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AmoyMagic--Guide
to Xiamen & Fujian
Copyright 2001-7 by Sue Brown & Dr.
Bill Order
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Service Information
Anyone in China that can afford
it, from executives to teachers, hires a baomu ±£Ä·(domestic
helper)--otherwise daily chores take all day, every day! Our own helper,
Lixi, has been part of our family since 1988! Read about her amazing story
in "Half the Sky", which Bill wrote for "Women of China"
Click Here for English version of "Half
the Sky"
Click Here for Chinese Version of "Half
the Sky" ¡¶°ë±ßÌì¡·ÖÐÎÄ
Click Here for "Women
of China" magazine (great English site)
Click
Here for NEW YORK TIMES article about Chinese nannies in U.S.! (Thanks
to Chris Green for this tip).
Need
a helper? Contact Ms. Eunice Chao at qp21
AT public.xm.fj.cn Her firm also provides
comprehensive services for expat companies.
Also check the Amoy Magic Forum
"Half
the Sky"
(in "Women of China" magazine)
.............by Dr.
Bill
Click Here for Chinese version (ÖÐÎÄ£©
A woman is like a teabag—only in hot water do you realize how strong
she is.
.........................Nancy Reagan
After seven years
in Los Angeles, life in China seemed to proceed at a snail’s pace.
But even so, we had little free time, because our everyday chores took
all day—until we hired a baomu (housekeeper/cook).
Unless you have a baomu, the head of the house (or her husband) must spend
hours each morning haggling over every onion, carrot, head of cabbage,
or block of tofu with merchants who point to enigmatic scratches on bamboo
scales that haven’t changed in 5,015 years, and proclaim that 4
eggs weigh a pound and a half. And once back home, the cleaning, chopping,
cooking and dishwashing takes hours. No wonder that a baomu is a top priority
for even poor professors. We eventually heeded our colleagues’ urges
to hire a baomu.
Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
Our first candidate was a grandmother who crossed our threshold and crossed
my wife in one fell swoop by instructing Susan on the errors of her ways
in cooking, cleaning, studying, and raising kids. She did not last a week.
Our next time around we tried our hand with students, who were thrilled
at getting paid for learning English (which is what they interpreted their
job to be). Xiao Hong and Melanie did little but read our English books
and watch TV.
At long last a Chinese professor suggested, “Why not hire a baomu
from the countryside? They are honest, hard-working, dependable, and cheap.”
“Cheap” went straight to my heart, and the next day we met
Lixi, a cook’s wife, never imagining that this froward, silent soul
would become like family.
It was an oppressively hot and muggy October day, but Lixi sported her
entire wardrobe: long johns and striped naval undershirt beneath cotton
pants and long-sleeved shirt; and over that, a vintage, frayed exercise
suit, topped off with a ratty gray sweater buttoned to the neck, and olive
drab canvas regulation army tennis-shoes that were probably handed down
from Mao's Long March.
Lixi contemplated her navel while her husband, wise to the “honest,
hardworking peasant” lore, extolled her virtues. The few times I
addressed Lixi directly, she peered furtively through thick, disheveled
bangs, then resumed picking her frayed cuffs with calloused fingers.
“Can she speak?” I inquired.
“Not Mandarin, just the Minnan dialect,” her husband confessed.“But
she’s smart. Just show her what to do.”
“Can she cook?”
“No, but I’ll teach her.”
Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
I suspected this sullen apparition was incapable of motion, either physically
or mentally, but just as I sought to tactfully end the interview--she
moved. Matthew was edging towards the doorway and the dangerous street
beyond, and Lixi flew to her feet, snatched him to her breast with practiced
swoop, and face aglow, bustled him off to his room. Then she retreated
to her chair, donned her practiced frown, and picked at her frayed cuffs.
Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
Inspired, Lixi's husband cried, “She’s great with children.”
Enough said. Sue hired her on the spot—to my immediate regret.
If the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, Lixi ought never
to have landed a man. No wok wizard, she was more of an alchemist than
a cook. She transmuted the choicest slices of fish into blackened slabs
of charcoal, and fresh vegetables, baptized in oil and pickled in salt,
became mush.
And how to communicate with her? Her Mandarin was worse than ours, and
she could not read. Even sign language failed. I suggested to Sue that
we dismiss her, but Lixi’s desperation defused my anger, and I consoled
myself that man does not live by rice alone.
Though incommunicado with us, Lixi was telepathic with tots—especially
Matthew, whom she bore on her back from dawn to dusk. But no wonder she
understood children: she had four of her own before begging the doctor
to tie things off down below.
Mark Twain wrote, “There was never yet an uninteresting life.
Such a thing is an impossibility. Inside of the dullest exterior there
is a drama, a comedy, and a tragedy.”
Twain must have meant
Lixi, whose plebeian dust jacket does no justice to her contents. Lixi
raised four children single-handedly by working the fields until her staunch
Buddhist family drove her from home after she became a Christian. She
trekked over the mountains to Xiamen and became a day laborer, lugging
baskets of granite slung across her brawny shoulders. After two years
in the school of hard rocks, she graduated and became our brawny baomu,
lugging towheads with heads lighter but harder than the granite she was
used to hauling around.
dBack to top
Amoy Magic Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
Fujian
Lixi applied her diehard spirit to becoming a capable member of our household.
She learned Mandarin and, to my chagrin, taught herself to read some of
the characters that still eluded me. She even taught herself to cook both
Chinese and Western food. By watching Susan she learned how to whip up
a pizza, sandwiches, burgers and fries, Irish stew. Even Chinese guests
begged for her recipes.
After Lixi had been with us for two years, we moved her four children
to Xiamen to help educate them and to fatten them up a bit, for they were
skin and bone. Her oldest son eventually took up computers, her sister
opened a small shop, and Lixi used her limited income to help those even
poorer than herself, both in Xiamen and back home in Anxi, proving that
investments in the poor reap compound interest.
Give and it shall be given…
Chairman Mao claimed,
“Women hold up half the sky,” but I think that was an understatement.
Chinese women, even with hands bound by lack of education, hold up a lot
more than half.
Hire a baomu--because they have a lot to teach us!
Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
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Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
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Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
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Back to top Amoy Magic
Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
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Back to top Amoy
Magic Guide to Xiamen and Fujian
Dr.
Bill Brown, Box 1288, Xiamen University MBA Center
ÅËάÁ®²©Ê¿ÏÃÃÅ´óѧ¹¤É̹ÜÀíÖÐÐÄ1288 ÐÅÏä ÏÃÃÅÊÐ ¸£½¨Ê¡ 361005
Xiamen, Fujian 361005
E-mail: chinabrown1@yahoo.com
÷ÈÁ¦ÏÃÃÅ£¡
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