We’d flown into Kunming and spent just a night there, but the changes in the anthropological landscape were immediately striking: this was now quite obviously Central Asia. The people were swarthier and spoke less (no) English, and architecturally buildings were still very communist, concrete apartment cubes hung with window boxes sporting plastic flowers. The music was different, less stereotypically Chinese (fluty, reedy, high-pitched) and more braying, chanting, drumming: braaaooooooh, not wee-wee-wee. (I’m sure I'll regret that turn of phrase later).
In Shanghai Pat had remarked that while on the seaboard China was metamorphosing at breakneck speed, it would take much longer for the newest revolution to reach the provinces, and I noted that here. Nevertheless, the seeds of change had been planted. The gigantic, hundred-foot billboards lining the highways who previously functioned to broadcast Maoist messages now issued the twenty-first-century’s incarnation of propaganda: A woman in a pink dress lounging before a plum-blossom background proclaimed “Yue Sai: The Best the World has to offer Asian Women!” A lipstick ad.
In the morning we went to the park at six to watch the city wake up. The gravel paths were filled with people massaging their elbows and faces, slapping at their chests, braying, humming, singing and shouting. To the unprepared, it might look like the garden of a large asylum. But it was wonderful. What I saw, I think, was a community keeping healthy together.