Health Update and a Tour of Xiaonanmen

Thank you so much for following me during my adventures in Shanghai! I hope you are enjoying my adventures.

If you haven’t, please subscribe and let me know! To subscribe, enter your name and e-mail on the right side of the page. Once subscribed, you’ll receive an e-mail with each new post. If you have any questions about my life in Shanghai, let me know. Instructions are on the “To Comment” page. Also, feel free to share this blog with anyone else who may be interested in my life in China.

Now, onto this week’s adventure!

Life in Shanghai

As I’m sure all of you are aware, the beginning of the lunar new year holiday corresponded with an an outbreak of a new strand of the coronavirus here in China. The center of the outbreak is in Wuhan (closer to central China). I want to start this entry be assuring you all that I am safe and healthy. My parents have told me that many of you have been concerned about me and asked them for an update. I really appreciate that so many of you thought of me, so I wanted to take the time to reassure you that I’m fine. Wuhan is ~ 500 miles from Shanghai, so Shanghai is not locked down like Wuhan is. However, in an effort to eliminate the spread of the virus much of the city is shutdown. Many museums, public parks, and entertainment spaces are closed. Schools are also closed until the 17th (which corresponds to when the Spring semester at SJTU begins). There have been many safety recommendations, such as 1). If one is sick, go to the hospital, 2). If you visited Wuhan please check with health authorities, 3). Wear masks in public, 4). Wash your hands frequently (this is the really important one), the CDC recommends this as the best way to prevent the spread of the disease (and as I’ve seen with many of my colleagues, soap is not always used here), and 5). Avoid wild animals (both in terms of eating and interacting with).

As many of you know, during Lunar New Year, many people travel throughout China and abroad. My main concern is that following the Lunar New Year holiday, which ends on Thursday, there will be an influx of people entering Shanghai, some of which who may have been exposed to the virus. For that reason, I’m making sure to take safety precautions. For me, this includes frequently washing my hands (after being outside) and wearing a mask when outside (albeit not when I go running). The CDC also notes that masks aren’t really entirely effective at preventing spreading the disease. While I personally wish the mask could be a little more comfortable (it started to hurt my ears after a while), I was glad that it at least didn’t fog up my glasses. I’ve ordered more masks (in black), which should be delivered after the new year. Hopefully they won’t be necessary, but best to be safe. If you have any concerns or health tips for me, please let me know!

In terms of the rest of the week, it was a pretty weird week. I went to the office on Monday and Tuesday. However, I was the only person in the office, which was really weird. While I don’t mind having a full office to myself, it wasn’t that enjoyable to realize that there was almost nobody else (except the janitorial staff) in the building. So, starting on Wednesday, I began working from home. I’m going to be doing this for all of next week as well. This was a decision I made not as a health concern, but primarily so I could avoid my hour commute to sit in an empty building. However, once the University reopens, I’ll determine (based on the advice of Prof. Zu) whether it’s safe (health wise) for me to return to the office.

The benefit of working from home is that I was able to be a little bit more productive with my time. I made some notable progress on my research on the Luminosity Function and am quite close to correctly reproducing the first (of two) figures from a prior work. I also have some exciting results from my research (based on my conversation with Song Huang) that I’m planning to start writing up this week! So, maybe I’ll be submitting a new paper in the next month!

While working from home has been nice, in terms of my productivity, it has also allowed me to watch a lot of tennis! As many of you know, I love watching tennis and am a diehard Rafael Nadal fan. The Australian Open started this past week and unlike the experience for those of you living in the US, the tennis happens between 8am – 7pm, so I can watch it throughout the day! This is the first sports experience that I’ve had where it’s much better being in Shanghai than the USA. I look forward to watching more of Rafa’s matches next week as well!

In addition to watching lots of tennis, I was also able to go for two runs this week, despite the somewhat lousy weather (in the 40s, but lots of rain). I did a 4.6 mile run on Thursday and a 5.1 mile run on Friday! Even with the virus scare, I think it’s important to exercise and maintain my own fitness.

