Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Tricks is for Kids

Here I am, writing exactly two years after my last blog post. Anyone who used to keep up with my blog writing will be thinking this, so I'll go ahead and just write it- "It's about time!" It is about time. I'll give you the update, but first I want to say "thanks". I've grown a lot and learned a lot over the past two years, but one of my most recent realizations boils down to this: my life is really exciting, and it's worth writing about and sharing with you. It really is. Whether I see you on a regular basis or I haven't seen you in years, I've realized that I take a lot of joy in writing this, and I've missed it. So, thank you for reading. Thank you for being interested in me. It translates into care.
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Update? I left my job teaching Mandarin and being an RA for Chinese high school students in Chicago in February of 2013. I went back to Philadelphia, where my parents and little brother live, to find another job.



I left Philly for St. Petersburg, Florida at the beginning of April, with the goal of finding a job on a yacht. Thus began an adventure that involved... a lot. I slept in the airport in Tampa, and I slept in the airport in Fort Lauderdale... for a week. I took a fire safety course and broke an immersion suit. I hit golf balls into a swamp at sunset. I couchsurfed. I made good friends and feared for my life. The highs were high and the lows were low. No joke, Jack Kerouac would be jealous.





All of the adventuring yielded, among other things, a job. I began working on an estate in the Hamptons on Long Island in May of 2013 as a "deckhand". I washed cars and windows, carried heavy things, and basically did anything I was asked to do. I loved it. At the end of the summer, the owners asked me to stay on and continue working for them, and I did. I continued with the family over the winter season and into this summer of 2014, my responsibilities increasing as time went on.















With the summer over and me sensing that it was time to move on again, I submitted my two weeks' notice in the middle of September and my last day was on Sunday, two days ago. So, once again, I write you as a free man. Jobless, but free.
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I fly to China in the middle of October to visit friends and be in the wedding of my friends, Rock and Vivian. I haven't seen many of these people in 2+ years, so I am excited.






After that, the plan is to return to the states and head back to Honduras, where my sister and brother-in-law live and work. The idea is that I'll do something similar to what I did when I visited in 2012- accompany them as they do ministry in the community they work in. I also intend to be a bit more proactive about seeking part-time employment and learning Spanish to potentially make my time there a bit more sustainable. 








All of that being said, anything could happen. I'm on the loose once again, and I could end up anywhere. I've missed this fluidity quite sincerely. 
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I just realized that I can gloss over the past two years quite easily with my words. Hindsight is like that- I can knock out a synopsis of that two year period pretty quickly and easily, and it's because it's in the past for me, I'm moving away from it. 

The reality is, though... it hasn't been easy. Especially the last six months... It's been really, really tough at times. I've felt clouds in my rib cage. I've felt near constant stress and perpetual anxiety. I've felt morally torn and morally compromised. I've felt forlorn and utterly defeated and lost. In fact, I'm being false by saying "it hasn't been easy". It's more truthful to say that it's been heart-breakingly dismal at times. I'm banking on the fact that most of you rarely hear my say things like this and you recognize what a state I've been in. 

I'm resisting the urge to balance this out by writing a paragraph about how great and high things have also been at times, and it's because of this- the best thing about the dreary time(s) I've passed through is the hope that exists despite all of the awfulness. I have no problem mentioning rather cliche sayings and ideas like "it's passing through the worst times that helps us realize how good things really are", and it's because I believe it. That hope is the only reason that "passing through" can even exist. Hope can set you apart. Hope doesn't make sense and, I believe, in it's truest form, it is often exceedingly illogical. But it works. The hope of change changes everything. 

So, hope. That's what I've learned over the past few years. I feel like I spent the first twenty-something years of my life learning theoretically about hope, and I finally started doing my practical training just a few years ago. The training's not easy, but it is good. 
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I know it's a bit corny, but I have some random lyrics from songs that I enjoy that have jumped out at me as being particularly descriptive of some of my feelings during that rough period. I'm rearranging them to read less like lyrics. 

