"Iron Chef China"
THE WOOD, I feel your pain. After working and paying for 7 semesters of continuing ed and my other living expenses at the same time, I have very little patience for immature and unhelpful undergrad KIDS. Especially in chem lab, where my grade partially depends on some silly dipshit from a Manhattan townhouse coming through with his part of the results. Also, when it comes to utilities, read on:
**********
I've had this roommate for a year now. Let's call him 'Shaq'. Let's keep a straight face about this, folks -- Shaq is a very common English moniker chosen by Chinese students learning English these days. One of my junior high classes in Harbin had 5 Shaqs. Anyhow...
Shaq answered an ad I'd put on the internet. He seemed like an OK guy. We ended up having a good chat when he came over to see the place, partially in Chinese, about my travels in China and our common interest of cooking.
And was he ever into cooking. The first weekend he was here, Shaq took over the kitchen in our little one bedroom (I rented him my 'living room'). There were ugly crumpled plastic shopping bags full of various ingredients lying over every horizontal surface. Shaq was flying around the kitchen shirtless and sweaty, chopping and frying and chopping and frying and baking. The kitchen, poorly ventilated to begin with, was stuffy as a sauna with a box of fried rice dumped over the coals. At first I'd comment on the good smells and make polite conversation, and even ask to taste things (bland, for the most part). I told Shaq how shocked I was he was into such a big project.
But it wasn't a project. It was his life -- it was all he did. To this day, I think Shaq spends a good 2/3 of the waking hours he's home cooking and eating. I ended up having to plan some very strange hours to be able to use the kitchen for myself. On weekends and other days he doesn't have school, I usually leave the house and eat quick stuff out all day.
But even when I got to use the kitchen, I didn't want to. You see, Shaq, who never cleaned anything except the five dishes he owns, left the place filthy. The stove was caked in a black tarry ash. The floor was black and sticky as a ghetto convenience store, and not a single surface was not coated with a yellow oily sticky film. One weekend Shaq was away I made myself a giant country breakfast and a big cup of coffee, put on some upbeat house music, and cleaned the kitchen until it fucking twinkled. (I would've asked him to help me, but I didn't trust his cleanliness standard enough.) Shaq walked in a few days later and said in a really namby-pamby voice, "Oh, it's a miracle!" I could've punched him.
It took Shaq two weeks to get the kitchen right back to where it'd been before.
I could at least give Shaq shit in a friendly way if he had anything close to the same values as me. But I cannot abide a guy who is such an enemy of Mother Earth, and cares naught at all about health related ... anything. He leaves the water in the kitchen sink and bathtub trickling, after I've shown him how to turn it off tightly and completely (I guess if we're not footing the utilities bill it doesn't matter, right? 8) Pfft). Shaq leaves the shower curtain open, so that water gets trapped in the folds and it grows mildew. This is helped -- I can smell the fucking mildew spores -- when he takes a steaming hot shower and then pulls the door to the unventilated bathroom shut when he leaves -- with the light still on of course. Shaq cannot for the life of him get our city's recycling system down. He prefers to pile garbage indiscriminantly in the corner. Many times I've found his tuna cans in the regular garbage, with some rancid meat still in them and some flies taboot.
I'm a pretty forgiving guy. And I really shoud be, after all, he's paying $250/month, leaving me with only $145 to make up the difference. Plus, I've been an exchange student abroad too, and I know how it feels to really miss familiar foods from home, so I do my best, when I'm in the best of moods, to still make conversation with Shaq sometimes. But I damn well better be in the mood. You see, Shaq has the balls to chronically try and talk me out of becoming a doctor, when he knows jack all about either me or that profession. (He's convinced I have a future in diplomacy. huh?!) After I'd already told him of my plans to contiune my current line of work in NYC, he got all sore once when I didn't follow up on a 'lead' he gave me for a paper-pushing position in the county government here, looking for a non-native Mandarin speaker. Shaq's one other hobby besides cooking is stock trading. Get it through your thick, one track head, Shaq -- MY MOTIVATION FOR BECOMING A DOCTOR HAS NOTHING TO GOD DAMN MOTHERFUCKING DO WITH MONEY!!! Capeesh? Dong bu dong?
As easygoing as I strive to be, Shaq has always seemed uncomfortable around me. He'll take a giant dramatic recoil back, with a sheepish but bothered look on his face, should I need to reach for something one foot from him, even if I pleasantly say "excuse me, just gotta grab something", etc. When he needs to ask me a question, you'd swear he's gearing up to propose to a girl, and if I just give him a soft, nonchalant "yep" and a nod, he gets perplexed my response wasn't more emphatic or intense, and proceeds to rephprase his question as if I didn't understand.

I should add that his English is actually decent, and this is not his first year living in the US.
His response to my electronic music was, "Whoa, how can you listen to this creepy music that's like a human heartbeat? You should give classical a try." After telling him in no uncertain terms classical music isn't my cup o' joe, he kept trying to sell me on taking my g/f to see this symphony orchestra playing at our college.
Though I appreciate his help with the rent, I can't wait till he's gone. I doubt we'll speak again once he returns to the land of a thousand thousand Shaqs from whence he came.