China Daily (Hong Kong)

A life of stories shared and lived in China

- Eric Nilsson

Ostrich rodeos. Leprosy villages. Disaster zones.

Robotic dinosaurs. Heroin addicts. Yak herders — who break dance.

Catching bees in my mouth — the deep-fried kind that “buzz” between chopsticks pinched by ethnic Miao women, who sing until guests snap them into their maws. (That’s after guzzling Miao moonshine from an ox horn.)

This has been my life as a journalist in China. A life of stories shared — and lived.

Sleeping next to yak dung in a Tibetan nomad’s tent beneath a glacier in an isolated swath of Qinghai province’s Yushu.

Eating horse intestines on the floor of the house of an elderly Kazakh nomad, who

This Day, That Year

ItemfromOc­t24,1993,in ChinaDaily:Baskin-Robbins, theworld’slargestch­ainof icecreamst­ores,hasopened itsfirstou­tletinChin­a....

Beijing’sdessertlo­verscan nowenjoyit­s31flavors.

From Baskin-Robbins and Walls to Haagen-Dazs and Meadow Gold, foreign ice creams are now widely available across China.

Haagen-Dazs alone has hunts with golden eagles on horseback in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

Discussing sexual rehabilita­tion with Sichuan province’s Wenchuan quake survivors paralyzed by spinal cord injuries. Reporting from Beijing’s Paralympic­s opening ceremony. Heading China Daily’s Sunday edition on such frantic nights as when MH370 vanished.

I arrived to “do my year in China” a decade ago. I never left. That’s because the country has so much to offer. And there’s so much foreigners can contribute to its developmen­t.

I’m shadowing the head of the UN in China as he tours Jiangsu province’s wetlands. I’m releasing a book about the Wenchuan quake zone from the podium of the Shanghai World Expo’s UN Pavilion.

The night before, I’m sleeping among goliath beetles on the floor of a school in one of Anhui province’s poorest mountainsi­de com- 380 stores in 84 cities, big and small.

Research company Euromonito­r Internatio­nal said in a report last year that the Chinese market would grow substantia­lly over the next few years because of rising disposable incomes.

While US brands are the market leaders in China, Russian brands are also becoming popular.

They took off this year as munities.

I’m in a cave with a monk. I’m with a boardroom with a Fortune 500 CEO. I’m listening to heroin addicts in Sichuan province’s Emeishan.

Journalism has shown me China is a country best discovered from the backs of yaks, ostriches, horses, elephants and camels. That is, to navigate its deserts, mountains, grasslands and farmlands.

There are opportunit­ies to get involved beyond work. Colleagues and I started a volunteer group in Wenchuan in 2008. This inspired me to generate another group in Yushu’s quake zone five years ago.

During the past half-decade, we’ve delivered literally tons of clothes, food, medicine, computers and the like to Yushu’s nomadic schools.

Last summer, we brought a girl from the desolate highlands to Beijing for a cleftpalat­e surgery. This summer, we brought a boy to Qing- trade between the countries got a major push, and Chinese consumers became more aware of products from their northern neighbor.

Russian ice creams are generally less expensive than many premium foreign brands available in China.

One package of traditiona­l hai’s Xining for ear surgery.

We also fully fund underprivi­leged university students’ educations.

A highlight of my time is — a decade after arriving in the country, knowing nothing about the language and actual society — winning the China Government Friendship Award, the country’s “highest honor for foreign experts”.

Sometimes, I take our tykes on my lap and tell them about adventures I’ve had in China. I’ll perhaps someday do the same with their children. Maybe here. Maybe they’ll also be raised in China.

I’d hope so. Grandpa will have many stories about our times in China. Ten years into China, I’m not planning to do another year. I’m hoping for 10 more. At least. There are many stories left to tell. And to live.

23, nurse in Shaanxi province

“There is no such canteen in the city I’m living in, and many elderly people like me are looking forward to it.”

Contact the writer at erik_nilsson@ chinadaily.com.cn

78, retired teacher in Shaanxi province

Russian ice cream, weighing 100 grams, is typically priced at 10 yuan ($1.50). A small cup of Haagen-Dazs ice cream weighing 81g costs 33 yuan.

“Such a canteen is exactly what we need. Our daughter is living in Beijing and we don’t want to move there.” homemaker in Yunnan province

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