We didn't have too much time to dally at the Beijing airport (but enough for my dad to forget his wallet at customs and take the long walk back from the gate to luckily retrieve it) before getting on the second 13.5 hour flight. There was a noticeable cultural difference in the folks aboard this flight. They were still mostly Chinese, but without the Chinatown feel. It was a bit more like the Bay Area instead.
After another mind numbing night on another plane, we were welcomed into the comfortable warmth of my dad's side of the family. Dad's cousin Lillian (Ling Ling) recognized me despite not having seen me since I was 2 and a half, and hugged me ecstatically. A nap followed a homemade lunch followed by another meal in Eastwood, which is a very Chinese suburb near Willoughby where we were staying. Dad and I dined with his two siblings, their two cousins and their husbands, and Great Uncle Samuel and his wife, whom, clearly, everyone adores as much as I do. Funny enough, I was told to sit at the kids' table with five cousins who were all younger than me.
Samuel is 86 and has twinkling, boyish eyes with charm to match. He is a writer, a gardener, a Falun Gong practitioner, and as a result, is blacklisted from entering China's borders. He has aged a lot since I met him in 2000 when he came for grandma's funeral, but isn't any less spirited. He asked us all to bring photos with us. My dad brought some really old photos from when all of the elders were just getting going in life, and he was very delighted to reminisce.
I gave him a Phillies cap, because he always has a cap on his head, and he gave me a deck of Sydney scenic photo cards, a wooden 3D koala model, and kiwis and persimmons from his garden. He explained that each card has a duplicate, and I'm supposed to send one to a missed loved one back home and when I return, to attempt to reunite the pair. If I am successful, that means that I am loved back.
I liked that the house he shared with his wife and a renter - a young white woman who is also a Falun Gong practitioner - was cozy, modest, and familiarly Chinese, despite the kindly, innocently swaggering Australian-ness about him.
If I had felt any distance between myself and these newfound relatives whose lives and world views are relatively (har har) different from my own, Uncle Samuel's utmost warmth helped close that gap. I haven't always felt a part of a large, old, strong and caring family with a lot of rich history. It's nice to experience that now.
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