tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-51708344547534289652024-03-13T04:22:26.897-07:00Lost in Changsha: 旧的不去,新的不来V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.comBlogger43125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-48000944502168776392011-08-21T04:23:00.000-07:002011-08-21T04:26:43.100-07:00First Impressions - Part Two: Changsha<span style="font-style: italic;">(taken from an email to a friend back in September)</span>
<br />
<br />…..It’ tough to tell if the <span style="font-weight: bold;">city weaves in and out of the mountains</span> or if the mountains weave in and out of the city.
<br />
<br />Not even 100 yards from my dorm is a start of a hiking trail.
<br />
<br />Maybe a mile from my campus is the river which cuts the city in two, so when you ask people where they live? They first refer to what side of the river they live on (east or west) and then to the bus stop. Biked along the river last week with some friends and was rendered speechless... to my immediate left, maybe 30 feet away was steps going down to a stretch of farmland. The farmland stretched outward to the river for a few hundred yards and then along the river for miles. Looking down you could see horses milling about… and <span style="font-weight: bold;">small fishing boats that could have been plucked out of a Chinese painting. </span>Looking across the river is a backdrop of a city that is highlighted by mountain peaks. Ominous rain clouds do not exist. To my immediate right was the east side of the city I live on -- and one of the busiest highways, not more then 100 yards from the horses and fishing boats I just told you about.
<br />
<br />The juxtaposition of these images is mind boggling to me at times. <span style="font-weight: bold;">It's a unique blend of raw nature with concrete and development.</span> I quite enjoy musing about how things must have looked like a hundred years ago.
<br />
<br />People here are like people in any city. There are nice people and rude people -- the extremely fashionable and the ones that you can sense immediately are from the rural areas of China, city bound for the first time. <span style="font-weight: bold;">People that speak flawless English and people that hawk a spit from the back of their throats. </span>People with perfect hair and people who have rat tails. The humidity here can be oppressive at times, but I've quite gotten used to how kinky my hair is everyday. As most people would say here "随便”.
<br />
<br />There is a decent amount of black people here -- mainly from North Africa, which really surprised me when I heard people speaking French. I've met a few Americans from Yale, but I have yet to see white faces unless I go out of my way to meet up with people.... and my American friends are Black American and Asian American.
<br />
<br />I haven't started classes though, so perhaps things will become less interesting when I actually can't go out everyday to explore the city.
<br />
<br />I figured out on my own how to use the buses, so I've been quite addicted to public transportation. It's a little weird being in a city with no metro, and no Starbucks (coming soon in a month). The idea that China is a "developing country" is definitely more apparent here than in any other city in China that I've been to before. Between the BMWs that drive on the other side of the road, <span style="font-weight: bold;">the abandoned hotels where the beggars live</span>, and the strawberry fields by the agricultural university-- Changsha is quite a contradiction in itself. Buildings are knocked down every other day and it seems like overnight... beautiful architectural masterpieces are erected just for fun. <span style="font-weight: bold;">As if a child was playing with a trunk full of legos. </span>I wish I could explain to you more accurately what I'm experiencing and seeing, but just be reassured that it is quite a new experience. It feels like I'm in a different world -- mainly because there seems to be no comforts of home or signs in English. I'm completely immersed in Chinese -- I even text in Chinese. It helps that I look Asian – people immediately write me off as from Hong Kong.
<br />
<br />I miss home terribly, but only because of the people I've left behind. <span style="font-weight: bold;">If I could take all of you with me to China, I wouldn't mind being here for another few years. </span>
<br />V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-38632315431252868552011-08-18T02:37:00.000-07:002011-08-18T02:49:11.035-07:00people watchingwith sunglasses on.
<br />i really like it.
<br />i have <strong>an excuse not to socialize.</strong>
<br />a bit unapproachable.
<br />legs crossed,
<br />expressionless, eyes darting.
<br />a slight jutting of the jaw.
<br />a knowing smile that quickly disappears.
<br />...you wonder if it was even there.
<br />my head cocked to one side --
<br /><strong>a little too strong</strong>
<br />but unassuming, discreet
<br /><strong>i fancy, </strong>a bit mysterious.
<br />
<br />i'm starting to wonder if this is what...
<br />
<br />private detectives.
<br />fbi agents.
<br /><strong>cia operatives.</strong>
<br />or just ordinary state troopers
<br />
<br />...do, day in and day out.
<br />
<br />stake outs are really just...
<br /><strong>...glorified people watching.</strong>
<br />
<br /><strong>perfect location?</strong> shenzhen airport, waiting for my flight to bangkok.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-8008077663977238282011-07-18T09:21:00.003-07:002011-07-18T09:21:43.287-07:00King's Black Magic - Lady of the Sunshine<iframe height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/qZ-V5FQEuNc" frameborder="0" width="425"></iframe>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-74313324857051194622011-07-18T00:00:00.000-07:002011-07-18T09:02:54.688-07:00soundsthe roar of the subway<br />creaking of metal<br />the strumming of a guitar<br /><strong>a chinese serenade</strong><br />phone beeps, alarms, and text messages<br />a child hopping up and down<br />shuffling and murmuring<br />a recorded, automatic, feminine, robotic voice<br /><br />announcing that we've reached our destination.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-33145611688628059422011-07-17T06:54:00.000-07:002011-07-17T06:58:09.773-07:00Confessions of a List-aholic<div><strong>Staring at my computer.<br /><br /></strong>I was confronted with the death screen. White and blue lettering on an otherwise black screen. I turned my computer on and off, on and off, off and on, off and on, <strong>and then off again.</strong><br /><strong></strong><br />I pull back, slumping against my chair, a little too tired for words. My mind racing at the different options, different scenarios, and different price tags I might be confronting. <strong>I immediately pulled up my mental checklist, grudgingly adding another task to my laundry list.</strong><br /><br />Ewan tries comforting me and JunJun offers to go fix the computer with me. I walk up to my room under the excuse that I need to ask Amanda for her computer, but I walk away to collect myself. I try to assess my emotions. Sometimes I find it hard to understand what I'm feeling... but <strong>I always find that once I pinpoint what I'm feeling, I can calm down considerably.</strong><br /><br />I was feeling anxious. A little bit distraught... but mainly just annoyed with what had happened. I was nervous about how much money I would need to spend. I hadn't accounted for how much my French visa would cost in China (another 1800 RMB -- which is 277 USD or roughly 180 quid for those who want to quickly assess my financial situation)... and to tack on a computer problem would considerably squeeze my already tight budget. I started re-doing my budget and listing out future and potential expenses. <strong>Fuck</strong>.<br /><br />When I feel anxious, <strong>I make extraordinary random lists and elaborate plans</strong>.