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The Last Man Standing

Today, I found out that I am the last of my friends from San Jose to remain sin­gle. (Well, I dunno about Mike W… we all lost touch with him after high school.) But yeah… Siavash S and Liz Z, Jason C, Adam P, and now Chris N. And then there’s my Sacra­mento friends… I don’t think a sin­gle one of us is close to being mar­ried. Same with my APhiO crowd.

Not that I’m itch­ing to get hitched tomor­row, or that I’m blam­ing any­one or any­thing for hold­ing me back, but this whole thing has just made me really curi­ous about my life’s path.

(Oh, and Liz Z… if you hap­pen to see this, don’t be mad at Siavash S, I twisted his arm for the truth.)

Play Dead

Hey every­one! Sorry for the lack of updates lately. There’s some­thing about the con­stant dis­trac­tions of liv­ing at Drama House… I’m almost never on my com­puter any­more. Actu­ally, being in school again may have a small role in that, too. :)

But since Peggy S “tagged” me, I guess I’ll update. Just be pre­pared for a longer-​than-​usual “yes­ter­day” sec­tion than most people’s.

Ten Years Ago…
I was twelve years old and just start­ing eighth grade at Bernal Inter­me­di­ate School. Sev­enth grade was a tough year for me because I had just moved back to San Jose after liv­ing in Chicago for two years, and the micro­cosm I had left behind at San Anselmo Ele­men­tary, which was just down the street from Bernal, might as well have been in Tim­buktu. I had never really re-​connected with my old friends, and was pretty much a drift­ing loner for sev­enth grade. Luck­ily, around this time, I found a new group of friends in Adam P, Brian G, Chris N, Mike W, and Siavash S, and we would stick together for a good while yet…

Knowl­edge Bowl dom­i­nated my life in school. (We got first in the state and six­teenth in the coun­try one month!) Out­side of class, we had video games, rock and roll, moun­tain bik­ing, and home-​made explo­sives to keep us entertained.

Oh, and around this time, I expe­ri­enced extreme racism for the first time. I was walk­ing to school one morn­ing and hap­pened to be walk­ing next to an Asian girl. There was a group of three white guys behind us who decided it would be cool to throw rocks at us and call us names. It was easy to ignore the names, since I con­sid­ered most of the peo­ple my age idiots any­ways, but I was so freak­ing scared as I saw rocks the size of my fist whizz past my ear. One landed short, bounced off the curb, and hit the back of my knee. That hurt like hell, and I seri­ously con­sid­ered turn­ing around, charg­ing at those guys, and kick­ing the crap out of them. (I had been tak­ing mar­tial arts for sev­eral years already.) But it was three to one, and they were big­ger, and I wasn’t very sure of my skills, hav­ing never fought in a real fight before. (I still haven’t ever been in a real fight.) As I debated it in my mind, the boys stopped on their own as we got close to school.

Funny how that inci­dent sud­denly sprang into my mind as I wrote this… I had for­got­ten about it for years.

Five Years Ago…
I was sev­en­teen, and start­ing my senior year of high school. Again, this was after a move. My dad’s com­pany moved from San Jose to Sacra­mento because they couldn’t afford to pay their employ­ees enough to live in Sil­i­con Val­ley while the tech bub­ble was at its biggest. Our house wasn’t com­pletely fin­ished yet, so my fam­ily was liv­ing with fam­ily friends, down the street from Laguna Creek High.

The first guy I really got to know at Laguna was Lon­son B, and through him, I met David S, Eddie C, Jerry S, Ryan E, Tyler P, and Xuong T. We had some good times with our “study ses­sions” and our Din Fu (“Crazy Tigers”) Triad. (Our motto was, “Not guns, fun!”) Oh, I spent every lunch period in Mr. Pi’s room play­ing chess with Thanh N. He was a mon­ster! I met Chester W, Jeremy J, and Will N this year, too, but don’t remem­ber hang­ing out with them a lot; we got closer in college.

