just another passing fancy
Thursday, August 31, 2006
Monday, June 12, 2006
1. Grab the nearest book.
2. Open it to page 161.
3. Find the fifth sentence.
4. Post the text of the sentence in your journal along with these instructions.
5. Don't search around and look for the coolest book you can find. Do what's actually next to you.
"Lee looked at him and the brown eyes under their rounded upper lids seemed to open and deepen until they weren't foreign any more, but man's eyes, warm with understanding." - East of Eden, John Steinbeck
Tuesday, May 23, 2006
H is for...
This is a game that Janita started on her blog and passed onto me. She assigned me the letter H and I have to come up with ten words that start with H and explain their significance to me.Let's start with the obvious...
1. The concept of hyphenated identities have been on the forefront of my conscience for the entire year. When the topic of Chinese/North Americans arise, the only name that seems to be recognisable is Amy Tan. To my pleasure, I found that there are many others who have wrote on the same topic with passion and attitude - John Okada, Maxine Hong Kingston, David Henry Hwang, Fae Myenne Ng, Chang-Rae Lee, Eric Liu and Ien Ang. We all live in what Said calls the third space.
2. I was not born in Hong Kong, but I maintain an intimate relationship with its culture and a love for the city. You will never see fireworks more beautiful.
3. My culture can be described as homogeneous. In our mosaic or melting pot, this concept is foreign to many North Americans. This is best described by historian Fernand Braudel who says, "Tous les jours, une civilisation emprunte à ses voisines, à assimiler ce qu'elle vient de leur prendre. A première vue, chaque civilisation ressemble à une gare de marchandises, qui ne cesserait de recevoir, d'expédier des bagages hétéroclites."
That being said...
4. I have been blessed to be surrounded by a group that can be described as heterogeneous. I look at the faces of my friends and can see that I am surrounded by colour. If we were all together in one room, we look as if we were the United Nations. I am surrounded by different cultures and we learn from one another every day.
5. I was introduced to Hermeneutics in fall term by Denis Lamoureux.It is a philosophical technique concerned with the interpretation and understanding of texts, particularly, scriptural texts. In the 20th century, Heidegger's philosophical hermeneutics shifted the focus from interpretation to existential understanding. It was treated more as a direct, non-mediated, thus in a sense, more authentic way of being in the world than simply as a way of knowing. Three quarters of my undergrad in literary theory have been based on Hermeneutics and I fall more in love every day.
6.Happenstance is one of my favourite words. It is the meeting between two strangers in a completely random situation. Some of my best friends have come about by happenstance. It is such a lovely concept, and a lovely word.
7.Halasana is the first posture in the finishing sequence. Every time I reach Halasana, it is a relief and it is a joy. When I come to that posture, I reflect on my practice and think of what I accomplish and what I need to improve. Regardless of how the rest of the practice went, I look forward to Halasana, because it means that in 5 minutes, my poor body will be able to lay in savanasa.
8.I love Harry Potter. I am usually very wary of anything that is an international phenomenon and I am extraordinarily glad that I was proven wrong by Ms. JK Rowling. *hearts*
9. Tash Harychan is one of my most trusted confidantes. Thank you Tash for inspiring and challenging me to make the right decisions, to be a better person and a better friend.
And to wrap things up...in the spirit of the Stanley Cup...
10. Currently, I am living in Hockey pandemonium. I feel attacked by its paraphernalia, but I cannot ignore the philosophy behind this sport. It is commonplace to assert that ice hockey signifies something about Canadian popular culture, and indeed Canadian culture as a whole.