In the little time that I spent outside of my apartment this week, I did see lots of cool Lunar New Year decorations! It’s really cool how the city has been decorated.

Additionally, I noticed that some of the translations referred to it as the year of the mouse, so the rats may be cute because rats and mice aren’t differentiated in Chinese culture like they are in the US.

There was also an awesome interactive art exhibit set up in Xintiandi (near where I live) called the Airship Orchestra! It is inflatable sculptures, some of which kind of look like rats, with music playing inside!

Additionally, I saw a lot of fascinating sculptures, advertisements, and decorations throughout the city! It amazes me how decorative Shanghai is. I love that even though I’ve lived here for 4 months, there are still so many new things for me to see when I walk around the city!

One thing I do want to mention is that unlike what everyone told me, Shanghai is not completely shut down during the Lunar New Year Holiday. While I did have to order my groceries to arrive on Thursday, the local fruit store and local convenience stores (Family Mart and Lawsons) were open. Many of the stores in the local mall were also open on Sunday. So, while the city empties out, everything isn’t closed for the week.

Since many of the museums that I want to visit where shut down, this week, on Sunday, I joined the Historic Shanghai group for another walking tour, this time of the Xiaonanmen district of Shanghai. This is an area ~ 2 miles from where I live that is located on the outer boarder of the old walled city of Shanghai that is near the Yangtze River (the bund area). This is another older district of Shanghai that is in the process of undergoing urban renewal. However, there are still tons of beautiful older buildings and architectural landmarks, some of which will hopefully be restored.

The Tour began by visiting an old fire tower, that was built at the beginning of the 20th century. Then we proceeded to take a long walk weaving down alleyways to different streets and lane neighborhoods. As you can tell by these photos, these houses were built at a time to showcase a combination of Chinese and European styles with some Art Deco influences thrown in as well! These buildings were mostly built between the beginning of the 20th century and the 1930s.

We also visited a home that Albert Einstein visited and dined at when he visited Shanghai in the 1920s! I didn’t realize Einstein had ever been to Shanghai, so this was quite a treat to learn! This was the estate of a wealthy family that was later abandoned and occupied by the family’s servants during the cultural revolution.

The tour ended by visiting an old 16th century estate and library! While the compound is now unfortunately in disrepair due to a disagreement between the family who owns the home (and has since 1880) and the Shanghai government, it is still a beautiful building. I hope that one day it can be repaired to its original majesty.

Despite the wet weather conditions, I really enjoyed the tour of Xiaonanmen. It’s really interesting to see all of these old neighborhoods, especially since in a few years many of them will likely be gone or completely transformed (as is the case with Xintiandi, the neighborhood where I live).

Due to the Lunar New Year holiday and the virus I didn’t have any culinary or Jewish adventures this week. Hopefully those will resume in the coming weeks.

While not as fun as some of my other weeks, I hope that you are comforted by my explanation of what’s been happening here in Shanghai (with respect to the coronavirus). Hopefully a cure will be discovered soon and life can return to a semblance of normalcy. Additionally, I hope that you also enjoyed seeing some of my photos from my tour of Xiaonanmen as well! This upcoming week will be relatively quiet. I’ll be working from home so hopefully I’ll make more research progress. I look forward to sharing my upcoming adventures with you all! If you have any questions/comments about Shanghai, let me know!

In peace,
Jesse

A Chinese New Year Celebration and a Second Visit to the Jing’an Temple

Thank you for following along with my adventures in Shanghai! I hope you’ve been enjoying experiencing this amazing city with me!

If you haven’t, please subscribe and let me know what you’ve been enjoying! To subscribe, enter your name and e-mail on the right side of the page. Once subscribed, you’ll receive an e-mail with each new post. If you have any questions about my life in Shanghai, let me know. Instructions are on the “To Comment” page.

Now, onto this week’s adventure!

