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Sunday, March 09, 2008

JULY - NOVEMBER 2007: ASIA

As promised, although really really late and I don't know if anyone even reads xanga anymore..=)  As a warning, this post is just a RIDICULOUSLY large photo dump. To reward those who read the entire thing, the funniest story is at the end. =)

While I was in HongKong, I spent most of my weekends out of town, trying to take the mostadvantage of being in Asia. 

TAIPEI, TAIWAN:  I went to Taiwan to visit my relatives (and eat a LOT of food) – This was my first time to go to Taiwan without my parents), so I was a little intimidated, but it turned out to be a lot of fun!   

We ran into Wang Lee-Hom (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee-Hom_Wang) and some other Taiwanese model.  I had no idea who the Taiwanese model was, but I had to take a picture anyways.

I have always claimed that Taiwan has the best food in the world (even after visiting Italy).  I thought that was only because of the way I was raised, and that I was used to eating the food.  But apparently, Taiwan is known in Asia for being a place to go solely to eat – as in, there’s not much to see or do, but the food is fantastic.

some of my favorite foods:

pudding (pronounced in chinese PU - DING) which tastes just like flan

 

shaved ice

taiwanese breakfast: soybean milk, rice-roll, and fried dough. =)

more taiwanese breakfast food: 'dan bing' (literally translated egg tortilla)

and just something I've never seen in the US: yellow watermelon

My grandmother turns pink when drinking too!  Supposedly I look and act just like her.

 

a picture of her when she was 23 - see the resemblance? maybe?

      
Bicycled for 3 hrs around some lake with my uncle's family and coworkers.

 

playing in taipei with my cousin, aunt, grandaunt
      

SHANGHAI, CHINA

I went to Shanghai to visit Alicia, who I’ve known since we were in 3rd grade.  We haven’t seen or spoken to each other in 4 years, and this is only the second time I’ve seen her since high school graduation.  But despite that, I still consider her a close friend of mine, and I love that we were able to pickup exactly where we left off =)

I really like Shanghai – it’s exactly like New York in some areas and Europe in others, save the fact that the signs are in Chinese and the people are all Asian.

The Bund at night. Shanghai is a gorgeous city.

The view from the Bund.



alicia and i at xiantiandi - an area where the expats frequent.


  

TAGAYTAY, PHILIPPINE

I went to the Philippines to visit my high school friend Krystle who goes to med school there.  We went to a place called Tagaytay (http://www.tagaytay.com/), which is sort of like a country resort/vacation destination (like going to Hot Springs, Arkansas for a weekend).  Among other things, we got the BEST massage I've ever had in my life for only $12!!, rode horseback up a volcano, and just lounged around our wonderful hotel (which brought us freshly baked cookies and milk each night at bedtime).


It reminded me a lot of Jamaica…except the people are Asian, and instead of trying to sell you drugs, they are trying to sell you souvenirs. 
Filipino food is also very similar to Jamaican food – in that most of it is heavy, fried, and spicy.

The poverty and the wealth gap between the rich and poor in the Philippinesis truly shocking.  We would pass a whole section of shacks…and then right next door there would be a neighborhood of (literally) mansions.

(i don't have many pictures because krystle has them all hehe). 

 

the back of our hotel/resort.

some of the shacks we passed by on the road.



the crater of the volcano we climbed



the path we took to get to the top of the volcano


BORACAY, PHILIPPINES supposedly one of the most beautiful beaches in the world.
I went with Cat Leung, a sorority sister who now lives in Hong Kong .  The sand was so soft and the water was so nice, it was probably the only place in Asia where I've seen clean water. 



the place where we got massages (a must-do in any city visited in Asia):


and then we just sat on the beach, relaxing from our ibanker lives. =)


...ALL day...


the beach, although I don't think it is accurately captured by my camera...(we never made it out to the beautiful white sands beach because it was raining).
 

this is what the taxis are like in the Philippines:
 

the airport was so cute:
 

these were the only 2 check-in counters:  I found it adorable.