<br /><br />I can make list after list of things to do, things to see, books to read, people to meet, places to visit, and goals to accomplish. My planner is color coded -- my to do list in one corner and my day planned out by the minute in another corner (<strong>usually when I'm abnormally stressed out during exams, emergencies, or when my parents fight</strong>)<br /><br />I compulsively make lists and plans. Like, really. Some people joke about having anxiety problems and quirks. I promise you; I most likely, probably, maybe, definitely do have an anxiety problem of some sort. And it's not a lame joke. I can't really explain why I'm like this... then again, I've never really bothered to understand this one facet of my personality. Some people may pick up on this habit of mine ... but looking back, I'm not even sure even my parents, my ex-boyfriend or even best friend ever actually knew how extreme this part of my personality was. Sometimes I'd be on the phone with my ex and I'd bring up the idea of traveling together (looking up hotel prices and emailing him random websites)... but he always dismissed it as random musings, as if I was suddenly caught by the idea of traveling... not realizing that when I was bored or distracted, instead of doodling, I'd be making ridiculously long lists of countries to visit. <strong>On the back of napkins, the corner of newspapers, book margins, random handouts in class, or on the edge of flyers.</strong><br /><br />I realized I wasn't normal when I realized I was afraid to tell people how far I plan out some ideas (particularly travel plans). Part of me was afraid people would laugh at me... How corny would it be for me to say that my dream was to travel the world? <strong>What people don't know is that I've been like this since before middle school.<br /><br /></strong>I remember after one particularly large fight my parents had, I planned out an entire family vacation to Maine. At the time... I was 12, and I had the idea that if we just took one family vacation together -- things would just go back to normal. Maybe the fighting would stop if we just remembered how much fun it could be to be together. <strong>I was young.</strong><br /><br />Nonetheless, the image was in my mind and I was completely enraptured by the idea. Family vacations always seemed like they would be relaxing (at first), brought my brothers and I further apart (due to long car rides without AC), and managed to tire us all out by the end of it (because we forgot that the point of a vacation is to relax and we did too much sightseeing). But... my parents always mellowed out considerably and never fought. <strong>And that's what I wanted.</strong><br /><br />I looked up maps, hotels, and hiking trails. I planned out our daily schedule for a four day weekend trip... making sure to plan around a budget, timing each activity, and even taking into account driving time. I looked up when different museums open and closed and what areas had peak travel seasons, seasonal discounts, and special promotions. I looked up local attractions and popular restaurants -- and even tried to find restaurants that would cater to my father's high culinary demands. Every aspect of the vacation was considered. I even went so far as to check weather.com to see when the sun would rise and set in case my family wanted to do a hike to take some pictures. I compared hotel prices and tried to predict gas prices. I looked at rental options and also considered bike shops. <strong>I spent the better part of a day planning out a trip that we never took.<br /><br /></strong>Now? When I'm really upset? I'll just hop onto a random site and look up airplane tickets (my current favorite - AirAsia)... my mind constantly figuring out a budget, listing out prices, figuring out currency conversions... my cursor quickly navigating hostelworld, couchsurfing, and various websites.<strong> Multiple browsers opened, endless amount of tabs to sift through.<br /><br /></strong>I don't generally know what I'm doing next week... let alone have a definite ten year plan (because I have 26 ten year plans -- Plan A to Plan Z). In fact, I'm the biggest procrastinator -- so to be honest, it's kind of stupid I even make plans. Probably the biggest reason most people don't know how OCD this quirk is ... is because it doesn't affect my mood if things don't go according to plan. I hardly ever have to stick to plans. If plans go awry, I never get upset, I just replan. Nothing is ever definite in my life. When you travel around as much as I do, it's tough to make promises and it's easier to be flexible and laid back. And I'm the furthest thing from high maintenance when it comes to traveling. But I like having ideas. An idea of what will happen. So let me clarify and say -- I don't compulsively plan, I compulsively make plans. Does that make sense? I make plans because I am stressed, I don't stress because of plans. <strong>I like having plans even if I'll never follow through with them. </strong><br /><strong></strong><br />So I always write down all of my options... and plan every option out. I have tentative plans for almost every country. For every country, I have a list as to what I want to do and see in each. You actually cannot understand my wanderlust. It's only after I got to college that I realized...<strong> I can actually follow through with the millions of ideas, scenarios, and plans I've concocted over the years.<br /><br /></strong>So my computer breaking down? No big deal. Let's breathe, calm down, and think. New budget. New list of things. <strong>New plan. </strong></div><br />
<br /><div><strong></strong></div><br />
<br /><div><strong>p.s.</strong> I hope I didn't scare anyone.</div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-3245103725448720582011-07-14T19:42:00.000-07:002011-07-14T19:44:24.434-07:00beijing, brits, and bars<div><div><div>my last three weeks....<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>the soothing ambience of jazz... </div><div>while sipping a cup of bailey's coffee</div><div>hostel life. <strong>dirty.</strong> loud. but fun</div><div>constant goodbyes</div><div>a mess of languages - </div><div>chinese, french, <strong>cantonese</strong>, british, english</div><div>sharing music with strangers, <strong>drum and bass with chinese pop</strong></div><div>too many brits</div><div>and a beijing fling with feathery soft kisses</div><div>something called "<strong>liquid funk</strong>" that i need to look into</div><div>bar hopping and tequila shots</div><div><strong>clubbing til sunrise</strong>... two days in a row</div><div>hangovers in the afternoon</div><div>bookworm. <strong>reading books on rooftop bars</strong> with a beautiful nighttime view</div><div>shisha bars and fisheyed pole dancers</div><div>"i like clever girls" and "i can't be bothered"</div><div>random weekend trips to tianjin</div><div>bargaining for cheap purses</div><div>and macau food with hong kong dishes</div><div><strong>never have i ever...</strong></div><div>first girl kiss and a tangle of limbs</div><div> fourth of july and rejection</div><div><strong>good friends and the warm buzz of alcohol</strong></div><div>conversation, the hum of music, and comfortable silences</div><div>surreal. young. <strong>invincible</strong>. twenty something dreamers</div><div>content, peaceful, happy amidst the chaos</div><div><strong>summer storms and soaked sandals</strong></div><div>the smell of cigarettes and sweat</div><div>dancing on bartops and boats</div><div>silly giggles and stealing hotdogs</div><div>overpriced water and cheap barbecue</div><div><strong>cutting hair and little buddhas</strong></div><div>sanlitun, the village, and uniqlo</div><div>skype chats and photos</div><div>constant texts and laughing softly</div><div>stumbling, <strong>smiling</strong>, and child pickpockets</div><div>flirting with bartenders and swinging fists</div><div>laundry, clothesline, and underwear</div><div>french visa. complicated. money.</div><div><br /></div><div>30 days til Hong Kong</div><div>34 days til Thailand</div><div>45 days til Malaysia</div><div><br /></div><div>can't wait til europe next year</div></div></div><br />V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-67878547776685652642011-07-14T01:59:00.001-07:002011-07-14T03:05:11.197-07:00Life, love, and what happens after... V (Final)<div><div>Close to a year ago… I had meant to soar into the water, but in the frenzy and in those few moments of adrenaline -- <strong>I found that instead I had plummeted instead</strong>. From such great heights. Hurdling myself too fast forward, tripping, and lurching into the depths below.<br /><br />Recovering from my initial distress, I craned my head to look back up to where I had started my plunge. It seemed like an impossible climb back up to that point.