Saturday, March 26, 2011
Matthew Lien - Music and Liner Notes
from a Canadian Musician in Taiwan
Saturday, May 8, 2010
A Journey of a Thousand Miles: How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love Taiwan
When I quit my job to become an English teacher,
many people started asking me “Why?”
the magazine of the Canadian Society in Taiwan)
So, if a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step, when did I take that single step?
Let's say that this journey began in the early 1970s when I first saw David Carradine in the original Kung-Fu TV series and persuaded and my mum to sign me up at a martial arts school. Ever since then, I've wanted to go to China. I guess I just always thought that it would be Hunan province, home of the Shaolin Temple. I never thought it would be Taiwan.
Before coming to Taiwan, I took another step. I quit my job with the Thomson Newspaper chain after more than 10 years as a working journalist — the last eight and a half at the Brandon Sun. At the time, many people asked me “Why?”
The truth is, the chance to teach English in Taiwan couldn't have come at a better time. Now is not a good time to be a journalist in Canada.
For those of you who don't actually work in the business — or at least know somebody who does — you need to know only one thing about journalism. The business of journalism isn't about journalism any more. It's about business.
Want proof? Just look at media magnate Conrad Black, sometime owner and publisher of The Times of London as well as the National Post. Conrad Black's hero is Napoleon. His workers are his armies and his henchmen are his generals.
When Conrad Black used his armies at Hollinger Publishing to conquer Canada's largest newspaper chain, Southam, Black told reporters that he was “the best friend a working journalist had in Canada.”
To prove it, he immediately laid off hundreds of journalists at the newspapers he'd just acquired. Apparently, if you didn't think Conrad Black was your best friend, you weren't a working journalist any more.
The Brandon Sun was once considered “the Cadillac of small newspapers in Canada.” But for my last two years at the Sun, my mantra was “I just want my life back.” I said this at least as often as I said, “I hate my job.”
When I decided to take a chance on Taiwan and become a teacher, I took the most important steps. I sold my house, cashed out my retirement savings funds, and paid off some debts. What I couldn’t give away, I put in storage. And then, on a wing and a prayer, I came to Taiwan.
In Taiwan, I have found that teaching children can bring redemption for jaded souls, and life to weary bodies that have spent too long in jobs they can't stand.
Perhaps that's because children are life. Did not a very wise man once say “Allow the little children to come to me, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”?
That same wise man (those who knew him called him "Teacher") also said, “Whoever would save his life must lose it. And whoever loses his life... will gain it.”
When I became a teacher, for the first time in a long time, I felt like I had my life back. All I had to do was take that one child-like step.
All I had to do was give up everything I had.
Monday, April 12, 2010
Time to honour a national hero:
Sir John A. Macdonald
In an essay in the Globe and Mail (Toronto's national newspaper), former Liberal prime minister John Turner argued that one Canadian prime minister stood head and shoulders above all other prime ministers: Sir John A. Mcdonald.
This was my published reply...
It was a natural question. Who else's picture would you put on a $10 bill?
In Taiwan, officially known as the Republic of China (ROC), only two political figures appear on the currency: Sun Yat-sen and Chiang Kai-shek.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Stephen in Wonderland:
The Lure of Taiwan for Ex-pats
Autumn 2005
For some, Taiwan is a pit stop in the journey of life, or at least in a journey around Asia. They make some money (often quite good as far as temporary gigs go, especially), check out the nightlife and then move on to other locales.
Others, however, are captivated by the opportunities, lifestyle, culture, energy and ambience that the country abounds with. Even though they may have intended to stay only a few months, or perhaps a year or two at most, they linger longer; in some cases, decades or the rest of their lives.
Maple Leaf Magazine asked four Canadians – including broadcaster/journalist Stephen A. Nelson (born in Scotland and moved to Canada in 1965) why they remain here after years away from Canada. The insights about Taiwan and motivations for staying make for good reading, especially Stephen’s more humorous approach, complete with a mock interview - appropriate for a guy who first arrived in Taiwan on April Fool’s Day seven years ago.
Stephen in Wonderland
By Stephen A. Nelson
Maple Leaf: So, Stephen… What brought you to Taiwan in the first place?
Stephen: Canadian Airlines.
ML: I see. But what I mean is, “Why did you come to Taiwan?”
Stephen: I used to tell people that it was my purpose, my destiny, God’s plan for my life. But a lot of Canadians get real nervous when you tell them that - especially if it’s true. So now I just tell them I came here because I was lured by promises of love, money and future considerations.
ML: So how did you find Taiwan when you came here?
Stephen: I turned left at Japan.
ML: No, I mean did you find your destiny? Did you find love, money and future considerations?
Stephen: I did, but then I lost them.
ML: So what keeps you in Taiwan, then?
Stephen: Gravity… gravity and inertia. A body at rest tends to stay at rest.
ML: So why don’t you do something? Go somewhere?
Stephen: Well, I keep running and running, but never seem to get anywhere.
ML: Why’s that, do you think?
Stephen: Coming to Taiwan is like Alice stepping Through the Looking Glass. Things may look the same, but nothing works the way you expect it to. It's like playing speed chess through a mirror. Sometimes you have to move backwards to move forwards.
And there is always someone yelling, "Faster! Faster!" So you move faster.
But as the Red Queen says to Alice, "You have to run much faster than that if you want to go anywhere!