Fish Tales and Film
Chinese mid-Autumn Festival – zhōng qiū jié
- started with the fat full moon on 16th September in Pisces, and fire
crackers on each corner, exploding. Then China eased into moon cake
festoons and family rituals for the next three days.
Some stay at home, but many Chinese people like to
travel, and many come to Shandong province in eastern China, where I have the
great luck to live - at the far edge of town, by Jinshatan Golden Beach – to
get the last of summertime and the still warm sea.
Jinshatan, 1935, courtesy of Mr Mountain-Shan |
On the16th as the party opened, the waves were breaking
madly, having eaten part of the fishing village up the road in one huge bite;
gone. I went to film that night, and all that was left of the three small homes
were baby pumpkins clinging to the sand and earth, their roots like tiny veined
fingers burrowing down into the flimsy soil, as if they knew that, yes, their
time was up too. Everything washed away, washed clean. Tomorrow the pumpkins
will have gone too.
But the sea was warm on the 17th, and inviting.
We all ran on the still hot sands, scaling Golden Beach, looking
for our favourite spot, arms heavy with food hampers and frilled umbrellas.
I had to do it, I couldn’t help it. I bought a huge
rubber ring like the Chinese - the size of a child - and joined the riders
bobbing like bouys in the water.
Bobbing along watching lovers curl around each other,
cheek to cheek, fingers locked, bodies bound forever to eternity. I spy, not
far off, new-mother-in-law watching from the shoreline, tapping gently
the present and possible future against the ample heart which beats within her
tiny frame.
There are the selfie gangs of youth, arrogant and tasseled,
tattooed and modern, hip slim, sexual and casual. Fisher-folk, and
loners, solitary idlers, secret drinkers, happy businessmen letting their hair
down, and women wearing clinging silk beach wear – eat your heart out Victoria Beckham - more like models ascending a catwalk, then sinking to our sea, discarding
flimsy rhinestone sandals and delicately holding white lily flowers to the wind,
to have their photos taken. Lily is the festive flower. The local toilet cleaners, armed with sprays and nets, stand admiring all of us, like kings and queens in front of their '4 star tourist toilets.' We grab, like greedy children, this last flush of
summer, squeezing out the very last drop and lolling long till night falls.
Eating, drinking, making merry.
Some of us are quite drunk by nightfall, staggering
slowly back to home or hotel. Sun-licked and sand bitten. And under our fish-tailed
Piscean moon which plays hide and seek with the clouds, lovers kiss in dark
corners and fishermen wait the night long: no work tonight my friends,
out there the sea is far too rough !
I am still on holiday. I have forgotten that I am really
back at school. I forget time, here on the beach. I forget about films and
teaching film English, and documentary, and eager students, as I bob outwards,
towards the heads, heart pounding, a bit scared; waiting for the biggie to come
– that wave – which
will drag me back to the shore, once more.
Once more…
What an incredibly beautiful environment you show us. I'm amazed by the thought of walking 8km by the ocean every day. Do you walk back too? You must be super-fit, and how wonderfully clear your mind must get with the sea wind blowing dull cares away. es
ReplyDeleteHappy to read your stories !
ReplyDeleteThat is a lot of walking Jeannette. I am doing the Concordia Shuffle today to raise money for student scholarship and it is only 7 kilometres! Happy. Peace. Love.
ReplyDeleteJeannette, it's always a pleasure to read you, dear friend. Thank you
ReplyDelete