Long-form

Long-form blog posts and editorials. Topics cover both personal and the world at large. 

And darling, it was good... - 2014 reflections

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I hate to start off these things with a writing cliche, but it really is quite difficult to find a proper starting point whenever I do these long opuses. So, where to begin in this ode to 2014?

One thing I won’t say about 2014 is that it went by quickly, because it most certainly didn’t. To some degree it was a slog simply to get to this, the last day of the year (this, the day of your daughter’s wedding…) Not to say there were many hardships in 2014 - it was a very good year indeed - but I definitely didn’t blink and missed it (more cliches!) That’s probably a good thing; Don’t motivational social media handles always remind people to stop and smell the roses? (Okay, I’ll stop…)  

TIME, WHERE DID YOU GO?

Sadly for me I don’t particularly enjoy smelling flowers (damn allergies), but I did put effort to be more cognizant of the moment in 2014. I used to be the sort of person that constantly looked forward for the next thing to happen. While watching a movie I would be thinking about the drive home or the dinner afterwards, instead of enjoying the moving art in front of me. Going on trips, while on the flight en route I would already be thinking about the flight back. It’s a disease. 

That sort of thinking accelerated the time relativity. Moments and occasions would be over with before I realized, leaving me to many arduous hours of reflecting on what happened - because I’d no idea, usually at the expense of beloved slumber hours. I think that’s how years can appear to slip you by, leaving you to agonize over how where exactly did all the time go.

For me, 2014 wasn’t going to be that; Time was compartmentalized down to each day, and focus was only towards what was right in front of me. My mother’s tendency to ask what’s for lunch when I’ve only just finished breakfast is now met with I’ll figure it out when I get there

Not to say I don’t plan for things - you’ve got to, naturally. One can only be so spontaneous in a world that craves structure and predetermined results. If that wasn’t the case, then Wall Street wouldn’t go ape-shit every time earning results don’t match forecasts, or your friends wouldn’t desert you over failure to ever commit to anything. 

So I’d only do the most minimum amounts of planning. I haven’t got a five year plan, nor do I care to imagine where myself will be in 10 years - it’s all superfluous. The magical elixir that ultimately allows the freedom for such thinking is of course, money, and the state of having some of it. I don’t know about you (I’m feeling 22!…), I retain a job not merely to sustain myself: the endgame is to have enough money to practically (and relatively) do what ever the heck I want. 

MONEY TANGENT

The key, then, is to save. I may not plan for much, but saving significant amounts out of every paycheck is absolutely crucial. What people like to call ‘financial freedom’ is one of those real-life nirvana states that I would very much like to attain. Obviously, I have my Chinese upbringing to thank. Saving money is national past-time for the Chinese, and my parents were no different. When life threw suddenly-large-expenditure curveballs (as it is wont to do) at them, not once did they flinch - even when our family made half of what we do now (read: poverty level) and were still financially supporting me. 

Growing up without much made me saw first hand just how limiting not having money can be. There were many things and experiences that the typical middle class kid grew up with that I was largely deprived of. For me, there was school, and that was it; The family hasn’t got money for anything else. It wasn’t only until well into high school when my parents made a bit more money that I was afforded other opportunities and options. And by that time, I was only a few years away from university and having my own income. 

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not bitter about it at all. I was fed and had a roof over my dome - there’s absolutely nothing to complain about. 

Being Chinese, coupled with the conditions to which I was raised, taught me to save religiously. I wasn’t going to let money prevent me from doing stuff I want to do in the future. And mind you, it’s not about anything material (well, not most of it anyways - I do desperately want a Porsche at some point…). The things most worth paying for are experiences. I used to detest going out - and seldom did - due to the paradigm of going out costs money (after all, I am the president of the Homebody Association). My mindset has changed in 2014: these days I much rather go out and hang out with the comrades (and made an effort to do so) than buying the latest and greatest techno-gadgets or car parts. 

2014 introduced to me a practice that hugely resonated with me: stealth wealth. It’s about living a life of modesty even though you’ve got significant sums in your accounts. The key is to never let other people be cognizant of your financial standing, because money can most certainly corrupt people’s perception and attitude towards you (haters are going to hate, as the kids say). One doesn’t need to be all flash and material, announcing to the world how much money you have. A person that didn’t already know who Warren Buffett is would never be wise to his vast fortune based only on encounters with the man. He still lives in a relatively small house even though he can easily afford to buy the entire town. 

THE RALLYE CAR

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That’s exactly what I strive to be, and the only object that betrays that ethos is my beloved car. One simply cannot, as an Asian male in his 20s, drive an Impreza STI around without people think of you in two ways: your parents are rich and bought you the car, or you yourself have loads of cash. In some ways I very much resent the latter viewpoint, because on a macro level the STI isn’t at all what you would consider expensive. The average transaction price of a car in the U.S. is around 30K - I only paid about 5K more than that for my car. Alas, that huge wing at the back, box fenders, and the Fast and Furious franchise completely ruined the image. 

Sometimes I wish I wasn’t so into cars and would otherwise be content with a Prius. 

That said, I absolutely adore my STI. 2014 marked year two of the ownership experience and I’m happy to say it just continues to be a joy. I turn back to look at the car every time I park, and when I return to it after a long days work I practically giggle like a schoolgirl. Me; I get to drive this car home! That kind of euphoria is definitely worth paying for if you’re a person with an affinity for automobiles. I drove the car whenever the opportunity presented, especially towards the latter parts of the year when gas prices went back to levels unseen in half a decade. I never thought I would ever again see the arabic numeral ‘2’ in front of the decimal point on gas station placards. It was game on.  

It wasn’t all positive, though. The car suffered a minor fender bender with another vehicle attempting to occupy the same piece of tarmac. Thankfully it was all just surface scratches on the passenger side of the front bumper. I’d previously installed paint protection film (PPF) on the car so to remedy the situation I simply tore the film off the bumper. Quite literally, it was good as new. The PPF proved to be a worthwhile expenditure. It would’ve been quite the nightmare had the car needed a front-end respray, because the tri-coat pearlescent white pigment is just about the hardest paint on the planet to match accurately. My advice to anyone is avoid buying a car in that hue. Had I known about the fact I would’ve gotten the STI in blue. 

LEAVE BEHING THE WORLD

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In 2013 I took the car down the famed Pacific Coast Highway (twice!) for some proper road-tripping action, so this year I figure I’d head upwards instead: on a trip to Eureka that involved bits of Highway 1, 101, and various mountain roads in between. It was an absolutely blast. I had no idea the northern parts of California possessed such beautiful landscapes and scenery. Certain parts of the 101 that snakes through the Humboldt country Redwoods were some of the best roads I’ve driven yet. Miles upon miles of immaculately paved sweeping high-speed curves, cutting through mountains full of majestic trees; I’m not sure any alpine pass in Europe would be able to top that experience. (Not that I wouldn’t have a go…

I can also say I drove my car through a tree. Cost me eight dollars to do it.  

The other big trip I made was during thanksgiving week. Every year I seem to find myself in Los Angeles for whatever reason, and 2014 was no different. Somewhat spontaneously, I decided that I would attend the annual Los Angeles Auto Show, considered one of the big shows that automakers launch new cars and concept vehicles. I figured as a car enthusiasts it’s one of those bucket list items to tick off. 