<br /><br />Pulling myself out of the water, I stood timidly at the bottom of the cliff, taking in the task in front of me. No way out, but up. But…the cliff looked too tremendous, too imposing, and incredibly high. <strong>Shards of green glass from broken beer bottles sprinkled my climb up as I guardedly chose my footing.</strong> Accidental slips, fumbling back two steps for every one step I took.<br /><br />And the “steps” themselves were uneven in height -- some giant-size stone steps. Some just small bits of rock, jutting themselves out unnoticeably among the bits of vegetation that had reached a settlement with mother nature. At points, I quailed.<br /><br />Barefooted, I clambered up the cliff refusing to look down or pause for breath. I took leaps of faith, from one level to another – and held my breath each time I felt my grip slip. I was so focused on the climb, that I didn't even notice when I had reached the top.<br /><br />Pulling myself up to that final ledge, I felt my body tense nervously as I reached for the smoothness that was the ground -- my feet now catching up to my hands.<br /><br />And for the first time in a long time -- I felt it. A thump. My heart. <strong>A breath of a pulse.</strong> The soft beep of a monitor, a wave of green, and the tentative hum of the machine. I had worried that I’d lost my heart for a while there…<br /><br />Like Spring's slow emergence... afraid of a sudden morning frost or perhaps <strong>that last shudder of a snow storm</strong>... Spring takes its time like a gun-shy deer. <strong>Caught in headlights.</strong> Perhaps too startled to move. Or inhale. Because the world in the next few moments might shatter and crash. Demolished, with not a slap but a slam. Back into confusion. Horror. Shock. And then death.<br /><br />But for now, I'll take it all in. <strong>Take what I can.</strong> I don't need anything more than your company. Just this moment of tranquility. Quite out of no where, when I least expected it. I can breathe normally again. I'm happy with where I've found myself, at peace with what life has in store for me.</div><div> </div><div> <br /></div><div>And perhaps that light -- <strong>isn't headlights at all</strong> -- but the light at the end of a long dark tunnel.</div></div><br />V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-53315528038702468142011-07-09T23:19:00.000-07:002011-07-14T23:23:12.448-07:00Life, love, and what happens after... IV<div><div><div><div>After less than an amicable split with Mammet …<br /><br />I, of course, once again, swore off men.<br />And of course, once again, I found myself in a romantic entanglement of sorts...<br /><br /><strong>Let’s call him Lee.</strong><br /><br />A Chinese university student.<br />A biology major with a basketball obsession.<br />5’10 with black thick-rimmed frames.<br />An excellent Chinese calligrapher.<br />Who had a slight, yet endearing, Changsha accent.<br />And, he was smart. i.e. my type.<br /><br />Our first date was probably perfect. Dinner, arcade, walking around the pedestrian street just talking, a movie, and the softest goodbye kiss before I left the cab. I had butterflies. He had treated me like a princess -- a perfect gentleman.<br /><br />And so I found myself in the world of “casual dating”.<br /><br /><em><strong><font size="4">casual dating</font></strong><br /><strong>v.</strong>: A compound of casual, meaning not regular or permanent and dating, defined as going out with someone in whom one is attracted to. Casual dating offers the benefits of relationships with none of the commitment: “casually dating him before we make any decisions to see each other exclusively”</em></div><div><br />My friend Jason after a dessert and catch up session <strong>just shook his head at the news</strong>.</div><div><br />“You’re going to break that poor Chinese boy's heart, Tc.”<br /><strong>I laughed, not committing myself to any response.</strong><br /><br />After the second date with Lee, I clarified that my studies was my number one priority. He told me that was fine.<br /><br />After the third date, I clarified that my friends were more important at this point in my life. He told me he’d be happy if he was just a little bit special.<br /><br />After the fourth date, I clarified that I didn’t want a boyfriend. He told me that he was willing to wait for me.<br /><br />Almost exactly a month after our first date, we fell apart after the fifth date.<br /><strong>Perhaps I should’ve made it clear after the first date I didn’t want a relationship.</strong></div><strong></strong><br /><br />Lee was hurt to say the least. He said that girls like me were the worst. The ones that refused to get close to anyone because they’ve been hurt once. The girls that hurt guys because they don’t want to be hurt themselves.<br /><br />I felt bad. But not bad enough to change my mind. I wasn't in love -- and as much as rejection had hurt him, he wasn't in love either. He'd bounce back -- I was sure of it. He was a good looking guy with a bright future -- any girl would be lucky to have him. I just wasn't that girl. He deserved someone better than me, or at the very least, he deserved someone ready for a relationship.<br /><div><br />Instead, <strong>I was cursing my luck</strong>.<br /><br />How did I keep finding guys that only wanted a serious relationship? Wouldn’t most guys jump at the idea of casually dating a girl? Where you don’t have to call or text a girl every day and where there were no expectations. The courtship period where only if two people were <strong>conveniently free at the same time </strong>-- would they then make plans to go out together and have a drink. The time period before two people have the "DTR" -- where you don’t have to attach the messy definitions of “boyfriend” and “girlfriend” or “just friends”.<br /><br />No strings attached. <strong>No time commitment. </strong>No heartache. No guilt for wanting to travel.<br /><br /></div><div>But then I realized, that was the problem The cultural differences that complicates all relationships with foreigners.<strong> Sometimes there are no translations, let alone definitions</strong>.<br /><br /> </div><div> </div><div>In English, we have a hard enough time defining relationships let alone understanding them. Casual dating, friends with benefits, open relationships, "single", hook up buddies, f*ck buddies, dating, boyfriend, girlfriend, backburner... it goes on, and on, and on.<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>Now if there are no translations for these types of relationships -- how can you even fathom the concept? The idea of "casually dating" or "open relationship" is as foreign to a Chinese person as the idea of "celibacy" is to an American frat guy (<strong>sorry for the stereotype</strong>).<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>In Chinese there are only three types of relationship a guy can have with a girl:</div><div> </div><div>1. 普通朋友 (normal friends, "just friends" which you do not hang out with 1 on 1)<br />2. 兄弟姐妹 (brother and sister relationship -- self explanatory) and...</div><div>3. 男女朋友 (boyfriend and girlfriend)</div><div><br /><br /></div><div>The closest idea they have to "dating" is "谈恋爱" -- which literally translates to "talk about love" and roughly translates to "be in a relationship". But this verb can only be used to refer to "boyfriend and girlfriend" relationships --<br /><br /></div><div>The idea of “暧昧” means "complicated" but only in reference to the period before you confess your feelings to each other and you're still unsure about the other person's feelings.<br /><br /></div><div>So how do you explain the idea of "casual dating" to someone who has never heard of casual dating? It's difficult. It's like reteaching the alphabet to a seven year old who's set in his ways. Lee just couldn't understand the concept of "no commitment" because to him -- if he liked a girl and the girl liked him, what was stopping the two persons from making a commitment to each other. He didn't understand that in the States.... we can spend weeks, months, forever dating someone before deciding to make anything official. Liking someone isn't enough reason for a relationship. For him, it seemed as though there needed to be a 结果, a conclusion, of some sort to our complicated relationship. Why waste your time if you're not going to end up together?<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>My mindset at the time? I was in the firm belief that if there's a "start" to a relationship, then there necessarily must be an "end".