is a deformed little pointed foot that takes years of pain to achieve. These tiny deformed feet were considered beautiful, but they rendered the girl a virtual cripple her whole life! What a strange cultural practice.
I put up my door couplet for Chinese New Year. If you remember my post last year, my friend John Mark's father made them. They are beautiful Chinese calligraphy wishing good things for the new year. (scroll back to last year for a story about him making this door couplet) I also have a decorative ox head hanging on the door for the Year of the OX, my fifth Chinese New Year which I have been priveleged to ring in!!! Many Chinese decorate their doors for the new year. It is mostly red colors and very bright.
This site will have a cultural flavor to it. I will tell short stories of everyday life for an ex pat in China. Included in this blog will be short insights, funny anecdotes, lots of photos, bits of information about the culture and other things that tickle my fancy and tell a story about where I live: Kunming, China in Yunnan Province in the far southwest corner of the People's Republic of China. I teach high school at Kunming International Academy. I just re-upped for my 8th year next school year, so that tells you I like it here. I find the culture endlessly fascinating. I hope to bring some of that enthusiasm for the culture to this blog. I hope you will come back again and again to join me!
'The Year of the Rabbit'
February 3, 2011 will ring in the new Chinese New Year's Day.
I live in Kunming, China and I teach high school at the only international school in this city. This is my seventh year in China. I return to the U.S.A. each summer to see my three kids and one grandson. I live in a nice apartment in this city of over 4 million with my husband of 36 years, Jeff. My main life philosophy is 'Seize the Day,' or Carpe Diem within a Christian context.