Archive for the ‘being Asian-American’ Category

I Feel Like a Rock Star

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Jayna Rust at the Taj Mahal in Agra, India

I have been having a total blond-girl-in-Asia complex in Delhi and Agra. And I don’t really know how to cope.

See, this is really the first time on this trip where I’ve felt like people were staring at me. OK. “felt” is a poor choice of words. Because people ARE staring at me. A lot.

Before I left North East, I’d bought the traditional Assamese dress, which looks a lot like a saree but is easier to wear (because it’s two pieces) and is something I can take apart to wear back home. I’d had two Assamese women train me in putting it on, so I knew I’d be wearing it properly.

So on the day I went to visit Agra, home of the Taj Mahal, I figured I’d wear it, you know, hoping to blend in. Well, you know, that didn’t happen so much.

At first I thought the recent pickpocketing had just made me paranoid about people staring at me. But, then, at the first tour stop, a woman sitting on a bench, yells at me, “Hey, babe, lookin’ good!” Hmmm…weird. So maybe they ARE staring at me.

Then at the Taj, I could feel more people staring…men and women. At the entrance, I heard the kids behind me whispering in Hindi but realized they were talking about me when I caught the word mekhla (the word for the skirt of the dress I was wearing). Later, a wife and husband, both dressed in traditional Indian clothes, stopped me, and tell me, “You look wonderful in the saree…keep it up!” People staring and commenting on my dress played itself out over and over throughout the day.

I tried to ignore it, but I’d made four friends on the bus ride, a Sri Lankan-Canadian couple and two Indian guys, and one of the Indian guys — without knowing my paranoia — kept pointing out who was staring at me. He’d keep saying, “all the women are looking at you right now” or “they’re staring again.” Um, yeah, so it wasn’t just in my head.

Fast forward to the next day. I just wore jeans, an Indian shirt and my coat (which I hardly took off the whole day). Thinking it was the full-on Indian dress that drew the attention, I figured I’d be OK.

Wrong. The stares continued. And, of course there were the rude men making comments as I walked by; but I’d been to dance clubs in the states…and I’m sure what I’m hearing here is just the Hindi version of the obnoxious stuff I heard back home. I mean, I can handle the lewd, “Hey, baby,” comments and obscene gestures. But the stares??? And pictures? One English-speaking Indian couple stopped and asked me for a picture with them as did a group of high school boys. And those were just the ones who asked. I noticed a few others snapping away as I’d walk past.

I thought this was only supposed to happen to the white chicks. I mean, I’d been giving my supposed-to-be-visiting roommate the advice to dye her hair so as not to draw attention to herself. But the blonde American solo 20-something female traveler drew less attention than I in Delhi.

Instead, I’m the freak show here. There’s plenty of blondes around, and Koreans are EVERYWHERE (I even saw another wearing a saree at the Taj Mahal), and I just want them to go stare at them.

I know I should be flattered. People are clearly not doing it out of harm. And from the (non-”Hey, baby!”) comments that I’ve understood, they’re looking at me in a positive way. But I guess I realize that although I always want to be the girl who walks into a room and makes everyone stop and stare, I’m not. I’m way too self-conscious to handle it. Because there’s this little voice in the back of my head that says, “They’re thinking ’she’s too fat to wear that’ or ’she’s too skinny’ or ‘who does she think she is?’ or ’she looks like a total prostitute.’” So instead of being flattered, I freeze up and my mind starts thinking of all my flaws and how I want to hide every piece of me.

Yeah…who knew being in Mainland India would make me have this self-realization of how uncomfortable I am with my body and flattery? I sure as heck didn’t. Uh, so yeah, thanks, India. Now I’m just obscenely aware of another one of my relationship issues.

Wow. I really wish my friend Megan would have been here these last few days, like we’d planned. Not only would I have a pal to chat with, but I could totally blame her for the people staring and taking pictures and have spared myself this awful introspection.

Maybe I should become a true rock star and pick up a mind-altering drug habit to forget about it.