I got in the news­pa­per this year for get­ting 1600 on my SATs. It wasn’t a big deal to me; it felt like any other stan­dard­ized test, which I almost always do well on. I was just glad I made my par­ents so happy. And it sup­pos­edly was like a skele­ton key that would let me into any col­lege I wanted. That was a mis­con­cep­tion if there ever was one. I had set all my hopes on attend­ing Franklin Olin Col­lege of Engi­neer­ing in Boston, but they rejected me because of my extreme intro­vert­ed­ness. They didn’t want good stu­dents. They didn’t even want great stu­dents. They wanted to cre­ate a new mas­ter race that was trained in engi­neer­ing and busi­ness admin­stra­tion and could take over the world with pin-​stripe suits, mechan­i­cal pen­cials, and fiber-​optic lines.

I’m not bit­ter. Really.

One Year Ago…
I had just been kicked out of UC Davis shortly after cross­ing in Alpha Phi Omega. No con­nec­tion between those two events, of course. ;) No, in all seri­ous­ness, I was already well on the road to being kicked out before I decided to pledge. I remem­ber my engi­neer­ing coun­selor telling me she wanted to pick me up and shake some sense into me. I guess I never took Davis very seri­ously… per­haps some­thing left over from my bit­ter­ness of being rejected from the “good” schools.

Kept myself busy with odd jobs like being a chef at Sushi Nobu, which I loved, and work­ing at the ARCO sta­tion on Mace, which I hated. Also did plenty of ser­vice, earn­ing myself the Ser­vice Cow West term. It was fun at first, but there was always a voice at the back of my head nag­ging at me that I was wast­ing my life, while every­one I knew was mov­ing for­ward with their own. This voice got louder as time went on, and I was deter­mined to get myself back into school and fin­ish up a degree, any degree.

It’s funny how as a kid, my par­ents always told me I could accom­plish any­thing I set my mind to. Actu­ally, not just “could,” but more like “will.” They almost expected me to cure can­cer, boot the com­mu­nists out of Viet Nam, and give them enough grand­chil­dren to pop­u­late the moon (after I single-​handedly terra-​formed it into some­thing hab­it­able for humans, of course). Not nec­es­sar­ily in that order. Now it seems like they’ll be happy if I can get a job good enough to sup­port myself and pos­si­bly a wife, in case I ever get a girl­friend that will want to stick around for a while.

Yes­ter­day…
Now to the meat of my post. :razz:

Let’s see… I woke up at 8:30, did my usual morn­ing hygiene/​grooming rou­tine. Went on the com­puter really fast to check for press­ing e-​mails. Logged onto Utopia to check on my province. I don’t think I’m going to play it any­more. I feel less inter­ested in it every time I log back on. Had oat­meal and a banana for break­fast, packed myself a lunch of fried rice and ribs, and watched the news until it was time to catch the bus to campus.

Walked through the MU to see if any­one was in CoHo this early in the morn­ing, but no one was. Grabbed a news­pa­per and went to my first class of the day, PSC 101 — Intro to Psy­chobi­ol­ogy. Unfor­tu­nately, the topic of the day was cel­lu­lar neu­ro­science, and there wasn’t much in the way of funny anec­dotes. The pro­fes­sor ridiculed his own lack of artis­tic abil­ity as he scrib­bled axons on the black­board, and I started nod­ding off, so I pulled out the paper and started doing the cross­word. I don’t know if it’s harder or I’m just stu­pider, but I couldn’t get much done.

Stopped by CoHo between classes, some peo­ple were there. I just said hi and topped off my Nal­gene and I was off to PSC 100 — Cog­ni­tive Psy­chol­ogy. Didn’t see Clint S, so I sat next to Marissa K. We agree that Prof. Trom­borg is hard to stay awake for. He seems like a good lec­turer, but all he does is lec­ture. If you haven’t had him before, he’s blind, so he just stands there and talks… no walk­ing around, no writ­ing on the board. And for the last two lec­tures, the material’s been really dry stuff… his­tory of psy­chol­ogy… so yeah… it’s easy to doze off. Which Marissa did, dur­ing the video he showed for the sec­ond half of class.