Life in Shanghai

The fall semester here at SJTU officially wrapped up last week. However, this really doesn’t change much in terms of my day-to-day activities. The only thing that’s really changed is that the SJTU campus has emptied out and the Astronomy department for all intensive purposes is empty (and will likely remain that way until after the Lunar New Year Holiday, which ends on 1/30). For me, in terms of my research and productivity, last week was a normal week (except for the Departmental Chinese New Year Celebration and end of the semester meeting in the Zu research group). I’m still making progress on my Luminosity Function research as well as making fast progress on looking at how the cluster Stellar Mass – Halo Mass relation is impacted by the incorporation of satellite galaxies. So, I’m aiming to make headway on these results over the next two weeks while the university is on break.

Last week, the Astronomy and Physics Departments held a joint Chinese New Year party/performance! This was a surprise to me. I found out about the party 5 minutes before it started. 🙂 The party featured different department members playing games, singing traditional Chinese songs, dancing, and giving speeches. A woman also played the Pipa, the Chinese Guitar, which was really cool to see/hear. My friend and fellow postdoc, Haojie, told me that she was playing a song that was hundreds of years old!

Unfortunately for me, the majority of these were in Mandarin, so I couldn’t follow much. However, that didn’t prevent me from participating in the games!

Thanks to Haojie, you can see me play a game where I had a box of ping pong balls strapped to my waist and had to jump and dance around to get them out. As you can see, I was a good sport and had fun, while still making a little bit of a fool out of myself. Even though I didn’t win, it was a fun, yet bizarre experience! 🙂

Throughout the celebration, the department was giving away red packets on WeChat. This was done by posting the packet on the WeChat group and giving the packet to the first 10-20 people who clicked on the packet. These were small monetary gifts (< $10). I won ~ $4. Additionally, every attendee was given a bag of snacks as well as a blanket, which was a gift from the union (that represents the faculty and staff).

For my adventure this week, I returned for a second visit to the Jing’an Temple. I wanted to see how a Buddhist temple is decorated for the Lunar New Year Holiday.

The primary decorations are the beautiful red lanterns, which adorn the temple ceilings as well as the beautiful flowers

For those of you who missed some of my early posts, the Jing’an temple has amazing statues of different Buddhist deities and aspects/depictions of the Buddha.

As you can tell from these photos, the architecture and aesthetic of Jing’an temple are breathtaking! There’s so many little intricacies and details of the sculptures and the temple that I didn’t notice on my first visit!

I want to emphasize (as done in previous posts) that this is an active temple. There were a lot of people making offerings, praying, and burning incense at each statue. However, out of respect for their privacy, I tried not to take photos of them while they were praying.





Unsurprisingly, there are tons of Chinese New Years decorations up all over Shanghai! Since the Jing’an temple is located closer to the center of the city, I saw some of the coolest decorations there!


You can see that the decorations stretch along the entire length of this mall!

There were also a lot of cute smaller decorations!


In addition to the decorations, outside Jing’an temple, I saw a street musician, playing the guitar. Unlike big cities in the US and Europe, I haven’t seen any street musicians in Shanghai. He was playing a mix of Chinese songs and English songs. He played Bob Dylan’s the Times they are a Changin’ while I was there. One difference is that unlike in the US, where everyone gives coins or paper money, he had a sign set up with his QR code so you could scan and give him money via WeChat or Alipay! So everything is done digitally here!

In addition to the decorations I saw near Jing’an Temple, I also found Chinese New Year decorations in the areas and shopping malls near where I live.

While much of the decorations and advertisements that I saw this week in Shanghai were centered around the Lunar New Year, there were still a lot of other cool sculptures and advertisements that I saw as well!


While all of those were very cool. My two favorites this week made me realize that Shanghai isn’t so different from the US. The first was an add for the NBA, which featured different NBA players interacting with Chinese fans and wishing them a Happy Chinese (Lunar) New Year. To my surprise, as I walked down to the Xintiandi metro Monday morning, I was met with the smiling face of Utah Jazz star Donovan Mitchell! As an diehard Jazz fan, this was an excellent way to start the day!


The second advertisement that I saw on my daily commute featured Wonder Woman star, Gal Gadot! It’s always nice to see ads where I recognize the people in them, especially when it’s some of my favorite celebrities!