Jayna Rust in Delhi
Laying down to forget about the starers and quite succeeding at looking frumpy

Jayna Rust at the Tomb in Delhi
My total papparazzi shot

Jayna Rust and her new friend in Delhi
Me and my (adorable) papparazzi photog…who I spent a good chunk of the day chatting with…but didn’t get his name, of course

It’s Like I’m Chop…Sticks

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

Thanks to my friend Nikki, I learned how to use chopsticks in 10th grade. I wouldn’t say I mastered the skill. But I could eat with them when I had to.

That’s what China was…a had to. And after two and a half months of using pretty much only chopsticks, I’m pretty darn comfortable with them; I also realize that there are some dishes that are just EASIER to eat with my two little wooden (or stainless steel) friends.

However, here in Chiang Mai, almost any time I order in English I’m presented my dish with a fork and spoon in tow, and I have to request the chopsticks. It’s kind of weird. Even my Asian-American exterior doesn’t convince the servers to bring me chopsticks…

Hey, Baby

Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

baby in Seoul

My sister and I visited the welfare agency that worked with the American adoption agency through which we came to the US. Now the Korean agency has an in-house hospital where babies are cared for until they reach a month and then are placed in their adoptive homes or a foster home.

This full-head-of-hair baby was sporting a onesie that I believe all the others were wearing as well…a little “Disney Babies” one. He/she was SO cute wearing the little American cartoon characters!

All throughout the agency was evidence of our two countries’ ties through children…from the volunteers in the nursery helping care for the babies to the photos of adoptive children when in foster care and later when in their adopted American homes. (But just so you know the agency does try to place them with Korean families first, so only about half are sent to the US or Australia)

The Real Reason?

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

I’ve been a little stunned that there have been a few people here who’ve automatically started talking to me in English. One restaurant greeter later told me it’s because he doesn’t speak Korean, but as for the others…I’ve wondered why. Is it because they’ve heard me speak to someone else? Do my clothes give it away? Or do Americans have a certain walk?

Yesterday’s McDonald’s cashier may have given me the answer. “When I saw your eye makeup, I knew you weren’t from here,” she told me. “It looks different than what girls here wear.” She wasn’t being catty, just conversational. Still, I wondered if my MAC eyeshadows branded me a foreigner (or worse, a hussy). I mean, I had noticed that girls and women here rarely wear eye makeup, and for that reason, I’d been keeping my greens and blues to a minimum.

The color of choice yesterday was light purple. I don’t know the name of it because the sticker came off the bottom of the container. I think I’ll start calling it not-Korean purple.

(and here’s what my makeup looked like yesterday)

Jayna Rust's eyeshadow

The Melting Pot

Thursday, June 14th, 2007

US soldier at War Memorial Museum in Seoul, South Korea

I don’t know what I expected from South Korea. OK, actually I do. I expected everyone to be annoyed at me, an obvious Korean, and frustrated that I didn’t speak the language. I expected to be a freak of nature. And I expected for them to not understand that I grew up in the US.

My expectations stemmed from stories I’d heard from other visitors to South Korea and what I experienced in China. But my expectations were wrong. Very wrong. I’ve not been singled out here in Seoul. A few people are curious, but many here just assume I’m Korean and was born in the US to parents who didn’t find it necessary to teach me the language. They accept that I’m American, are happy when I try to use Korean, but don’t badger me with personal questions.

But it’s not just me that they don’t poke and prod at like circus freaks. It’s all Americans. They don’t gape and gasp at overweight ones nor do they whisper about African Americans. They’ve been exposed to so many Americans through the military families here and the girls of America’s Next Top Model that they realize we’re the melting pot we claim to be.

This was exemplified in my visit to the War Memorial Museum yesterday. The museum had information about all the UN troops who fought in the Korean War. In one room, the Koreans have put up statistics, dates, and a uniformed soldier mannequin for each country largely represented. The US’ soldier was an African-American. I looked around at the other countries, and most were represented by the country’s majority race. But I found it incredibly intriguing that the Koreans seem to have realized that not all Americans are white…something I find many other countries struggle with understanding about us.

other soldiers at the War Memorial Museum

Step Right Up! See the Asian-American who Can’t Speak Chinese!

Monday, May 21st, 2007

restaurant in Qinhuangdao

Wherever I eat, I can usually get by with my phrase book. I’ll use it to either ask questions or decipher the menu. Well, by “usually,” I mean in Beijing.