BANGKOK, THAILAND with my coworker Ray: Thailand was not what I expected at all.  It is much more modernized than I would have liked.  The temperature is warmer, and the people are laid-back -- I kept comparing it to California or Florida.  The people are also looked very similar to Chinese people, which I found surprising.

at Wat Phra Keo (Temple of the Emerald Buddha)


  
i really liked the artwork on the side of the walls


the Grand Palace


where all the women/concubines in the Palace lived...
 

Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)



the steps we had to climb



to give you a sense of how steep they were..


Again, we saw someone famous. I have no idea who she was. Think she was the hostess on Bangkok's version of MTV.
 

Thai Boxing


the Snake Farm. That is my 'nervous' smile.


We walked around the Chatuchak weekend market and ate a lot of street food. My favorite were the Happy Buns. 


 

 

BACK IN HONG KONG:

i was really lucky to have quite a few friends either living or visiting Hong Kong while I was there.

with joey wong and steph wu in soho.


elaine wong flynn and jim flynn came the week after they got married.  outside dimsum at city hall on my birthday.


with michelle tiu in times square / causeway bay.


tingting! =)


with my buddy alex at prive on halloween. .

michelle, alex and i with the mascots for the 2008 beijing olympics.

also, the 2 people i probably spent the most time with:

jessica, my cutest favorite personal trainer. =) she's SO cute. and hot. haha.

winty, my violin teacher. yes, i brought my violin to hong kong..

My mom's best friend from high school happens to live in Hong Kong, so she adopted me as her fake daughter, and I adopted them as my fake family.  Spent many pleasant weekends just hanging out in their house in the 'suburbs' swimming in their pool, etc.

 

We went hiking at Deep Water Bay together...hiking in Hong Kong is no joke...we hiked for EIGHT HOURS straight, all the way from the far peak in the back of the picture.


We also spent a day in Sai-Kung, a fishing village Hong Kong.

there were tons of these boats selling a variety of fresh seafood (can you spot the starfish in this picture?)


I took an 8-hour private Cantonese restaurant-style cooking class with my coworker Jeff. 

some of the dishes we made:

crispy chicken steak with lemon sauce.

pork-stuffed tofu and vegetable soup.

I spent the day after my birthday alone on top of that hill with my journals and thoughts for a time of reflection. Was quite nice actually.

here.

the view.

DUMPLING CHALLENGE:

The most embarrassing thing that happened to me in Hong Kong: I was offered $1000 by my coworker if I could eat 50 dumplings in 45 minutes.  All I could think was that a) this guy obviously does not know me at all, b) I love dumplings, and c) what was I going to buy with that $1000…..

Needless to say, I didn't win (only got to 41..), but I did manage to sacrifice my dignity...here, for the world to see.

All 50 dumplings. don't they look good?

I thought so, at first.

30 minutes later, I was doing very well..thought I had a chance of winning.

Then it started to hit me..

And it was over. Not a shot.

the aftermath.

That same day at lunch, an analyst had tried to take on 50 dumplings in FIVE minutes for the same amount of money...he fell to a very similar fate. 

my coworkers watching.

haha we created such a commotion that a large crowd gathered around. A few of them took out their cameras too!

 

 And that is all. Thanks for reading if you did. Happy March! =)


Saturday, October 13, 2007

currently reading: Modern Love: The Best of the New York Times 'Modern Love' Column

i received this book as a present in the mail from my friend valerie who said "the moment i heard about this book, i thought it would be perfect for you and had to get it!"  it's a compilation of articles from the 'modern love' column in the new york times...and i am known around my friends for sending out tons of articles from the new york times, and sending out tons of articles relating to issues of love, etc etc. just because i find them both fascinating.

to be honest, it's been so long since i read this book that i forget my thoughts on it, except that i liked it and found it interesting, insightful, and honest.  the quotations i have below may make the book (or myself) seem a bit depressing.  but many of the stories were quite funny, for example - a story of an entire relationship that began, progressed, and ended via text messaging. 

