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OCD: Gone Feral

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All this week, Ophelia Chong will be touring China, all the while recording her observations, thoughts, and insights right here for you. To view more of her online diary entries, click here.

china_dog

Day 4 / Beijing, China

I rode through a small village on the Fifth Ring Road in Beijing. The entrance to the village is marked by a sign "Pomegranate Cafe. Beer. Coffee.Here"

The village is on the other side of a small creek, the smells from the creek aren't of wild grasses, but of human excrement and trash. I peddled my bike down the dusty road into the main drag, passing a massage parlor and small noodle cafe filled with men watching a television while the chef cooks outside, cutting noodles into a boiling pot fueled by a propane tank.

I dodge a few dogs, and what caught my eye was that they weren't mutts but purebred dogs. A Dachshund was digging through a pile of garbage, a Lhasa Apso scooted across the road chasing a small beagle. They were all filthy and with no collars. They might be homeless or they could have homes where they rest at night in the village, it was hard to tell.

I was riding a bike through a village of feral lap dogs.

A few years back, when China's middle class rose up in prosperity, the item to have was a small dog. They were expensive and a badge of "I am now wealthy enough to have a pet".
But the thrill of lugging around a pet faded, and the dogs were let go, dropped off by the side of the road. The ones who were smart enough survived through the bitter winters by finding warm spots to sleep and marked out their favorite spots where the trash was plentiful. This village was paradise to those lost dogs.

The Forgotten Ones

There is a parallel with the feral lap dogs and China's ADHD. The architecture has gone from loud glitz to high end glamour (the architects of the new Beijing, Rem Koolhas et al).
What was once the epitome of elegance is now the Bourgeoise's best forgotten shame, like the first crush we had in grade school that has come back to haunt us. China is growing up fast and discarding old loves even faster. What was once hot is now colder than a Gobi Desert winter gust rushing down Tianammen Square.

Do you like me now?

China is like your wallflower friend who has come into her own, discarding the plain brown smock and now sauntering down the avenue in Chanel. She has power and an iron will that will not be told that she cannot do what she wants when she wants. But she leaves in her wake a trail of refuse and waste. The scent she leaves is not sweet but sour.

garbage

The Next Chapter

The feral dogs like the discarded will survive and mutate into stronger mutts that will one day form a pack, and that pack will rule the land.

Images: Ophelia Chong/ Beijing 10.2009

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