Now in a much smaller city, where the number of tourists is extremely low (two English-speaking college students that I met on the train, laughed when I said I was coming just to visit), I’m finding that my phrase book isn’t as helpful and that I stick out severely. This was defined by my late lunch today. I ventured into a restaurant, that upon my passing I’d noticed had a picture menu. When I asked to see the menu and was told something I didn’t understand at all, I told the hostess I only spoke English. By the time I got to the last page of the menu, I had six staff members gathered around me pointing at the menu and telling me a million things (in Chinese). Taking a table, a new group of four staff members gathered round and listened while I tried to order a doufu (tofu) dish. After the waitress spent five minutes asking me questions by writing them on paper, she finally went to fetch someone else. The waitress she brought over spoke great English, and I easily ordered what I’d been eyeing. But it was too late; I was already the spectacle of the restaurant. The table next to me kept staring and talking about me through the entire rest of their meal. As they left, one of the two women kept watching me even as she walked through the door.

The whole incident brought me back to my first year in LA. Back then, some friends and I had celebrated someone’s birthday at the racetrack in Inglewood. After the races (and a free, nostalgic Spin Doctors concert), we decided to stop at a local Latino bar. When our car full of non-Latino teachers strode into the dark room, every person stopped what they were doing to stare at us. It was no exaggeration to say that the music skidded to a stop. There was literally a moment of dead air as we made our way to the bar and Shania Twain replaced the Spanish-language music that had played before our entrance. We were stepping onto their territory and were quite the spectacle, but they still tried to make us feel welcome. Soon a little Mexican dude approached our group and asked me to dance. I obliged, smiling. Dancing with him, I felt like I was in middle school again (we danced with his hands on my hips and mine on his shoulders, and he was a good three inches shorter than me), but it was still OK.

Later, the birthday boy, who knew I usually ignore guys who hit on me (or pretend I don’t speak English), said, “That was really cool of you to dance with him.” I told him, that it was kind of fun, but moreso, I felt a bit like I had to. We were the outsiders coming in, and I knew that the first interaction with someone from our group had to be good. I represented us all.

And that’s how I felt again today. Although a part of me wanted to stare down the other guests staring at me, I knew I shouldn’t. It’s obvious they don’t see Americans here often, and however I act will be a large part of their idea of who we are. So even though I’m treated like a freak with three heads, I have to smile and be courteous and let them stare. But at least I didn’t have to dance with anyone today.

“Wo shi Meigro ren.”

Friday, May 11th, 2007

Long HairBack when I was a wee little college freshman (see right), I was often approached by Chinese foreign exchange students. Apparently, my small-town style was similar to their Chinese fashions. In Mandarin, they would ask me questions that I couldn’t understand for the life of me. After a few months at MU, though, I chopped off my waist-length hair, decided to wear makeup every day, and discovered boot-cut jeans. After these minor transformations, the questions stopped.

That is until I started planning for this trip. From the get-go, I’ve been mistaken for a Chinese gal. The Seven jeans, Hollister shirt, and American passport weren’t enough for people to question my lack of language skills. At China’s embassy, the visa officers spoke to me in Mandarin until my blank look and, “Um, hi! How are you today?” gave me away.

And now that I’m in China, nobody will believe that I don’t speak Mandarin. On my Air China flight over here this morning, the attendant and I kept playing the “You speak in Mandarin, and I’ll speak in English” game. Which seemed bizarro to me considering she obviously understood me and she spoke great English to the American chap sitting next to me.

And despite 30 minutes of confusion and nearly 10 phone calls to information lines because I only spoke English, my taxi driver –whose English was limited — still couldn’t believe I was American. When I pulled out my phrase book to point that out to him, he shook his head exclaiming, “I thought you were Chinese!” Which is exactly how everyone I’ve run into here has perceived me.

Now, I knew I would have to learn some Mandarin, but hearing about most Americans’ trips to China, I assumed I would learn “How much?” and “Where is…?” Instead, I’m taken back to my freshman year of college, and my first phrase of mastery (which I must greet everyone with) has been “I’m American.” I had no idea this trip would make me so freakin’ patriotic.