"Here in a familiar place, we've got our heads down and we pretend it's because the night is dark and running out of space for us to run around, but it's a dead end, and money's tight, and it's been a long time of this. Something has got to give. Everyone here is ready to go, it's been a hard year with nothing to show, from down this road, it's only up we go. 

Nothing gives easy, easy gives nothing. Dawn is bound to break when the night is done, always darker days before brighter ones."

..........

"Have you got something to prove? This place will suck the life out of you. You seem to be confused. There’s nothing left to lose. The depths of your heart are sinking like an anchor. 

In the center of the mirror, you just watch where you fall. You’ve got a disconnection with yourself, and the emptiness fills until it all makes you crumble down, until you feel like there’s no way out. And you started to waste away, cause something led your heart astray, and inside it’s pulling you down. It's time to take a different view- there's no one looking out for you."

..........

These ones are always favorites: 

"Can love, even in times uncertain, be the thing that carries us through?
Can love open a heart that's frozen and be there when there's nothing left for you?
This is what it feels to be alive, even though we stumble our way through. 
One chance and then another one appears, and then again another comes to view."

I TOLD YOU these would be corny! I told you! 

Lights- Up We Go 
Kito and Reija Lee- Starting Line
Falling in Love with Brazil- Kaskade Mashup 
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I may not technically be an MK or a TCK, but this article sounds familiar. Thanks to whoever posted this on FB. 
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My friend Ryan said something a few years ago that I've never forgotten and I've found it to be true. He basically said, regarding music and music performance, "People want to be moved, whether it's to feel immense elation or depths of emotional sadness or anything in between, people want to be moved." I've addressed many creative genres and mediums with the same attitude, and I find it to be true. That's ultimately one manner of describing what we are looking for as audiences (and creators, for that matter) of almost any creative outlet, right? To feel our heart shake within us. 

It can also initiate grace and patience toward genres and mediums one does not naturally feel inclined toward, e.g. I may not particularly enjoy the musical genre of _____, but I can see that it makes some people feel the same way as I do about music from this other genre that I love, therefore it may be easier for me to be patient and more gracious toward that genre and it's followers. 

Hahahahahaha that's a joke by the way... what genre of music do I not like? 
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Another recent discovery is this: 

Our greatest move on this earth is to strive to live this life in such a manner that our "last check bounces", but in an economy of mercy, in which our gifts include all of our resources... all of them. When someone dies an untimely death, does a healthy soul mourn the loss of the man-hours that person could have contributed to the regional economy? Surely not. It's the loss of the potential positive change and influence the individual could have enacted that is mourned, the memory of the laughter they caused or the care they showed, the "sharing of their resources", one could say. To make that last check bounce, to completely expend our every resource... this idea has been in my mind. 

I never understood the desire to increase one's own influence or reach in this world until I understood it in that context- 

How do I increase my giving (of everything)? How can I give more of myself? How do I increase the number of people who truly benefit from my work, from my very presence? If I feel confident that I have something to contribute as an individual, how does that alter my worldview and my understanding of my role in my community and in this world? 

These questions don't need answers, but, for the first time ever, I am actually taking real delight in dwelling on them. I have no hesitation in admitting that these questions have arisen out of the fact that I have recently been earning a very reasonable amount of money for a single male a lot of money, the highest salary I've ever made, more than I "need", so to speak. Yes, I donated, and yes, I tipped a lot, and yes, I gave more freely than before, and yet I realized that it's not enough. In the realm of financial giving, I considered myself healthy and probably wouldn't have done things too differently if I did it all over again, but in the realm of my other resources, I was constipated. You laugh, but I'm serious. 

It's like having a brain surgeon apply band-aids to paper cuts all day. It's absolutely important to have someone to apply the band-aids with tenderness and loving care, and I've no doubt that a brain surgeon would be good at that, but I'd propose that the surgeon is going to feel broken and dead inside at some point, knowing that they've been equipped with other resources that are at their disposal, if only they had the opportunity to use them. My angle here is not about individual potential and achievement so much as it's about finding a place and a way for someone to give of their resources in a way that resonates within them and makes them "come alive". Could it be that we all have giving "wheelhouses", particular manners or situations in which we both achieve a major impact while also feeling a true "aliveness"? 