While most of what I see on a daily basis is completely foreign to me, it’s nice being reminded that even though I’m not able to communicate well with the people here in Shanghai, they have some of the same interests as me. 🙂

Food in Shanghai

This week, I tried another vegan/vegetarian restaurant. On Saturday, I got lunch with one of my friends near Jing’an temple. We went to a cafeteria, located behind the temple that only serves vegetarian food! I got tofu, bok choy, peanuts, rice, and vegetable soup. We also got vegetable bao buns, broccoli, and mushrooms! If the food at the SJTU cafeteria was this good, I would definitely still be eating there


On Saturday, I got tons of dried fruits and nuts from a local vendor shown on the right. I got dried apricots, two kinds of raisins, and almonds!

While I haven’t shared photos of these kind of vendors before, I’ve seen a lot of vendors selling different fruits, meats, and vegetables, but this was the first I’ve seen selling dried fruits and nuts, which reminded me a lot of buying some of these same things in markets in Israel!

Jewish Life in Shanghai

This week I had a lot of interactions within the Jewish community. On Friday, I joined Kehilat Shanghai for a lovely Shabbat service. I particularly enjoy observing Shabbat since it adds a nice sense of calm to my week, so I’m really glad that I’m able to observe Shabbat so frequently, here in Shanghai.

On Sunday morning, I taught the students of Kehilat Shanghai’s Sunday School (ages 5-12) about the phases of the moon and lunar calendars, as they spent the day learning about New Year’s celebration. So, unlike my past experiences teaching them, I actually got to use my skills as an Astronomer. 🙂 The students were learning about lunar calendars since the Chinese and Jewish calendars are both are solar-lunar calendars. It was a lot of fun getting to interact with the kids and some of their parents. However, I think the highlight of the activity was having the kids make the phases of the moon out of oreos!

On Sunday evening, I joined Moishe House for a Bagel dinner (or Brinner). To contribute I made vegan oatmeal raisin cookies, which were a huge hit! As I’ve said before, It’s been really great having the Moishe House and Kehilat Shanghai communities as ways for me to meet people and make new friends here!

I hope you enjoyed learning about my visit to the Jing’an temple and my Chinese New Year celebrations! This week will be relatively quiet. I’m told that Shanghai shuts down around the Lunar New Year. So, since I’m staying in town, I’ll likely be working from home will definitely be trying to get in a few extra runs! I look forward to sharing my upcoming adventures with you all! If you have any questions/comments about Shanghai, let me know! Also, if you are observing the Lunar New Year, I hope that you have a wonderful holiday!

In peace,
Jesse

The Shikumen Wulixiang Museum

Thanks for joining me for on my Shanghai adventures! I hope you enjoy this entry and virtual visit to Shanghai!

If you haven’t, please subscribe and tell me what you enjoyed seeing and learning about! To subscribe, enter your name and e-mail on the right side of the page. Once subscribed, you’ll receive an e-mail with each new post. If you have any questions about anything I’ve posted, let me know. Instructions are on the “To Comment” page.

Now, onto this week’s adventure!

Life in Shanghai

The first full week of 2020 was a relatively productive week for me. I’m still working at getting the prior Luminosity function measurements reproduced. So, I haven’t made tons of progress on that project yet. In more positive news, this week, Dr. Song Huang, who I’ve previously met and whose research overlaps quite nicely with mine, visited SJTU and the T.D. Lee Institute (located on campus). On Friday, I met with Song, and now have a few new research ideas to explore, which is exciting! Although, I think I have more ideas than I actually have time for, but that’s a good problem to have. 🙂 Additionally, this week, I started to notice how the semester is wrapping up, since some of the graduate students and postdocs have started to leave to go home for the Lunar New Year holiday (which starts on the 24th).

The weather was weird this week. It was ~ 70 on Monday and Tuesday, but then I think we transitioned to a somewhat normal winter in Shanghai. This means that the highs are in the mid to upper 40s, with lows in the 30s. However, instead of snow, we get lots of rain (it’s not heavy, but it happens often). So far it hasn’t been below freezing. However, I was stunned on Sunday morning when I woke up and realized that it was about 20 degrees warmer in Boston and Saratoga than it was in Shanghai! I think that this might be the first time that this has happened while I’ve been here.

