Archive for the ‘Personal History’ Category

New Glarus Tombstones

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

China Time Machine — How Much Has Changed in 20 Years

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

My Chinese visa, 1989

The last time I stepped foot in Mainland China was April 24, 1989. I had just spent a month in-country, seeing Guangzhou, Guilin, Kunming and Shanghai. I spent the final five days of my trip in that city. The night before I left, the evening sky was filled with the protests of students as the forces that culminated in the Tiananmen Massacre of June 5. My American host at Fudan University told me it was probably a football match.

Shanghai Bund, 1989

Regarding Shanghai, it’s hard to imagine a deeper contrast. Nanjing East Road, today a vast shopping route, was a sparsely traveled narrow road. I remember a few dozen shops open, including a dusty old bakery (one of the few in China – bakeries are not part of Chinese cuisine), a bookstore with perhaps a dozen titles, a few magazine shops and little more. Dust was everywhere.

Shanghai had been an international city, an open port since the Opium Wars in the early 1800′s. Prior to that, it was simply a sleepy fishing and weaving village of little importance. As trade came through the area, foreigners moved in. By the beginnings of the 20th Century, while there were only 20 to 30,000 westerners living there, their army of Chinese laborers had built them a full city of western buildings, paved roads and the like.

Horse Racing in Earlier Days in Shanghai

In 1989, much of this was still visibly evident. Between the concrete monstrosities of communist construction, there were numerous beautiful mansions and villas for the wealth few. In the middle of the city was the abandoned British horse racing track. A gigantic part of the inner city, it was leveled to build the People’s Square park and complex of museums.

Today, Shanghai is again a cosmopolitan center of business, finance and trade.

Modern Shanghai, Pudong District

Skyscrapers dot the skyline. Streets are littered with shops, banks and other modern delights. The remaining old villas of pre-communist China are marked by historical markers, but are otherwise not very noticeable between the modern, trendy constructions of the present.

But these were changes I was expecting. The news, after all, is full of detail on the changing face of China. But there were aspects of these changes that struck me to the core. Three things in particular that I was not expecting.

Chinese Backpackers

1) Chinese Backpackers and Tourists. When I traveled China in 1989, moving from one place to another was so enormously complicated, difficult and expensive, few Chinese people did so for pleasure. I remember talking to people in a village outside of Kunming. None of them had traveled anywhere expect to the provincial capital. And those trips were only by necessity, not to see the sights.

The Chinese backpackers were everywhere, taking pictures of everything. They look exactly like I did when I was one of the first independent travelers in China all those years ago. These people saw what we were doing, copied it, and made it theirs. The Chinese backpackers, in the swarming thousands, are my spiritual descendants.

Suzhou Redlight

2) Red Light Districts in Suzhou. Nothing prepared me for a red light district in the People’s Republic of China. Walking to a pub to meet a friend and watch World Cup Soccer one night, a Mama-san grabbed my arm and took me into her small pub to show me her girls. It simply shocked me. I’ve seen Manila, Hong Kong and the infamous Patpong District in Bangkok, but never expected anything here. There was one for foreigners (located on Shiquan Street, near the intersection with Fenghuang Street), and one that was exclusively Chinese south of the Night Market.

Suzhou Massage

A local resident told me that Shanghai had closed all of their redlight districts in preparation for the Expo, and that several of them had move to Suzhou, an hours drive to the west.

Friendly People

3) Talking to People. In 1989, Chinese people were extremely reticent to talk to foreigners traveling in their country. I don’t blame them; people with foreign connections were targets during some of the upheavals in the ’60s and ’70s.

Today is different. It really is possible to sit down and talk with people. Not everyone, but lots of people are certainly open to just talking for a period of time. Common questions when they learn I can speak Chinese: “Where are you from?” “How do you like China?” “How many kids do you have?” “Four!?!?!?!”

It’s a different place. And, very largely, for the good. Twenty years ago I thought growing up Chinese was a terrible tragedy. I’m so happy to be proven wrong.

Re-Acquiring Chinese

Monday, July 5th, 2010

One of my Chinese professors once told me that learning any language is a graduating series of failures, coming at higher and higher levels. When you start a language, you fail at the simplest things. Then you can pass the salt and find the toilet, but you can’t determine who’s who in your friend’s family (a fairly complicated process in Chinese). And so on …

Re-acquiring the language after a twenty year hiatus was like this, only at warp speed. I’d listened to elementary CD’s at home in Southern California, which all seemed clear as a bell. But when I stepped in my first taxi on the first day in Shanghai and tried to tell the driver to turn left or right, my mouth opened and nothing came out.