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“When the movie ended, we shuffled outside with the rest of the Saturday night date crowd: handsome boys and coltish girls dressed in shorts and T-shirts.  They wandered outside, laughing and smiling, blissfully unaware of the dangers they courted.  Would they still be happy and smiling in a year’s time, knowing as we did that to love is to risk great unhappiness?” pg 50

 

“Since my divorce, I have probably e-mailed hundreds of men and spoken with dozens of them. I’ve had drinks and/or dinner with a handful and a coffee date with a very sweet plumber who is also an aspiring poet.  He sees plumbing as indoor art, an intriguing idea that we discussed through several phone conversations.  The danger of personal ads, I realize, is that you become seduced by the ease a telephone situation can provide.  But you can’t know if the chemistry is there until you meet..” pg 60

 

“And so it goes for all of us: for me, Ron, the poet plumber, and the professor, who place ourselves within the confines of a personal ad hoping someone out there will connect with our fifty words and nervous voices on a recorded message.  If we were really honest, our ads would read: ‘My heard has been shattered, and I’m scared….” Pg 64

 

“It’s okay to fall deeply for one loser after another…It’s okay to have too much to drink and call your ex twenty times and then to be mortally embarrassed when you realize your number must have shown up on his caller ID….It’s okay because I believe that all of these grand gestures and heroic attempts….are not really about this guy or that guy.  Making a fool of yourself for love is ultimately about you, about how much you have to give and the distances you will travel to keep your heart wide open when everything around you makes you feel like slamming it shut and soldering it closed.” Pg 68

 

“No one ever told me that a really great marriage can make up for two decades of horrible dating.  I’m happy now that I dated the DJ, the doctor, the candlestick maker.  When I look back at those relationships, I can see that in the midst of all the drama I managed to have a goodly amount of fun.  What would have happened if any of those relationships had lasted, bumbling along in all their glaring wrongness?  Instead of just being dumped and consoling myself with pints of Chunky Monkey and viewings of Breakfast at Tiffany’s, I could have been facing any of these men in divorce court, or being forced to see them every Saturday afternoon, when we met to swap custody of our children or our cocker spaniel.”  Pg 72

 

“CSM was becoming a version of the fill-in boyfriend, which many women in long-distance relationships have. The fill-in boyfriend takes you to the movies or to dinner, or sets up your DVD player.” Pg 83

 

On being the third wheel:

“Their needs were fulfilled by each other; my needs were fulfilled in tandem, by them.” Pg 90

 

“Listening to this took me back to the night when, ten years before, I’d dug in my heels and told someone, ‘Well, if you’re going to be so busy, let’s just stop seeing each other.’  He was the great love of my life, and I never told him that. Instead I’d struck back, eager to punish him for hurting my feelings.  I was young and thought he would be easily replaced.  But I had learned through some very miserable years that there is something worse than rejection, and that is not risking rejection, even certain rejection, to tell the truth.  I had lived with a bluff and my supposed pride and more regret than I can express.” Pg 117

 

“The decision came from my desire to be fully in my life as a writer rather than to raise a child. Having a child was not how I wanted to make meaning of my life, not how I wanted to give back to the world.  And the reason for this was my sense that I would love too fiercely, to desperately at the cost of my self. I knew my children would always come first and my art second, and I sensed the resentment I would feel about that. So I made a choice and said no to the idea of a child” Pg 176

 

“I have been in many mothers’ groups – mommy and me, Gymboree, second-time moms – and each time, within three minutes, the conversation invariably comes around to the topic of how often mommy feels compelled to put out. Everyone wants to be reassured that no one else is having sex, either. These are the women who, for the most part, are comfortable with their bodies, consider themselves sexual beings.  These are women who love their husbands or partners. Still, almost none of them is having any sex….except that is, for me.”  pg 198

 

“..the real reason for this lack of sex, or at least the most profound, is that the wife’s passion has been refocused. Instead of concentrating her ardor on her husband, she concentrates it on her babies.  Where once her husband was the center of her passionate universe, there is now a new sun in whose orbit she revolves….What’s wrong with me? Why, of all the women in the room, am I the only one who has not made the erotic transition a good mother is supposed to make?”  pg 198

 

“I love my children. But I am not in love with them. I am in love with their father.  If a good mother is one who loves her child more than anyone else in the world, I am not a good mother. I am in fact a bad mother.  I love my husband more than I love my children.” Pg 200

 

“I don’t think the other mothers at Mommy and me feel this way.  I know they would be absolutely devastated if they found themselves widowed.  But any one of them would sacrifice anything, including their husbands, for their children.”  Pg 201