However, despite the cooler and wetter weather. I still went for a 4.5 mile run on Sunday afternoon and did a lot of walking. As usual I saw lots of interesting buildings, signs, statues, and pieces of art!


On Sunday, I also saw an adorable Greyhound, which brought back fond memories of visiting my cousin Margaret and her family in Ann Arbor and getting greeted by her to two Greyhounds. While I know her Greyhounds would wear jackets, when it was cold, I’m not sure I had ever seen one wearing pants before!

In addition, I saw a lot more decorations for the Chinese Lunar New Year!

As you can tell, it is the year of the rat (though often depicted as the much cuter mouse). These decorations are everywhere from major shopping centers to local convenience stores. The primary recurrent decorations are the red lanterns, which are hung on tons of buildings!

For this weeks adventure, I visited the Shanghai Shikumen Wulixiang Museum located in Xintiandi (where I live). It’s a family’s traditional Shikumen lane house that has been converted into a museum that preserves the culture and style of the family who lived there in the 1920s and 30s. I believe that all of the items on display and photographs in the museum belonged to the family. As soon as I arrived, I realized that this is one place I’ll definitely have to bring my Mom when she visits since it reminded me of visiting different antique shops with my parents when I was growing up.

The home was divided into 3 floors. The first floor featured the courtyard/entrance way, the welcome room, the father’s study, the grandparents bedroom, and the kitchen.


I think my favorite thing on this floor (and possibly in the museum) was the grandparents bedroom. Even though this bed is probably too small to fit me, I think we can all agree that it is a luxurious bed!


On the small second floor, was the Tingzijian bedroom. These were small bedrooms that were rented out by Chinese families to earn extra income, and in the 1920s and 30s were rented by Progressive writers.

On the third floor, was the parent’s bedroom, the son’s bedroom, and the daughter’s bedroom.

As you can see, this is a rather ornate house, with both fine pieces of furniture and decorations. The guided tour (done via WeChat) described this family as upper middle class. The father worked for a foreign company, which likely explains some of the foreign influences you see in the possessions found in the different rooms.

I was also really impressed by the different pieces of art hung on the walls as well as some of the pieces of china!

Interestingly, the museum also featured some works by a local Chinese comic artist that highlighted life during the Shikumen period.

In these pieces you can see the bustling and active streets that characterized this time in Shanghai’s history.

Overall, I really enjoyed my visit to the Shikumen museum. To me, it was like stepping back in time. If you’re at all interested in Shanghai’s history, it’s definitely worth a visit!

Food in Shanghai

In terms of food, I’ve now switched to cooking most of my meals. I’m making my own breakfast, lunch, and dinner most days, so I’m definitely eating healthier and feel better. The main difference is that I’ve switched out fried and oily foods at lunch for salads.

Despite these switches, I still had food from a lot of different cuisines this week!

On Wednesday, I went to an Indian restaurant with my friend Julia. We enjoyed samosas, naan, vegetable kofta, chaana masala, and aloo gobi. The food reminded me a lot of the Indian food I enjoy at Little India in Saratoga, just spicier.

On Saturday, I went to a Malaysian restaurant for lunch, where I got Vietnamese Spring rolls and a Malaysian yellow curry with tofu, carrots, mushrooms, beet croquettes, eggplant, and Brussels sprouts!

Additionally, the Malaysian restaurant sold boxes of vegan Quinoa hot chocolate which I got for myself! Once I try it, I’ll report back and let you know how it is. 🙂


To end the weekend, I got tea/coffee with my friend Ilan and had a delicious raspberry cake! For those of you keeping track, this is another European style desert. I still haven’t had a really Chinese desert yet.

