Betty Cutts' Blog

I love Jesus and appreciate his life that flows through me to love others. I hope you enjoy a window into my life.

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Location: Morehead, Kentucky, United States

Betty is a housewife and community volunteer with a Master’s Degree in Elementary Education. She has taught as a volunteer teacher in an English as a second language (ESL) program, and three summer English camps in China. She has also served as a volunteer court-appointed special advocate (CASA). Betty served as secretary for Morehead Sister Cities and spearheaded the Morehead exchanges with Morehead's Sister City - Yangshuo, Guangxi, China. She is a Rotarian and past President of the Morehead Rotary Club. She and her husband David, a retired physics teacher, have two sons, who are engineers with national companies, and four grandchildren.

Tuesday, February 08, 2005

Chinese New Year

Many of my friends are getting ready for Chinese New Year today. I will be traveling to Lexington, Kentucy to have a real Chinese meal with several of my Chinese friends. It will not be American-Chinese like most local Chinese restaurants. You can get real pig's stomach at this restaurant. The American-Chinese restaurants I ate in China didn't always quite get it right, so I can imagine the frustration of Chinese trying to get traditional food in Chinese-American restaurants here.

This is the year of the rooster. Who knows how far back these zodaic symbols go. They are different from the western symbols based back in Babylon or somewhere. The Chinese culture does it their own way. Their writing began from top to bottom because they were writing on strips of bamboo when others were writing on clay. Later they invented rice paper which can be rolled up and stashed away much easier than brittle western paper. When they invented gun powder, they sensiblily used it to celebrate New Year rather than kill their neighbors.

I have come to appreciate deeply the Chinese people. I teach several of them English at my church. They value learning and teachers much more than their western counterparts. It is their saying that a favored teacher becomes like a father or mother to be always honored. Any time I visit in China or Taiwan the door of my students or their parents' door is open to me.

I value their culture so much that I am trying to learn their language. At 59 that is not an easy task. I have a Chinese tutor who is patiently stuggling with my struggle. They are practical about their verbs not messing with all the tenses and verb form changes involved with English verbs. One verb does it all with a few time words thrown in for understanding. If you go to town, you go to town. In English if you go to town you have to go, went, and have gone. The characters are also interesting although they are not easy. I think of them as art and philosophy, and then I can appreciate then even when I cannot read them or write them. Being an artist myself, I appreciate the art involved in using a brush instead of a pen. Being computer literate, however, I really feel for the Chinese trying to put an e-mail thought into all those characters.

Enough for today.
Blessings,
Betty Cutts




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