A desk

They say you can tell a lot about a person based on how they organize their desk. Some people are very concerned with keeping the surfaces of their desk clean and tidy, preferring to push the messes into the drawers, hidden away from sight. Some are just the opposite, fastidiously trying to keep everything tucked into its right place inside drawers and cubbies, but are somehow fine with leaving piles of papers and miscellaneous crap on top. And of course there are also those who leave everything a mess and those who strive to be neat inside and out.

Can you guess which one I am? I think the answer is pretty easy — I am type number two. I can organize and file the hell out of important (as well as useless) documents and items and easily access them whenever a need arises. But the top of my desk… whoo! Right now I have a stack of mail from yesterday and today sitting on my desk, a dvd drive box, an elephant figurine I picked up in India as a gift to one of my friends here, stacks of cds, loose pens and post it notes, a box of salon pas, a bottle of eye makeup remover and more piles of… random stuff. It really does drive me crazy, but i’m not about to put anything on my desk into the wrong place inside it. In the meantime, it looks like crap. I mean, it looks really bad.

I wonder if that’s what my life looks like to the outside person. I can’t lie and pretend that what people think really doesn’t matter to me — I’m still a good Chinese girl at heart and my mama did succeed in instilling some measure of decorum in me, despite my emphatic resistance. I know she’s concerned about the decisions I make, how they must look to her traditional/conservative Chinese friends. I know she has a hard time explaining my actions to them, and I feel bad putting her in that situation. It’s not her fault that I didn’t turn out to be the proper, good Chinese girl like she was when she was growing up; the circumstances of my upbringing were beyond her comprehension and control. I grew up in a different time, with a whole host of influences affecting who I ended up becoming. A different village raised me. In a way, I am not really her child…

What a profoundly strange situation my parents were in in immigrating here with me! I mean, just imagine what it must have been like: You are living in a new country, living in a transplanted version of a community from the home country, still carrying the same values, and yet despite the presence of a community of likeminded people from your home country, you still have limited means in trying to perpetuate those values to the next generation compared to what you would have had ‘back home.’ There is media and advertising and different social norms and completely oppositional ideas on how to achieve success. And not to mention the ultimate challenge: how do you teach your children to succeed in a society you’re still figuring out how to succeed in yourself?

I know I was a challenging daughter to raise, and to this day I know I still give them grief. I’m not proud of the headaches I’ve caused my parents (I’m still Asian enough to feel quite guilty, thank you very much). But at the same time, I’m eager to continue being who I am. I want to tell my parents, look ma, I’m that second desk, and I promise, in the end it will all be worth it. I want to keep hoping, keep believing for myself that it really is true. I need to believe for myself that it’s possible, that I’m much more than that messy exterior seems to say, that one day I’ll have it all together.

Mom and Dad, I love you, you’re wonderful, I’m sorry, but one day I’ll make you proud. I promise.

all i want is to be your sunflower

It is infinitely easier to consume and read than it is to create something from nothing, especially if you’ve been out of the creative business for a little while.

That’s more or less where i’m at right now, being a sort of erstwhile writer, posting the occasional ‘what i did today’ blurb on my blog or some regurgitation of that day’s browsing experience. I find myself focused more on the generalities of what happened in a day than in the small life lessons one can learn from those events. My excuse lately has been that I haven’t really had much happen to react and write about since I’ve settled down, stopped hitting the clubs and drinking every other weekend, begun to exercise restraint in my practice of making things more difficult for myself, gotten past the idea that creating emotional drama is some glorious form of personal expression and cut back on spending time with people who are still stuck in that mode. These changes began two years ago when I started seeing Jer, and to be honest, I find the peace I have with my life far more liberating than the “liberated” lifestyle I was living before. So while ‘nothing happens’ in my life nowadays, for the most part, I’m also content that nothing really needs to.

But it doesn’t make for particularly moving or relatable writing or art in the least bit. I’ve long been enamored with the archetype of the suffering artist. Growing up in the age of grunge rockers like Kurt Cobain and Eddie Vedder and living in the fiercely idealistic San Francisco bay area, a region with boasting quite a few prominent suffering artists itself, it’s not hard to see why. And, the emphasis on emotion — to be so young and to put so much faith in one’s emotions and believe so deeply that in this great wide world of falsity and deception and money and fame and sex and corporate junk, emotions are the one true thing in life. It really is a beautiful thought, and to be honest, a part of me still finds the romantic notion deeply alluring and compelling. It’s why I loved Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind so much. I can’t say I’m completely past being a victim of my emotions, but I’ve learned the hard way that even those too can be betrayed.