My expectations were beyond exceeded. The sort of token auto shows we get in San Francisco or San Jose are a pittance compared to the vast scale I witnessed within the walls of LA Convention Center. I hadn’t plan to spend an entire day at the show, but for the better part of what ended up to be nine hours, I made my way through the throngs of cars, people, and small children that shouldn’t be there. 

It was a lovely time. I got the opportunity to sit in many car I wouldn’t have otherwise. One particular vehicle was the Nissan GT-R. Who knew one of the most capable sports cars at any price point doesn’t have a telescoping steering wheel? That fact entirely shattered any chance for me to purchase a used sample in the future, because thanks to my weird body proportions, I don’t fit in the car! Cars without reach-adjustable steering wheels are not options for me because I wouldn’t have enough head-room. 

One thing I found out driving to and from Los Angeles was that in the absent of body bulk, sitting in the STI for prolonged periods of time was super uncomfortable. I’ve become too skinny for the car’s seats. Those seats were designed for large Americans, and not scrawny Asian guys. 

WHY ARE THEY PLAYING CANON?

By the time 2014 is over and done, I would have lived slightly over 26 years of life. Age and the numbers associated with it are quite the conundrum, isn’t it? It’s one of those peculiarities where even when you feel like your station in life is standing still, the numeral that marks your age keeps on ticking. Men are endowed with the gift of mortality, as Tolkien puts it, and that gift of limited time enforces norms and expectations of a person in society. At my age, I’m suppose to ‘settle down’ and get married soon, right? (That’s hilarious…)

Do you think people would be in such a hurry to get married and have kids if our biological clocks are infinite? 

Though I haven’t yet to figured out how to live forever, I don’t believe in such restrictions, and neither are my immediate friends (or so they say…) That said, in 2014 I was immensely happy to see two of my cousins get married. One was way overdue (high school sweetheart status), and the other (two years junior to me) we’re all like what’s the hurry? Ha, that age number and our perceptions of it again.  

It’s almost impossible to reconcile that soon I would have nieces and nephews of my own. Scary, even. I’m going to be the best uncle, though: the uncle that gives you money. (Not directly, of course; It’ll be in a trust!)

My cousins getting married afforded me the chance to attend a wedding for the first time as an adult. Except I didn’t simply attend, but rather activity participated. Why didn’t anybody tell me being the best man is so incredible tiresome and so much work? I’m not sure I’ve ever drank as many Starbucks expresso shots as I did on the day of the wedding. Traditional Chinese weddings are such a production that personally I rather avoid it for myself if possible (unless future imaginary wife is Chinese and wants one) From the crack of dawn to the closing of midnight, it was nonstop. 

It’s then that I realized, weddings are not for the bride and groom. Given the option I think most couples would choose the smallest of ceremonies possible, unless you’re the person that’s had dreams of that perfect wedding day since youth (my perfect wedding would be forgoing it completely and use that money that would’ve otherwise gone towards it as a down-payments towards a Porsche I mean mortgage…) Wedding events are entirely for family and friends, and especially family if you happen to be Chinese. You may not want your parents’ childhood friends at your wedding, but they do, and outside of financial restrictions I’m fairly certain your not going to argue with them. Same with those relatives you’ve only seen maybe twice in your life. 

What do a bunch of Chinese otakus do for a bachelor party? We play snooker at a pool hall, and then eat some Asian desserts. Super mundane, super fobby, no alcohol, and no stripper. Granted, it was the night of Thanksgiving. I think my cousin would have unceremoniously ejected me out of the family if I had, as the best man, taken him to a strip club.  

HOLY GROUND

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One occasion that is definitely worthy of a celebration is the San Francisco Giants winning yet another world championship in 2014. The first time in 2010 was already beyond lovely; The second one in 2012 was a purely gift; A third in five years is something I cannot put into words. Not in my wildest of sports fanaticism and hopes could I have imagined to see my favorite baseball team win three World Series in such a short period of time.      

And my sympathies for Chicago Cubs fan grow even deeper. 

Sports are not suppose to work that way. Seldom do teams have that much success in such a short time, especially in baseball, where winning it all takes every bit of skill and luck. I’m not one of those that dismisses luck, because baseball is a game where the smallest of variables can have devastating effect: a chance directional change of wind could determine the outcome of a game. A team like the Giants that barely squeaked into the playoffs needs a bit of luck to win it all. That said, I also subscribe to the notion that one must work hard to have any luck, so to say the San Francisco Giants was lucky to win the World Series is not at all dismissive of their tremendous body of work. 

It was luck that the Dodgers were eliminated by the Cardinals, and the Giants did not have to face them in the league championship round. I firmly believed we would have lost. Good thing that scenario remains fantasy, and I’m still pissed the Giants failed to capture the NL West title. (Hahahaha…

In terms of skills, it helps to have the services of arguably the best manager in the majors. It was massively satisfying during the playoffs to witness Bruce Bochy’s master class on how to manage the modern game. Opposing managers made questionable move after questionable move, while the seemingly infallible Bochy called out all the right moves from the dugout. This astonishing phenomenon also happened in 2012 and 2010, leading you to wonder why hasn’t anybody studied and learned from it.

Not that I’m complaining. 

In addition to a great manager, there’s the Rock-of-Gibraltar Buster Posey, but has a team ever relied on one singular person to take the gold more than the Giants did in 2014, riding on the vast shoulder expanse of Madison Bumgarner? It’s not hyperbole to say that sans Bumgarner, the Giants would not have had another parade down Market street.  

Sometimes you flip through the baseball history books and find transcendent pitching performances, wondering to will you yourself will ever stand to see one them. Well, I can proudly say I was alive and watching for Bumgarner’s otherworldly performance in the 2014 playoffs. Utter domination would not begin to sufficiently described what he did. You know your pitcher is good when you have slight (very slight…) thoughts of feeling sorry for the other team having to face the guy. When Bumgarner came into game 7 of the World Series to pitch in relief, I saw the desperate despondence of the Royals players and fans. It was, simply put, unfair. 

Not that I’m complaining. 

I RUN SF. KIND OF. NOT REALLY

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This year I gradually weened myself of other forms of exercise, and in their place, took to the art of running. I used to hate running, and could barely suffer through the requisite mile for PE. Now that I’ve discovered it again however, running is indeed wonderful. Next to swimming it’s the perfect exercise as far as I’m concerned. Instead of working out practically everyday as I’ve done previously, 2014 saw me only doing a five mile jaunt of Lake Merced on Sundays, with music my sole companion (because you always run alone, even if you start with others). 

For someone that tend to hate going outdoors for anything, I have to say it’s quite the turnaround. I can still remember the first time I ran the lake: my left ankle was out of commission the following week. Naturally it got better as the weeks moved on, so much so that in September I ran my first (and certainly won’t be the last) 10K event at the 2014 running of Giants Race. Aside from the ungodly wakeup time (I’m decidedly not an early-morning runner), running together with thousands upon thousands of people, with the gorgeous San Fransisco waterfront as a backdrop was incredible. If only I could bottle that euphoria as I crossed the finish line, giving Lou Seal a hearty high-five. 

And through it all, even with the dramatic scaling back in exercise frequency, I managed somehow to shed 20 pounds by summers end. I guess that famed Asian metabolism is alive and well in my body. Time to hit the buffet tables more often while I still can.

