I’m back!



I’m writing this entry from a net cafe at lunch time. Many, many things have happened over the last two months, some good some not so good.

The Updates have been rather sparse recently, mainly due to my intransigence and bad mood. I haven’t had the will to write anything much less log on the net, type, add pictures etc…

Christmas, the new year and the Spring festival have all passed by. I worked on Christmas day, and the new year was also pretty low key. I spent most of Janyary working at a local primary school, wasn’t much fun and I really loathed having to get up at 6.30 to go and do it. Of course I wasn’t meant to do any childrens classes after the new year, but they said they had no other teachers, so I did them a favour, and grudgingly obliged.

The School I was working at is quite a good school out in the east of the city, but that said, it’s still a primary school. Looking back I’m glad that I have the experience of doing this, it makes me really appreciate just how much better it was last year teaching at 长师。 I used to think there were problems there, but it pales into insignificance compared to some of the things I have had to face in the past few months.

So come the end of January the Spring Festival was upon us. Two weeks of fireworks – or more accuratly – insendury devices exploding morning noon and night. I remember this from last year, and it’s really quite spectacular. Especially on night of the new year, when come midnight, the night sky is constantly lit-up for at least 2 hours by multitudes of fireworks. Really quite special, and there is nothing quite like it back home – Bonfire night doesn’t even come close!

However, after 2 weeks of banging and being woken up at 4am by explosions large enough to destroy a small farm, it gets rather annoying.

I bought some great fireworks, spent about 100元 total. Two long bazooka looking devices, one red stick of TNT (I kid you not!!) , a bag of little green mock hand-grenades, some 3000 red bangers strapped together and something akin to a Roman candle. This was more like a Roman firebomb, I almost killed myself by not retiring the full 1000 metres as required – was incredibly loud, i couldn’t hear much the next morning, except a high pitched ringing sound. Now I fully understand why these things are illegal in the UK!

So the Spring festival was a welcome break from teaching and allowed me time to re-focus my energy elsewhere; namely, what to do next semester. My job wasn’t what i had been led-to-expect, and it was making me feel really unhappy about things.

So I decided that I was no longer going to work with kids, full stop.

I could just walk-away, afterall it’s a good time of year for jobs, and the perfect time to start studying for the new semester. But at the time I thought it prudent to keep in my employers good-books and not piss him off by resigning or vanishing into thin air.

However my decision was made for me when a couple of days into February I got a call from him. He said that there was no work available during Feb (except kids classes at god-awful qinguha) and that he suggested I take the ‘month-off’. I said that ‘you leave me with little choice’ so i took the month off. He then went on to say they would be unable to pay for my apartment, because, I was having the ‘month-off’.

This was the final straw, and is what ultimately led to my leaving the company.
(Lesson learned: NEVER work for a company dealing with foreigm teachers in Changchun. They are all money grabbing opportunists who prey upon naive first timers/those that can’t get work elsewhere/those that have no other choice at the time (me) Please take it from me, AVOID AVOID AVOID )

So he wanted me to have the ‘month-off’ at my own expense, and still continue to honour the contract for the next semester。I think not. You can’t cherrypick which parts of the contract to enforce and which parts to ignore. You most certainly can’t threaten your teachers with visa-cancellation if they refuse to continue to work, as they did when I said i can no longer work if you keep on moving the goal posts when it suits you.
Anyway, as of last wednesday I disappeared. I changed my phone number and moved on. I said nothing of my future plans to anyone and just upped-sticks; gone.

It’s all very sad that this is how things have to be done, but doing things ‘the right way’ or as you would back home (i.e go to the authorities) , cuts no mustard here. I learnt that before and i’m not about to make the same mistake twice.
Will post more exact details later!

BTW for those that want to know My QQ address is: 125873000

David


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8 thoughts on “I’m back!

