Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons
Hong Kong wasn’t a place I thought I’d ever visit. Let alone call home. Initially, the plan was one year. It would be an experience. You know, like an extended family vacation in a far away land but with grocery and household lists added to the search for souvenirs. Oh. And a first marathon. There I was. Kissing forty. Mom of two. Daughters. Both under the age of eight. A highlighted-hued, ponytail topped woman who’d never set foot in Asia let alone train for something instantly striking me as way too ambitious on the way to grocery shopping that first morning. All well before I became aware of the fact our new hometown was dubbed “The Graveyard of Marriages”, domestic help was expected to walk behind an employer, and monolithic China was moving fast and furious to show each and every resident the promise of one party, two systems was no longer in anyone’s best interest. Wait. Did I mention a husband who spent the vast majority of his days and nights under the roof of a factory hundreds of miles away? An ordinary life superimposed onto an extraordinary backdrop provided an unexpected education about a city unlike any other in a very memorable way. It’s the Hong Kong you won’t get to know through the most thorough of destination city guides or even catch a glimpse of following the fullest and most researched of travel itineraries: solar calculator-fueled bartering in all kinds of markets (whether it be for fresh fruit, stickers or turtle food), impromptu conversations with very patient taxi drivers unwittingly thrown into the mix of an attempt to try to perfect one let alone the eight other tones of Cantonese, navigating motherhood in a nanny-central playground, tackling an always beyond packed public transportation system highly concerned with the spread of influenza and infant formula smuggling, ignoring expected and assumed infidelity, and training for a first marathon where there’s only one middle-aged, woman runner for miles and miles. Run, Big Lady, Run is how I ran Hong Kong.
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Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons
Hong Kong wasn’t a place I thought I’d ever visit. Let alone call home. Initially, the plan was one year. It would be an experience. You know, like an extended family vacation in a far away land but with grocery and household lists added to the search for souvenirs. Oh. And a first marathon. There I was. Kissing forty. Mom of two. Daughters. Both under the age of eight. A highlighted-hued, ponytail topped woman who’d never set foot in Asia let alone train for something instantly striking me as way too ambitious on the way to grocery shopping that first morning. All well before I became aware of the fact our new hometown was dubbed “The Graveyard of Marriages”, domestic help was expected to walk behind an employer, and monolithic China was moving fast and furious to show each and every resident the promise of one party, two systems was no longer in anyone’s best interest. Wait. Did I mention a husband who spent the vast majority of his days and nights under the roof of a factory hundreds of miles away? An ordinary life superimposed onto an extraordinary backdrop provided an unexpected education about a city unlike any other in a very memorable way. It’s the Hong Kong you won’t get to know through the most thorough of destination city guides or even catch a glimpse of following the fullest and most researched of travel itineraries: solar calculator-fueled bartering in all kinds of markets (whether it be for fresh fruit, stickers or turtle food), impromptu conversations with very patient taxi drivers unwittingly thrown into the mix of an attempt to try to perfect one let alone the eight other tones of Cantonese, navigating motherhood in a nanny-central playground, tackling an always beyond packed public transportation system highly concerned with the spread of influenza and infant formula smuggling, ignoring expected and assumed infidelity, and training for a first marathon where there’s only one middle-aged, woman runner for miles and miles. Run, Big Lady, Run is how I ran Hong Kong.
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Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons

Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons

by Rafal Szlapa
Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons

Run, Big Lady, Run: What Hong Kong Taught Me About Eights, Tortoises, The Moon, And Marathons

by Rafal Szlapa

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Overview

Hong Kong wasn’t a place I thought I’d ever visit. Let alone call home. Initially, the plan was one year. It would be an experience. You know, like an extended family vacation in a far away land but with grocery and household lists added to the search for souvenirs. Oh. And a first marathon. There I was. Kissing forty. Mom of two. Daughters. Both under the age of eight. A highlighted-hued, ponytail topped woman who’d never set foot in Asia let alone train for something instantly striking me as way too ambitious on the way to grocery shopping that first morning. All well before I became aware of the fact our new hometown was dubbed “The Graveyard of Marriages”, domestic help was expected to walk behind an employer, and monolithic China was moving fast and furious to show each and every resident the promise of one party, two systems was no longer in anyone’s best interest. Wait. Did I mention a husband who spent the vast majority of his days and nights under the roof of a factory hundreds of miles away? An ordinary life superimposed onto an extraordinary backdrop provided an unexpected education about a city unlike any other in a very memorable way. It’s the Hong Kong you won’t get to know through the most thorough of destination city guides or even catch a glimpse of following the fullest and most researched of travel itineraries: solar calculator-fueled bartering in all kinds of markets (whether it be for fresh fruit, stickers or turtle food), impromptu conversations with very patient taxi drivers unwittingly thrown into the mix of an attempt to try to perfect one let alone the eight other tones of Cantonese, navigating motherhood in a nanny-central playground, tackling an always beyond packed public transportation system highly concerned with the spread of influenza and infant formula smuggling, ignoring expected and assumed infidelity, and training for a first marathon where there’s only one middle-aged, woman runner for miles and miles. Run, Big Lady, Run is how I ran Hong Kong.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781483565354
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication date: 08/08/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 392
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Stephanie Brochinsky happily continues to call Raleigh home. Along with her favorite Rooster, Horse, and Monkey. When not in carpool listening to power ballads, she can be found rooting on the Boilermakers, shuttling teenagers to volleyball practice, virtually planning recipes and organizational hacks that stand a 2% chance of happening, and putting her running shoes and MP3 player to good use.

Table of Contents

The Question 1

Start 9

Mile 1 Trailing 21

Mile 2 Golden Dolphins 35

Mile 3 Domestic 43

Mile 4 Exhibit 61

Mile 5 Typhoon 69

Mile 6 Moon 81

Mile 7 Nine 89

Mile 8 Museum 103

Mile 9 Worlds 111

Mile 10 Pilgrim 123

Mile 11 Hot Pot 141

Mile 12 Shenzhen 149

Mile 13 Golden 181

Mile 14 Laced 187

[Golden Dolphins Training Addendum] 205

Mile 15 Twenty-Six-Point-Two 215

[What My Marathon Training Book Left Out] 223

Mile 16 Cab 225

Mile 17 Particles 247

Mile 18 Grace 253

Mile 19 Dumpling 267

Mile 20 Trailer 273

Mile 21 Phoenix 287

Mile 22 Gold Digger 305

Mile 23 Pop 319

Mile 24 Fortune 325

Mile 25 Bird Market 341

Mile 26 Classification 347

.2 365

Finish 371

The Answer 377

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