TEN THINGS I THINK REFLECTING 2014

1. A heart-felt rest-in-peace to Robin Williams, whom the world untimely lost in 2014. I seldom get caught up on the death of famous persons, but for various reasons, Williams’ death hit me like a ton of bricks. I, like many of my contemporaries, grew up watching his humor and humility. A favorite son of San Francisco, Williams is very missed. 

2. I stopped watching American football in 2014, because I cannot support a league that tolerates domestic abuse and other transgressions in order to maximize profit. Since I don’t buy anything related nor do I care to fork over the exorbitant amounts of money to go see a game live, the only way the NFL makes money off me is my eyeball to the television. Well, not any more. 

3. The most enjoyable I watched in 2014 is Guardians of the Galaxy. Suffice it to say, everything Kevin Feige touches, turns to gold. The latest offering from the colossal Marvel empire is ridiculously fun, awesome (especially that mixtape), and appeals to the sci-fi space adventure geek in me. Since it’s release on home video, I’ve watched the movie like five times.

Honorable mention to Interstellar (I’m an admitted Christopher Nolan fanatic), and Lucy (Scarlett Johansson as a femme fatale shut up and take my money). 

4. The most fun thing I purchased this year has got to be the GoPro. It’s so easy and convenient to use that you find yourself looking for excuses to go shoot and do crazy stuff. I remember having similar feelings of exploration and excitement when I first bought an DSRL camera. I only wish the GoPro’s battery life wasn’t so anemic, but at least extra batteries are cheap. 

5. I value work-life balance greatly, and to that end I cannot be happier with my current job. The university atmosphere keeps it young and energetic, with the natural cadence of academic life allowing more than adequate time off and opportunities to decompress. I may not make as much as the equivalent in the private sector, but on the happiness scale there’s no comparison. 

6. In times of digital consumption and mass-produced products from China, I find myself putting more value towards stuff that are analog and hand-made. For example, photographs are infinitely better printed out on paper stock than digitally imprisoned on the screen of our mobile devices. There’s something special about the tactility and tangibleness of actual objects. Any book or album I particularly enjoy, I make it a point to buy it in physical form. 

Bespoke products made with actual human hands are well worth the premium. Nothing fits like a tailored suit. There’s beauty in exquisite craftsmanship and artisanal technique you won’t find in a factory in China. 

7. “When you admire the work of artists or writers, tell them. And spend money to acquire their work.

On the same token, support small businesses, local or otherwise, with your cash. As mentioned, I’m not exactly cavalier with my money, but given the option and opportunity, I definitely make an effort to support ‘the little guy’. 

8. Sometimes it’s okay to trade money for convenience; For someone raised on miserly principles, I’ve had trouble latching on to that ethos, but I’m getting there. As you get older, you come to the recognition that the value of time trumps all. Some things simply isn’t worth the hassle: that time is better spent elsewhere. I’m perfectly capable of performing maintenance procedures on my car, but I elect to spend the money on servicing it at the dealership. Drop it off before work, pick it up after work; There’s a free shuttle to and from. 

9. Facebook is of no use to me, and towards the end of 2014 I quit the platform entirely. I don’t really want nor need to keep tabs on so many people, most of whom I’ll never see again in my life. Checking Facebook became a distraction and time-waster, one I could do without. Instagram and Twitter is where I’ll be. For now. 

10. Numerous times during 2014, I’ve definitely been lethargic towards doing anything, and that’s not okay. Too much to learn, see, and do for that to be happening.

BEAUTIFUL TIMES

This is the part of the blog post where I usually summarize the year and say a few words about the year to follow. Strangely though, I haven’t got much thought about 2015, even as I am writing these words on the last day of 2014. People tend to symbolize the completely turn of the calendar as some significant signal towards renewal or new possibilities. Good for them, I say, but for me, tomorrow is just another day. The only change is that I’ve got a shiny new personalized Calendar in place of last year’s. If 2015 is largely more of the same as my 2014, that would already be tremendous (Giants win the World Series again? Yes?). 

And we go on…! 

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2014 ITUNES TOP TEN PLAYS

1. NS Yoon-G - If You Love Me (feat. Jay Park)
2. Henry Lau - Butterfly (Feat. 슬기 of SMROOKIES)
3. Girls' Generation - Mr.Mr.
4. 소유 (SoYou) X 정기고 (JungGiGo) - 썸 (Some) feat. 긱스 릴보이 (Lil Boi of Geeks)
5. EXO - 중독 (Overdose)
6. 潘瑋柏 Wilber Pan - 不的不愛 Got to Love (ft. 弦子 Xianzi)
7. SHINee - Love like Oxygen (산소 같은 너)
8. Owl City - Up All Night
9. Red Velvet - Be Natural (Feat. SR14B `Taeyong (태용)`)
10. Taylor Swift - Blank Space

Aren't we so lucky - 2013 reflections

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So, where to begin? 

2013 was quite mundane compared to previous years. It’s what happens when I’m two years removed from the (probable) end of my educational life and entering workforce as an “adult”. I say probable because I’ve yet to determine whether or not pursuing a graduate degree is worth the considerable time and concentration (doesn’t help that I’ve develop a smidgen of apathy towards being enslaved to the academic machine once more). Anyways, there’s only so much excitement to spread around when week after week you do the exact same thing at work. I don’t think I’ve looked forward to weekends more than I had this year, purely because that’s where all the fun happened.

Ironically, I haven’t exactly left academia at all; my place of employment, after all, is a college campus. No complaints from me though, because while I’m increasingly antagonistic towards going back to school for an advance degree, I must say I enjoy immensely the vibe and lifestyle offered by a college campus. In a way it keeps me young - and young at heart - because the median age of the immediate surroundings at work is always at a constant high teens to low twenties. I turned 26 this year (where it all goes downhill from, right?), but I don’t feel at all that age. Innately I feel just as wet behind the ears as ever. What doesn’t help the situation though, is seeing many friends of a similar age getting on with the business of marriage and procreation. Meanwhile, I’m over here screaming: what on earth is the rush? 

Indeed, it’s gotten to that point, hasn’t it? I’m at the age where acquaintances left and right are settling down (or have settled) to form families of their own. Stable employment does that, I guess (and love, haha). Good for those people, of course: just because I’m nowhere near that point in my own timeline doesn’t mean I throw ninja stars full of question marks every time I see a new engagement announcement or pregnancy press release. Funny thing is, none of my immediate group of friends are even remotely close to that sort of stuff, which gives credence to that whole “you are the company you keep” spiel. Hey, at least I won’t have to hear “yeah… we’re going to stay home tonight.” when hang-out solicitations are sent. 

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Of course, countless thanks to the higher spirits that I have gainful employment amidst the turmoil that still is the United States economy (my god I must have been watching FOX news). 2013 is the first year that I’ve ever held a full-time job (well, if you discount much of January), and the stability it has brought to my life is immeasurable. Having a solid sense of purpose everyday when I wake up and actually looking forward to going to work is, as Gollum would say, precious. However, as with any public university job that isn’t management, the pay is what can be best described as mediocre - especially when I live in the third most expensive city in America to live.

It’s enough for me, though. Every time I encounter negative employment news such as the fast-food workers strike or the termination of unemployment benefits, I’m reminded just how lucky I am. Low wages, income uncertainty, and job search futility -  I’ve been there, and it isn’t at all fun. Plus, everything else about my current job is so spectacularly awesome. One of which, is my commute to work doesn’t consist of me being mired in Bay Area’s infamous traffic gridlock. I’d gladly trade a few ten thousands in dollars earned to not have to sit in traffic for hours on end, every single day. Time is money, as they say, and nothing piss away money faster and more miserably than sitting amongst a sea of cars, all going slower than people can walk. 

