A TRAVELER'S LIFE
January 2004
Jacques is a good director, and a good story teller. He told many a
traveler’s tale while yours truly was on a video editing suite executing
Jacque’s demands. Firm but fair as a director on a small production (no
small feat, as anyone who has done similar work knows), and fun and intelligent
as well—c’est Jacques.
What were you doing before Taiwan?
Other forces were at work that caused Plan A to fall through, but in the end—based on the couple of weeks I spent here—I decided to get a teaching degree. That, in a nutshell is how I ended up teaching in Toronto. “I was approached by the Yunnan Television Network to be the lead male actor in a television movie called "Allen in Dali". What made you decide to move there?
A boatman on Amarapura Lake, 12 kilometers from Mandalay. Amarapura was briefly a capital of Burma in the 19th Century. The U Bein Bridge, the longest bridge in Myanmar, is visible in the background. The 1.2 km bridge is made using teak planks. Copyright Jacques van Wersch. Was it your plan to stay? If not, what was your
plan?
I remember going to Hong Kong to pick up my first resident visa (this
is something you had to leave the country to accomplish back in those days)
and I met a woman who had been at this kind of lifestyle for some time.
She told me then that I was “ruined for life” and I believed her. At least
I imagined I would kick around Asia for at least a decade. That was a decade
ago.
The main discernable difference between Taichung and Taipei was there were fewer boulevards. It was all fairly narrow streets jammed with cars, trucks, buses and scooters. Mostly scooters. And there was no concept of a sidewalk in a Western sense. I remember that made a big impact on me my first day there. I think I decided that almost everything I was seeing was “charming” when I got my first roll of photos back. I thought I would document in black and white how ugly the place was and I discovered that all the photos looked cool. I came up with a pseudo-brand called RealTaiwan and sent them away as RealTaiwan postcards—practically the whole roll. And everybody who got one said the same thing: Wow, that looks amazing. I drew a photo of a palm tree over a trash bin and wrote “RealTaiwan” on the back of each photo and sent them like postcards. That’s as far as the “brand” went. Later, I called my website ReelTaiwan for fairly obvious reasons. There were fewer Westerners back then, and locals were much more likely to point, stare and somewhat stupidly say “foreigner” or “American” … or the Chinese-language equivalents of “big nose” or “sharp nose.” It didn’t bother me Was it hard to get a job?
You have to remember that I was a certified teacher, so I could have had my pick of jobs … and I had pedagogical ideas of my own, so I was fairly disillusioned to wind up in a job where they expected me to teach in a purely rote manner. How did you approach the language and where are
you now with it?
It was the characters that got me hooked. Within weeks, I altered my
original goal from basic proficiency to wanting to be able to read a newspaper.
For the first eight months, I kept my teaching hours down below 20 hours
per week and spent about double that studying on my own at home.
Nevertheless, there’s another level: classical Chinese. I haven’t taken the leap yet. It’s a whole other world and many a sinologist will tell you that you can’t really know the language unless you know classical Chinese. So you can say that there’s room for improvement. |
What are you doing right now for a living?
I’m a national anchorman at the English-language radio station here, ICRT. What are you doing now, in your life, for fulfillment?
I go out inline skating and am always on the cusp of getting back into roller hockey. I am Canadian, after all. I just picked up the guitar again, and am in the process of relearning the basics. What has traveling/living in Taiwan brought you?
You've used it as a base for trips around Asia, right? Where have you
gone?
Any favorite places, good stories?
You see, I lived in Kun-ming (Yunnan, China) for a while and I was approached by the Yunnan Television Network to be the lead male actor in a television movie called “Allen in Dali.” [See picture on first page.] I played the American Allen opposite a budding actress from Harbin, who played a Pai maiden [one of the 26 ethnic groups in the Yunnan province]. Needless to say, I (Allen) fell in love with the Pai girl, who was clad in full traditional ethnic dress, on first sight and followed her to a place she described as a “Shangri-La.” A lot of stuff happens in between, but I end up singing “O Sole Mio” to try to win her love in a bizarre song-and-dance number at the end. We spent a month shooting the feature-length movie with a crew of 30. They treated me with kid gloves, albeit in fairly rustic surroundings, (I said Shangri-La, not the Shangri-La Hotel) so I felt like a privileged family member. I have never been so close to so many Chinese people at one time since. This would be a special memory even if I were a professional actor. But of course, I hadn’t any acting experience since high school. They were desperate with only two weeks to filming and I spoke Chinese acceptably, and more or less fit the bill physically. So the entire experience was a lark. And they have played it a few times to the entire TV-viewing public in China. That’s several hundred million people with the opportunity to watch my movie. Any plans to try something else soon?
That would make it all the more interesting. I mean who knows anything about Kiribati, other than it’s a largish equatorial archipelago just south of the Marshall Islands (another Taiwanese ally; there are 27 in total and would be 28 if our good friend Charles Taylor hadn’t been kicked out of Liberia) with a population of 99,000 residents, some of whom have been known to wear grass skirts? What advice would you give someone who wants to
go to Taiwan?
If I had to do it over again, I would give myself the luxury of an extra few thousand dollars as a buffer when starting out. Oh, and if you wander into a cavern anywhere in the world, make sure you have extra batteries, lighters, matches, etc. before getting beyond view of the cave entrance. Josh Krist is the publisher and designer of InsideOut Travel. |
Copyright 2003-2004 InsideOut Travel
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