<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>So why define it?<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div>If I start a relationship someone (at least at this point in my life) -- more than likely, there will be a "break up". I hate being broken up with and I hate being the one to initiate a break up. So let's bypass the mess, I say. I didn't want a conclusion to my friendship with him -- so it was easier to keep things up in the air. It was nicer to not be defined. To not need to breakup. To not need to say goodbye. If we were happy just spending time together then why couldn't we continue just getting to know each other?<br /><br /></div><div> </div><div><strong>After a few weeks apart, we ended up staying "just friends".<br /><br /></strong></div><div>And then I happened upon a realization... I wouldn’t waste my time with a guy that didn’t want to spend time with me – get to know me, appreciate me. But the guys that wanted to spend time, get to know me, and possibly fall in love with me? For the most part, won’t be the type to waste their time on casual relationships. So, to sum things up: I want a guy that wants to spend time getting to know me -- but not a guy willing to dedicate his time to me. I never said that I made sense. Damn. I realize I'm going to be single for a very long time.<br /><br />So howabout a Beijing fling?<br /><br /><em><strong><font size="4">fling<br /></font>n.</strong>: A short period of enjoyment or wild behavior: "one final fling before a tranquil retirement"</em></div></div></div></div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-33977258932723220492011-07-08T10:08:00.001-07:002011-07-08T10:08:49.612-07:00You know<div>you've been in China too long when you have a choice between a "squat toilet" and a "western toilet"... and you choose the "squat toilet" because the idea of sitting down on a toilet bowl <strong>disgusts</strong> you.</div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-60988573311395850852011-06-22T05:25:00.000-07:002011-06-22T05:27:45.095-07:00HSK -- 汉语水平考试<div>-- i.e. the only reason why I spent a year in China.<br /></div><div> </div><div>I passed my Chinese proficiency exam!!! <strong>及格了!!!<br /></strong> </div><div>All the headaches, late night studying, resultative complements, and grammar cramming finally paid off.</div><div><br /></div><div>高级,五级 -- A等<br /></div><div> </div><div><strong>Winning.<br /><br /></strong></div><div> </div><div>Thanks to all who helped me, guided me, encouraged me and saw me through this! Love you!</div><div> </div><br />V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-84701014071986393592011-06-21T11:21:00.000-07:002011-06-21T11:25:42.419-07:00Life, love, and what happens after... III<div><div><div>“我爱你。。。”<br /><br />I stared at the Mammet on the screen. Speechless, terrified, <strong>I felt my feet turn into ice. </strong>Did he really just say he loved me? I knew it was coming, but I was still baffled, speechless, and scared shitless.<br /><br />Within few days, I broke up with him.<br /><strong>Over Skype</strong>… (hey, I never said I was perfect)<br /><br />Breaking up with someone... is always a less than pleasant affair, to say the least.<br /><br />He begged me to stay with him but I stood my ground.<br />He begged me to let him see me but I ignored him.<br />He begged me to make him understand but I had no words.</div><div><br />I felt disgust, confusion, anger, <strong>regret</strong>, guilt – and a little bit of everything at one time.</div><div><br />At one point, I heard myself thinking.... “<em>Why are you being so pathetic</em>?” as if those weren't my own thoughts and words, but that of a <strong>heartless bitch</strong>. Then, ashamed of myself for not being able to empathize and be more patient with his pain... I retreated into my thoughts until I could come to terms with what I had just done.</div><div><br />What had I just done? <strong>I had broken someone’s heart.</strong><br />I had broken someone’s heart because I had been trying to fix my own screwed-up one.<br /><br /></div><div>I tried my best, did the most I could, to make things easier for him… but is there such a thing as easily breaking someone’s heart? <strong>Breaking someone’s heart easily?</strong> Easy heart-breaking? Breaking easily into someone's heart. Easing a breaking heart? The ease of breaking a heart.</div><div><br />It’s not you, it’s me.<br />I’m not breaking up with you because of someone else.<br />I just want to be by myself.<br />I just<strong> don’t</strong> love you.<br /><br />After some bitter words from his end, I had more than enough reasons to never talk to him again. By the time it was all over, all I could feel was “relief” – in the very true sense of the word. I finally wasn’t running away, escaping, or <strong>using someone to pass the time.</strong> I was cleansed in a sense.</div><div> </div><div> </div><div><br />But I want to clarify. I wasn't a good person for hurting him, but nor was I a bad person. It took me a long time to understand that jumping into a relationship, and essentially rebounding... so soon after the end of a tumultuous relationship... was definitely wrong, selfish, and had the potential for high casualties. <strong>But I'm only 20 years old! I'm still young! </strong>I had been honest with him the entire time. What guy wouldn't want a casual relationship!? <strong>But, Tc, be honest.... You should've known better. </strong>Approaching a relationship with an end-date was probably a bad idea. At least, I'm making these mistakes now instead of later on when it's supposed to count... I tried to assuage my consience with these facts and life lessons. But I still feel horrible for what happened.</div><div><br />And then my friend Jesse asked me a very important question…<br />“Are you sure you’re not breaking up with Mammet because he’s a “<strong>nice guy</strong>”?”</div><div><br /><iframe height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/xfeys7Jfnx8" frameborder="0" width="483" allowfullscreen=""></iframe><br /></div><div>Valid question…<br /><br /></div><div>But what is a nice guy? <strong>I had once thought, the only “nice guy” is the guy that’s in love. </strong>But that can’t be true, because I myself have a ton of guy friends who I consider “nice guys”. You know… the ones that deserve the sweetest, smartest, and sexiest girl out there.</div><div><br /><br />The “nice guy” that you would ideally date, have fantasized about dating, or have future plots to date -- but for some reason aren’t. You know those guys that are not <strong>garbage, have baggage, or seem damaged.</strong></div><div><br /><br /><strong>Stable, loving, and committed.<br /><br /></strong></div><div>And I thought about this question for a long time… was I a masochist? Did I only love my ex because he didn’t love me back? Did I only like a guy because of the chase? Did I want guys to play “hard-to-get”? Was there a Freudian answer to all of my questions?<br /><br /></div><div>Nah, the answer was simple. Mammet wasn’t a “nice guy” by any measure, but at the end of the day… it didn’t matter if he was a “nice guy” or not. He just wasn’t “<strong>the</strong> guy”. Or rather, <strong>I just wasn’t “the girl”</strong>. Or better, I just wasn’t ready for a relationship.</div><div><br /><br /><strong>I didn’t want stable, loving, or committed.<br /><br /></strong></div><div>I just wanted to be happy again.<br /><strong><em>By myself.</em></strong><br /></div></div></div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-9328839059626051082011-06-13T11:26:00.001-07:002011-06-13T11:26:44.061-07:00<iframe width="425" height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/J6w5G6g12_k" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-4986608909255993702011-06-09T07:06:00.001-07:002011-06-09T07:09:00.566-07:00I realize...<div>I haven't seen the stars in a while. I miss them.</div><div>Right now in my life, <strong>I lack total silence</strong>.</div><div>Probably why I could never spend the rest of my life in a city... </div><div> </div><div>Give me a clear sky any night.</div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-86939777917335670182011-06-07T01:55:00.000-07:002011-06-07T02:05:12.911-07:00端午节快乐!<div><strong>Quick thoughts:</strong></div><div>"端午节" does not translate to "Dragon Boat Festival"</div><div>Thai & Vietnamese 粽子 are more 丰富... and use banana leaves. </div><div>Chinese 粽子sometimes don't have any filling!!??