So how is it possible that I can live in the great expensive city of San Francisco when I’m getting paid less than a BART train operator? (There’s a joke in there somewhere). Fortunately, because I’m decidedly Asian (last I checked), there is no social stigma in my culture for living with your parents pass the age of 18. So, instead of using a significant chunk of my monthly paycheck towards renting a place, I get to put most of it towards investment accounts. Which, speaking of, 2013 was a solid year for stocks and mutual funds, and I must humbly brag that my investment portfolio is looking very nice indeed. Anyways, I’m not saying moving out on your own and doing for yourself is a terrible thing (we all have to do it eventually), I’m just glad I have that option to choose, instead of getting unceremoniously kicked out of the house at a predetermined age. 

Because if there is one important lesson I take away from 2013, it’s that spending time with your family is incredibly important, especially when you’re still young and single. Perhaps it’s all too easy to get caught up in being independent and experiencing the world, but you - and your parents - are only as young as you’ll ever be, today. I certainly don’t want to be that person who regrets not having spent more time with the parents only when said parents are sick in a hospital bed, or gone to the heavens. We need to spend time with our family while we are still able, healthy, and on our end, not tied down with spouses and kids of our own.

There will come a day when I’m only going to see my parents during the scant few holidays we get in America (meanwhile, most of Europe gets the entire month of August, off), because real life will certainly get in the way. In the meantime, I’ve made it a point to allocate a portion of all my weekends to hang-out with the father and mother. While I still can.

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Portions of the weekend not spent with family, I’ve mainly dedicated it to my beloved car, the Subaru Impreza WRX STI. The joke is the car has become a substitute for a girlfriend, and it really isn’t far from the truth (haha!). There’s not much better on a weekend day than spending a few hours cleaning up the STI, and then taking it out for a spirited drive on one of the numerous mountain roads the Bay Area is so blessedly endowed with. It’s horrendous on gas, sure, but what car isn’t that can go from zero-to-sixty miles-per-hour in under five seconds. Besides, the car’s significant running costs (lost the windshield to a rogue traveling rock this year, which was quite the ouch to the wallet) escapes the mind as soon as I mash the throttle. Driving the STI brings a smile to my face each and every time I get in it,, and having a daily driven car that can do that for you is one of the core tenets of being a car enthusiasts.

With the STI in tow, I made a few ventures southwards this year, utilizing the blissful stretch of tarmac that is the Pacific Coast Highway (PCH). The first time was back in July, when I took the weekend to traverse the entire length from San Francisco to Los Angeles. It was an arduous 12 hour affair, and most of the time I was stuck behind slow-driving SUVs that refused to let faster cars behind them go past. However, the spectacular views (the skies cooperated very nicely) and the winding road was as advertised, and more. I highly recommended those traveling to LA and have got the time to spare, take the PCH instead of Highway 5 - twist and turns with a view beats driving in a straight line looking at cow manure any day. The STI’s seats proved their worth as my back didn’t complain at all after the 12 hours, though my feet had a completely different opinion. I guess Chuck Taylors aren’t the best driving shoes for trips of considerable distances. 

I love the PCH so much I went back a second time early October, this time along with other car enthusiasts (there was nearly 20 of us). Good times are best shared, right? At least it made slow cars more willing to move over, because having 20 loud sports cars in a train behind you is a frightening scene indeed (ah, the power in numbers). Driving in a group also meant being with people with more knowledge of landmarks and places of interest. This second drive on the PCH was definitely more scenic than the first. I certainly wouldn’t have gone on a tour of Hearst’s Castle in San Simeon had I gone by lonesome.

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Speaking of cars, I started new blog this year dedicated to them. Since my personal life hasn’t been nearly as exciting as previous years, I decided to exclusively write about one of my greatest interests. Povertyspec.com is chock full of random editorials about all facets of the automobile, from individual models, the technologies, to the greater industry as a whole. Having written nearly 90 posts in a span of five months is pretty prodigious, if I do say so myself (and I do). Blogging has continued to be is a good excuse for me to hone my non-college educated journalism skills. I shuttered my separate photography blog (pun intended), and this blog with under my namesake has largely become its replacement. 

2013 marked the first time I’ve made the prerequisite pilgrimage to that small town in the desert, Paradise, Nevada. Some might say the age of 25 is much too old to be making the first (adult) trip to Las Vegas, but honestly the timing just hasn’t gotten right until this year. Never known to be the life of the party or a compulsive gambler, I think this year was as good as any to see Vegas for myself. It’s really all one huge, never-ending party, isn’t it? The awesome food, the great shows, and the overflow of drinks simply doesn’t stop for the entire duration. I can definitely see the allure of Vegas for many of my peers, because compressed down to it, it’s an escape

As for me, it’s merely a ticked check-box on the bucket list. I don’t think I will be making another trip to Vegas again anytime soon. Not to say I didn’t enjoy it, because I had an awesome three days with my friends. (I found out exactly how long a Las Vegas block (off the strip) is, and I will never venture to walk one ever again.) It’s just that there is so much to see and do in this world that it’d be a personal disservice to visit a place more than once within a short time-frame (says the guy that drove on the PCH twice this year). A trip to Vegas isn’t particularly cheap (and I didn’t even gamble!), and I much rather allocate that money next time to go visit another awesome place.

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Midway through the year, I started the 16/8 intermittent fasting program. It dictates that I must eat my daily required intake of food within an eight hour period (three big meals, in my case), after which I mustn’t eat for the next 16 hours. The fasting is suppose to significantly increase the body’s growth and repair hormones, something it can’t normally do if you keep stuffing it with food. I haven’t stop doing it since, because it has been, and continues to be, wonderful for me. Not having to worry about the old “eat every three hours” routine has been liberating, and I’ve ceased to have the typical hunger pangs. In fact, I seldom get the “hungry” feeling anymore, even when it’s the end of the 16 hour fast and my stomach cannot be more empty. Combined with my usual regiment of healthy eating and regular exercise, I feel awesome and full of energy ever day. 

When it comes to sports, now that I thought about it, 2013 was bad. Bad, because expectations were so high. Not for me to complain after winning two championships in the past three years, but the San Francisco Giants stunk up the joint during the 2013 season. I do wish the team doesn’t get the World Series hangover the season immediately after (same thing happened in 2011), but it appears to be inevitable with the men in orange. Of course, it’s always an good time (as Carly Rae Jepsen and that Owl City guy would say) to go see games live at the cathedral that is AT&T park. That’s the beauty of baseball: even when your team isn’t going particularly well, there’s enough games in a season that many, many, good things can still happen. Losing season as it may, I won’t soon forget epic-ness that happened like the Tim Lincecum no-hitter in San Diego, Pagan’s walk-off, Pablo’s three home-runs in one game, and many other heroics, that’s for sure. 

As for the 49ers, I didn’t think I can be more heartbroken than back in 2012’s NFC championship game when Kyle Williams fumbled that punt. Well, what happened in the Super Bowl back in February proved me wrong. Granted, as whole it’s awesome to see the 49ers get back to being perennial Super Bowl contenders, but being a scant six yards away from winning it all, that’s a heartbreaker if there ever is one. Perhaps it’s just too much to ask the sports gods to grant two teams from one city winning their respective championships in the same season. Now that the baseball Giants have failed to defend their championship this season, perhaps it’s good sign for the 49ers heading into the playoffs early next year. One step at a time, right? Lose NFC championship last year, this year win NFC championship. Lose Super Bowl this year, so next up is surely: win Super Bowl. 