Jewish Life in Shanghai

This week, I went to quite a few Jewish events. On Tuesday evening, Moishe House hosted an improv game night. I had fun trying different improv games, which I probably hadn’t played since summer camp. Then, for Shabbat, I again joined Moishe House for their Monthly Shabbat, which was lovely. I even helped prep some of the dinner that was made! Shabbat was a great opportunity to hang out, chat, and catch up with a lot of the people that I’ve met and become friends with by attending their events.

Probably the most significant thing that happened this week was that I was asked to join and accepted a position on the board of Kehilat Shanghai! As part of my position, I’ll be serving on the Shabbat and Jewish Rituals committee. On Sunday, Kehilat had there annual members meeting, where I was officially announced as a new board member. Sunday’s meeting also provided me an excellent opportunity to learn about all of the ways that Kehilat has grown over the past year as well as learn the goals for 2020. As I’ve stated in prior posts and you can likely tell, Kehilat Shanghai has been a huge part of making me feel comfortable and at home here in Shanghai. So, I’m excited to be more involved and give back to this community!

I hope you enjoyed learning about my visit to the Shikumen Museum as well as seeing my delicious food pictures and learning about me joining the Kehilat Shanghai board! This week should be a fairly normal research week, likely the last normal week for a while, since Chinese New Year is the following week. I look forward to sharing my upcoming adventures with you all! If you have any questions/comments about Shanghai, let me know!

In peace,
Jesse

The Shanghai Museum of Science and Technology

Thank you for joining me for on my latest adventures in Shanghai! I hope you enjoy reading about it as much as I enjoyed doing it!

If you haven’t, please subscribe and tell me what you’ve been enjoying! To subscribe, enter your name and e-mail on the right side of the page. Once subscribed, you’ll receive an e-mail with each new post. If you’re curious about anything I’ve posted, let me know. Instructions are on the “To Comment” page.

Now, onto this week’s adventure!

Life in Shanghai

Happy New Year! Welcome to 2020. As I correctly predicted in my last entry, I got here first and have been enjoying the start of this new decade. Since New Years Day is a Holiday in China, I got Wednesday off from work. Since I haven’t had any vacations since I arrived in Shanghai, it was nice having the day off and getting to rest, relax, and of course go for a run!

In terms of Astronomy, I’m starting to make more progress on my measurements of the Luminosity Function. I’m still in the stage where I’m attempting to reproduce a prior result, but it feels like I’m closer to getting the infrastructure complete (at least in terms of the computer code that I’ll be using) so that I can start taking my own measurements in the near future.

Additionally, as I previously noted , the academic semester at SJTU is starting to wind down. The students had some finals last week and more this week. So, the campus (and department) will start to empty out for vacation (although I’ll still be here for most of it). I’ve also continued to sense the coming Lunar New Year (Chinese New Year), as I’ve seen more decorations appear around Shanghai. If you can’t tell, it’s the Year of the Rat!

For this week’s adventure, I visited the Shanghai Museum of Science and Technology. This is a humongous Museum! Gigantic museums are definitely a theme I’ve noticed in China. Almost all the museums are massive!


In addition to the impressive size of the museum, there was also a cool Chinese dragon sculpture on display in the front of the museum. This one shows dragons supporting the globe! It was amazing to look at.

In total, I spent 2.5 hours visiting the Museum and saw about 1/3 of the museum or 4 exhibits. I saw the exhibits on the history of space travel, modern breakthroughs in science (quantum theory, relativity, and genetics), robots, and information technology. There are also exhibits on earth sciences, health and the human body, and animals. Overall, this museum reminded me a lot of the visiting the Smithsonian and the exhibits I went to reminded me of visiting the air and space museum with my grandparents and family in Washington D.C. when I was younger.

Given that I’m an Astronomer, it’s not surprising that I gravitated toward the exhibit on the history of space travel. 🙂 The museum had different scale models of Chinese, American, and Russian satellites and space shuttles as well as descriptions of when they were used and their design specs.

There was also a models illustrating the different orbits satellites use as well as a Chinese Astronaut’s space suit. I was particularly impressed that there was information explaining the Newton’s and Kepler’s laws! A fundamental part of my own Astrophysical studies.

A Zero Gravity Simulator!

