Thursday, November 19, 2009

bureaucrazy

In my seemingly never-ending quest for my ARC (Alien Resident Certificate), there have been many hoops to jump through. Well, the last hoop has nearly been jumped through so while I wait (impatiently, I might add) for my number to be called for the second time today (more on that in a minute) I thought it might be prudent to share my arduous journey which has brought me to this point. What follows is a timeline which show the steps, cost and time spent. Bear witness to my madness...

Step 1 – Sept.1/09

Time spent: Health check - 1 hour in hospital, 1 week waiting for results, 30 minutes travel time

Cost: $1500NT

Step 2 – Sept.9/09

Thought I was going to be picking up my health check, but turns out I needed to have an inoculation. I was able to get my health check, but only after a made another trip home to get some money to pay for the inoculations as I hadn't expected to pay for anything.

Time spent: 1 hour in hospital, 1 hour in transit

Cost; $500NT

Step 3 – Sept.10/09

Submit all documents to school for application

Return to school to sign papers (2nd time)

Got another call stating I need to get a tax receipt from the last time I was here? Of course, the tax office is closed

Time spent: 1.5 hours in transit, 10 minutes at school

Cost: $200NT

Step 4 – Sept.11/09

Trip to the tax office. Return to school, drop off original receipt. Now I play the waiting game while I wait for my work permit letter.

Time spent: 45 minutes in transit

Cost: $350NT

Step 5 – Oct.5/09

Received letter from government. Took letter to immigration where I'm told that the letter doesn't state that my contract is a year, but only 6 months. I'm denied a work permit as my visitor visa will cover extensions. Call school and find out we have to start the whole process over again.

Time spent: 30 minutes transit, 30 minutes wait. 5 hours of screaming and swearing.

Cost: $250NT

Step 6 – Oct.7th

Sent in package again, but need to get another copy of health check and tax receipt.

Time spent: 1.5 hours in transit + 1 month waiting for new permit letter

Cost: $400NT

Step 7 - Nov.15/09

Received 2nd work permit letter from school.

Step 8 – Nov.19th

set off to immigration office with all necessary paperwork. School sent me to the wrong place. Walked 5km to the correct office. Everything was in order except the clerk asked me for the original copy of my lease. Trip back to my apartment to grab the orig...back to immigration where I waited again in line. Finally got up to the counter only to be told I needed to complete an application form. Took another number and waited again. Handed in my documents and paid the fee.

Time spent: 3.5 hours, 2 week waiting period.

Cost: $400NT

Now for some math...

TOTAL TIME: 2 months, 2 weeks, 21 hours and 16 minutes

TOTAL COST: $3400NT

And the thing is, I still don't have the work permit yet. All of this time, money and effort for a stupid little plastic card. I pick it up Dec.3rd...

Fingers crossed that things go smoothly.


 


 


 

Sunday, November 8, 2009

the bubble

the bubble (n) - the area which encompasses an individual's life.


i realized the other day while sitting on my building's rooftop garden, that i really live in a bubble. and i can see most of the areas where i either work, shop, have friends, or generally spend time in. what makes it even more interesting is that i am pretty much smack dab in the middle of this bubble. taipei may have a lot of people, but metro taipei isn't really that big. at least, square footage-wise. my life inhabits an even smaller portion of metro taipei...minchuan to the north, guangfu to the east, zhongshan to the west and keelung to the south...these 4 roads make up the boundaries of my life in taiwan. not that's a bad thing, but it sure doesn't look like much.
within this small window exist all a man needs or wants. no shortage exists for food...among the favoured are yong kang street or shi da road...busy, but delicious areas to break bread. getting to work is easy thanks to the subway and bus system which are clean, cheap and efficient. shopping is never a problem and one of the easiest things to do just about anywhere in the bubble. i tend to be flexible about my shopping and like to spread it around...101, dunhua/fuxing for the more urbane and fashionable, gonguan + shi da for the latest in street wear. the same rules apply for activities as well...clubs, pubs, lounges, arenas, theatres, art performances, ampitheaters all survive and thrive inside my bubble.
of course, there are reasons to leave your bubble now and then, but i'm sure it's safe to say that some people seldom do. i tend not to unless i specifically have a reason to go to a certain area. for example, the department of foreign affairs is a place i have to visit about once a year for bureaucratic reasons and exists in a part of the city that i really have no need to visit, except for this once a year a trip. definitely outside the bubble. another reason might be to visit a friend or relative who lives outside your bubble, but for the most part, most of us like to stick to our own bubble.
bubble can change over time. if your job changes, you mght move or at least have a different commute to work. perhaps you meet a new friend who lives in an entirely unknown region of the city. hence, the bubble shifts to encompass this new aspect of your life. this has happened to me often (likely 'cos i move so much) but even staying put in taipei has meant a lot of bubble shifting. i've moved house 4 times, have had 6 different jobs ranging from nearly across the street to being over an hour away and have had friends who have lived near and far. all of these factors have shaped and re-shaped my bubble many times over.
funny enough, i actually decided to revist some familiar places that made up my bubble when i first arrived in taiwan. i was living in neihu, a sort of satellite city to taipei. at the time i lived there, neihu was pretty, quiet and a bit of a wasteland for things to do and see. the mrt didn't service this section of the city like it does today and things have changed. neihu seems to have sprung up over night...hotels, shopping centres, restaurants and clean, efficient public transport have replaced the neihu i remember. giant fields of grass and dirt being overturned (in preparation for what stands there today), long and lonely, temporary roads which appear to head nowhere. a lack of good places to eat, with only noodle stands lining the sidestreets and no matter where you were, there was always construction. i can remember trying to search for the bus stop, which was temporary and often moved due to construction, only to climb onboard some old, rattletrap bus that should've been de-commissioned about 10 years earlier. i'd take it through the wastelands for about 25 minutes to the closest mrt station (by closest, i mean the once-end of the blue line) to take the MRT another 20 minutes into the main station and civilization. so, my bubble was actually quite large in those early days...not to mention my first teaching job was in taipei county, in the city of xizhi, which meant a bus ride to the mrt station, transfer buses and head to xi zhi for about another 30 minutes. then, from xizhi i would take the train into the main station and then go to chinese classes for about 2 hours, then another hour trip home. life sucked. about 3 hours everyday spent in transit. that bubble was too big.
how life has changed since those days which feel very faraway now. revisting the old neighb didn't really give me the sense of nostalgia that i had expected. in its place, i felt relief and a sense of accomplishment about how far i've come from those days. how naive and uncertain i was of everything here...i feel much happier , much more settled and comfortable now than i did in those days, but at the same time everything was exciting when i was living in such a huge bubble. it likely felt that way 'cos so much could and often did go wrong. i get lost. i'd have a strange encounter. i'd see something interesting. i'd eat somewhere different. fun, but scary at times when you don't speak the language. scary and frustrating, but all part of the fun. yes, there's definitely something to be said for getting out of the bubble every now and then. maybe we just need a good reason to 'pop' our bubble once in a while.