In my recent job, only a portion of my resources were being used (some of them were being abused), and all of them went to but a handful of people. No doubt, those people greatly appreciated me, but the brokenness and constipation and feeling of death and stagnation crept in ever so slowly. It's no one's fault, but it was a good thing for me to learn and now be aware of. 

Disclaimer: I'm not advocating for manipulation and the wrestling of emotional or other resources from any entity. There's a difference between giving of one's self willingly and being manipulated to the point of feeling guilty or otherwise obligated to give. 
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Something bad happened when I tried to grow up too quickly. I don't think it's a secret that males in my age group get chastised quite regularly for being immature, with examples like simultaneously sporting facial hair and a backward baseball cap depicting our desire to gain the best of both the child and adult worlds at the same time. Well, I only realize it now, but I made a semi-sub-conscious effort to expedite that maturing process over the past year and a half and I feel like it kind of backfired on me. I grew up faster than I ever have before. It was painful, but I also recognize a meaninglessness in it. 

Maybe some would say that it all needed to happen, maybe I "needed a dose of reality", maybe maybe maybe... I'll be quick to say that I don't rue the growth that I've undergone or the events that brought that growth about, but I also believe that it wasn't necessary for any of it to happen, so to speak. That could dwindle into a discussion about fate and destiny and will and predestination, but I'll let that go and say that, for me, it comes down to this: the people who are older than me that I most wish to emulate all tend to be ones who have never worried about making sure their maturity narrative is on schedule. Besides, I can agree with the idea that "Maturity simply means knowing when it's okay to be immature". I like that. 
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It may sound like "eat, drink, and be merry"ing, but understand when I write that I think some of the most underestimated powers in this world are the abilities to laugh and to evoke laughter. Think of a world without laughter! How wretched. 
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Maybe it's just me coming back from blog-hiatus, but this one has been especially lengthy and wordy. I won't apologize. In fact, I am going to make an effort to be a bit less censored with my writing. Why not? This is my blog, after all, and it's not like you can't challenge anything I've written! 
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-OH DARN I'm posting on October 1st, not September 30. Oh well! 

Sunday, September 30, 2012

W-Days

Chicago is nice
Autumn is cool and crispy
Leaves crunch under foot
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When you are young, you go to bed early. You walk to your room and hear your parents still watching TV or closing doors and turning off lights. You watch camp counselors preparing for bed while your part of the cabin already lies in murky darkness. You hear your siblings listening to music or doing homework as you fall asleep.

Then, one day, you wake up, and you are the camp counselor or sibling, or perhaps the parent who sent yourself to bed years ago. You find out what it's like to have your light still on while the young ones sleep. You tip toe around creaky spots on the floor to attempt to not wake them up. You go to sleep later and wake up earlier than them. You're the one who checks that all the doors are locked.
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I teach Mandarin at Morgan Park Academy to first and second graders this trimester. My students call me "Mr. Kyle". The teachers refer to me as "Mr. Kyle". I am Mr. Kyle. I feel I am a kid who gets paid to play the part of a grown-up... who plays with kids... and gets paid to do it. 
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I have recently discovered that it's one thing to have many tasks of the exact same nature to complete, but it changes everything when the tasks I must complete are diverse and spread me all over the place. In other words, if I have a stack of papers in front of me that have information on them that needs to be added to a computer (or some other mundane task), that stack of papers can be a foot tall, but it will still present less of a stressful situation to me than the challenge of completing a variety of different tasks.  
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Rockwell- Childhood Memories
Bjork- Crystalline (Current Value Remix)
Indigo- Ayahuasca
Seven Lions

Monday, July 23, 2012

19104 and a Strong Jawline

Hi!