After that, Marissa K, Clint S, and I walked back to CoHo together. Clint S and I dis­cussed Sudoku strate­gies, as I kinda played around with one for the first time dur­ing lec­ture to keep myself awake. Clint S’s friend and I had the same basic algo­rithm, while he uses a tech­nique that he says is faster, but not 100% fool­proof. When we got back to the MU, Marissa K stayed at the aKD­Phi table out­side, and Clint S went home, so I went to CoHo by myself. No one was there at first, and I was very con­fused. Then Peggy S came back, and the two of us went to return some text­books and buy some other text­books. Back to CoHo again, where yesterday’s quote occurred. It’s from when Thu H was try­ing to recruit for Mus­ic­Comm, as well as plan out their meet­ings with Aaron R.

I want to sing bass!”

- Thu H, when Aaron R was split­ting up the parts to U2 — With Or With­out You.

I don’t think you can… bass has to do this…”

- Aaron R, who started to sing the beat.

I can do that!”

- Thu H.

…”

- Aaron R, con­tin­u­ing the beat, which dropped an octave.

I can do that!”

- Thu H, still insistent.

…”

- Aaron R, con­tin­u­ing the beat, which dropped another octave.

I can do that!”

- Thu H, still insistent.

Uh… I don’t think you can…”

- Every­one else at the table.

Thu H still wasn’t con­vinced though. I think she still thinks that she has the same range as Aaron R. Oh, while also at CoHo, Kiki K fed me some of the chips from her taco plat­ter. I miss the TexMex Grill. :)

Went to Peggy S’s non-​verbal com­mu­ni­ca­tion class with her at 4. The pro­fes­sor was really funny. And his Korean sounds really good to me. I have to talk to Sandy, who’s also in the class, to see what a real speaker thinks of it, though. All I have is Korean movies to com­pare to. But yeah… if I get the chance, I think I’d take that class.

After that, time for my last class of the day, PSC 168 — Abnor­mal Psy­chol­ogy. The pro­fes­sor talked about the dif­fer­ent approaches to the treat­ment of men­tal ill­ness, and had an awe­some story about a patient of hers who refused to take her pills. I think it’s both good and bad that my three pro­fes­sors are cov­er­ing basi­cally the same ground right now. It’s nice because they rein­force each other, espe­cially since they all present the mate­r­ial in slightly dif­fer­ent ways. But it’s bad because I tend to tune out stuff I know, and that occa­sion­ally makes me miss new stuff.

Then I caught the bus home. Had din­ner while watch­ing Lost. It was my first time watch­ing it as it aired instead of a down­loaded episode. On the com­puter for some ser­vice stuff, then took a shower and passed out while watch­ing Iron Chef with Peggy S.

Five Snacks I Enjoy:

  1. Jello
  2. Pud­ding
  3. Flan
  4. Apple­sauce
  5. Yogurt

I don’t know why I like things that come in lit­tle cups so much.
Five Songs I Know All The Words To:

  1. Thanh Nien Hanh Khuc (The Viet­namese anthem)
  2. Star-​Spangled Banner
  3. Jin­gle Bells
  4. Creep (by Radio­head, not TLC)
  5. Sadie Hawkins Dance (by Reliant K)

All per­sonal anthems at one point or another in my life. :)
Five Things I Would Do With One Hun­dred Mil­lion Dollars:

  1. Buy my par­ents their dream house wher­ever they want
  2. Buy my own dream house
  3. Put myself and my sis­ters through col­lege and grad school
  4. Invest enough in an air­line to be able to fly any­where I want
  5. Invest the rest and hope­fully live off the interest

I kinda feel bad for not donat­ing any­thing to char­ity, but if I really could live off the inter­est of my invest­ments, I’d donate my time and skills to char­ity, which I think would be bet­ter.
Five Bad Habits:

  1. Messy
  2. Poor time management
  3. Unfo­cused
  4. Spend­thrift
  5. Lazy

Yeah, I know… they’re everyone’s. But hey, they are mine, too.
Five Biggest Joys:

