Beijing, the Earnest Young Man, and the 24 Pearl Rings
The Bird's Nest Stadium at the Olympic Park in Beijing, China.
(Taken from: http://www.homesthetics.net/the-chinese-national-stadium-in-beijing-the-birds-nest-stadium/)
I could write a travel blog specifying places to see and restaurants to eat at, at the major cities/towns/rural places/wilderness areas of the world that I have visited or will come to visit – however, these tend to be topics that have been fairly
well flogged, and besides, there are plenty of good travel writers out there.
Most importantly, that is not the purpose of my writing.
Instead, I want to talk about a young man that I met during
my recent short visit to Beijing, China.
And 24 pearl rings.
And so the story begins…
We had been to view jade, cloisonné wares, silk, tea, and learn more about Traditional Chinese Medicine.
We had gone shopping. We had eaten duck three times.
After a delay, the salesgirl came back to apologise, saying that it was a busy evening with many groups touring the facility concurrently - hence all the researchers were engaged at the moment. She asked us for a little more patience.
After another short delay, the doors to the room opened, and
there stood a nervous young man dressed nattily in a sweater vest and dress
suit, looking a little shell-shocked.
He was visibly very nervous, and although he didn’t stutter,
he was choppy in his speech initially. Straightaway, he had my full sympathy
because I knew how he would have felt in that instance – like a deer
caught in the headlights of a speeding car.
After a brief self-introduction, he went onto jade and pearl
- the types and grades; how they are valued; how to tell apart the real from
the fake.
For some reason, as he spoke he kept looking my way (or at
least, in my general vicinity) while he spoke and asked questions of the
audience, till I felt shy enough to start avoiding his gaze.
As he continued, he hesitated briefly before he said: “To be
very honest, I only know so much, and I can only teach what I know. I am not as
learned as some of the others, nor as well-polished a presenter. I was pulled
in to speak to you on the spur of the moment, I did not have any prior
preparation and I was taken aback by how big this group is.”
He seemed to rally after admitting this, and as he continued
on, he steadily gained fluency and confidence in his speech.
At one point, a revelation. He said: “Put it this
way, if you come back in a few years, this entire enterprise could be mine. I
am currently only doing work experience here, but hopefully given some time I would
be working here. If you come back to visit, you can always come to look for me."
[The above is a literal Chinese to English translation, however, reading between the lines
and taken in account what is lost in translation, he was essentially telling us
that this was a family business that could
be handed into his hands to manage, given a few years (as told in a Chinese
roundabout fashion)].
One of the cheeky ladies in the tour group boldly told him
that in order to remember him by, a gift would be required. As they bantered,
the gift being negotiated increased from a jar of pearl powder face/body cream apiece
all the way up to the boldest suggestion of a pearl necklace each.
[In Chinese business
transactions, gift-giving and receiving as well as the bestowing and returning
of favours, are an integral components. It oils the cogs of the machine, so to
speak. This occurs in the context of ‘guanxi’,
or the business network of people you know.]
A tray of pearl mounted on rings was brought around, for us
to select from, one for each person, and 24 in all were chosen and taken. There
were white, champagne, pink and black pearls to choose from.
Later on, as he warmed up to us, he asked questions about Indonesia,
Malaysia and Singapore (as my tour group members were from these three
neighbouring countries), and began to interact with the audience a lot more comfortably.
He had not been to any of the three places, and was curious about our home
countries. He mentioned that he hadn’t travelled anywhere else besides going to
university in America.
Not because I was given a pearl ring.
Far from it, I am a person who is not motivated by money nor riches.
I felt like crying because I was touched by how honest and
earnest he was – I don't meet the likes him everyday. He is a budding
businessman, but he showed that he is human too.
I thanked him as I took it from him.
His name is Yan Liang, and I wish him all the best in what I believe will be a very bright future.