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So, that’s pretty much 2013. Just your typical twenty-something adult life: work for five days, and then play on the weekends. I do wish I’d travel more, and I took the least amount of photographs this year since starting the hobby many moons ago. I hope to rectify these two things in 2014, but other than that, hopefully much of the same as this year. As long as we have our health, family and friends, a roof over our heads, and a steady job, we’re all so very lucky, indeed. 

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The top 10 most played songs on my iTunes, 2013:

Let the games begin! - 2012 reflections

Welcome to my annual last day of the year reflection blog post extravaganza (holy run on sentence, Batman)! 2012 will go down as, unfortunately, just another year I’m afraid. I want to embellish it to bits by saying it was legendary (thanks, Barney) and all but to sum it all up it was just like any other year. That’s quite okay because the most important thing is and always will be that me, my family, and my friends are all healthy and in good spirits (or what they choose to tell me anyways). As I always say, as long as you have that, everything else will take care of itself. 

2012 was suppose to be a banner year for me, being that I turn the coveted (or dreaded) quarter century age mark in life. It’s the year to do it big, right? Wrong, nothing too exciting happened. I settled right into post education adult life; work, home, and sleep! I didn’t even leave the Bay Area the whole entire year! What kind of debauchery can possibly happen when I did not even leave the safe cocoon that is my lovely hometown of San Francisco (and various surrounding areas that are obviously not as cool nor popular). Alas, being the president and CEO of the homebody association affords me a particular set of skills which allows me to be wholly entertained even though I am home practically all the time. Plus, I save a lot of money (and not just on my car insurance!)

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Oh, 2012 signals the end of the numerical repeating digits in dates. Savored it while I can indeed. My birthday this year landed on the magical numbers 12/12/12 (that’s December 12th, 2012 for the less inclined). Couple with that fact I turned a quarter century old, i would say that it is pretty special of a date. It’s extremely too bad that I spent the entire day (and night!) stuck at work. But when you are this old (and face it, once you get pass 25 years of age, I think people should stop counting. It’s depressing, you know) I think the celebrations of birthdays can wait a day or two later. Being an adult and all the entails unfortunately can supersede any and all kinds of trivial celebration of human life events. Be that as it may, I did reward myself with the motherlode of birthday presents to myself - to be explained later (call it, a quarter life crisis).

I do envy the kid(s) that turned 12 years of age on 12/12/12. Now those kids are the utmost special out of all of us that celebrated birthdays on that day. 

Anyways, let’s get on with the reflecting, shall we?

ADULT LIFE

My message to you kids that are still in college - STAY THERE! Sure, all the work load and the trials of finals week is no walk in the park (which ironically, our generation seldom have actual walks in the park), but at least vacation is awesome, right? And plus, the real world is indeed scary, because there just aren’t any jobs available for the career you majored in! Of course you’ll just pick any random job to scraped on by living, but that’s not really how you’ve envisioned things now, did you? 

I faced that conundrum when I got out of college year and a half ago - there was ZERO jobs. I majored in business, which one would assume would always be in demand because all fields require some business accumen (haha!). Well, that’s true, but businesses just was not looking for those kind of people when I got out. The hot thing in demand was (and still is) engineers. Curse the people that told me not to get into CS (computer science) when I was choosing majors (there’s a meme in there, somewhere). Even if you didn’t have work experience, as long as you’ve got some kind of engineering degree, chances are high you’d be hired somewhere within two months post graduation. 

So I did what plenty of my peers are doing - getting any job just to have some form of sustainability (thank heavens my student debts are not nearly as rough as some of you have it). My plan post graduation was simple really - work, save, and use that money to start my business somewhere down the line (probably in my early thirties - I did pledge to play and be merry until I am 34(!)). 

A stroke of good fortune this year aided me tremendously on that goal. My old tech support job (while I was still studying undergrad) at San Francisco State had an open position posted in January of this year, so naturally I applied (nothing like doing things you’re familiar with). Due to my bright smile and charming looks, I somehow got hired (haha!). The job gave me the stability I didn’t really knew I needed until I had it (it paid twice as much as the job I currently had back then). Money for the most part was no longer an issue (and mind you, I’m wasn’t making that much - it’s wasn’t even full time!), and with that I can actually plan stuff out way beyond just a year (and ticked off one of my childhood dreams). Of course, ultimately it is supremely wonderful to work with familiar faces again - and a brand spanking new library building to work in! 

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I found that planning is a must when it comes to the adult stage of life. Back when you were a kid, everything is basically all laid out for you (go to school, go to school, and yeah, go to school). But as an adult, you have to constantly look ahead. I hated doing that at first because I am more spontaneous of a guy than anything - let’s go through today and worry about tomorrow when it comes. I am not sure if it’s societal pressure or natural progression of life, but I just couldn’t live like that anymore. Even if the plans are not as intricate as those plans to capture and kill Bin Laden (too soon?), you’ve got to have a framework in mind. Guess they were not kidding about those “where do you see yourself in five/ten years” questions. 

It all goes back to money, naturally. Money is freedom. Freedom to do what ever the heck you want. As an adult with a stable occupation, it should not be a problem at all. What people really have to worry about it “post work”, also known as retirement (you know you are old when you are planning for your retirement already). That’s when you need the money because you have zero income (otherwise, it’s not retirement, now is it?), and you still have to live conceivably a few more decades (got to start young with that whole living healthy business). Government sure as hell not going help when it comes to our generation (Social Security, what Social Security?!). So, you’ve got to do it on your own. 

That means saving money for retirement. Wade through all the bullshit financial planning books tell you, and most would agree that start saving as young as possible is the best way to have the most money at the end when you really need it. At the ripe age of 24 this year (actually quite late compared to plenty of people), I got myself a Roth IRA to supplement my work’s 401k. Is it painful to see a chunk of my money disappear into the abyss, one in which I cannot touch (without incurring heavy taxes) until I am in my sixties? FOR SURE. But I remind myself the adage: “out of sight, out of mind.” You just have to treat that money like it was never there (and live accordingly so you won’t miss it). 

Well then, let’s see; in 2012 I got a steady job that pays, and I planned for my retirement. My god, I am ready to live in Pleasantville, aren’t I? 

GREETINGS, SPORT FANS

2012 was an incredible year for Bay Area sports fans. 

As we found out towards the end of 2011, the 49ers are good again! It has been a decade in the making but wow is it nice to see some winning football on Sundays from the hometown team. It was absolutely crazy during the playoffs earlier in the year, especially the divisional game against the New Orleans Saints. 49ers fans have waiting years to see such a performance from their team. That game is up there with some of the best football games I have ever watched (and I’ve got it saved in digital form!). 

As we all know, it was all for naught as come the next game, it all came crashing down against the New York Football Giants in the NFC Championship game. Being sports fans, you come to expect failure and/or disappointment from your teams. After all, it is practically impossible for the team you root for to win it all each and every year (Yankee fans like to think so). I think what we don’t want, is for the team to lose it in a way that is just plain stupid. If it was not for Kyle Williams muffing two punts in the game, I am confident in saying we would have celebrated a 49ers Superbowl win. That night was particularly interesting because it was Lunar New Year, and the game was encroaching on the usual big family dinner (it went overtime). Imagine the disrespect at the table! A night to remember, for sure, either way. 