Well....... I started this blog a few years ago to document my travels and experiences in various places throughout the world, but I feel I've only done an exceedingly mediocre job at it. I think half of the things I write here are just bitter rants that I don't want to bore even my close friends with. Sure, it may be therapeutic, but I still get plenty tired of my own negativity.

Anyway, the times they are a-changing. I've had some crazy adventures over the past couple of years, but my blog consists of some gaping holes and does not accurately reflect those adventures, i.e. consistency has not been a forte of mine! Let us hope that this changes.
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So what are these adventures? Well, the most recent ones are as follows: I left Chengdu, China in March and returned to Phoenix. From Phoenix, I went to La Ceiba, Honduras to stay with and hang out with my sister and brother-in-law there for a couple of months. We left Honduras on June 16 to attend a Kyle family reunion in North Carolina, after which we drove up to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where my parents and brother now live. My sister and brother in law returned to Honduras while I started job-hunting soon after I got here.

I am now sitting in a room in an apartment in West Philly which I am temporarily renting, and, as of this morning, I have accepted a job offer as a Residency Advisor caring for and essentially acting as a parent for Chinese students who come to the states to attend private high schools. I will move to Chicago in mid-August, and the students I care for will attend Morgan Park Academy.

Sometimes I think about my desire to travel and how it used to be somewhat of an obsession of mine. My geographical stagnancy bothered me and formed a burden on me. Now, I'll watch movies, and there will be certain points at which, in the past, I would have pined for change and felt the weight of the lack of... experience? adventure? or something... There are many reasons for this, but my point is, I don't cringe or feel a burden anymore. I realize I'm doing exactly what I wanted to be doing for so long. Ups and downs, exhausting laughter and cathartic heartache, I'm alive.

Not everyone can say or write these things. Perhaps the burden still persists for some, or perhaps it has been lifted, but there was or is more heartache than joy.

Hope always remains.
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Now, for a pick-me-up! 

(Thanks Christy!)
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Did everyone born after 1990 make a tacit agreement to refuse to use correct capitalization and punctuation in casual messages? I know it's a generalization so don't take offense, and I'm more amazed than I am irritated.
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South Korea has long had a corner on the pop culture market in East Asia. I propose that western pop music is going to start taking it's cues from South Korean artists very soon.

Ultimately, though, good music is good music.
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There are many reasons that a 25-year-old male might possess negative feelings toward conservative news outlets like Fox News and radio personalities like Glenn Beck. I don't watch the news. I don't subscribe to any news outlet in particular, and, if I did, I'd most likely head toward the BBC. You probably already know that I'm "apolitical" in that I tire of the bitterness and fighting that politics causes among those I care about, I tire of the disunity and I think that, at the end of the day, the results are almost  the same, regardless of who's in what office. I'm fed up with the system, and I think it's fooled us all. I care with all my heart, but I don't.

So, understand where I am coming from when I write that the reason I most hate Fox News is because of what it does to my father.
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This is interesting: 30 x 30
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Here is one thing I learned during the process of my job and temporary apartment searches:

It sometimes hurts to send a billion emails out and get only one or two back in response. 


I'm so glad that I got responses at all. 
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I've recently realized that I consistently tend to most enjoy the not-popular songs off of mainstream hip-hop and rap albums. I sit there wondering, "Why'd they pick that song to be the single?"

I guess I shouldn't be surprised, though.
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Most of you probably already know about this, but just in case... some of my music.
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Given that I haven't posted in a long time, my music recommendations are going to be plentiful. So, I hate to do this, but all I can recommend today are albums, because I just enjoy the songs on these albums that much.

Audrey Assad- Heart
Ellie Goulding- Lights
Esperanza Spalding- All of her albums, ever
Gil-Scott Heron and Jamie xx- We're New Here
M.I.A.- Maya
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As usual, comment, question, prod, poke, cut down, sneer at, etc. everything and anything that you'd like!

I'll write again soon! Hopefully...