 

“And if my children resent having been moons rather than the sun?  If they berate me for not having loved them enough? If they call me a bad mother?  I will tell them that I wish for them a love like I have for their father. I will tell them that they are my children, and they deserve both to love and be loved like that. I will tell them to settle for nothing less than what they saw when they looked at me, looking at him.” pg 203

 

“The women I grew up with, like most women today, have tangible, marketable skills…Inside or outside a marriage, they can support themselves. I, too, am a well-educated woman with a decent work history, who actually made more money than my husband when we married.  I prided myself on being self-sufficient. But we both wanted someone to be home with the kids, and we decided it would be me, so I stopped working and let him support us.  And now I’ve ended up in the same vulnerable position I once thought was the fate only of women who married straight out of high school, with no job experience beyond summer gigs at the Dairy Queen.”  Pg 251

 

“When I took off my wedding rings, my fingers had atrophied underneath in a manner that seems excessively symbolic. I protect this white band with my thumb like a wound. When I wore my rings, I was a different person, emboldened in the way one can be in a Halloween costume. I could laugh as loudly as I wanted and go out with dirty hair and sweatpants. I was married.  Someone loved me and it showed. I could refer to a husband in conversations with a new friend or a store clerk.  They didn’t care if I was married or not, but I did.  My ring said, You can’t touch me. It’s like base in a game of tag. You’re safe.”  Pg 254

 

“These young mothers are often torn between wanting to be home with their children and the statistical possibility of future calamity, aware that one of the most poverty-stricken groups in today’s society are divorced older women.”  Pg 295

 

From someone who was getting divorced from an arranged marriage:

“Yet I honestly don’t think I was more brainwashed than any young bride who, starry-eyed, says yes to the man of her choosing.  The one she met at work, or in a coffee shop, or on a blind date, or in art class.  Marriage under any circumstances requires a leap of faith no matter who you are or how your paths may have crossed.  My husband and I ate our ice cream, took a chance, and leapt.”  Pg 301


Monday, September 03, 2007

The Last I've Seen of New York..

For those of you who don’t know, my company sent me to hong kong in mid-july and I’ve been there ever since.  So I only got to see the beginnings of summer in New York…but tried to enjoy as much of it as possible!

 

Spent most of the month:

-          apartment hunting (was going to try living by myself or a different part of town..but in the end decided to stay with my wonderful roommates in our wonderful apartment. =))

-          watching the ballet (saw 3 ballets in the span of a month)

 

Travel: for memorial day, I went to visit Carol in Austin, TX.  Krystle came all the way from the Philippines!

 

with the UT longhorn..

IMG_02041

 

we went ziplining:

 

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IMG_0565

 

IMG_0616

 

met my parents and alice (who's never been to texas before and was in town for a volleyball tournament) for dinner:

 

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my friends are pretty. :)

IMG_0218

 

 

krystle got a tattoo...

 

IMG_0222

 

which was painful,

 

 IMG_0227

 

but worth it. (it means 'while i breathe, i hope')

 

IMG_0229

 

there was also a lot of this going on.

 

DSC_0296

 

between the 3 of us, there were SIX cameras. (and i only had one...)

 

IMG_2910

 

and just chilled and enjoyed each other's company. =)

 

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DSC_0286

 

 

Back in new york...we threw our semi-annual party (this time at Katra):

 

j 014

 

..to catch up with old friends...

 

(younger girls from my sorority visiting the town)

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(first year analysts at m.stanley)

IMG_1954

 

one of my favorite plano girls =)

j 046

 

j 015

 

and spend time with a certain cute new one ;)

IMG_1964

 

also spent some quality time with other good friends:

 

(dave came to visit. we took a picture because we loved the shorts+long dress socks+sneakers look. haha he was on his way to get his real shoes from his car)

'07 06-02 dave comes to visit, dressed as tourist

 

since both audrey and i were going to be spending a few months in asia and missing winnie's baby shower, we decided to celebrate with her on our own...she doesn't even look 6 months pregnant does she? haha i bet you can't even tell which one is the pregnant one. =)

'07 06-16 audrey and i elping winnie celebrate her pregnancy - dinner somewhere in soho

 

cynthia AND val came to town. wow this is a whole lot of texas in a few months..(bet you didn't know there were so many asian people in texas huh? hehe)

'07 07-08 philip marie - cynthia val anita breakfast2

 

spent a lovely afternoon with nancy+alice.  muah.