On the baseball front, the Giants was on a comeback tour in 2012 after a disappointing 2011 campaign. Everything hinged on the comeback of the golden boy; Buster Posey. We all felt that if he is healthy enough to play the full season, we’d at least be in good shape to make the playoffs, and perhaps even more. 

Turns out, the team did better than that. Much better.

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I still find it hard to believe the Giants won the World Series - AGAIN! Who would have thought that the magic of the 2010 World Series run can actually be topped. The whole of the 2012 Giants season was just magic; one after another. For sure there was ups and downs (looking at you, Melky Cabrera), but the sum of it all, you have to say, WOW.

To note a few things: Matt Cain threw a perfect game (the first perfect game I have had the pleasure to watch from beginning to then end), aided by a spectacular catch by Gregor Blanco that people will tell you is a once in a many thousands chance of making. Buster Posey had the comeback season we all prayed and hoped he would (but wouldn’t fault him if he didn’t), and won the Most Valuable Player award in the National League (and I thought I’d never see another Giants players win the MVP, post Bonds era). Our pitching staff is lights out as usual, even with Tim Lincecum having the worst year in his life, and Brian Wilson lost for the season 4 days into it. Our bats, while not world beating, came through in the clutch (the complete anti-thesis of 2011) often enough to win 90 plus games during the regular season and battle their way into the playoffs towards the World Series win. 

And what playoff run! The first time I watched the Giants World Series commemorative DVD, I bawled my eyes out. All the story lines that tugs at your heartstrings. The team won six consecutive win-or-go-home elimination games to advance to the World Series. It’s complete insanity every time I think about it (that NLDS game five in Cincinnati will live on in infamy for me - I lost 10 years of my life watching that game). Then, the Giants swept the Tigers in the World Series - with the Tigers being the team EVERYBODY in the sports world picked to win.

Alas, it is the story lines that made the entire playoff run:

Tim Lincecum took the demotion to the bullpen like a man, and was absolutely lights out in that role. After a regular season of stinking up the place, it was nice to see him perform like we all knew he could. It’s almost unfair to the other teams that we have a two time Cy Young Award winner, pitching like his vintage self, coming in as RELIEF! It was plenty satisfying seeing Timmy strikeout batter after batter. Ryan Vogelsong’s story needs no introduction. After almost a decade traveling and bouncing around the world in various baseball clubs, it probably does not get any better to see a guy that works so hard to finally reach the top of the mountain in his profession. His numbers in the playoffs are ridiculous, and it warms the fans heart to see a good guy like him fulfill a lifelong dream, after a equally long struggle to get there. 

Speaking of struggle, that term fits Barry Zito’s tenure with the Giants the most. He just never showed up to be the guy that was promised to the fans when he got that enormous contract six years ago (with big money, comes BIG responsibility). So imagine the scenario - Giants down threes game to one in the NLCS agains the Cardinals in a must win elimination game, and Zito is your starter (what can possibly go wrong?!). I must admit as a fan, I was not all that confident going in. I’ve seen this play before; you’ve always hoped that Zito gets it together and have one of those games of his life. Sadly, he never delivered in previous chances. On that night, he did. 7 and 2/3s shut out innings was something I am willing to bet nobody saw coming. Then, in the World Series, he got the start in GAME ONE - and WON against Justin Verlander (with the help of Pablo Sandoval channeling his inner Babe Ruth). The sentimental feelings in you can’t help but just admire at such circumstantial beauty when it happens like that.

It’s hard not to be romantic about baseball, indeed. 

BOUGHT A CAR

It was splendid birthday and Christmas for me indeed in 2012 (it’s what happens when your birthday is so damn close to the holidays - people tend to lump the two together when it comes to celebrating) as I bought myself the biggest present of all - a brand new car. To explain, let’s step back for a bit.

I’ve been a car enthusiast ever since I was old enough to know exactly what they were and what they did. When I was young, back in China on the weekends, it was Formula 1 racing on the television that got me into the absolute speed of an automobile (I still watch and follow F1 to this day). Fortune has it that I was lucky enough to immigrate to this great land of America and thus is afforded a future where driving cars was in my future when I grew up (I’d still be on a bicycle if I never came here, or dead because Chinese made cars are not exactly what you’d call safe). The thirst for all things automotive never ceased.

Before I was old enough to get my license, the video game medium allowed me to enjoy car and car culture. Much thanks goes to Polyphony Digital, the team that brought to the world the Gran Turismo (GT) series. The game is an automotive museum, one that would allowed you to (albeit virtually) drive cars from all makes and all era. The games were indeed a virtual encyclopedia of cars, and also allowed users to do upgrades and tuning, which foster my interest in that aspect (and a royal money pit!). Forbidden fruits of cars like the Subaru WRX STI, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution, and the Nissan GTR (to name a few) from the Land of the Rising Sun were ONLY accessible through videos games like GT. 

As with any automotive enthusiast, the goal in life since youth was to own a fast car. I’ve done the usual gauntlet of car magazine subscriptions, and Internet car forum participation. Of course, my first car (2006 Toyota Corolla) would be nothing to write home about in terms of performance. It’s due to the fact being a boy in the high teens, insurance premiums were astronomical, and getting fast car right off the bat is just irresponsible (plus, high chance I might not be alive right now). Did not stop me from not modifying the car though; wheels, suspension, brakes - the works on the car (looking back, what an absolute waste of money!). I did not touch the engine because I knew immediately that if I want to go faster, I need to get a faster car instead. My next car would be just that.

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2012 proved to be a good time to get my second car. I am turning 25, so insurance premiums would go down dramatically, and I’ve worked long enough to have a considerable amount of money saved up for a down payment. I started researching what car to buy earlier this year, and settled on a brand new 2013 Subaru WRX STI (your average 305hp four door all-wheel-drive rallye car). I’ve wanted one of those ever since Subaru (finally!) started importing them to America back in 2004. Why a brand new car even when it makes economical sense to purchase used and let the first owner take the depreciation hit? Because when it comes to performance cars, you just cannot trust the previous owner. They say they “babied” the thing, but really, can you trust it? I cannot.

I put in an order at the dealership late October (due to specificity of the equipment and color I wanted in the car, I had to have one custom made), Sidebar: if you guys are looking for a good Subaru dealership in the Bay Area, go to Putnam Subaru! and I picked up the car from the dealership just five days before my birthday (as Obama would say, not bad!). From video game to reality right in front of my eyes. I was quite emotional when I turned the key for the first time and drove it off the lot (and into a tree! haha, just kidding). 

Yes, I guess you can call it a quarter life crisis car (haha!), and indeed it’s not very financially responsible right now to throw practically my entire life savings towards a largely depreciating asset. But you’ve have to love cars like I do to understand the lifestyle choice. Plenty people like me out there that would rather eat ramen noodles every meal of the day just to save enough money to afford a fast car (and parts for modification are not cheap either!). Everybody has that one thing that they were willing to sink a lot of money into (god I wish mine was stamps instead of cars), and mine just happens to be a horseless carriage. 

