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Learning to enjoy a night on the tiles with my in-laws

Updated: 2023-02-17 08:23 ( China Daily )
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Owen Fishwick.[Photo provided to China Daily]

 

With a clip of Hollywood actress Julia Roberts doing the rounds in China whereby she reveals her passion for playing mahjong, I'd thought it fitting that I too share my love for the popular tile-based game.

Developed in China in the 1800s, a relatively new game by Chinese standards, mahjong — originating from the word for sparrow in southern dialects — sees four players sitting around a table drawing and discarding tiles in order to be the first to achieve four sets of three and one pair.

The star of Pretty Woman and My Best Friend's Wedding said during an American talk show interview that mahjong was "creating order from chaos by the random drawing of tiles", which is a rather more spiritual way of describing any number of card games, but something I thoroughly agree with the Oscar winner about.

However, I differ from Ms Roberts in her characterization of the game as being one that calms her down. In my experience playing against grizzled mahjong pros (Grandma Ling and Uncle Wang for example) after lunch during the Spring Festival holiday, the atmosphere is frenetic — for me at least.

No sooner have I drawn my original set of 13 tiles and clumsily arranged them in order, than the game has started and Grandma Ling and Uncle Wang are already waiting for me to take my turn. Uncle Wang casually flips a tile between his thumb and middle finger, using the forefinger to caress the raised edges of the face of the tile so that he can discern its identity without even looking at it. Grandma Ling patiently works her way through a bowl of time-wasters (sunflower seeds), as I dumbly paw through my tiles like a cat at a computer screen.

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