For a number of reasons, it’s been awhile since I’ve posted. But I tell you; I’m not letting this become another Beijing Blog. So, I’m going to start with a story I’ve been meaning to tell. Let’s flash back to mid August. It’s the first day of Ghost Month—the time when its believed the gates to the underworld open and the ghosts are free to wander around the world of the living. The Taiwanese will all burn incense and offer food offerings outside of schools, businesses, and homes in the hopes of warding off the bad spirits. They’ll also avoid seemingly mundane things like swimming in the ocean, because of the tendency of ghosts to lurk there and pull you into the deep (Luckily this made for very beautiful and uncrowded beaches all month).
That very night, I was just returning from a night writing in a local coffee/tea shop along the road to my apartment. In a good mood due to the beautiful weather and scenery, about a block from my complex I greeted an elderly woman with my standard smile/nin hao combination. I continued on my way, and after rounding a corner, getting into my tower’s elevator I heard a faint shuffle approaching from the distance. Now normally, I just would have left but because I was feeling friendly I held the door. Shuffle shuffle shuffle….
I must have waited 20 seconds for the shuffles to finally materialize into a person, and it just so happened to be the same elderly lady whom I had greeted on the street. I smiled again, but she responds with an uneasy glance. A little strange, but I wasn’t going to let it get me down. As the elevator starts to move, I realized that she hasn’t pushed a floor button yet, and I was pretty confident she was not on my floor since it only had one other apartment. The complex is set up in a series of towers, with each 22-floor tower having its own elevator, small hallway, and only two apartments. Naturally, I asked the woman what floor she lived on, but by the time she responded with “fourth”, we were already at the third floor. Luckily, I was just in time and we stopped at the fourth floor, providing a conclusion to the suddenly awkward elevator atmosphere.
She departed, and my mind wandered to the plot of the short story I was writing. It must have been 15-20 seconds before I realized that the elevator had yet to move. I hit the seventh floor again to get back to my apartment. The icon lighted up and immediately turned off, signifying that I was already on the seventh floor. Strange, I must have been so absorbed in thought I didn’t notice the elevator move. I opened the doors and walked out, but quickly spotted the elderly woman outside my apartment, attempting to open my door. I was extremely confused. Why was she at my room? Or was I on her floor still? Upon hearing the elevator open, she immediately turned around with a look of shear horror. “I think this might be the seventh floor,” I said in Chinese.
“No, it’s the fourth. It’s the fourth!” she mumbled before returning with a frenzied determination to fight the door lock with her keys.
Somewhat rattled myself at that point, I returned to the elevator dearly hoping that I was wrong and had accidentally gotten off at her floor. Unfortunately, pushing the seven button once more only confirmed my previous discovery that we were both on the seventh floor. Exiting the elevator for the second time turned out to be a mistake. At that point the woman was not even attempting to open her door, but was simply cowering in the corner of the small hallway outside of my door.
“This really is the seventh floor.” I looked at her with pleading eyes. “That’s my apartment,” I said.
She didn’t give my words much thought. “Fourth Floor! Fourth Floor! This is the fourth floor!” she responded, her voice rising in both rate and intensity. “You live on the seventh floor, go back to your floor!”
She was clearly extremely afraid of me, and I was starting to feel like a criminal. Fearing she might work herself into a heart attack, I shuffled backwards around the corner and into the elevator. I decided to wait there until she eventually figured out that she was on the wrong floor. Then I could slip past her and into my room. I held the doors open in order to keep the elevator from leaving, which was also probably a bad idea in hindsight. But at the time, all of the excitement had clearly impacted my on the spot decision-making. Maybe thirty seconds later, the elevator started buzzing at me because it wanted to move to a different floor.
The startling buzz ended up being the last straw for the already distressed woman. She ran past the elevator doors to the only other room on the floor and started pounding on the door and ringing the doorbell. At the same time she started yelling, “GHOST! GHOST! HELP! GHOST! A FOREIGN GHOST IS HERE!”
As confused and distraught I was at the whole situation, I took the opportunity to slip out of the elevator and to the now unoccupied entrance of my apartment. Swiftly unlocking the door with my keys, I disappeared inside and latched the bolt behind me. Throwing myself down on the couch, I wondered how my relaxing night had so drastically changed in just a few short minutes.
About a month or so later I ended up seeing the same woman at a downtown bus station in the middle of the night. I moved away quickly to avoid any more awkward situations and made sure to board a few people after she did in order to keep my distance, but when we ended up getting off at the same stop she thoroughly surprised me. This time she gave me a smile.
“I’m really sorry about what happened that night. In fact, looking back at it now, its rather humorous.”
And that was the start to a quite pleasant friendship.




















