To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.
^ YOU TURNED DOWN A TRIP TO CHINA?????
You may be one of those people who doesn't like to travel, as there are people who don't care for it. Or was his entire purpose for the trip, nothing more than try to trace "roots" and such, and not do tourism or anything else? Back in the days that my commitments were only "optional" and not piled up atop one another, if somebody (who I liked or loved) offered me a trip with them to elsewhere in the world, I wouldn't have turned it down, and indeed that happened to me twice and both times I took the people up on it. (Both were friends I knew I'd enjoy traveling with - and it was Nassau in 1970, Germany in 1989.)
Interestingly, in all these years, I've never taken a "nookie trip" with a friend. I don't need to.
More recently - THIS YEAR - I've possibly started an annual trip with another friend. This year it was a trip to Hawaii less than a month ago. That's still the United States, but another part of the world. However, unlike the 1970 and 1989 trips, this isn't just somebody asking me if I want to go with them, but proactively taking part of the planning every step of the trip.
I have a strong passion to travel but, I just don't want to go to China yet and travel with my dad will cause more tension and stress as we have very different opinions, I'm more of a free spirit backpacker while he was more of a stick with the tour guy
I don't want to go to China either... I have never been there and I don't feel a connection to the country as well, although I am Chinese. It doesn't help that I have no idea how to speak any Chinese dialects. :/

No?I love me some Chinese men.
![]()
But I don't want to go to China as I feel I'd definitely be really awkward and left out there. Even when I went to the Chinatown in London and Manchester I would feel a little weird being there. Everyone would be talking to me in Mandarin or Cantonese and I'd be staring at them blankly. Communication barrier. And I think they'll be thinking what sort of dick wouldn't know his own language. :/
I was not born in China, but I am of pure Chinese stock. I grew up in a Chinese environment, which means I am not a banana (yellow outside, white inside). I speak mainstream Chinese (Putong Hua/Mandarin) and three other southern Chinese dialects. I read and write Chinese, and I know my Chinese literature and culture.
I used to have the same problem. I have been told that one should look them in the eye and firmly say Oom Go Joyo Jeh!… don't know how to respond in a way …
I've been to China and kept getting harassed for money (in the toilets...) or dragged into shops/restaurants by force. Not particularly keen to go back.
But I'm from and grew up in Hong Kong, not mainland China.
For some reason, people always come up to me and ask me for directions in Mandarin Chinese (in Australia, Hong Kong, anywhere). Mostly, I understand what they're asking for, but don't know how to respond in a way that they'll understand since they obviously don't speak English or Cantonese. And Mandarin is spoken like it's written, and less conversational.
Sometimes they're polite, but there was this one middle aged bloke that just stopped me in my tracks, and blurted out "Where's Chinatown!?" in Mandarin. I pointed him in the opposite direction.
You have to be street smart.
This guy can survive in china, i'm sure you can too:
I didn't really get dragged in, but what happens is, you go down on the escalator, and it's all clear.
But when you're about mid-way down, and too far gone to go back up, a dozen people start scampering from the shadows, waiting to get their talons on you once you reach the bottom of the escalator.
Not handing your phone over is pretty much common sense. I wouldn't go as far as buying a stranger food over there, as it'll involve taking out your wallet, which they could just grab and bolt.
I like how he ended the video though, hahahaha
