Riding the subway on the way to meet a friend after work one recent evening, I had one of those “Beijing moments” when you stand back and take note of all the change that’s been going on gradually before your eyes.
I was riding Line 1, which goes beneath the city’s main avenue, and was about to get out to switch to Line 2, which goes in a loop beneath the second ring road - built on what used to be the old city wall.
As one does, I was jockeying for position with my fellow passengers, bracing myself to contend with what I knew would be a rush of people trying to get into the train before we’d even gotten out. That’s just the name of the game, a mini sporting event to top off the day.
The only thing is, everybody outside was lined up neatly on either side of the door, leaving a perfect open path for us to exit through.
I didn’t know what to make of it. It was nice in a way, but then again I almost felt cheated, as though one of the privileges of being an adopted Beijinger was being taken away from me. It was all a little too easy.
Now don’t get me wrong - I’ll be the first to welcome a bit less pushing and shoving during my daily commute. And many of the people I share the subway with each day still have a long way to go to understand what it means to wait in line.
But the ease with which I exited the train that evening set me thinking that all the propaganda, all the comic-book educational brochures, the young men employed to order people into lines and help squeeze them into crowded cars - that somehow, bit by bit, they’re starting to have an effect.
Maybe even beyond the Olympics.
Jason Subler is a correspondent for Reuters in Beijing
Picture by Jason Lee/Reuters
Video footage of passengers boarding a train in Beijing taken from YouTube. Titled: “Beijing Subway Congestion What happens when the train comes?” Posted Jan. 10, 2008

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If we’re not careful, the Chinese will surpass the US in civilized behavior in addition to kicking our butts in economic supremacy.
- Posted by MattIt’s not surprising to see people queue at Guomao at 6pm. What did shock me was seeing people, mostly mingongs at Dongzhimen standing in line on a Sunday morning. Of course the guards were there.
- Posted by Hannah