Friday, March 30, 2012

Need the Light but Not the Heat of the Day

I'm back in Phoenix, Arizona. I returned on March 2, 2012. I flew through Tokyo and LA to arrive in Phoenix at around 3 in the afternoon, after which I proceeded to take public transportation to within 2 miles of my parents house. Upon arrival, I placed my distinguishable luggage in plain sight of the front door, knocked on said front door, and ran away. My parents and brother slowly came to the realization that I had returned and was likely in the area. And then... suddenly, Chris!

It was a fun, enjoyable, and emotional time.
_

Since my return, I've been readjusting to life in the United States, and relaxing. I've also been contemplating my next adventure.
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I find that one major form of contentedness in Chengdu, China during the winter (which feels like it lasts between October and March) is simply to possess warm fingers, and especially to have warm toes. In fact (and quite unfortunately), warm feet and hands are nearly a prerequisite for any other forms of potential happiness to manifest.
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The American suburbs are startlingly quiet. After living in the city (a large Chinese one, nonetheless) for more than a year, the lack of noise hits me like thunder as I walk through my parents' Phoenix neighborhood.
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My uncle and aunt who live in Guangzhou, China invited me to visit them last year. With the first foreign television channels at my disposal in more than a few months, and despite the fact that multiple soccer matches were on, I found myself naturally drifting toward nature documentaries.

This tendency of mine at that time satisfactorily illustrates the numbing effect of Chengdu; the literal and figurative clouds tend to cause one to forget that there is a huge world outside of that bubble of a city. I had forgotten about lions and tigers and sunshine and safaris and waterfalls and rain forests and diversity and color, to the extent that those nature documentaries turned my world upside down in a great way.

I love being in that city, but I hate that White Wall of China. I despise it with all of my heart.

Naturally, I've been hanging on Alec Baldwin's every word as I watch "Frozen Planet" episodes recently.
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I could never fathom that people would prefer silence when the chance to listen to music is available, but I know people are not all alike in that regard.

Staying at my parents', I haven't been waking up to music, nor is there a set of speakers in the room in which I am staying, both of which are the norm (if there is such a thing).

For this reason, I've discovered at least one reason regarding why I can't handle being somewhere quiet without music playing. I often wake up with songs that I find unpalatable going through my head, and, with no speakers in my room, I can't get those songs out of my head until I reach the headphones at my laptop in the kitchen or some other source of music. Sure, my thoughts may remain in the foreground, but that music is always in the background...
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::Begin Rant::

I used to be really competitive about my musical tastes. I'd have to hold myself back when an artist I'd listened to for years started getting popular among my peers.

I've gotten a lot better about that. In fact, I don't even feel that way any more. If artists or genres I enjoy get popular, I'm glad that more people in the world get to enjoy the music.

That being said, I cannot stand some of the abomination that is on the American radio these days. With all my heart, I hope I'm not just getting older and turning up my noise at the kids and their MTV and Pokemon. Ultimately, that's impossible, because any bones I have to pick are not with the people who consume the music, it's with the money-craving hounds who are making it(or cutting and pasting, rather).

No, it's not everything. There's still some great stuff out there, even on the radio. I guess I'm talking about situations in which samples from songs and music videos that got popular on Youtube are tossed into hip hop songs shamelessly.

I have no qualms with mixing genres, nor do I have any issues with so-called "genre-less" music. What I have an issue with is when popular, talented artists take part in songs which involve samples from songs which got popular from the internet, and these tracks are placed over the most popular beat at any given time to create a sort of misfit "super-song" which has been created and marketed for nothing more than mass appeal, and, therefore, to make someone rich.

Again, mixing and matching is great. The problem is that they aren't making music when they make those songs. They are making what I perceive to be mainly (and perhaps, solely) a product. I love hip hop music, and I usually don't mind, appreciate, or enjoy songs that get popular on the internet, but when the best of both worlds are taken and forced to co-exist because their money-making potential is sought out by the man... it sucks. I feel like the life-giving nature of the pieces as separate entities is lost.

I know this could become a bigger discussion about how the art only reflects the culture, or perhaps about how it's always been like this, or that, if I don't like it I should just not listen to it. Those are all valid reflections.