  1. Give us all a fucking break. IT IS YOUR FUCKING responsibility to know the conditions of employment before you sign a contract and move there. Don’t give us this shit about you are paid only for teaching minutes and shit, you should fucking ask. Don’t give us this shit about not getting paid for commuting time – you fucking knew you get paid for teaching time and guess what – you fucking accepted the condition that you had to teach at various locations – so fuck you. Do jobs in your home country pay you for sitting on the freeway in a traffic jam on your way to work or way home from work ??? FUCK NOW

    Shut up and take some god damn personal responsibility you dumb shit.

    BOO HOO HOOO — I AM A FOREIGNER – GIVE ME EVERYTHING I WANT

  2. Give us all a fucking break. IT IS YOUR FUCKING responsibility to know the conditions of employment before you sign a contract and move there. Don’t give us this shit about you are paid only for teaching minutes and shit, you should fucking ask. Don’t give us this shit about not getting paid for commuting time – you fucking knew you get paid for teaching time and guess what – you fucking accepted the condition that you had to teach at various locations – so fuck you. Do jobs in your home country pay you for sitting on the freeway in a traffic jam on your way to work or way home from work ??? FUCK NOW

    Shut up and take some god damn personal responsibility you dumb shit.

    BOO HOO HOOO — I AM A FOREIGNER – GIVE ME EVERYTHING I WANT

  3. AND IF YOU REFUSE TO WORK – THEY HAVE EVERY FUCKING RIGHT TO CANCEL YOUR VISA AND HAVE YOU DEPORTED –

    IT’S CALLED …. BREACH OF CONTRACT

    EITHER QUIT YOUR JOB WITH LEGAL MEANS IF THEY BREAK THE CONTRACT

    IF YOU DON’T THEN IT’S YOUR DAMN RESPONSIBILITY IF YOU STAY THERE AND YOUR RESPONSIBILITY IF YOU DON’T WORK AND GET DEPORTED

    DUMB ASS

  4. AND IF YOU REFUSE TO WORK – THEY HAVE EVERY FUCKING RIGHT TO CANCEL YOUR VISA AND HAVE YOU DEPORTED –

    IT’S CALLED …. BREACH OF CONTRACT

    EITHER QUIT YOUR JOB WITH LEGAL MEANS IF THEY BREAK THE CONTRACT

    IF YOU DON’T THEN IT’S YOUR DAMN RESPONSIBILITY IF YOU STAY THERE AND YOUR RESPONSIBILITY IF YOU DON’T WORK AND GET DEPORTED

    DUMB ASS

  5. You obviously haven’t read all of what I have written, work for Star or are just very dull. Probably all of the above.

    You don’t understand China very well If you think you can ‘…QUIT YOUR JOB WITH LEGAL MEANS IF THEY BREAK THE CONTRACT’

    In the west this is possible, In Changchun this is simply not possible.

    As for the contract, I knew what I was signing. I knew how much I was going to be paid- but when the company tells you – we have no more classes for you for another 6 weeks – therefore not getting any salary – AND you can’t work elsewhere as Star wont let you move, you have very few choices.

    The primary obligation of an employer is to provide work, this was started in the contract. If it cannot do this then IT is in breach of IT’S obligations. Not me.

    Chinese contract law is not like in the UK, you have to treat it as such and be prepared to jump ship if your employer starts to mess you around. They did, so I left.

  6. You obviously haven’t read all of what I have written, work for Star or are just very dull. Probably all of the above.

    You don’t understand China very well If you think you can ‘…QUIT YOUR JOB WITH LEGAL MEANS IF THEY BREAK THE CONTRACT’

    In the west this is possible, In Changchun this is simply not possible.

    As for the contract, I knew what I was signing. I knew how much I was going to be paid- but when the company tells you – we have no more classes for you for another 6 weeks – therefore not getting any salary – AND you can’t work elsewhere as Star wont let you move, you have very few choices.

    The primary obligation of an employer is to provide work, this was started in the contract. If it cannot do this then IT is in breach of IT’S obligations. Not me.

    Chinese contract law is not like in the UK, you have to treat it as such and be prepared to jump ship if your employer starts to mess you around. They did, so I left.

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