</div><div>We're celebrating a guy because he killed himself.</div><div>Okay, not really.</div><div>And no, no boats in sight. A little bit of a disappointment. =[</div><div><br />Don't bother watching the video below.<br /><br /><iframe height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/T1WQ90F4HlI" frameborder="0" width="425" allowfullscreen=""></iframe></div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-56151280976638500372011-06-06T06:21:00.001-07:002011-06-06T06:23:48.679-07:00<div><div>Dear Cupid,</div><div><br /></div><div>This is a bad joke.</div><div><br /></div><div>Yours truly,</div><div>Tc</div></div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-59002368362011994152011-06-06T02:53:00.001-07:002011-06-06T02:53:52.028-07:00Two missed calls later...<span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (05/29 7:40 PM):</strong> Hi,this is an international call,my name is George in Sydney.sorry to bother<br /></span><br />Another ring… But my mind wanders briefly…<br /><br /><em>Vague recollections, memories from October of last year, begin to float languidly to the surface. It had been raining that night. A slight sense of dread draped me as I took a step out of the café. Why hadn’t I brought an umbrella? Why didn't it start raining three hours ago when I was on my way out? I grimaced looking down at my new shoes I had decided to parade around today, of all days. I hate rain and public transportation. I hate rain without rain-boots...<br /></em><br /><em>Anny laughs, what was I worried about? Her friend George could drive us home. It wouldn’t be inconveniencing him at all. Who is George? I don’t know him, never met him – but Anny assures Brandon and I that "George" will drive us home. If Brandon comes, it should be alright… Plus, I reason, I don’t want to take a cab home by myself. We greet "George", not pausing for introductions, and jump into his car.<br /></em><br /><em>The car ride back to the dormitory is relatively short, no more than 10 minutes, give or take a few pauses. It seems small talk in English is mandatory. “George” talks mainly about himself… he’s headed to Australia soon. I’m lost in my own thoughts as I watch raindrops coalesce, separate, intertwine, and not so fluidly trail down the window. I sit in the backseat with Brandon. Still a little stiff… my hands begin to hurt. I hate rainy weather...</em><br /><em></em><br /><em>I lift my head quickly as I realize someone is talking to me.<br /></em><br /><em></em><em>Perhaps we could all meet up and practice English, his Chinese accented voice breaks through my weariness. I am polite but not warm, giving a muffled non-committal hum.<br /></em><br /><em>A few days later I received a text from “George”. He’s sorry to bother me but he had gotten my number from Anny. Was I free for coffee? </em><em></em><br /><em><br />Who was George again? ... I pause, fumbling and sifting through papers on my desk, buying my memory time to remember the name. I scramble for a scrap of my memory. I remember I didn't have a particularly good first impression of him.<br /><br />He had come off as strange to me... I had a neutral, leaning towards a negative, first impression. Impeccably dressed, not bad looking, but not my type, a little too arrogant that wasn't confidence, and I could tell he was "rich". Not that I dislike people with money, I'm just wary of them. And I hated his voice. Low but not at all attractive, like a dull thud, like a wet log being thrown into the mud. Or a limp corse being tossed casually into a grave. A little bit like Bert's voice from Sesame Street. Boring...his speaking style a soft drone and not the least bit riveting or even interesting. Like listening to a lecturer from the back of a large auditorium with two hundred other students, half of whom are hidden behind their books. Make no mistake, they're sleeping not studying...<br /><br /></em><em>Would Anny be there, I ask? He doesn’t reply and instead sidesteps my question telling me he could pick me up because he has a car. I’m not sure I really care he has a car.<br /></em><br /><em>Tomorrow’s not good? What about anytime I’m free?<br /> I’m conveniently busy at any time. I tell him that maybe we can go when Anny’s free.<br /> </em><br /><em>A few weeks later in December, “George” texts me to ask me if I’d like to get coffee again because he’s leaving for Australia in two days. He would love to be able to practice speaking English with me before he has to leave. </em><em>At this point, I’ve started dating Mammet… so I politely decline telling him I don’t feel comfortable meeting him one on one while I have a boyfriend. </em><br /><em></em><br /><em>The texts end.</em><br /><br />Another ring and my thoughts interrupt themselves.<br /><br />He was a friend of a friend, perhaps I should be polite. Plus, it seems as if he won’t stop calling until I pick up… And apparently he's calling me from Australia?<br /><br />“喂,你好…”<br /><br />We speak for less than two minutes and thirty-six seconds, <strong>during which time I robotically go through the pleasantries</strong>. I’m quite good at those now. I’m distracted as I take the call… I’m shopping with Best, my roommate.<br /><br />Yes, I do remember him… but why was he calling again? Is it urgent? He doesn’t hear my question apparently – and instead returns my question with a few of his own. Yes, my studies were fine. Yes, so was my health I suppose. Oh really, he’s coming back to Changsha – well isn’t that great. Oh, too bad I’ll be leaving Changsha soon. Where am I going? Beijing. He tells me that he was thinking of traveling to Beijing for some fun when he’s back in China. Right… <em>Damn</em><br /><br />He asks me for my email… I distractedly give it to him. Maybe he’ll stop bothering me now? I give him the wrong email address at the very last moment. I tell him I’m busy, now annoyed with myself. <strong>I try to live by the idea that it only takes a second to be polite -- but I had given him 156 seconds. </strong>I hang up, perhaps a little too abruptly.<br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong></strong></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (05/29 8:01 PM): </strong>Hi,very glad to hear you are going to work in Beijing for sometime.I will go to Beijing at the end of the year. I thought I can not see you any more.take care</span><br /><br />I carelessly look back at the text, dismiss it, and go back to the changing room. In my mind at this point, I had fulfilled all necessary obligation to be polite to a person who was my friend's friend.<br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (05/29 8:36 PM): </strong>Hi,I just trying to send you emails,unfortunately I failed. Would you mind sending me email so I can email you back with the following address: georgeXXXXX@hotmail.com.Thank you and looking forward to your email<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (05/29 9:25 PM):</strong> Hi, just wondering why you wanted to contact me? I just find it odd you would go through so much trouble? Hah…<br /><br /><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (05/29 9:32 PM):</strong> To be honest,mysterious longing just for the once unforgettable charisma.Hopefully you do not mind accepting as a friend<br /><br /></span>Gotta hand it to him, haven’t heard that one yet. I’m a little weirded out, but it’s not as if a random pick up line can really phase me. I don't text back. I decided to ignore him. He'll get the hint, right? He'll go away.<br /><br />A few days later...<br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/04 9:52 AM): </strong>TC,Best wishes on the dragon boat festival.I understand it is hard for me to win your confidence,which is not bad.Maybe I should have an Aussie girl friend<br /><br /><strong>Tc (06/05 10:45 AM):</strong> ? Why are you telling me you should have an Aussie girlfriend. Did you think we were going to date? Either I’m confused or you are...</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 10:56 AM): </strong>I really wanted to date you before I left Changsha, but you said you have a boyfriend and denied to meet me.Even do I still miss you and hope to make friends with you because you have your rights to choose your boyfriend.I am an optimistic man,I sincerely wish though I can not make it<br /><br /><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 11:36 AM):</strong> If you are available,I am honored to one of the potential candidates to go after you.If you are not available I am happy to be friends<br /><br /><strong>Tc (06/05 12:48 PM):</strong> We only met once… I don’t understand how you could want to pursue me. You don’t even know me. I’m sorry but I’m a little uncomfortable with this situation.