澳门赌场招聘-赌场有哪些_免费百家乐追号软件_全讯网最新资讯网址 (中国)·官方网站

How a five-year stay in Guangzhou changed a life of a Finnish student

Share
  • Updated: Jul 23, 2015
  • Written:
  • Edited:
Source: http://paper.i21st.cn/index_21st_issue_1113.html#Focus
Interview by: Wang Xiaoying

When Sara Jaaksola stepped on an airplane to China in 2010, the then 22-year-old Finn didn’t predict her exchange program with Guangzhou University would change her life.

"I was prepared to stay one semester, but now it’s been more than five years. I just fell in love with learning Chinese in China,” she said.


Sara Jaaksola Provided to 21st
 
Five years is a long time for a foreigner to stay in China, long enough that Jaaksola now calls coming back to China returning home. In a sense it is. “I had been in the safety of my mother’s belly when she was expecting me in the late 1980s in Beijing,” she said.

According to Jaaksola, this may have contributed to her passion for Chinese language and culture. In high school, she found her Chinese name online and let everyone know they could call her by that name if they wanted to. She also read massive amounts of books about China and surfed the Finnish version of Taobao.com to find China-related items.

Though Jaaksola started learning Chinese in 2008 at The University of Tampere in Finland, it was not until 2010 that she was closely bonded to China.

"I knew some things about Chinese culture, but actually living here in China is a totally different thing. China is as diverse a country as any other country. It’s huge and has many different people and cultures. I think that vast *diversity is something I didn’t really realize before,” she said.

That encouraged her to stay in China longer. “My Chinese-learning destiny was sealed when I applied for the undergraduate program in 2011 at Sun Yat-sen University. Chinese officially transformed from a hobby to my major,” she said.

Since then, life in China has slowly started to become more ordinary for her and she has even started enjoying life as Chinese people do.

"There are no strict rules. The Chinese don’t mind it if you can’t use chopsticks or eat *dim sum with your fingers. I think the Chinese, perhaps especially the Cantonese, are very relaxed people and there’s no need to worry about making mistakes or embarrassing yourself,” she said.

Now, Jaaksola is pursuing her master’s degree in teaching Chinese as a second language at Sun Yat-sen University, which means she still needs another year to finish her studies.

"For me, it’s never boring in China. Of course it’s the same as living your daily life, but with a twist,” she said.
TOP
十六浦百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网游戏平台有哪些哪家的口碑最好| 基础百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 金狮娱乐| 游戏机百家乐官网作弊| 玩百家乐新澳门娱乐城| 快乐之都| 百家乐白茫茫| 百家乐官网风云论坛| 闲和庄百家乐娱乐平台| 百家乐官网翻天youtube| 澳门百家乐游戏说明| 湛江市| 沙龙百家乐娱乐网| 百家乐官网赌博代理| 威尼斯人娱乐注册网址| 百佬汇百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 优博线上娱乐| 百家乐官网倍投软件| 赌场风云| 伟易博百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 德州扑克官网| 广州百家乐酒店用品制造有限公司| 百家乐官网网上公式| 二八杠自行车| 澳门百家乐开户投注| 神州百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 大世界百家乐官网娱乐城| 大发888是真的吗| 百家乐娱乐城游戏| 百家乐官网21点游戏| 万利娱乐城开户| 百家百家乐视频游戏世界| 百家乐赌机凤凰软件| 百家乐官网鞋业| 百家乐官网开户送百元| 德州扑克比赛视频| 全讯网888| 海王星百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐视频游戏客服| 芝加哥百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 |