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Hyphenation
I am the child of Chinese immigrants. I am caught at the crossroads of being loyal to my heritage and being fluent in my nationality. I seek approval from both sides of the hyphen. I speak an accented Cantonese, but I speak it with love. I am only a visitor in Hong Kong, a stranger to China; its history, however, is rooted deeply in my person. At home, I follow the customs of my parents - my Mama and Baba. The dishwasher employed for Tupperware storage, the cupboard full of chopsticks, the packages of black fungus, dried bean curd, grains of red bean, the twenty pound tub of white rice; these are customs that prevent me from being fully Canadian. I speak English with passion. It is the language that I can manipulate. It is the language where each word is used to its fullest potential. I speak English without an accent and with a comprehension that my parents will never realise. They will never appreciate the world of books, music and films that have helped craft part of my identity. Canada is my home, but I am not Canadian. I am Chinese Canadian.Growing up, I took every lesson imaginable: skating, ballet, piano, math, gymnastics, Chinese and French. My parents were determined to have a prodigy who they can compare with their friends’ children. When my friends would talk about the fun things they did during the weekend, the only stories I would have to tell would be about sitting in extra math classes and Mandarin lessons on Saturday and Sunday mornings. All the games I played involved learning. Carmen Sandiego taught me geography, Midnight Rescue and Number Munchers taught me basic arithmetic. All these games, if broken down to its root was based on academics. I'm not certain if I have ever received praise from my parents. All I remember is being told to do better. They would show me articles of kids that have reached University level courses at the age of 10 or won a grand prize playing piano. They told me that if I worked harder, I could be one of those kids. I resented those children and always complained that they compared me with people who were far too extraordinary – this frustrated them, because, why would you want to be compared with mediocrity? You compare yourself with the best.
One year, I was cast in the school play as the Chinese shopkeeper. I only had one line, and every time I said it, people laughed. As a child, I thought that the laughter revealed how much the audience liked me; with every delivery, my pronouncement became more dramatic and exaggerated. With impatience, the night came that my Mama and Baba would be in the audience. Finally, it was time for the Chinese Shopkeeper to come out of her store. I walked onto the stage, with a bag full of rice. I looked out at the audience and in a loud, Chinese accent not unlike my Mama’s, I proclaimed, “Lice! Lice for everyone!” while scattering the rice grains onto the stage. As predicted, the audience erupted in laughter and I eagerly looked into the audience for my parents. The spotlights blinded me from seeing their true expressions so I imagined that they joined in on the laughter while bragging to their neighbours that the girl onstage was their daughter. After the play ended, I clambered into the backseat of our car and waited for the praise that I would never receive. It was not until years later that I finally understood the deep disrespect that I had displayed not only to them, but also to myself. My parents came to
My relationship with the term “Chinese-Canadian” has never been constant. The source of conflict for me is the hyphen. I am neither fully Chinese nor Canadian. Mama never lets me forget that even though we may live among ghosts, we are different from them. We may not necessarily be better, but we are different. “Ghost” is the literal translation for Caucasian people. The term ghost was not originally used to describe the transparency of their skin. For the Chinese, these strangers were so different in appearance and manner during their first encounter that they were frightening. The abnormal. The supernatural. Just like ghosts. To my parents, I may be born in Canada, but I will never be entirely Canadian. I will never be a ghost. “You are Chinese,” Mama says. “You can try and pretend to be a ghost, you can fake it. But as long as you are my daughter, you will never succeed.” I feel doomed by this pronouncement. In spite of the extracurricular math lessons that I was forced to take to be ahead of my class, I thought one plus one equaled zero. My two identities cancelled each other out.
I make the mistake of bringing a girlfriend with me to Chinatown. She is appalled by the fully skinned chickens, ducks and pigs that are hanging in the window display. She criticises the distinct smell of the Supermarket. The mixture of roasted meats, wok fried vegetables and tubs of fresh intestine, colon, stomach lining, kidney, liver, pancreas and pig snouts create the initial smell of sewage. To me, it is familiar. All I can smell is food. She does not understand the Chinese folkways and she becomes increasingly judgmental of her surroundings. What she does not realise is that her negativity towards these customs are also directed at me. I wander through separate aisles alone, feeling solidarity with the rest of the Chinese shoppers. I feel like a foreigner with my friend. Later, sitting in the middle of a bustling tea cottage in the heart of Chinatown, we are the only ones speaking English. I order in Chinese, but I trip over a word that I do not recognise in the menu. When my order comes, beside my bowl, the server sets down a fork.