The main difference between this museum and those I’ve been to in the US were that the museum was very interactive!

This exhibit had two features. The first was a zero gravity simulator, where you were strapped down and then rotated upside down and in helix patters to simulate what it would be like in space. While not me in the picture, I went on this! It was somewhat like being on a tiny roller coaster except every time I went upside down, I could really feel gravity pulling down on me. Afterwards I was quite disoriented. This activity reminded me a lot of an exhibit at the Buffalo Science museum that my grandparents took me to that featured a human gyroscope. Although at the time, I’m pretty sure I was too afraid to let myself go upside down.

There was also another interactive exhibit to demonstrate centrifugal force. In this activity, people shot nerf balls at a target while the station was rotating. This activity was a lot of fun and demonstrated how rotation impacts your frame of reference!

After spending an hour learning about the history of space travel, I went to the exhibit on scientific breakthroughs such as Einstein’s theory of relativity, quantum mechanics, and genetic. They had different models of DNA structure as well as a ton of different models of experiments I remember learning about in my college physics classes.

While the museum emphasized that much of the breakthroughs were made by western scientists, they also highlighted the different contributions that Chinese scientists made to some of these discoveries.

My second favorite part of the museum was the exhibit on robots! This exhibit was super interactive! There was all kinds of information explaining how there are different types of robots from those that function of individual command programs to complex artificial intelligences.

They had robots that were dancing, solving rubix cubes, doing archery, drawing, playing go, and playing the piano!




As part of this exhibit, I got the chance to challenge a robot in archery. Unsurprisingly, I didn’t do very well. Maybe my friend Alex could have beaten the Robots, but not me. Although I’m not sure better technique would help me. It was a great fun to get to try archery, though.

The last exhibit I visited was on the rise of information technology. This exhibit highlighted advancements in computers and the digital world as well as how computers work as well, the science behind programming pattern recognition (one of my best research skills), and how computer chips are made.

Overall, visiting the Museum of Science and Technology was a lot of fun! I’ll definitely be back to visit and see the rest of the exhibits the museum offers!

In addition to visiting the Museum this week, I also went running twice. I did a 5.8 mile run on New Years Day and a 5.1 mile run on Sunday. It’s been pretty warm here, mostly in the mid 50s – upper 40s. However, Monday and Tuesday of this week will be in the 70s! So, I’m not sure I’m going to get much of a winter here, which despite getting to run, makes me sad, since I do miss seeing snow.



This week, I also saw a ton of cool advertisements and sculptures during my walks and runs around Shanghai!

There was also this really cool constellation design on the floor of the subway. I couldn’t quite figure out why it was there, but I enjoyed looking at it during my ride home!

Food in Shanghai

For those of you wondering, I’m still doing a lot of cooking here. I’ve just switched to bringing my lunch instead of eating at the SJTU cafeteria (I was getting really tired of the same fried tofu and steamed veggies every day, which sounds much better than it actually is).

However, I’m still exploring different vegan/vegetarian restaurants to try new foods!

This week I had a fantastic lunch! I had spicy tofu, a noodle soup with tofu, boy choy, and squash, and sweet and sour eggplant! The eggplant was the star! You probably can’t tell, but it was a whole spiralized Japanese eggplant that had been tempura fried!

Jewish Life in Shanghai

After all the Channukkah celebrations, this was a quieter week on the Jewish Life part of my life in Shanghai. I did however, substitute teach for the Kehilat Shanghai Sunday School. I taught the Alef (5-7 year old) class. This week we learned about Mitzvot (good deeds). It was the first time I’ve ever taught students that age, although playing with my cousin Margaret’s sons in Ann Arbor did prepare me for how to deal with them. I had a great time teaching the students and hope that they learned the importance of doing good deeds to help those around them!

I hope you enjoyed experiencing my visit to the Shanghai Museum of Science and Technology! This week will be a normal research week, and possibly the last week of AstroCoffee for the semester. I look forward to sharing my next adventures with you! If you have any questions/comments about life in Shanghai, let me know!

In peace,
Jesse

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