<br /><br /><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 2:36 PM):</strong> I saw you once,that’s true.But you did give me a very good impression and honored to be friend with you.That’s the reason,I ask for your email ,so we can get to know each other more.So take it easy and relax,I will never push you.Anyhow I will go to Beijing after I graduate<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (06/05 2:42 PM):</strong> Okay… But I’m not going to be in Beijing? I’m going back to France then the States.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 2:44 PM):</strong> OMG,when will you depart Beijing<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 2:51 PM)</strong>: tceu1@yahoo.com is your email address?I planned to send you a few pictures so you can recognize who I am.Please do the same, so I can keep you in my heart<br /></span><br />Do you think if I see a picture of you I’ll suddenly change my mind and become interested? And my picture? Uh. If the warning bells hadn't gone off already in my head, they sure as hell were ringing out full blast now. I don’t text back. I’m actually a little scared. This is so stupid, I think to myself…<br /><br />----<br /><br />My cell phone rings almost six hours later at 8:30 PM. I don’t have caller ID and usually pick up all of the calls I receive.<br /><br />“喂?” I calmly ask....<br /><br />His voice. I immediately hang up. I panic. Why is he calling me?<br /><br />----<br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 8:37 PM):</strong> Hi, your voice is very sweet,I do not know the reason my voice can not go through</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (06/05 8:40 PM): </strong>I’m sorry. But the attention you’re giving me is making me uncomfortable. Especially because you’re overseas and still feel the need to contact me so persistently.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 8:45 PM):</strong> I am sorry to make you uncomfortable.Would you please send me your email and when will you go to Beijing and then depart.I am thinking of taking the upcoming holiday to back to China so you can have minimum impression on me.if I can make it,good,if can not,I will keep you as a friend in my memory<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (06/05 8:53 PM): </strong>You’re going to come back to China just so that I can meet you? I’m not comfortable with meeting you. You’re really a stranger and I don’t need this type of attention.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 9:06 PM):</strong> Do not be nervous.I tried,failed, will not regret. This will be a short scenario in life.I thoroughly respect you.Would you please send me your email address.Actually I am considering apply PHD in an American university<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (06/05 9:10 PM): </strong>I’m sorry. But I do not want to give you my email address.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 9:15 PM):</strong> You do not have to say sorry.it is all my fault.Your denial makes sense .Maybe this is the last contacts between you and me</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 9:24 PM): </strong>I always watch my manners as a gentleman should be based on my horizon.Your refusal just breaks my long waited dream.Anyhow which is not bad.I always sincerely wish you best happiness though I can not bring to you.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/05 9:37 PM):</strong> TC,except dating,there ate many things more than that .I do not understand why it is so hard or even impossible to make friend with you.I am not a wolf nor a hooligan ,but a sincere man with warm heart and integrity</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>Tc (06/05 9:45 PM): </strong>I don’t know you. If you were actually a gentleman you would take this rejection gracefully as you said you would. I have no interest in being friends with someone who barely knows me and goes to such lengths. Your attraction to me seems superficial at best. Please stop.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><strong>+00614XXXXXXXX (06/06 11:37 AM):</strong> TC,I will give up as you said.However I want to protest that love is miracle and distance is not the pretext .I will back to china in several months. Best wishes to you</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"></span><br />V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-54987894066792138982011-05-22T11:42:00.001-07:002011-05-22T21:34:45.962-07:00Life, love, and what happens after... II<div><div>Within<em> a month</em> of my boyfriend breaking up with me…<br /><br />I changed my plane tickets back to the States, called up my friends to make travel plans, bought tickets for<strong> Thailand</strong>, <strong>Indonesia</strong>, and <strong>Singapore</strong>, changed up my style with two new pair of reading glasses, cut away more than ten inches of my hair, dyed it brown…<br /><br /><img src="http://usera.imagecave.com/tcvu/faces.png.jpg" /><br /><br /><strong>flirted with my hairdresser</strong>, went on a shopping spree, bought sexy black lingerie, splurged on a pair of kick-ass heels, reread “<em>Tale of Two Cities</em>”, and <strong>of course</strong> found myself another relationship.<br /><br />This time around?<br /><br />I had a <strong><em>Turkmen-Muslim </em></strong>courting me in <strong>Chinese</strong>.<br />The hilarity of the situation did not escape me.<br /><br /><strong>Mammet.</strong><br /><br /><strong>He…</strong><br />can't be described as the type that struck you as particularly good-looking, nor was<br />particularly brilliant.<br />could obsess about soccer, <strong>Akon</strong>, and mayonnaise.<br />had a habit of fiddling with his phone, which<br /><strong>would spin compulsively between his thumb and index finger</strong>.<br />was just about 6’, dressed like a Parisian.<br />was learning Japanese and fluent in Russian, Turkmen, and Chinese. But…<br />didn’t make for outstanding conversation and his taste in music was… <strong>terrible.</strong><br />simply peeked my curiosity, <strong>blipped onto my radar</strong>, because<br />spoke so many languages, and his voice was dead sexy.<br /><br /><strong>I</strong><br />have a thing for voices.<br />had <strong>never </strong>heard of Turkmenistan.<br /><em>kind of </em>just wanted to say I dated a guy from Turkmenistan.<br /><strong>really like guys who can speak more than one language.</strong><br />could read him like a book.<br />knew he wasn't smarter than me.<br />admit,<br /><strong>rebounded.</strong><br /><br />I had to leave China in eight months.<br /><strong>He had to go back home to an arranged marriage.</strong><br /><br />He warned me, “I can’t marry you. I can’t love you.”<br />I replied, “Get <em>over</em> yourself”.<br /><br />It seemed like the perfect situation. A few months. Fun, light, <strong>non-committal</strong> and more importantly, there was an end-date… And I hate to admit it, but I liked it that way.<br /><br />There was <b>no immediate spark</b> or strong connection.<br />But, he was exactly what I needed.<br /><br /><em>When I woke him up at seven in the morning, crawled under the blankets, and started quietly crying</em>…He laid down next to me, silently, wiping my tears – remarking how I was still beautiful when I cried.<br /><br /><em>When I went to the bars with the sole purpose of forgetting the night and hopefully the last two months before that night…</em>He accompanied me to the bars until four in the morning until he finally had to leave to catch his flight to Guangzhou for work the next morning.<br /><br /><em>When I had higher expectations that he would sleep around with other girls than text me…</em>He managed to find time in his schedule in between conferences, meetings, and clients -- to Skype with me even though he’d only get a few hours of sleep.<br /><br /><em>When I woke up mad one morning and refused to talk to him…</em>He bought me a scarf to apologize, made me breakfast in bed, and more importantly he looked at me as if he was the luckiest guy in the world. <strong>I had forgotten how nice it felt to be </strong>–<br /><br />Loved.<br /><br /><strong>Wait. </strong><em><strong>What?<br /></strong></em><br /><strong>Stop.