At my cousin’s bridal shower, I feel a sense of camaraderie with a group of strangers that I have never experienced with friends. We are all Chinese Canadians. They understand the constant desire to please our parents. We sacrifice some of ourselves for their pride and their approval. A sacrifice that is foreign to many ghosts. We have double amount the pressure. We feel the high expectations from the parents, and scrutiny and judgment from ghosts who will never understand this different form of respect. We have formed, temporarily, a haven for ourselves. We are hidden away from the ghost friends who flippantly comment, “I’m so glad I’m not Chinese.” We are safe from the constant nagging of our mothers. We laugh at the punishment of Asian parents that can be defined in Western society as child abuse. We have been locked out of our house at the age of 5, bullied by a vacuum hose, attacked by a flying slipper, and threatened to be taken away by the Chinese mythology Gods and trapped in their water jug. We all agree that Asian mothers have an unparalleled talent for guilt tripping us into doing their bidding. We all possess the same fractured identity. We understand our heterogeneity in a homogeneous culture. Long ago, I thought my identities cancelled each other out. I understand now that one plus one does in fact equal two. Before, I did not know if I were either. Now, I understand that I am both.
Edward Said says, “A part of something is for the foreseeable future going to be better than all of it. Fragments over wholes. To do as others do, but somehow to stand apart. To tell your story in pieces, as it is (After the Last Sky, 150).” While I am walking down the busy downtown streets, I overhear dozens of voices chatter in their different languages. The hyphen is not a subtraction, but a connection. An invisible hyphen exists beside the term “Canadian.” This new identity is not the third space, but an infinite one. The distance that exists between the numbers one and two are unending; the hyphen exists within those infinite numbers of decimal spaces. It can never be firmly defined as a whole. The dash is the unseen part of the Canadian. It is defined in its dual meanings -- as something joined, and something which must always be separate. The dozens of voices that I heard were only the ambassadors for millions of voices that live within the undefined space with me. We move together, connected, in the footsteps of our narrative
Friday, March 31, 2006
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
have officially successfully avoided my run for the day
What can I say, I'm a procrastinator extraordinaire and my body is going to pay for it tomorrow.Got tagged by...Eunice.
These aren't in any particular order...
5 Things that scare you
1. crowded parking lots.
2. my parents not being taken care of in their old age.
3. snakes
4. my friends and family being hurt
5. being permanently handicapped
5 Things you like the most...
1. books
2. random acts of kindness
3. solitude
4. company of friends ( oh, the irony)
5. flashes of funny memories that have already been archived
5 Things you don't like...
1. thoughtless people
2. university admin
3. black shoes/pants with white socks
4. people who constantly look at life as an inconvenience
5. my procrastinating ways
5 Important things in your room...
1. books
2. alarm clock
3. pictures
4. midgie
5. bed
5 Random facts about you...
1. I don't spend anytime in my bedroom. The room I inhabit the most is the study - aka, the computer room.
2. I've watched more seasons of tv shows (that I downloaded) on my computer than I have at the actual tv.
3. I'm 80 percent Carrie, 10 percent Charlotte, 10 percent Miranda.
4. my favourite colour has never been black
5. If the award getter (usually the oscar winner, which is the one I would watch) starts crying, I start tearing up too.
5 Things you plan to do before you die...
1. Go to Prague
2. document my family history
3. read all the books on Mrs. Duff's recommended list
4. be able to describe my swimming ability in ways other than "glorified sinking"
5. spend the day without knowing the time.
5 Things that attract you to the opposite sex...(attract mind, not necessarily like)
1. confidence with a hint of cockiness
2. cool demeanor
3. unassuming
4. cultured
5. kind to strangers
5 Favorite drinks...
1. Black Tea Lemonade (starbucks)
2. Chai latté with soy
3. Orangina
4. London Fog
5. Water, because I'm boring.
Tag, you're it!
Sunday, January 08, 2006
props to maura for this diversion ^_^ - this was actually posted on Feb 23rd, but I can't figure out how to change the date.
Instructions: Use the picture you like best from the first (no clicking around for 44 pages) page of the search results on Google Image.1. The city and province where you grew up, no quotation marks.
2. Current or former workplace.
3. Your name, first and last, no quotes ( this was posted on sally's website and has been long forgotten. Yes, I drew it. Yes, I loved Nick Carter.)
4. Your grandmother's name.
5. Your favourite food
6. Your favourite drink
7. Your favourite smell - I don't get it either.
8. Your favourite song
I think the game here is actually figuring out what I put in for my search! Thanks Maura.