It was like this for the first three or four days. The very simplest of statements came only with great difficulty. I moved into a youth hostel in Suzhou where very few people spoke English (the clientele were mostly Chinese backpackers). And there were days in that hostel when I would wake up in the morning, dreading going out and challenging my lack of language again. Several times, I thought I’d imagined ever speaking Chinese in the past. It was one of those ways the brain tricks you into thinking that you are someone special or different. No, I’d never done it.

Then, on Wednesday, after living in the hostel for three days, I negotiated changing my room to a nicer one. The whole negotiation and moving was done entirely in the language. One of the assistants in the hostel looked at me and said, “You speak Chinese now?” It was my first serious breakthrough. I was in heaven.

Every day after that had a breakthrough of one kind or another, very much like learning a language from scratch, but much, much faster. Phrases would come to my mouth, unbidden but remembered. The long phrase for percentage in Chinese was one. Thursday, I had a 20 minute conversation about my family with two cleaning ladies at the hostel. I’d been back in China for six days then.

The re-learning was not a smooth ride. While I gained confidence, there would always be somewhere to fall down. And once a conversation goes poorly, it becomes difficult to re-start it and convince your partner that, yes, you do understand what they are saying.

My professional conference started on Monday, June 28. I’d been in-country for ten days and, while not at all fluent, I was able to make myself understood and listen to other people. My level was still one where the language was a basic and blunt tool, not a thing of joy.

On my days back in Shanghai, before coming back to the US, I found myself again able to make simple jokes. Taxis had long ceased to be a problem. I could work my way around most forgotten or mis-understood words. I’d found part of my tongue, but not all of it. I can now remember being able to play word games twenty years ago, and know that those memories are genuine. And if I were to remain in-country for some time, I’d certainly re-acquire the ability.

But the last two days in Shanghai before boarding the plane were really very comfortable for me. My language was back, and I could use it.

China

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

I made it back from China. “So, how was it?” you ask.

Confusing, big, crowded, busy, noisy. Everything that you’ve heard, and lot’s that you haven’t. I plan on doing a few posts over the next few days, detailing some of the things that I was interested in.

As an overview, the trip was very successful. I gave a well-received speech and met lots of people from my industry in Suzhou. By coming ten days early, I was able to re-start my Chinese language skills from twenty years ago. And, I was able to get all of my techie-things more or less accomplished (bypassing the Great Firewall and posting to Facebook – getting my iPhone to work on a Chinese SIM card – and the like).

I expected to see lots of things: buildings, roadways and factories. I was not expecting to see others: Chinese backpackers, loads of Chinese speaking foreigners and an incredible invasion of American franchise stores.

If you want to see my photos from Facebook, but for some reason haven’t managed to, they can be seen on the following links:

Shanghai, my first day

Suzhou, my first day in a smaller Chinese city

Traveling in China

Day Trip to Shanghai

Back in Suzhou

Speaking at LISA, Five Star Hotel and a return to Shanghai

Seeing Nick and Aubrey, and my last day in China

Additional Letters to Dad

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Below the fold are the other letters to Dad that I have from his memory book on his 75th birthday. These are not all the letters, but all of those that I have.

(more…)

Lake Santee, 1966 and 1967

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Watercolor from a photograph, 1969. Original last seen at Parkinsons' house.

It has taken me two trips and multiple efforts to digitize the family book from Spring 1966 to Spring 1967. The photos have adhered to the plastic and neither camera scans nor flatbed scans will smooth the wrinkles. Nonetheless, here is the complete book – color corrected for age. The full images are there as well, just choose the “Download” option.

Let me know what you think. The photos are here.

Chinese Ed

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Shi En De - my Chinese name

Yesterday, part of the day was spent working on some very old brain cells. I had to recreate my Chinese name, given to me at Bloomington in 1988 and unused since 1991.

It took awhile, but I got it done.

On the Cusp

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

Ed Steussy, Parker Elementary School, 3rd Grade, Mrs. Robinson's class, 1972

This post is in answer to JR’s question on Facebook, “Great picture ! Where does Ed come up with these ? Does he save everything?”

Simple question, long answer. We’re on the cusp of a fundamental change in human history: digital artifacts vs. physical objects. The key here is that digital is really, really different. Let me walk you through my journey.