So here I am now, quietly going about my existence, the hazy memory of me as a ball of energy and ambition slowly fading from public view. I miss it sometimes, and a part of me still yearns to be that artist suffering in the pits of despair and flying high in the throes of ecstasy. The highs really were so very high.. but the lows were similarly so very low…

Why all this self-reflection? I find myself in this state as I go through the process of looking for work, assessing my skills and hireable qualities and figuring out what to highlight in a cover letter. This cover letter business is really daunting. It’s like writing a personal statement all over again, and we all remember how much fun that process was. And because a letter is focussed much more on the practical “what will you do for my company” rather than the open ended “what can you bring to our campus?” the priority in it isn’t just you, it’s how you make yourself a saleable product to a complete stranger. The very act involves trading in a shred of holier-than-thou idealism for a slice of practical materialism. Maybe I’m a little late in coming to this conclusion — I’ve been spoiled and lucky so far in that most of my jobs can from personal referrals and people seeing me in action and being impressed with what they saw. And boy, it’s much easier being sought after than being the one seeking. I’m slowly coming to grips with it as I’m going through the hunt now. But at this point, I’m pretty much accepting that I’ll need to do whatever it takes to find something. I need to keep my mediocre-quality mind from turning into low-grade mush. I can simply feel the brain cells dripping away…

Speaking of dripping away, I think my mind is about spent. Maybe I’ll continue this tomorrow…

One last thing: I don’t want to lose my creative energies. I don’t want to fade away and become a consumer in the crowd. I still want to create, give rise to schools of thought, change the world for the better. But I must remember that it is a daily pursuit and requires a certain vigilance. I must resist the urge to be complacent, even when things seem so happy.

Wish me luck as this wilting flower figures out how to sell her seeds to the corporate world.

content aggregators are way too much fun

i don’t know why it took so long to do this, but there’s a service out called kinja that lets you create, in essence, a blog of all the blogs you read. it is similar to xanga’s subscriptions page or livejournal’s friends page, only it only displays excerpts of posts rather than the whole thing. the digest you create is automatically shared, so other people can browse the sites you read and you can do the same for other kinja folks. it’s way cool! i’m still building my list of subscriptions, but you can see an early version here.

but it gets better. there’s a service called webjay, which grabs links to mp3s off a page and streams them to your winamp, windows media player, or iTunes. Couple webjay with kinja, and you can generate a webjay playlist stream with mp3s all the blogs you’re reading!

[ giddy~!!! ]

what you do/relevant links
www.kinja.com
webjay.org
link extraction bookmarklet for webjay (only works for mozilla based browsers, sorry)
– use bookmarklet on your (or someone else’s) webjay digest. watch those songs leap into your winamp. enjoy muuuusic~!!! :D

[ Now Playing: 3 – 7-03 – Ben Kweller performs – Commerce, TX.mp3 ]
*dance dance baby!*

dvd burner hooked up

so i forgot to mention this earlier, but i stopped by fry’s on thursday. coincidentally there was a one-day sale on the 4x emprex dvd +/- burner (edw-4020) for $70. yea, it’s a no-name brand, and there are going to be some problems with it, but it’s much better than my stupid quad speed sony cd burner i’ve been using since freshman year of college. it’s fast, quiet, and it worked right off the bat. so very happy. :)

i go play with my burner. i still can’t believe i burned a 4 gig dvd last night in 18 minutes. hot damn!

flyby update

happy daylight savings time. i want my hour of sleep back! >:O

last saturday:
flew home to the bay area. had lunch at a really good little hole in the wall chinese place that just opened up near where we live. homestyle chinese recipes with a bit of a new twist. their chili oil wontons were exceptional, scallion fried pancakes were flavorful and not too greasy, and soup dumplings were steamed atop little rounds of cucumber, which added a refreshing flavor to the not-oily-at-all dumplings. i’m missing it already.

slept the rest of the afternoon before getting ready to celebrate alice’s birthday. dinner at scala’s was not bad, but a tad expensive. the food in general was quite good — the calamari appetizer was delicious, the caesar salad jer and i had was snappy and flavorful, the olive oil/vinegar/garlic bread dip was fragrant and tasty. my only complaint was that the main dish jer and i ordered, a sea scallop risotto, was a little bit disappointing. maybe risotto’s just not my thing, but the flavor balance seemed to be a bit off.

hit shanghai 1930 for an element party afterward, and although jer and i didn’t dance a whole lot (or drink at all, for that matter), it was fun hanging out at the table and catching up with folks i hadn’t talked to or seen in some time, especially ruth, ed, agnes, and kelvin. would have loved to catch up some more with more people (stacey and albert, in particular) but it was still nice seeing everyone there. makes me miss home a little bit more than i already do.

