People on a Chinese public bus

Over the years I’ve lived in China, certain aspects of life here have begun to bother me more and more. I think it’s normal. Every long term expat has their pet peeves about China. There is one particular thing which began to irritate me when I had been living in China for around three years, and has bothered me ever since. I am talking about the constant noise pollution you suffer when you take any means of public transport, as a result of the constant, repetitive, irritating and utterly pointless public announcements which are played again and again on loudspeakers for the “benefit” of the passengers.

There is one phrase which captures the pure pointlessness of such announcements better than any other. It’s the one I mention in the title: 请注意安全, or “please pay attention to safety”. If you take a public bus in Beijing, you are liable to hear this phrase repeated dozens of time between getting on and getting off. You hear it after the bus has left a stop (“车辆启动,请注意安全“: the bus is moving, please pay attention to safety) and when it is about to arrive at a stop (下车后,请注意安全: after getting off the bus please pay attention to safety). Sometimes you hear it repeated again and again when a bus is negotiating a corner. Its very repetition, of course, makes it especially unlikely that anyone will pay attention.

Many of the other constantly repeated announcements in the busses and the subway are in the same vein: beyond obvious and irritating. There’s 请携带好您的随身物品 (Please make sure your belongings are properly protected). There’s 下车的乘客,请坐好准备 (passengers who are about to get off, please get ready).  And of course, in the subway there are also the announcements with a patriotic bent: 先下后上是中华民族的传统美德” (getting off first and getting on after is the traditional virtue of the Chinese people). I didn’t know Confucius dictated how to get off a subway train in the Analects. If only it actually had any effect on people’s behaviour! And this is without mentioning the ticket sellers on the buses, who add to the racket by hollering the extremely useful advice “往前走” (move forward) again and again when a crowded bus has stopped, and people are jostling to get off.

Of course one does hear announcements when taking public transport in other countries too, but at least in the European countries which I am used to it is not nearly as pervasive. Buses in most of Europe tend to have absolutely no public announcements whatsoever, not even to indicate the name of the stop. Most subway systems do have a few, but usually not as many, as meaningless and as irritating as in China. London’s famous “mind the gap” announcement is rather pointless too, but it is at least short and it has even inspired a line of t-shirts for tourists.

The funny thing is that the few times I have pointed out how annoying I find this constant assault on the ears to Chinese friends, they have defended the necessity of such announcements. They claim that it is necessary to keep repeating 请注意安全,otherwise people might not remember to” pay attention to safety”, especially little children. And if you don’t keep reminding people not to forget their possessions on the bus, well, they might forget them. The fact that the very repetitiveness of such phrases means that people don’t even notice them any longer seems lost.  When I tell them that in my country there are absolutely no public announcements of any kind in buses, they look baffled. After all, how can you function without an authoritative voice telling you what to do the whole time?

I can understand that Chinese people do not find such things as irritating as I do. After all, they are conditioned from birth (at least in cities) to put up with a constant level of racket which would seem unacceptable to a Westerner. Always surrounded by people, they learn to drown out noises, smells and sights to an extent few Westerners could achieve. However, actually defending the usefulness of this constant barrage of irritating noise is another thing. Oh well. Luckily I now live close enough to my work to cycle, and do not have to take public transport on an average day.

photo: nozomiiqel

Discussion

10
  1. Pingback: On the Chinese vs. foreigner language wars - Lost Laowai

  2. In case you haven’t used your mind to think about it, the messages are repeated for the people who just got on the bus. It seems to me that even though you don’t like being singled out as an outsider – in your post “On the Chinese vs. foreigner language wars” – you very behavior will always make YOU an outsider, instead of bitching about things on all those posts, maybe you should stop and think about the reason behind things that happen in China.

    Obviously most people don’t like those announcements, but one whose smart enough would look at the amount of people in China and how fast the country has developed in recent years and understand.

    Still not getting it? Try placing 1.3 billion people in America, then imagine 60 to 75% of those 1.3 billion people grow up in the countryside. Now think about what would happen if those same people, many of which may have never taken any form of public transportation before, start moving into the big cities. It doesn’t take a genius to figure that out.

    My final words to you on this matter are: if things annoy you so much in China, then it’s about time for you to get the hell out of here and go back to wherever you’re from. People who bitch over nothing like you are the ones who give foreigners a bad image.

    • What is your problem? Why are you so defensive about China? What, do you seriously expect us all to just be writing articles about how China is great and China is wonderful on this site?

      Since you are so rude, I will also be rude back.

      In your post under my other article, you make it clear that you are a foreigner in China, and can’t speak much Chinese. I am guessing you haven’t been here a long time, right?

      I’ve known others like you. You insist on always defending everything about China, with the same old arguments: “”China is overcrowded, 70% of the Chinese are peasants” etc etc…. You seriously think this makes you more culturally aware or adaptable than other foreigners, the ones who “give foreigners a bad name”.

      You get very annoyed when you hear foreigners who’ve been here longer than you and understand the place better than you making even reasonable complaints. I wonder how long it will take before you also start moaning about China. Usually the ones like you become the greatest moaners in due time.

      I am actually the last person to complain about things. I always try to understand and contextualize. However, some things in China are just pointless, and the only reason they haven’t changed is that the people in charge of them are not exposed to the outside world, and it hasn’t struck them that you can do things differently.

      You are not doing the Chinese a service by always looking for excuses for every indefensible practice in the country. It is far better to point these things out to them when it is the right time to do so.

  3. I don’t mind the noise pollution (most of the time). In fact, whenever I’m back in China and I hear “che liang qi dong qing zhuyi anquan”, it’s a nice dose of nostalgia.

    What I DO mind is when a construction site works overnight and their huge trucks beep and shout all night long. That, and fireworks at 7am.

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