  1. Spend­ing time with loved ones
  2. Learn­ing some­thing new
  3. Fin­ish­ing a good book
  4. Build­ing something
  5. Help­ing someone

Damn I sound like a nerd.
Five Favorite Toys:

  1. Inter­net
  2. Digi­cam
  3. Legos
  4. Chess set
  5. Fire

Yup… still pretty nerdy sound­ing.
Five Places I Would Run Away To:

  1. Japan
  2. Metrop­o­lis (Gotham seems cooler, but the crime rate’s a lit­tle too high for my tastes)
  3. Eng­land
  4. Thai­land (the clos­est I can get to Viet Nam for now)
  5. Spring­field

I think I’d just pull a Nemo and go to Dream­land. Never really felt the need to run away before.
Five Things I Would Never Wear:

  1. Leop­ard (or any other ani­mal) print
  2. A sin­gle glove
  3. Lace
  4. Sequin
  5. A paper gro­cery bag

I was think­ing of putting “Birth­day Fairy Suit,” but I guess it’s a lit­tle too late for that.
Five Favorite TV Shows:

  1. 24
  2. Invader Zim
  3. Simp­sons
  4. Lost
  5. Bat­man: The Ani­mated Series

For some­one who grew up watch­ing so much TV, I couldn’t really think of many shows.
Five Fic­tional Char­ac­ters I Would Date:

  1. Bat­girl (Cas­san­dra Cain, not Bar­bara Gordon)
  2. Psy­locke (prefer­ably in Kwannon’s body)
  3. Arwen
  4. Mara Jade
  5. Nikita

I don’t think any of these or even any­one like these are going to pop into my life any time soon. :(

I don’t really feel like “tag­ging” any­one, so I’ll end with this: And then I saw a naked chick. The End.

Keep Fishin'

OK, now for the real post about yes­ter­day… (Wow, it’s nice to be caught up.)

Let’s see… woke up around 8 from a dream I had about my old group of friends from San Jose com­ing together again. I feel really bad for los­ing con­tact with them. But yeah… after I left Santa Teresa, they all kinda went their own ways, too. Chris N went down to SoCal after Vy. Adam P moved to Red­ding and got mar­ried. Mike W moved to… Ari­zona, I believe… Nirav S went to UCI. Jason C and Siavash S are still in town. Jason C’s mar­ried and Siavash S is close. Wow… they’re all mar­ried, or were in long-​term rela­tion­ships last time I talked to them. What a long way from the nerd patrol we were in mid­dle school. I’m the only one keep­ing the nerd alive!

Any­ways… played around with the mail­ing lists, but I still couldn’t fig­ure any­thing out. Chat­ted and posted, of course. Read some more MPD Psy­cho. Oh, and kept call­ing peo­ple for Spring Fling. It’s great to be made chair at 1 AM the night before a project. :) Luck­ily, that was early enough to con­tact every­one except one per­son. But that one per­son was kinda wor­ri­some. Made myself some break­fast, and then I was off.

Went to the bank to cash Steph L’s $4 check. Took that and all the change I had to the 76 around the cor­ner to get enough gas to pick peo­ple up and take them to the project. Picked up Peggy S, but she was still eat­ing. That’s OK, because I got there a lit­tle early from my errands and used that time to look up how to get to the project. Which is kinda impor­tant. Picked up David P, Haley K, and Christina K from cam­pus, and then headed to Woodland.

We got to the project just on time. Good thing I decided to go about 15 min­utes ear­lier than I thought absolutely nec­es­sary. The in-​town travel took a while because it was one-​lane traf­fic with lots of reds. The project itself was really fun. First we played musi­cal chairs with the kids, only there was enough seats for every­one, and every seat had a color. After the music stopped, we would pick a color to win, so every­one was a win­ner. (The kids didn’t really catch on.) Then we had them color some paper plate fishies. And then we played a fish­ing game with them where they hold a stick with an alli­ga­tor clip on a string over the “water” and then catch a toy.