ODDS AND ENDS

The top 10 songs most played in my iTunes rotation in 2012: 

I upgraded my DSLR camera in 2012! Jumped from a relatively weak Canon XSi to a professional grade Canon 7D (thank you Amazon for your amazing pricing!). What professional grade equipment allows you to do is get to the results you want in a faster, more efficient way. Strictly speaking, photographs are still being taken the same way, ever since the mechanism has been invented. The advancement in technology is mainly to get better results, faster. Setting selection and general camera operation is light and day better with the 7D compared to the XSi (so is the price, unfortunately), and the 7D is weatherproof so shooting in inclement weather is as concern no longer.

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I do wish I went out more to shoot in 2012. The level of production in terms of quantity was dramatically less than 2011 (those of you that got my 2013 Calendars, the photo selection process was a big head scratcher!). What’s to blame? I was in money saving mode. All my focus for the majority part of the year was to save money for the payment for the car. Going out costs money. Even if you don’t buy anything to nourish yourself, gas is quite expensive if you haven’t notice. Besides, I’ve done most of the landscapes in the San Francisco area for the most part, so for new shots I would have to travel further. Unfortunately, not in the plans for 2012. 2013 though, watch out! 

2012 was the year I practically stop playing video games. I just no longer have any interest in it whatsoever. Not sure if it is a part of growing up and transitioning out of the phase, or perhaps I just need new games. It is definitely hard these days to convince myself to plop my butt down for a few hours and focus on a video game. I think the trivial-ness of it finally has dawn on me (I can hear parents around the world applauding). These days I am much into doing things (even if they are recreational) that are tangible. Even when I Youtube surf, I find videos that are instructional and teaches me things I’ve yet to learn (no cat videos here, though Gangnam Style is a must, isn’t it?). Thank heavens the Playstation can double as a Blu-ray player, which is infinitely helpful when it comes to watching The Dark Knight trilogy in all it’s intended glory!

Yes, I still exercised five days a week in 2012, and eat incredibly healthy (annoyingly so, according to my friends). You’ve got to be proactive and be healthy when you are young, unless you enjoy pain and paying for prohibitively expensive medicine later on in life. I’m going on my 6th year of this lifestyle and it just keeps getting better and better. Are there bad days where I just don’t feel like doing that pushup and eat a four by four? Actually there isn’t (four by four sounds repulsive - two by two is more like it!). I’ve gotten to the point where on days I DON’T work out, I feel absolutely terrible compared to days that I do. Is it a sickness? Perhaps, but every time I take off my shirt in the bathroom = worth it. 

25 THINGS I LEARNED IN 2012

  1. Drinking is bad, and expensive. I’m not doing it again. Ever. 
  2. Cable television is a waste. Cut the cord and stream your shows. What about sports? there are ways. No longer am I dumping $70 a month for only a few channels. The whole delivery system is monopolistic and archaic. 
  3. The common person just don’t take care of their automobiles. No wonder automakers make a killing off you junking your car every five years (or less!). I smell business idea.  
  4. America is (for the most part) a knowledge economy. We get paid for what’s in our head. Don’t be selfish, though - it’s our obligation to share it, paid or not. Blogs are the best invention of the Internet for that regard - sharing of knowledge.
  5. On the same token, never stop the thirst for knowledge. Even if it’s as trivial as “what to use for windshield washer fluid.” Learn something. Everyday. 
  6. I think deep down, Psy is not happy that his song about rampant materialism and it’s pitfalls got embraced only as a catchy tune with a wacky dance. The west sees him as a caricature, but he’s a very deep person musically speaking. Shame. 
  7. When you see someone doing something or having something you like/want, instead of turning green with jealousy, say to yourself: “Good for them. I’ll get there one day.” Boom. You’ve just set yourself a goal. 
  8. Save at least 15% of your monthly paycheck (and no, your retirement/401k does not count towards your percentage).
  9. Track ALL your spending. Once you make a habit out of doing it, it’s quite easy to see where you money go, and make things REALLY hurt when you stray from the norm (oh, nice shoes! what? $100 dollars!?)
  10. Once you have a fast car, you find yourself driving slowly - because in the back of your head, you know you can go fast at any time. 
  11. Invest your money - it loses 3% of it’s value due to inflation every year if it is just sitting there under your mattess. It’s how the rich get richer. 
  12. If you are doing a service, the only standard that matter is the one of the customer. Perform it up to theirs. No use to go overboard and waste energy if they are not even going to notice the different. 
  13. “Thank You” notes and shout outs never go out of style. Be the last word in the conversation. 
  14. Best time (read: cheapest price with the best seats) to buy tickets on Stubhub is two hours before the game. It’s the planning equivalent of Russian Roulette, but hey, save a buck, right?
  15. With the amount of information on the Internet, if it takes you more than an hour to buy a car at the dealership (meaning you’ve spent to long time negotiating a price), you’re doing it wrong. 
  16. When Amazon started charging sales tax, you realize the number one reason why you shop there in the first place. 
  17. People are too preoccupied with what OTHER people like or don’t like (the proverbial “haters”). Who the hell cares! As long as they are happy, good for them. Bashing people due to different preferences is completely stupid. 
  18. The State of Florida cannot run a presidential election vote count to save it’s life. 
  19. You should not be asking questions that can be answered by the information on the first page of a google search of the same question. It’s just spells lazy this day and age. 
  20. Following too close in traffic will only serve to give the front end of your car many, many rock chips. 
  21. Reading one novel a month does the mind and body good. 
  22. Cleaning your living area once a week will do wonders for the overall cleanliness. It’s quick, easy, and things wil never deteriorate into what can be called “out of control” mess (that jello pudding under the couch).
  23. Important to spend time with the family. Becoming an adult, it’s easy to “drift” apart due to various circumstances. Just a phone call once in awhile would suffice. 
  24. “Objects that are in motion, stays in motion.” Laws of physics apply to everyday human life as well. It’s why getting started is the hardest part. 
  25. Smile.

A NEW YEAR

Plenty people these days hate on the concept of “New Years Resolution”, claiming it’s a false sense of hope, and how people usually don’t follow through. While that may have some truth to it, I think the sense of renewed rigor and motivation that comes with the turn of the Calendar is quite beneficial. Hey, even if people don’t exactly do what they say, at least there is impetus and motion! The most important (and hardest) part is to get started.

With that being said, I will conclude this absurdly long post by exclaiming proudly my hopes for 2013: work my ass off, pay off debts, save plenty of money, take lots of photographs, travel out of State at least once (New York City is calling my name), read 12 books, blog once a week, hang out with friends and family, and finally, lots of sleep and exercise to go along with it all. 

Let the games begin! 

(Almost) mid-year update

Hard to believe it is already mid May of the year that is 2012 (cue the obligatory "where did all the time go?" spiel). I think it is the proper time to give an update on this very blog of mine just what the heck have I been doing so far this year. Since this is the first paragraph of this blog post, I am suppose to give you a preview of what is to come right? Well, I have only one word for you: busy.

BLOG? WHAT BLOG?  

So busy in fact that the amount of blog post of far this year on this very blog has diminished to an alarmingly low rate (according to my own personal standards) compared to previous years. However free flowing are lack of grammatical correction my blog posts are, they usually take quite a decent amount fo time to write. 2,000 words (about the average amount of words I write each time I blog) of anything just does not write itself within the hour, no matter what the procrastinating college student tells you otherwise (been there, done that). So apologies to myself (new years resolution was to write plenty) and the readers of this blog (count of which can probably be done with the digits on my limbs) for the lack of content these past months. 

