the low 20s; yesterday, in the sun, it was 36 degrees+. This mattered
a great deal as today I ran/cycled/ran a duathlon. Not a big deal
really; taking a third of the time of a full triathlon but since I
don't ever swim I chose to stick to the duathlon. It was almost a full
2 years ago I was last at the triathlon venue to watch the Olympic
event. It's a beautiful location set next to the hills around Beijing
and by a reservoir (where the swimming takes place). It does make for
a hilly bike ride unfortunately.
The last few weeks, since I last wrote have been fairly busy. A few
days in Hong Kong for work took me to one of my favorite cities.
Althought its only been 18 months since I was last there, i had almost
forgotten how great the place is; and in particular how distinctive it
is compared to Shanghai or anywhere else in China. The skyscrapers,
hills, high density, fast pace, linguistic mix and the diversity
between the islands, Central, New Territories and the suburbs are all
worth exploring. And everything is so accessible due to short
distances and excellent transportation.
Of course the World Cup has been the big distraction over the last few
weeks. Andrea's certainly happy at Germany's progress and performance
with crisp passing, pace, invention and finishing. All of which
England lacked for all but half an hour or so of their 4 games. One
day, hopefully in my lifetime England will actually play well as a
team against other good teams, and maybe win a match or so. But the
last few finals we've been in, we have never hit the heights that we
think (or dream) we should be capable of.
The big game last week was fun to watch, that's for sure and Germany's
progress has got Andrea much more passionate about football... which
will hopefully carry on into watching Spurs in the champions league
next season, also at 2.30am on weeknights!
The last thing of note to mention was a film festival organized by
some students at a film academy. We went to see a few films; one of
which was particularly interesting as it was done by a young Japanese
girl who wanted to better understand why the Japanese did not want to
admit, or learn the lessons from, their past atrocities in World War
2. Overall, for a 1st film, it was a good documentary but she could
have spent less time on the facts of the atrocities, more time
interviewing those who disagreed with her opinion (instead of only
interviewing those who agreed with her) and more time analysing the
reasons, and consequences, behind the 'denial' that continues. For
those interested int he topic or war crimes, or unaware of what Japan
did against the Chinese and the American POWs, check out the website
by googling: silentshame
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