After­wards, Haley K told us about how 425 was Coldstone’s free ice cream day, and the clos­est one is in Wood­land, since the one at the Mar­ket­place isn’t open yet. None of us knew where it was, though, but luck­ily one of the teach­ers did. (It’s by Wal­mart, at the oppo­site end of Main St.) Rolled over there to find out the free ice cream cake is only from 5 PM to 8 PM, so we were a lit­tle too early. Haley K sug­gested wait­ing, but peo­ple had class. And I didn’t really feel like wait­ing hours for a free slice of cake, no mat­ter how deli­cious it might be. Col­lected some gas money to be sure we had enough to get every­one home, and then back to Davis we went.

Chilled at the apart­ment for a bit. Julie C asked me to come over to her place and fix her inter­net. Unfor­tu­nately, I could only get her lap­top online, and not her desk­top. Back to the apart­ment. More chill­ing online. then Eddie C and I caught the bus to cam­pus for the gen­eral meet­ing. It went pretty fast. And it was like the small­est crowd I’ve seen in a while. :???: BComm had two peo­ple to present to… Kim and Tina. Every­one else was miss­ing. :( Oh, and we had no cos­tumed char­ac­ter this time because Clint S was sup­posed to do it, but by the time we were called up, he had to go to work.

MNR was at “U-​Mall.” But that really means it was at Old Tea­house. I don’t get why they didn’t just say Old Tea­house. I wasn’t plan­ning on eat­ing, but once I stepped inside, my stom­ach got the best of me. Thanks aBB for din­ner! :) Chilled there for a while and then remem­bered Jack­son T’s sur­prise party. Caught a ride with Mo W, Almira V, and Merry C to that. Only we were locked out of the sur­prise place for a while. And the Aspen Vil­lage man­ager yelled at us for being too loud on the stairs. What­ever… we were talk­ing in nor­mal voices, and it wasn’t even 10 PM yet.

The “sur­prise” party was pretty chill. Jack­son T didn’t look sur­prised at all. The cake was nice. And Ron L made these… things. They were pas­try wraps with a cream cheese and onion fill­ing. Good, but I wish I had known they were salty before I mixed it with the cake. We mostly just sat around and joked. Quote comes froma ran­dom con­ver­sa­tion I overheard -

Can I use your bathroom?”

- Ron L to Esther P.

… what are you going to do?”

- Esther P.

Num­ber one. … maybe a quick num­ber two.”

- Ron L.

Aw… wait until you go to Sab­rina W’s!”

- Esther P.

Hehehe. Ron L’s got such a rep­u­ta­tion. :)

After most peo­ple left, we had a lit­tle “story time.” That was hilar­i­ous. Sophia C says I should write a book with all my life sto­ries in it. Espe­cially my bird story. What’s that, you say? You haven’t heard my bird story? Well, gather yon­der, young chil­dren, and let me tell you a tale of long ago. An epic saga of an age now lost when dinosaurs roamed the earth… when men were men and women knew it. ;)

So back when I was at Santa Teresa High School… it was my junior year, and I was tak­ing a quiz in my Math Analy­sis class. It was some­time in May, so the weather was on the warm side, and the AC hap­pened to be bro­ken in the build­ing, so my teacher left the door open in the off chance that a ran­dom breeze would cool us down. In the mid­dle of our quiz, a bird flies into the room. Some peo­ple get freaked out, so the teacher starts play­ing with the light switch, hop­ing that it would make the bird go back out­side. The bird wasn’t hav­ing, it, though… it just cir­cled the room, above our heads. And every time it flew over me, it shat on my head. Not once, not twice, but three times, it shat on my head. It didn’t hit any­thing else in the room. And after the third time, it took off, never to return.

The bird had never even landed inside. It’s almost as if its only pur­pose in life was to come get me. So after that, I quickly fin­ished up my quiz, and then asked to go to the bath­room to clean myself off. This was right before lunch, too. I didn’t really feel like eat­ing after that. Oh, and to the peo­ple who won­dered why I didn’t move after I got hit the first time… I didn’t think it would hit me two more times. I mean, seri­ously… what are the odds?!