</strong><br />Rewind.<br />Play.<br /><br />And then I asked myself an important question… did I <em>want</em> this relationship?<br /><br /><em><strong>No.</strong><br />Shit.</em><br /><br />And it all went down hill from there...</div></div>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-55699896054301770332011-05-18T22:16:00.000-07:002011-05-18T22:17:29.010-07:00Fact.<b>[1:13:23 PM] Olivia Lucas:</b><br />you're not traditionally celibate<br />you're just emotionally celibate.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-30439822787115954422011-05-15T22:03:00.000-07:002011-05-15T22:05:08.442-07:00Fall Semester Plans?Class schedule for the fall.<br /><br /><img src="http://usera.ImageCave.com/tcvu/French%20Class.png.jpg"><br /><br />May the French Language gods have mercy on me.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-74700919944001294502011-05-14T10:27:00.000-07:002011-05-14T11:42:19.024-07:00CPOP for the win!If you're friends with me... you'll know that I have a pretty wide range of taste in music. <strong>I dare you to challenge that last statement and show me something new :] - </strong> <br /><br />Passion. Innovation. Talent. <br /><br />If an artist has at least two of the three aforementioned criteria, I can appreciate their music. I listen to everything from your classics to your classical -- from jazz, to 90's grunge, to blue grass, to rap, to simple acoustic, to R&B, to post-rock, to indie folk. <strong>Then multiply all that by the number of languages I'm learning.</strong> Why confine your music appreciation to just one language?<br /><br /><em><strong>My favorite way to get to know someone?</strong></em><br />Having them make me a mixed cd.<br /><strong><em>My favorite type of person?</em></strong><br />The one that continues to make me mixed cds.<br /><em><strong>My favorite mixed cd?</strong> </em><br />Has music I've never heard, but will love.<br /><br />However... pop music...I won't lie. I make a concious effort to avoid listening to pop music. Not necessarily because I dislike this particular genre of music, but because pop songs are designed to get stuck in your head. As easy to catch as the common flu - symptoms include headaches, nausea, and <strong>temporary memory loss</strong> as you hum your way through the bits of rap they manage to squeeze in between the uninspiring lyrics.<br /><br />But I digress....<br /><br />Came across this particular song during my taxi cab ride home yesterday. Yes, they have music videos playing in the tiny television in the back of taxi cabs here too. And yes, they had me trapped and partly brainwashed.... which might explain why I found this video so catchy.<br /><br />"I'm Back" by Danson Tang - 唐禹哲, featuring Amber<br /><iframe height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/v9i2poHjWmg" frameborder="0" width="425"></iframe><br /><br /><strong>Why do I love this song?</strong><br />1. I have the hugest girl crush on Amber - she has my haircut AND raps. <em>Badass.<br /></em>2. Asian choreography will never cease to amaze me. And...<br />3. It's been stuck in my head, on loop, for the last 24 hours.<br /><br /><strong>The only cure?</strong> To share this song, listen to this song, and then translate this song for myself -- in the hopes that I'll get sick of it and will never want to listen to it again... until maybe a few months from now, when this song just becomes associated with my memories of China.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-44655706331675083082011-05-12T10:44:00.000-07:002011-05-13T17:16:29.203-07:00To not be continued... 有缘分Destiny. Fate. Serendipity.<br /><br />In English, we often times use these words to describe our romantic entanglements, first impressions, secret affairs... <strong>love or what have you</strong>. For some reason, those words are often pulled out during weddings, anniversaries, and Valentine’s Day… or in a really sappy love scene in the latest romantic comedy.<br /><br />It was an inevitable course of events. <strong>A series of fortunate events.</strong> God, or whatever higher power you may believe in, planned for you to meet this person, at that time, under those circumstances, for whatever reason. Let’s keep it simple so I'm not forced to pummel you with my philosophy minor and thoughts on religion.<br /><br />In Chinese there’s a saying that can’t quite be translated quite as accurately, as meaningfully, or as perfectly into English --<br /><br /><span style="font-size:130%;">有缘无分<br /></span><strong>To have destiny, but not be fated.<br /></strong>To be destined to meet, but not be fated to end up together.<br /><br />But in Chinese, it doesn’t sound corny, clichéd, or even remotely exaggerated. I avoid translating this concept as "<em>star-crossed lovers</em>" because it's not necesssarily depressing and no where near tragic. It’s a phrase that can be used to describe a variety of people, situations, or events – not just past lovers, ex flames, ex-boyfriends, and ex-complicated.<br /><br />Like the strangers that have crossed my path, infiltrated my memory bank, and ambled away without a second glance back…<br /><br />I remember... one winter’s day, I found myself pleasantly lost, by luck, in a back-alley record store located in one of the many 胡同's in Beijing. The record store itself was a tiny cramped room, the floor space perhaps no larger than the last elevator you were in. The door to which, barely barred the wind from forcing its way inside, and would loudly clang the bells attached to the doorknob every time a customer entered… <strong>as if the owner wouldn’t notice when a customer entered and immediately took up one fourth of the space in the room</strong>.... Shelves and shelves of CDs hid the walls from view, threatening to topple over at any second, daring customers to just try and jam a CD just a little too roughly, a little too harshly, back into the shelf. Band posters and concert flyers served as a table cloth for the “cashier’s desk”… where a tiny Chinese hipster was hunched over his laptop (black rimmed glasses and all) – intent on whatever new album he seemed to have gotten his tattooed hands on.<br /><br />And for whatever reason, destiny, fate, <strong>or not</strong>… I met him.<br /><br />Not as if he or I had a choice in the matter… just entering the shop, I had already found myself right by his side. <strong>A step to the right, a duck, and a weave</strong> – as we naturally revolved around each other, trying to take in the music collection contained within the overly cramped room. Carefully picking our steps so as to not crash into each other - a dance between strangers.<br /><br />As I perused the collection, I noticed that most of the music I already had… which isn’t surprising as my CD collection is on the brink of reaching 300.... (You can laugh if you want but I’m an old soul at heart, hate new technology, still prefer record players to the newest iHome, and only recently succumbed to iTunes). So as I thumbed distractedly through the CDs, I found the time to discretely take in my fellow music-enthusiast…<br /><br />Now, he wasn’t dashing, and by no means gorgeous… But he had a strong jaw line, a lean figure, and from what I gathered he was just a little under 6’. <strong>To be honest, I can't remember his face...</strong> only that he was handsome at the very least. What I <em>do</em> remember? He was immaculately dressed. Underneath his grey wool peacoat, a sleek skinny tie peaked out of a dark blue cardigan – dark washed jeans, and leather lace up boots completed his outfit. <strong>A too careless look that had to have been planned.</strong> A stark contrast to the shadow of a stubble I noticed he seemed to have neglected that morning... He moves slowly, fluidly. I lower my eyes, focusing just a <em>little</em> too hard on the album in front of me as he turns to speak to the owner in Chinese...<br /><br />It was his accent which first captured my full-attention.<br />Startled, <strong>curious, </strong>intrigued – I had to ask,<br /><br /><em>“Excusez-moi, mais… est-ce que vous-êtes français?” </em><br /><br />And indeed he was. A French grad-student who’s been living in China for the last six years. We held a conversation in three languages, and he held my heart within three seconds. <strong>Was I French too?</strong> No, I spent time in France because of family -- but why was he in China? Oh, really? No, I’ve only been here for a few weeks. He spent some time in Vietnam, he says -- oh, and yes, of course I love jazz. <strong>And, could he recommend me some French music?