Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Catch up

Well I know I haven't written much since October of last year and that since transferring to a different school I haven't written at all. So here is a short recap.

0. Originally I posted that I received the transfer notification at the end of September. However due to delays due to inadequate notification and the number crunching after ADM week 1 (week where enrollment is verified for staffing reasons) I did not get the transfer meeting until the end of October.

My principal was wise enough to take me off the schedule and I work as a kind of building substitute teacher, helping out when needed. It was kind of hard to keep explaining why I am still at the school to the students and after a week of this I eventually just came to work and avoided interacting with the small school principal and just went to my classroom. There were three of us teachers Mrs. Korb and Mr. Lewandowski. Mrs. Korb was the most principled she helped students review for their OGTs while I just hung out. I felt like Peter in Office Space or Milton. I just came to work and sit there and well get paid to be in teacher limbo.

In fact I actually watched the movie in my classroom with the projector with Mr. Lewandowski on one of my last days at East Tech.

1. I went in to the transfer meeting with several schools in my mind namely Jane Addams or Rhodes. Both schools are high schools each school has pros and no real cons. Jane Addams was located near East Tech where I taught so my commute would be the same (mostly highway). Rhodes is my mother in law's alma mater (as well as Drew Carey's). I was ambivalent about both schools and flipped a coin. Jane Addams if heads, and I got heads. The staff at the transfer meeting was amused by the way I decided.

2. I had a day to get ready I moved my stuff and it took a better part of a day to do so. I inherited 2 Chemistry classes and a Senior OGT Science review class. The classes I inherited had many issues, the most frustrating was that the long term sub made up grades for the Chemistry classes and did not assign any grades for the OGT Science class. It was quite a struggle to overcome the long term sub's bad habits.

3. It was great to teach at Jane Addams I finally felt like I was part of a department, My department Mrs. Ammon worked with me and helped me prepare for teaching Chemistry which was a new topic for me to teach. She shared with me materials for labs and reading materials which was great. I enjoyed doing some of the chemistry labs, Mrs. Ammon was happy to see labs were being done.

4. I really enjoyed working with Mrs. Ammon she was like a mentor that I never had as a teacher, she was really pleasant to talk with and it was nice to be able to talk with her about how to teach Chemistry. I think I really learned much from her this year.

5. I really got into recycling this year. It is nice that Lakewood has plastic 1-7 recycling along with glass, metals and paper recycling. Some time after the start of the 3 quarter (late January) I started recycling in school, first in the teacher's lounge with a found can crusher for aluminum cans. Then in March I placed a recycling bin in my classroom to collect the plastic bottles and cans that students often toss into the trash. Apparently as I recycled more the more I had an aversion to seeing recyclable materials being tossed into the trash. In fact I recycled the boxes that were left behind when the school received 55 new computers. It took me several days to collapse the boxes and sort out the recyclables and several trips to the recycling center to get all the computer packaging to be recycled. I still lament that I could not find a place that would recycle the styrofoam packing materials for the computer and monitors.

By the end of the year most of my students actually recycled their papers and drink cans and bottles when they are finished with them.

6. After settling at Jane Addams I got into a very popular reality show it was called the Presidential Primaries of 2008. I had to watch CNN and MSNBC every night and checked Huffingtonpost and Realclearpolitics everyday to get last minute information on the characters presidential candidates and poll information. This pretty gobbled all free time that I have in the evenings. Ahmie and I first were rooting for John Edwards, after he dropped out of the race we rooted for Barack Obama. We went to see him talk in Youngstown, in Cleveland, and for a town hall meeting in Parma, we even went to see Michelle Obama talk at Cleveland State University. We rode the highs and lows of the campaign from Supertuesday to early June with Hillary Clinton's concession speech.

There is of course more to say about the past 8 months but that is for another night. I just finished reading The Road by Cormac McCarthy and I am planning a meditation on my reaction of the book.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Stages of Grief

1. Denial

I waited all weekend for the letter notifying my impending transfer but it did not arrive as I had hoped on Saturday. I grew more frustrated over my situation because I need the written validation. We went to church and a equinox party afterwards but still burning in the back of my mind was that I that I still am in limbo since I haven't seen the papers I cannot accept that I am being transferred.