'07 06-17 anita nancy alice - washington square hotel

 

our monthly brunch at vento:

'07 07-08 vento

 

And then, sadly…said good bye to nyc.  My last evening in town: some friends came over to help me pack and see me off...before i flew off to the other side of the world.

 

that night was so fun. doing absolutely nothing.

 '07 07-13 the night i left for hong kong - group pix

 

the end. =)  next update will probably be in 2008 haha. but there will be a whole lot of asia....


Sunday, July 01, 2007

Currently Reading
Stumbling on Happiness
By Daniel Gilbert
see related

Stumbling on Happiness

One of my favorite courses that I took in college was Psychology 1 at Harvard.  I took it senior year as part of the cross-registration program between MIT and Harvard.  Perhaps it was the teaching style (so different from that of MIT which I was used to), perhaps it was the subject material (we discussed the same topics in class that I discussed enthusiastically everyday anyways with my lunch group – which consisted of Nick, Dave, and sometimes Nancy or Tiffany), or perhaps it was the professor (he was one of the most engaging lecturers I have ever had)…but whatever it was, I loved the course. Had I taken it earlier in my college career, I could very well have been a psychology major instead of engineering. 

Flash forward to Thanksgiving 2006 – I turn the TV to CNN while running on the treadmill, and I see my professor being interviewed, talking about “what makes people happy.”   

Then in February, while rummaging through Barnes and Noble on one of Dave’s infrequent visits to NYC, I find that he has written a book, entitled “Stumbling on Happiness.” 

To me, it was basically a refresher course on my intro psych class, but my friend Jim found it fascinating – he read the entire thing during our Hawaii trip. I think that anyone who liked “The Tipping Point” would enjoy reading this book. 

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“Now, some people will bemoan this fact, wag their fingers in your direction, and tell you sternly that you should live every minute of your life as though it were your last…The things we do when we expect our lives to continue are naturally and properly different than the things we might do if we expected them to end abruptly.  We go easy on the lard and tobacco, smile dutifully at yet another one of our supervisor’s witless jokes, read books like this one when we could be wearing paper hats and eating pistachio macaroons in the bathtub, and we do each of these things in the charitable service of the people we will soon become.  We treat our future selves as though they were our children, spending most of the hours of most of our days constructing tomorrows that we hope will make them happy.”  pg xiii

“The question of the purpose of human life has been raised countless times; it has never yet received a satisfactory answer and perhaps does not admit of one…We will therefore turn to the less ambitious question of what men show by their behavior to be the purpose and intention of their lives.  What do they demand of life and wish to achieve in it?  The answer to this can hardly be in doubt.  They strive after happiness, they want to become happy and to remain so.” – Sigmund Freud, pg 34 

“..many people consider the desire for happiness to be a bit like the desire for a bowel movement: something we all have, but not something of which we should be especially proud.  The kind of happiness they have in mind is cheap and abase – a vacuous state of ‘bovine contentment’ that cannot possibly be the basis of a meaningful human life.”  Pg 35

“For two thousand years philosophers have felt compelled to identify happiness with virtue because that is the sort of happiness they think we ought to want.” Pg 36 

“What do psychology professors say when they pass each other in the hallway?  ‘Hi, you’re fine, how am I?’  I know, I know.  The joke isn’t that funny.  But the reason it’s supposed to be funny is that people shouldn’t know how others are feeling but they should know how they’re feeling themselves.  ‘How are you?’ is overly familiar for the same reason that ‘How am i?’ is overly strange. And yet, strange as it is, there are times when people seem not to know their own hearts.”  Pg 55

“…just consider what actually has to happen for us to see an object in our environment…in the tiny gap between the time that the light reflected from the surface of the object reaches our eyes and the time that we become aware of the object’s identity, our brains must extract and analyze the object’s features and compare them with information in our memory to determine what the thing is and what we ought to do about it.<