The reason I feel strongly can be summed up in this: think about what songs have been displaced by these remixes. The potential that has been lost breaks the heart.

Examples? I know a lot of people like this song, but... I can't handle it...

I released an R-rated tirade when I heard "Somebody That I Used to Know" (Gotye ft. Kimbra) in a hip hop song a few days ago. I don't have the guts to try to find it. Plus, it broke my heart the first time I heard it (even if it was only for a few seconds); I can't go through that again.

Someone with knowledge of the industry and/or an opinion that differs from mine, you are welcome to come and put me in my place!

(Removes monocle, nods at C. Kidd)

::End Rant::
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So, what's my next step? My sister and brother-in-law invited me to go visit and stay with them in La Ceiba, Honduras for a couple of months, so I'll be leaving Phoenix some time at the beginning of April to go chill with them. My parents and brother move to Philadelphia in a few weeks. We have a family reunion in North Carolina in June, so I'll be there. After that... I don't know.
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And here's the kicker...

Kimbra- The Build Up


Tuesday, February 7, 2012

"It Is Nothing To Die; It Is Dreadful Not To Live"

I haven't written since September. To an extent and in some regards, I feel completely unrelated to September 2011 Chris Kyle.

I'm looking over things that I planned to write in my blog back then and I don't really feel like writing about those things.
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Chinese friends ask what instant messaging service we use in America, and I don't really know. I know that I grew up using AIM, and I know that Facebook and Gmail have their chatting things, but I don't know what people actually use... What do you use?
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I despise Chinese cellphone etiquette. It's common to see people answer phones at meals, in meetings, and during class (both teachers and students).

One of my former students was having a tough day. 4-year-old "Peter" had been misbehaving during class, and his mom knew about it. After class, Peter came up crying, his mother trying to force him to apologize to his teachers. Right in the middle of this ordeal, the mom's cellphone rang, she answered it and walked off, leaving Peter with tears in his eyes and me awkwardly trying to calm him down.

Of course, it would be foolish to propose that people in the United States don't foster some unappealing social habits.
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My parents and little brother are moving away from Phoenix, Arizona to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. My dad took a new job with World Harvest Mission, and they move in June of this year.

I was born in the Philippines, grew up in Atlanta, Seattle, and Phoenix, and currently live in Chengdu. If my parents move to a city to which I have never been while I remain in Chengdu, how do I answer when someone asks me "Where are you from?"

I'm sure I have a couple of friends and cousins who can provide me with some advice with regard to answering this question.
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My American friends who are living in China and I will be asked if we are from Xinjiang or Tibet at least once a month.
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Remember my stories about saying students' names in funny orders? (Jim! Kerry!) (Jerry! Louis!)

I had a "Fish" and a "Tank" in one of my classes a few months ago...
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I can never wear the correct amount of clothing for Chinese people during the changing of seasons.

"Aren't you cold?" "Aren't you hot?"
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I've studied Chinese for more than 3 years, and I only realized a few months ago what "差不多"means. It means 差-不-多!!!
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In the past few months, I've eaten snails, some kind of larvae, bugs, and kangaroo.
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It's ironic that Sichuan women try to tell me how to eat given the stature of Sichuan men.
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Kaskade- Fire & Ice
Skrillex- Bangarang EP
Lily Allen- It's Not Me, It's You
Chris Brown- F.A.M.E

And I can't stop listening to

Eisley- The Valley
Kimbra- Vows
Gotye- Making Mirrors
Gotye- Like Drawing Blood

Haters gon' hate, y'all...

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Summer to Autumn

Summer was.
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I saw news about the 2012 US national presidential election a couple of months ago and thought "Oh, come on! Really? Didn't we just do this?"
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Chinese people seem to react especially openly and kindly to Americans, and especially young Americans. I know that the blatant reason has to do with the complicated intertwining of money, politics, and culture (a vague description, I know). I'll just explain it like this: many of the foreigners that I see walking the streets here in Chengdu tend to be older European types who wear serious faces... they tend to appear rather unapproachable, to put it nicely. NOT ALL are like this, but many are. So, what I'm saying is that it makes sense that a young American who seems to be brimming with excitement, hope, and openness would tend to be more attractive than some others in the foreign community may.