2. Anger

I was pretty angry about the whole situation even though I did not receive any verification on Monday during the day. I was tired of the hold up.

I did not really go through the bargaining stage.

3. Depression

I got a fax of the letter Monday night which was open night for parents to see teachers. Mr. Laux handed me the letter I expressed appreciation for giving this to me. I understand that East Tech is not a special school, it was some time in the past with various programs but other schools now have special programs to draw more students and talented students. But Mr. Laux and other administrators go on to try to bring in exciting programs and partnerships to help revive this school that is bereft of its brightest students because of competition with magnet schools with special programs.

It was hard to deny I saw it on paper it said that I had to meet on Wednesday 9/26 at 2pm to discuss placement.

It was even more difficult because I could no longer deny that I am going to be moved. I had to talk to parents of good students and say to them, I had a great time teaching to (student) but I will not be her teacher much longer because I am being transferred.

It was a humiliating experience. I was glad that the parents showed sympathy and even understood as some of the parents have in the past been transferred involuntarily. It still made me feel dis empowered. It was exhausting telling all the parents that I met this.

4. Acceptance

I accepted that I was going to be transferred with this letter, but it was hard finding high school science positions in the transfer list. I knew that I will have a job but I accepted that I will most likely have a choice like this

You can choose between the 2nd circle of hell or the 1st circle of hell its your choice.
Since I have low seniority I expected that all the better schools or programs would have already chosen so I would probably get a job any job and like it. I spent parts of Tuesday talking with other teachers finding out which schools may be the better choice

Today Wednesday Sept 26th I accepted that this would be my final day I even bought donuts for my students as a good bye treat. I had closed up all student work and had already given a test to go over the final topics.

Mrs. Korb tells me during period 3-4 that the meetings today was postponed until Monday I looked at the Plain Dealer and found an article stating the same thing. I'm glad that the city newspaper knows more about my work situation then myself that is wonderfull (dripping with sarcasm)


1. Denial...

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Moving on

I received news today.
The good news is I have a job.
The bad news is that it will not be where I am currently working now.

I was first told of this change in situation by my department chair Ms. King, she seemed upset and I was suspecting that something like this was coming. The school had a decline in enrollment this school year so I was suspecting that the probability was high that there world be redeployment of staff elsewhere in the school district. I had a total of about 55 to 60 students total which is on the low end.

Ms. King apologized to me that she had to tell me this news. I was stoic when the news was given to me. I understood that the way in which this school district operated teachers with less seniority would be the first to be moved or laid off. I felt a twinge of irony because this week I finally got around to putting book numbers in the textbooks that I am using with my students.
When I put an indelible mark is when I have to leave.

I walked upstairs to the 1st floor and talked to both my school principal Ms. Wright and Mr. Laux. They confirmed that I was indeed to be elsewhere in this district. In fact all of the departments were hit with transfers. Again I kept my stoic face up. What was the point to show sadness at this point in time. I knew that I still had a job so my most basic concern (having a job) was met.

I walked back towards the C building (where my classroom is) and stopped by several teachers to tell them about the news. They were all very sympathetic and were sad to see young teachers go, some expressed the fact that I could end up at a better school, or worst school, because it is a real crapshoot.

I packed up my papers and my clipboard and locked my door and left for the day it was hard to talk to students in the hallway and try not to show the roiling sea of emotions underneath my genial face. I got into my car and drove out of the school. I was flipping through my phone for some songs to commensurate to. First I listened to Under the Bridge by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, then The Distance by Cake, and last before I arrived home Overkill by Collin Hay, it was nice to belt out to those songs just to vent out some of my sadness.

I was not the only member of the science department that was to be transfered out. Mrs. Korb was teaching the last part of the day I was not sure whether or not she was told of this yet. But from the looks and responses from the other staff I was most likely one of the first to find out. I wonder how she took the news, I wondered who finally tells her. I said to Ms. King that she should tell Mrs. Korb before she goes home today. Instead of having her find out by mail on Saturday, because I'm pretty sure that the principals would not likely have told her this afternoon.

I guess that since I have taught longer than Mrs. