You were here for TBC 2017 Fall, so when you went back to the US after the semester, what did you miss most about China?
Man, I just missed the simple daily routines of getting up at 7 AM after going to bed at 2 AM to study for my Chinese classes, heading to the cafe and getting my 茉莉奶茶 (Jasmine Milk Tea), writing Chinese characters for two hours before Chinese class, going to class, learning Chinese with my close friends, and after that just enjoying the day in the lounge, or here on campus. I missed taking the subway to go see a new cafe every weekend; I really just miss the minute things; the daily routine that I had that got associated with Beijing, then got associated with China, then got associated with Chinese, like the Chinese language.
What would you say was the biggest reason that made you decide to come back?
I think it was one part the travel bug, the second part is my experience with China was still very relevant, very fresh. So I was thinking if I am going to go back to China, why not do it sooner rather than later, and the third part just wanting to continue building on my experience in China and build my Chinese language skills. I think it was mainly timing. I was thinking if I want to go back to China why not do it sooner rather than later, I am only gonna be an undergrad, for a maximum of four years, so I need to use this opportunity while I have it, and hopefully I’ll do the same thing after graduation and the same thing after that, but I just know I needed to come back, and I needed to come back sooner rather than later. I had already created those relationships with TBC and it was more of a “why not” kind of thing.
In what ways is your second China experience different than your first one?
This time I’m actually doing an internship, and I chose not to have an internship last time because I didn’t want to have too much work and wanted more to enjoy my experience abroad and I’m glad I did that. I’m also glad that I came back a second time to experience the other side of that, which is now internship intensive. So in the way that it differs is that now I’m expected to be at a job, to produce things for other people. It’s not like I’m getting a grade and if I get a bad grade it’s on me and it affects not only me if I do a bad job, it affects other people and how I’m represented in the workplace, and I feel like there is more pressure to become better professionally. And also, I think last time we interacted with each other as students of TBC but this time we are not at TBC all the time because of work. Most of us work 9 to 5 and like to go to a café afterward. So in that way, there is a lot less of a student experience and more of a young professional experience, and that’s a good thing that I never had before and I’m glad that I’m having it for the first time in Beijing, where it’s so easy to connect with other people who also consider themselves young professionals, and I think it’s been extremely advantageous to be a young professional in this city and I’m glad I’m doing it now before I graduate, so I get the undergrad experience, make connections and prepare for my graduate experience.
Tell us a bit more about your internship. What specifically would you be doing?
I intern with Project Pengyou, and I’ve come to really love it, to be honest. Project Pengyou was not my first choice when I decided to come here. It was more like a scrambling, close-to-last choice, not that I put them last on my list but just that time was running out. I needed an internship. I was flying very soon. I needed to handle paperwork and whatnot, so I was like “whatever I get just give it to me”, because I need something if I’m gonna be in Beijing. I got Project Pengyou. I mean the mission fit with exactly what I wanted, which was to build bridges between America and China. I’ve come to love it because the team there is young, professional and experienced. They hold strong leadership values, and they know how to run an organization. There are three paid employees there who run an international organization which blows my mind. I was talking to Alyssa, one of my supervisors about this. A lot of the teamwork that goes on there reminds of the teamwork that goes on in my high school wrestling team, which was led by my high school coach. By a lot of people, he’s known as the strong leader. This sounds kind of superficial, but my point is that I’m just really impressed with the teamwork at Project Pengyou and I’m glad to have been a part of that. I really loved it and am glad that I was accepted by them. And hopefully, I’ll have more Project Pengyou interactions in the future, as an intern or as an employee. I’ve definitely got their back for whatever they need me.
What advice do you have for those thinking to come to China?
I would say obviously keep an open mind. Everybody says that. Be patient when you are here. You might experience some frustrations with cultural shock and some things that you don’t think are cultural shock but are actually cultural shock. I think what made my China experience is that I’ve been very open to whatever comes my way, whether I’m assigned tasks for Project Pengyou, or weekend change of plans. This is a hard question. Coming to China I’d definitely say study Chinese, keep an open mind and say yes. Say yes to experiences.