Recently, because of the epidemic, all the barbershops, big and small, on the streets of Istanbul were closed. My Mr. Adu looked at the growing hair on his head and remembered an interesting thing he had experienced personally-
"One morning while taking a tour group in Turkey, I dragged my suitcase out of the hotel room and waited for the elevator, ready to go downstairs for breakfast. The elevator door opened and there were three tourists from China. I went in and stood near the door. I looked at the mirror next to the elevator and found that I didn't care to arrange my hair when I went out just now. At this moment, the handful of hair on my head was like a pile of weeds, and some of them were like a tumbler. After pressing it, I stood up immediately. I quickly stroked the few poor hairs left on my head in front of the mirror. Watching them finally fall to one side neatly under my wonderful hand, I smiled with satisfaction in front of the mirror, feeling that I was well prepared and better looking than Pan An.
At this moment, one of the China tourists in the elevator jokingly said to the other two, "I found that most Turkish men have very little hair. Look, he is still getting it around there ..." The other two also echoed. Just now, I was complacent, and I was hit hard by this. I turned my head and asked, "Really? Is my hair okay? Not too few, right? " All three of them were stunned. They smiled shyly and asked me in surprise, "I didn't expect you to speak Chinese?"
when I came to the hotel restaurant, I saw them sitting with other group members at a distance, eating and touching the hair on the top, laughing, and others looked back at me from time to time. It seems that this interesting thing came this morning.
As China's international influence continues to expand, many foreigners begin to learn Chinese, so you should pay attention when you are abroad. Maybe the people around you are an expert on China. "