Head for the Hills: Nan Shan
The Spring semester of 2007 passed in a dizzying rush for me. Hard work is nothing new to me but rarely have I spent so much time with my nose buried in books; there were days when, as my housemates retired to their rooms I was still sitting at the dining room table finishing up preparations for the next day's classes, and when they got up to start their day I was already set up at my post, making harried reviews for classes I was taking or teaching.
I had a busy schedule of full time one-on-one instruction (from good, demanding teachers) in two different languages in two different language families, neither of which has any fundamental similarity with my mother tongue. Then I taught a few hours a week as well. Wondering why no one heard much from me between February and July? Because I was losing my mind.
I did, however, manage to get into the mountains a few times. The first time this year was on a pleasant, one-day hike through some classic Xinjiang mountain scenery. Pine trees, rolling green hills, bubbling streams, and the occasional herder's yurt.