Ultimately, I think it comes down to the fact that hopefulness (being full of hope) is attractive, and we simply can't help but be drawn toward it.
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I hate that cross-cultural and multilingual communication often leads to one of the involved parties tending to appear stupid, for lack of a better word. An inability to express oneself and get one's message (a.)broadcast and then (b)internalized by others can be rather frustrating.
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It makes sense that there is such great tension saturating relationships in China at this point in time. Specifically, I am referring to age differences. It makes sense that there is tension when you understand that, for a number of reasons, both old and young people feel that they are entitled to... everything. They feel entitled to everything, but they most often end up hardly getting anything. And then, everyone between "old" and "young" is stuck somewhere in the middle.
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When Google+ first came out, the prospect of having to go through the whole social networking deal again brought with it a feeling of complacency and a general lack of motivation within me to go through the whole thing over again. The feelings remain.
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There is a peculiar freedom in being able to pick the circumstances under which you find and make friends.
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I enjoy the parts in movies when quick montages of scenes of life flash onto the screen rapidly.

Ex: Vanilla Sky, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
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I had a nightmare recently. I recall that, during the nightmare, I resisted by very intentionally and defiantly forming my hand into the "middle finger" gesture.
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I want to talk to you. I know I may come off as being a somewhat abrasive character sometimes, but just know that I want to be in communication with you. So, if you ever catch yourself writing something on my Facebook wall or sending an email to me and second guess yourself, ignore that. Write it. Send it. Say it.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Introverted Tigger Eisleys

I live in Chengdu: Tigger hunt. That's right.
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I've had my PC for almost 6 years. I'm really quite proud of that. How much money have I not spent? A lot.
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I've recently been thinking about why exactly I generally feel rather disappointed with my time at ASU, and more specifically with my Chinese class during my last semester. On the whole, it was alright; I don't hate... but I think the root of my disappointment stems from the gap between the China that I know and the China that I was learning about in Arizona. I believe a number of factors were involved, including but not limited to: the uniqueness of Chengdu compared to the rest of China, the shortcomings of the Chinese program at ASU (there, I said it), and, of course, my own knowledge of the fact that I was disappointed and general disillusionment with China and the Mandarin language.

There's no blame. Chengdu's just weird. And I'm weird. And the ASU Chinese program must not be.
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Standing up to family and friends is a challenge for many Americans. Based on my experience, however, the situation is exponentially more challenging and complicated for Chinese people. Chinese society traditionally idolizes family above all. There are webs and structures in seemingly every aspect of life which are meant to ensure the adherence of all to certain thought processes, methods, goals, etc. You're probably thinking, "Well... yeah. It's China, Chris." The thing is, we normally picture government forces enforcing this sort of system. In reality, I find that it's friends and family- the ones closest to a Chinese person- who tend to keep the individual "on track". Loved ones have essentially become the instrument by which the individual's choices are kept in line.

This is, of course, just what I see. Furthermore, change may be on the way.
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I could upload all of these things to the blog, but I'd rather just give you links:




Well, that was fun, right? A little bit of something for everyone. Maybe.
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I like the music I listened to in high school.
I sometimes miss practical jokes. (Not common in China.)
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Teaching story alert:

I now have a student named Leo Liu. Chinese speakers will know that's the stupidest English name ever to give someone with the family name of Liu. Why? Because "Liu" is essentially just pronounced "Leo" but with the emphasis on the second vowel. In fact, it's just "Leo", but spoken in one syllable instead of two. So, maybe it's not the stupidest name. Honestly, I quite like it. What doesn't seem too wise is the fact that class now has two girls named "Lily" (Lily Love and Lily Rong) and two boys named "Leo" (Leo and Leo Liu). Yeah.