About 2005, I realized that taking digital photos was a very different experience from film. Obviously, not using film is a great improvement in many ways — I can see a photo immediately and I can erase any photo I don’t want. But these are not the key, culture-shaking changes. One key difference is price: digital is free (or, from an economic perspective, the marginal cost of each additional image is zero). This means lots of pictures for even small events. When I was 25 and traveled around the world for eight months, I took 504 photos. Today, I’ll easily shoot 200 pictures at a child’s birthday party.

Nicholas Freitag's Deed to the family farm in Wisconsin, 1869

Another difference is the ability to make perfect copies, again for free. I have complete copies of all of my 27,000 photos in no fewer than five separate places, including two laptops. I also have 5000 of my photos from the past year on my cellphone. The very best photos are shared on Facebook and the Steussy Ranch website, which make them widely (Facebook) or universally (steussy.com) available.

Low cost and increased availability/usability are two key elements in the change. Realizing this, I start using my camera differently. When one of the kids brings home a test or makes a drawing, I take a photo. When I’m in my brothers’ or sisters’, aunt’s or parent’s houses, I’ll take photos of the key family pictures they have hanging. That way, I have my own copy. Business card from someone? Have to use the camera on it before I inevitably lose it. I’ve been doing this now for five years. And all of the images are in a 27,000 strong database that resides comfortably in my laptop (with a complete copy in my wife’s laptop).

The first page of my father's diary. Starts at age 10, probably 1933. First dated entry, July 1938.

Digitizing pre-digital images and records is an essential part of this database. While virtually everything created since 2005 has a digital component, and hence is stored somewhere where it is likely to be saved, most things before then and everything prior to 1995 needs to be recorded digitally in order to be preserved.

“But what about when your computer crashes or dies?” Aunt Mary asks. Good question. Since my computers hold a lot of critical business and personal data, I have a highly paranoid backup scheme. I have no fewer than five backups of my image database, and they are constantly maintained. From a culture-wide perspective, images that I post here on the Steussy Ranch are immediately copied by Google, Yahoo, Bing, the NSA, Baidu and a host of other private and public databases. Visit the Way Back Machine to see a very public version of old internet data. Once an image is on the open internet for a few days, you can assume that it will be indefinitely preserved in several places.

Maria, Unknown, Rufus (boy), Unknown, Unknown, Ruth Fretiag (girl). Undated - approx. 1918.

Charles Stross warns of a post-digital society which is incapable of forgetting, while our personal pre-digital histories deteriorate or get lost or forgotten. We’re five to fifteen years after the cusp of forgetting. When I see something important from the pre-digital era, I snap a photo and keep it. Photos of grandparents long past, family vacations from the 1960′s or 1970′s, pictures of the family dog I grew up with, scrapbooks from the 50′s and 60′s; these are what I save.

Dad. 1975.

When my father passed away earlier this month, there was one picture that we all remembered. Dad standing over the city of Amsterdam, enjoying a glass of Heineken beer after a tour of the brewery. This was Dad at his best in so many ways, captured on film by my sister, Cally, in 1975. One day, around summer 2005, I was at Cally’s house and saw it hanging on the wall. I snapped a photo of it. By 2010, it had been relegated to the basement, forgotten. The digital image I took then was the source of the photo that ran in the Courier Times, the Indianapolis Star and other places.

I’m not naturally inclined to be a packrat. But this digital collection of photos and images, letters and signatures, diaries and thoughts, dovetails with my interest in computers. So, I’ve enjoyed copying all of the photo albums from my youth, third grade school photos, pictures of my ancestors from the ninteeth century and the like and curating a database for them all.

Besides, someone will want all of this someday. I’m sure.

Calling card for my grandfather, Solon Boston Woodfin, Jr. Died 1922.

Canada, Summer 1982

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Ed (19), Chris (15), Dad (58). Canada, summer 1982

Going to Indiana

Monday, May 17th, 2010

I’m headed back to Indiana for three days later tonight. The biggest reason is to be with Mom, since she just lost the biggest part of her life just two weeks ago. I’ll help set up her iPad and make sure that she has all of her photos put together on it. I’ll also comb through the photo archives at the condo to see what I can find to scan and record.

Gabi will handle the four kids on her own in California. We’re still beside ourselves with the Temecula Preparatory acceptance for Camilla.

And China is now only four weeks away.