Sidebar: I have to say though, that piece about my experience with jury duty was probably the longest blog post I have ever wrote. Took me three days to completely flush it out and begrudgingly edit it.

HARDLY WORKING

What was I so busy with? Mainly work. I of course still work for O'BON; pandering our Eco-friendly school and office supplies to the United States consumer market. My role with the company has shifted and expanded a lot from the guy with the still camera that I was originally hired for (and would not have otherwise graduated undergrad if not for that). That tend to happen often in these small startup companies, where in order to save on labor cost, employees are forced to wear many hats (and not paid nearly as much as they should - America's false sense of high productivity). So yes, I took on many more hats on top of the photographer's hat I was already wearing: social media, marketing, design, email sales, shipping, and office admin.

It has been great to be present for so many facets O'BON (not really all the hard when the company is three people small), and learning from it constantly. I very much enjoy looking at the macro level of things - seeing how all the different compartment fits into the whole picture. Perhaps that is just the "control freak" personality trait that is innate within me (played too much of Sim City during my childhood). Granted, I think few that aspire to start their own company haven't got that obsessive compulsive nature of wanting to control everything, right down the most minute detail.

So that is my day job, if you want to call it that. I only get a little more than half time kind of work hours at O'BON (26.5 hours) so it is not exactly what you would like to refer as satisfactory - especially since I am not longer in school. I was okay with this situation for a bit though (extremely proud to contribute to the under employed statistic), because like many of my recently graduated peers, the job market is just not all that vibrant for us (go to college they said, you'll get a job they said.) Honestly though the pay is absolutely at the bottom of what can be considered as "entry level", and while I am frugal as frugal gets (excluding consumer electronics), I share my mother's worries about not earning enough to befit my college level education (hello there, sense of entitlement). 

WORKING HARD

As luck would have it, early February I found another part time job to supplement my paltry income. Thanks to my hard work and dedication during my four year tenure as a student assistant at the Academic Technology department of San Francisco State University (ha!), I was lucky enough to get brought back into the fold as the night staff for AT distribution. It was familiar and surreal at the same time to be back at the place of employment during my college years. Thank heavens all the knowledge I have ascertained did not escape me even though I was more than nine months removed from having last worked there. 

It was one of the best things to happen to me so far this year. 

There was a running joke at the time back in my college years that if I was there to see SFSU's new library finish and use it, then something is wrong (ie. still haven't graduated undergrad after five years - my apologies to those in majoring in bio or chemistry as the standard operating procedure for you guys is like six years plus). Well, these kind of things have a funny way of unravelling themselves because due to me being hired as the night staff for AT, it meant that I will be working at, that's right, the new library. In fact a week after I was hired, the whole department moved into the new digs. Who would have thought.

Cumulatively then, I went from working 26 hours a week to now a bit over 50. While it was financially awesome, it was definitely not physically or mentally awesome (commuting sucks no matter how you slice it). 12 hour work days takes a toll on you as I have already been sick three times so far this year. My usually exercise schedule is all out of kilter, as nowadays I have to force myself to wake up at 7am to get the workout in. Weekdays I don't get home until 11pm, and then I immediately get ready for bed because I value sleep so damn much (muscles don't repair themselves, you know). At this point I would like to give a shout out to caffeine, because without it, none of this would have been possible.

As you can see, I really haven't got much time these past months for anything else. In fact I have only gone out shooting (photography, not guns) once, which is a great shame. Weekends are definitely for recharging, with the Saturday night to Sunday morning 10 hours of slumber being especially awesome. With the summer months coming up and me ceasing to work night hours due to regular university semester being over, I hope to use the extra time to devote back to my hobbies and other activities. 

ONE DISTRACTION

Of course, that means plenty of baseball. 

As previously blogged, nothing quite compared the joys the Giants baseball season provides. While I won't rehash what I said here, let's just say it is a wonderful outlet and distraction from the all the "normal" stuff. It has been a great shame that due to my work hours, I have not been able to go to games during the weekdays (I am still peeved I missed the Phillies series). Not only did I missed a few key match ups, most important of all weekday games are MUCH cheaper than weekend games and I could have gone to multiple of them for the cost of one. Cannot wait for the summer time (one week away!) when I no longer work night time hours and I can finally go to weekday games again - because living in San Francisco is awesome for this: eat dinner, drive to park, park bit a way for free, and walk to the park just in time for a 7:15pm start time. Yeah, summer nights are awesome like that.

Remember one of my new years resolution for 2012 is to go to more baseball games than the previous year (20+). While I am off to a slow start due to my work schedule, having only gone to a grand total of four games, at least the team's winning percentage while I am at those games is already tremendously better than last years abysmal record. Yes, going to the ballpark, no matter win or lose, is an infinitely better experience than watching it on the tube, but honestly seeing a Giants win live at the ballpark and hearing the sweet sounds of Tony Bennet singing "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" as you exit is like nothing else. 

PHOTOGRAPHY IS PROHIBITED

Sad to say with all the business going on, my main hobby of photography was horribly neglected to far this year (not as severe as my gaming hobby though - I don't think my PS3 has been turned on at all this year). One bit of good news (for me) is that I finally ditched my entry level Canon Rebel XSi camera and stepped up to the big leagues with a professional grade Canon 7D (yes, it's a crop sensor. I haven't got the cash at the time for a full frame 5D Mark III). The difference in just handling and build quality of the two camera is absolutely night and day, not to mention the functionality and higher quality components. The limited shooting I have done with the 7D have been a joy (of course I am saying this partly because I spent a relative fortune on it), and the only negative thing is that it makes me want to reshoot everything that I have already shot with the XSi (not going to happen). 

Happy to report that my photo a day 366 project (due to this year being a leap year, it's a 366 project, not 365) is still going extremely well. But it goes without saying that for the rest of this year I need get back into the swing of things and go out and shoot much more often than I have (lest I risk blowing another of my new years resolutions). I am also looking forward to actually making some prints of the stuff I have done, either through a commercial entity or buying a photo printer for myself (oh, be still my wallet). 

(HALF) MID-LIFE

So what are the plans for the rest of this year? Definitely more of the same with regards to work (and baseball!). You can say I am basically in work and save money kind of mode right now. I am still contemplating the merits of a MBA graduate degree (outside of appeasing the hopes and dreams of my parents - how filial of me) so I think I will put that off another year just to be sure I am not dumping a few tens of thousands into tuition just for the sake of it. 

I turn 25 at the end of the year, and I guess that is a symbolic number as it signals the quarter of one's life (even though it does not make mathematical sense since the average life expectancy in the United States is still somewhere in the mid 80s). I have ask around and it seems like having a quarter life crisis is not all that uncommon these days (granted, not exactly a statistical sound kind of polling i did). I guess age 25 coincides quite coincidentally with most people's end of higher education (or imminent end) and thus they are stuck in the chasm between all they have ever known (education!) and full on adulthood (work for the rest of your life!). Age 25 is the "ho lee shit" moment.  

Well, in Stephen Colbert fashion, I am determined to have my OWN quarter life crisis, but not in a negative kind of way. I am going to embrace the ambiguity that exist between now and the future, and just take things as they come. Like the midlife crisis, I am going to buy a sports car. All in all, there is only one way I am determined to go:

Onwards and upwards.