Women's Gymnastics
I was fortunate enough to see the women’s all-around final in gymnastics yesterday. I love that gymnastics is more than a sport – though there’s plenty of athleticism – and it’s more than a competition – though there’s plenty of that too. It’s an art form, a dance, and it’s very mental. One of the things that TV viewers have a difficult time appreciating is that the event, in fact, resembles a four-ring circus. While one competitor is on, say, the balance beam, three others are simultaneously performing their event, the PA announcer is blabbing in three languages, and, most distracting of all, the gal doing the floor routine has her music of choice blaring on the speakers.
Most of my focus was on the lead group of the two Americans, Nastia Liukin and Shawn Johnson, the Chinese favorite, Yang Yilin, a couple of Russians as well, and also another Chinese girl (one of the alleged 14 year-olds I think – I suppose she has the next Olympics to look forward to).
It was a beautiful competition to watch and the drama climaxed with the last floor routine. Going into it, Liukin was first, Yang was second, and Johnson was third. Under pressure, all three did beautiful routines, no out-of-bounds or falls, and Johnson managed to edge Yang out for the silver.
Opening Night
Along with thousands of other Olympic fans, who chose to sweat it out in the crowds rather than stay in the air conditioned confines of their home, we watched the ceremony on the big screen and were not disappointed. The finale I found particularly gorgeous: a man was lifted up and ran in the air, torch in hand, almost as if he were on the moon. He ran like this around the entirety of the rim of the stadium and, when he reached the final resting place for the flame, touched his fire to it in dramatic fashion.
When the Chinese delegation entered the stadium, the crowd erupted in cheers.
They are chanting the ubiquitous “Jia You Zhongguo!” which means “Let’s go,
The order in which the various delegations entered the parade of nations I found quite interesting. Initially, I thought that the Olympic ethos of world peace and harmony dictated the order when
This was the first and—now that I know these occasions last for four plus hours—probably the last time for me to watch the entire event from beginning to end. It was a wonderful evening, though. Click here to see a photo a New York Times photographer took of some of us.
Today Is The Big Day
The Facelift is Complete
[photo of the air on opening ceremony day. by the way, you probably won't see my loveable yet modest neighborhood on tv]
The most disappointing feature of the “new
[courtesy of engrish.com]
Also, the myriad of construction projects have finished. Even if the buildings are not yet functional, they have managed to complete the exteriors. Besides the Olympic venues, a couple of the more noteworthy projects, which happen to be in the neighborhood I work in, include the new
China World Trade Tower 3 has been fully erected and has the flashing Christmas-like lights up at night to prove it. It is now the tallest building in
[taken this spring, you can see the China World Trade Center through the opening in the CCTV tower]
[also taken this spring, lunchtime is funtime for a number of people in our corporate plaza]
On the Way To Work…
For instance, I noticed what seemed like a bonfire in a parking lot. I suppose a fun way to spend one’s Tuesday morning…
Tai Qi is not only an ancient martial art, it can also be a staff team-building exercise…
I wish I had this guy’s dress code at work…
Back on the Blog
Since finishing that program, I began work on a project called the Green Long March. With obvious echoes of the historical Red Long March—a long and arduous journey for Mao’s communist troops, a retreat really, that allowed them eventually to claim victory—the Green Long March, similarly, is a call for another long journey to rise above the ecological challenges of our time. Beyond the somewhat grandiose name, there are some pretty interesting individual projects that occur. More on this later…