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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 4th, 2023

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  • Yeah I wouldn’t want to live here again anymore, it’s not fun long term. I could imagine Taiwan on the other hand side, it’s pretty awesome. Though I could imagine the constant threat from China looming over you isn’t particularly nice.

    Japan is also lovely, friend of mine just moved over last year. He married a Japanese woman he met in China though, that made it rather easy.

    Personally I would consider Vietnam or Thailand and maybe Philippines long term (especially after retirement), mid term we are headed for Scandinavia first.


  • Native German, fluent English, conversational Norwegian (and by extension passable Swedish; and I read 100% Danish but suck at speaking/listening comprehension), passable Dutch, Luxembourgish and French, and basic Chinese (mandarin).

    Edit: And I passed Latin in high school (grades 5 through 10), so I do manage to read inscriptions in old buildings and churches, and pick up written Italian and Spanish because of it.






  • Oh we lived in Suzhou, so not close to Wuhan at all. Just traveling to the village over CNY, year round nobody really lives here.

    Covid was still terrible, Suzhou had the strictest measures in all China since they are a hotbed of the medical industry and absolutely wanted to avoid any slowdowns, so we spent a collective total of 3 months in home isolation, experienced food shortages, had alarms taped to our doors that would trigger text messages to the nearest police station if we opened it outside of mandatory testing windows, the whole nine yards. That’s also mostly what motivated us to gtfo, made us realize we live there like cattle without free will or rights.

    In Malaysia we live in Seremban, capital city of the neighboring state to KL, and actually closer to KL airport since that’s so far out of town. I need to travel quite a bit for work, so that comes in handy.

    Not walkable either, so had to get a car first thing after arriving; relying on grab was a bit cumbersome. Now I work from home 99% of the time when I’m not visiting suppliers. We have a small representative office in KL that acts as my formal employer, but I’m functionally fully attached to the Chinese/HK company. Thanks to covid we had missed some mandatory supplier audits, and ultimately decided that to counter this in the future, someone qualified/certified needs to live in a third country jurisdiction, and I was the lucky choice.


  • I have cables that are 15 years old and still work. Not USB-C obviously, but A-A and A-B, but also some USB-C cables that are close to 10 years old now and came bundled with some OnePlus phone (the 3 I think?).

    The key to not breaking cables is to not roll them up tightly. If you need to transport them, put them very loosely into a bag or something, and everything should be fine.

    I’m using the cheapest 2m long cables I could find online, they don’t fail if treated correctly.




  • I guess there might be some monks that stray into haram territory, but yeah following the doctrine properly, they sure aren’t allowed to.

    Love Sichuan food, though it fucks up my stomach regularly… And yeah we got crazy drinkers here as well, but if I say no then it’s a hard no and they understand I don’t budge, so that’s that. I can’t handle the taste of baijiu at all, had to drink years ago with some business partners, and ever since my first proper baijiu vomit session, I’m done and over with that stuff.

    Opposite for me by the way, I’vebeen living in China all through covid since late 2017, and we only just left to Malaysia last August. So I’ve been in the village a bunch of times, though usually we’d celebrate CNY where the family actually lives, trips to the village are only for special occasions. In the future we’ll probably still come annually, but not necessarily for CNY when everybody is crazy, roads blocked and shit twice as expensive as regular.


  • Henan food is actually quite mild, Hunan is the chilli province. Here it’s mostly stews or an assortment of dough stuffed with veggies and meat in an shapes and forms, from dumplings over pancakes to steamed buns. Allegedly the original baozi came from here, but I’m sure if you research it you’ll find a million origin stories for every province.

    Right and I guess if you cite religious reasons, they leave you mostly alone. Alcohol wasn’t as straightforward since I have no reasons aside from health benefits, and then it’s the usual “but once a year won’t kill you” spiel (that I have to go through on every single occasion, even if they drop it ultimately and are happy to have a dedicated driver when the night moves on…).

    How many times a year do you generally visit the hometown?