last sunday:
sleeping off saturday night and jer’s hellish week last week. mom fixed a really yummy amazing dinner of spare rib soup, yellow chives w/brown tofu and pork strips, shrimp and snow peas, home-roasted chicken, and celery/carrot/soybean sprout stirfry. i need to steal more recipes from me mum. :)

monday:
jer and i went to meet up with his mom in san francisco. we had lunch at boudin in embarcadero square, wandered into ferry building, then took a muni streetcar up to pier 39. picked up some saltwater taffy at the candy store at the end of the pier, watched some seals, then took a streetcar back to embarcadero, where we wandered around the shops at the center for a while longer before taking his mom back home. mom fixed some beef noodle soup for us as a quick dinner before taking jer to the BART station for his flight home.

saw eternal sunshine of the spotless mind with sarah later that night (lovely, beautiful movie.. i think it’s a favorite of mine now), then went home.

tuesday:
slept in, did some reading, did some job hunting online. dinner — bean sprouts with fried tofu, salmon, roasted chicken from the other night, and a couple other things i can’t remember (my memory is so shot). dad took me to the airport. hopped on a plane and flew home.

discovered my computer wouldn’t turn on. it’s still not turning on today.

wednesday:
my sister was still in town, so grabbed a late lunch with her at um’s tofu in gardena. dessert of hawaiian shaved ice at the shop in the same complex (highly recommended), and wandered around the hawaiian store two doors down. dinner — leftovers from lunch: bulgogi, tofu soup and rice

thursday:
cleaning day. took julie to the airport, then went to Fry’s on the way home. Picked up a dvd burner on sale for $70; have yet to install it.

friday:
ran around town looking for final fantasy tactics for the gameboy advance. finally located two copies at the eb games on PCH and Calle Mayor. Score! Dinner of dumplings and edamame. watched some movies on HBO (Conspiracy isn’t bad — Kenneth Branagh is such a good actor, but his talents are so wasted on a lot of the material out there now.)

yesterday:
lunch at chick fil-a with vanessa, fisshy, jenn w and marie. picked up a game stop membership (worked out cuz fisshy was getting games and could get a discount if i purchased a discounted membership i’d use anyway). got some candles at joanne’s while fisshy and jenn shopped for fabrics for their next projects (skirts and dresses for their friends.. that includes me, woohoo!). parted ways soon after, as they were going to a play in santa monica later that night. jer and i ran some errands before dinner (broccoli beef and picked radish), then hung around the house watching bad movies on HBO (collateral damage, anyone?) and donald trump making an ass of himself on SNL. tip: no matter how much you want it, seedless watermelon at this time of the year is really disgusting and spongy. not worth it.

quote of the day: while listening to the really long solo section in lynyrd skynyrd’s ‘freebird’ jer remarked that you don’t hear people playing like this on the radio anymore. “you have to be old or ugly to play like this.”

today: daylight savings time blows.

mm… gyudon…

had a very good eating weekend. I made a modified version of beef bowl for dinner last night that turned out to be ridiculously good. Here’s the recipe i ended up using (modified from the one i originally intended to use… long story)

Yummy tasty gyu-don (beef bowl w/egg)

4 C short grain rice (mm… sticky short grain rice…)
1 T canola oil
1 medium sized white onion
.8 lbs sukiyaki meat (the cheapest kind i found at marukai)
1/4 C mirin
1/4 C soy sauce
1 C water
1 t sugar
1/2 T hon-dashi
3 or 4 handfuls of prewashed bagged spinach (hey, it was leftover from spinach salad the night before)
4 large brown eggs, beaten

Cut onions into 1/2 inch wide slices and set aside. Heat wok on medium heat for a few seconds, then spread 1 T oil to lightly coat the bottom of the pan. Allow oil to warm (but not get too hot) before adding onions. Saute onions until they are about 3/4 done (when the onions get golden and soft, but not soggy and browned). Add mirin, soy sauce, water, sugar, and hon-dashi to wok; stir to combine. Then add beef to the soupy mixture and cook for 10 or so minutes until meat is done. When meat is almost done, add the spinach, stirring and turning the soupy meaty mixture so the greens can cook.

After the meat and spinach are done, add the beaten eggs to the wok. When the eggs are set, you are done! Spoon over steaming hot bowl of rice and you’ve got a meal to make a non-vegetarian belly very happy. :)

I really want to try making a miso seared sea bass. If you happen to know of any good recipes (for sea bass or anything else really), please let me know! Ah yes, I could also use some good vegetarian recipes too. Can’t really live on meat alone. :)