</strong> Reaching above me to a shelf located to the left of my head, he quickly pulled out a few CDs handing them to me with a promise that I'd enjoy his selection.<br /><br />Songs by <em>Gotan Project</em> breathes this memory into life every time one of them manages to shuffle itself onto my playlist.<br /><br />If I had bothered to get his number? <strong>What’s the most that would have happened?</strong> We would have become facebook friends? We would have exchanged maybe three or four emails – before our moments in the record store, would be nothing but a muddled memory. I’d discover that he’s like any other man -- with flaws, defects, and not the Parisian I had imagined him to be. He'd be average. My first memory of him would be tainted. Our correspondence? Would fizzle, <strong>with a last crack to signal its death</strong>, then like the embers of a campfire of the next morning, be buried in grey ashes. No, I couldn’t let that happen.<br /><br />I wanted to keep him as a perfect memory. Distinct. Vivid. A memory of a cold, clear day -- in a record store in Beijing. Some moments are only perfect, <em>because</em> of the beauty that can be captured by its brevity. Like a transient daydream. An artifice of your imagination. <strong>Fleeting yet enduring.</strong> A moment to revisit and romanticize. His character, forever slightly a mystery, which only my imagination could serve to fill in the blanks.<br /><br /><br />Which is why I walked away…without a second glance back. And without regret.<br /><br /><iframe height="349" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/s8pxlrKqMUs" frameborder="0" width="425"></iframe>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-83103406965569921182011-04-26T10:29:00.000-07:002011-05-17T04:50:06.582-07:00Life, love, and what happens after...<strong>Soundtrack:</strong> <em>The Only Moment We Were Alone</em> -- Explosions in the Sky<br /><br />When I first came to China, I was in the midst of a long distance relationship.<br /><br />He was my high school sweetheart. Probably the most complicated character in the first chapter of my life. <strong>The antagonist.</strong> Maybe, just a dream of sorts. My best friend. The person who knew me best at my very worst.<br /><br />Our relationship… was one of those<em> messy</em> situations that came about after almost four years of being off and on, hot and cold, loving and hating, and god knows what else in between (the sheets).<br /><br />Knowing that the likelihood of us staying together was minuscule, wishing we hadn’t fought all summer, and making impossible promises; we put a blindfold on and approached the edge of the cliff. And instead of flying, <strong>we swan dived</strong>. It wasn’t a surprise to either of us. Like jumping into the quarry back home.<br /><br />And yet… hitting the water, there was still a sharp intake of air as I sliced into the icy darkness. The immediate shock that releases itself into pain. My eyes sealed shut, as I focus on the pounding in my ears. <strong>The pressure</strong>. From the speed at which I fell, combined with the water consuming me – driving out all rational thought<strong>.</strong> My breath, lost. A sense of weightlessness that comes with being underwater. The space around me, <strong>attempting to right itself</strong>. Instinct taking over as I flailed my way to the surface. I found myself alone, surrounded by an immense expanse of water, the sky above me, the cliffside towering behind me.<br /><strong>Did I jump in by myself?</strong> I wonder.<br /><br />In the end, we just didn’t know how to grow up together.<br /><br />Handling a broken heart by oneself in a foreign country, on the other side of the world, with a 12 hour time difference, and poor internet connection -- is not highly recommended. Your best friend isn’t a phone call away and everything familiar and comfortable will seem out of reach. A hug is hard to come by. And a pint of <strong>Ben & Jerry’s</strong>? Completely impossible.<br /><br />Which is why I didn’t deal with it. <strong>At all.<br /></strong>I rebounded.<br /><br /><center><img src="http://usera.ImageCave.com/tcvu/quarry.jpg"></center>V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-67947895500660126682011-04-21T02:17:00.000-07:002011-05-13T17:31:54.870-07:00Fruit -- and things that look like it.I have dragonfruit for breakfast, <strong>freshly cut pineapple during lunch</strong>, and snack on fresh mangos all day. But sometimes...when I'm daring (or just bored) -- I try out whatever fruit I've never had/seen/<strong>tasted</strong>/heard of before in the States. Usually hit or miss -- but always delightfully colorful.<br /><br /><a href="http://usera.imagecave.com/tcvu/fruit%20%281%29.JPG"><img src="http://usera.imagecave.com/tcvu/fruit%20%281%29.JPG" /></a><br /><br />There's a game I like to play here in China. It's called "Guess what."<br /><br />Guess what this fruit is...<br /><br />in Chinese?<br /><strong>in Thai?<br /></strong>in English?<br /><strong>in Vietnamese? </strong><br /><br />This particular fruit -- I found it in Chinese is called "甜瓜" which translates to "sweet melon".<br /><br /><strong>What is that you ask?<br /></strong><br />I'm not very sure myself. A slightly less sweet version of a honey dew melon -- that sweats a translucent orange, much like the color of a topaz...<br /><br />As fun as it looks, looks can be deceiving. <strong>Not nearly as sweet as its name</strong>, and entirely too heavy to have for a snack. When put in a Thai dessert it's passable as a dessert.<br /><br />I miss <strong>peaches and plums</strong> from the States. But...<br /><br />I'll miss having kiwis, lychee, durian, dragonfruit, small oranges, pomegranate, mangoes, pineapple 等等 -- all for ridiculously low prices. Why can't I have all of that in Massachusetts... Cheap, exotic, fresh fruit. One of the many reasons why I love living here. :)V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-7970428735048087462011-04-14T03:53:00.000-07:002011-04-14T04:02:01.685-07:00whether the weather will whateverThe wind breathes warmth into my room, foreshadowing temperamental thunderstorms that have yet to come. The door to my balcony is wide open as I <strong>wait for the weather to make a decision. </strong><br /><br />The weather has decided to adopt the ‘Japanese horror-film’ version of suspense – the slow build up with no ultimate climax. The atmosphere – constantly heavy. You feel your breathing becoming labored, because of a constant pressure on your chest. It's psychological, don't worry. <strong>If you’re not paying close attention, time drags you to no ultimate destination. </strong><br /><br />I take my time walking into my room and then out again onto the balcony, adjusting to the noticeable difference in temperature.<br /><br />Should I wear a sweater? It’s cold in my room even though I’ve left the door open all day. <strong>But…I can’t bring myself to do it, despite my discomfort.</strong> I think it’s as ridiculous as wearing a sweater in the summer because the AC is turned on high – while people outside are dying of heat.<br /><br />The sky has been brushed grey and the air weighs down on me -- a sigh barely escapes my lips. I want to stand on my balcony and watch as people walk by, but my neighbor is out on his balcony… and hypocritically enough,<strong> I hate when people watch me people watch.</strong> Watching people people-watch.<br /><br />I should go for a run. Or stop typing. Focus on work? Translate a few poems for fun. Read the Murakami book I’ve had <strong>bookmarked halfway but haven’t touched in two months</strong>. Study Chinese. Finish my stupid essays. Start my Chinese essay. Review my Modern Chinese chapter.<br /><br />I don’t have a point to this post. I’ll save you the headache of reading my thoughts and stop here.V.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5170834454753428965.post-33484717501284006202011-04-08T08:53:00.000-07:002011-04-08T08:56:44.057-07:00Life Advice of the Month<b>[11:49:58 PM] Jesse Hou:</b> just remember Tc<br /><b>[11:50:02 PM] Jesse Hou:</b> marry a middle eastern, eastern african<br /><b>[11:50:04 PM] Jesse Hou:</b> so your kids<br /><b>[11:50:08 PM] Jesse Hou:</b> can be the most racially diverse everV.http://www.blogger.com/profile/10498957621745544725noreply@blogger.com0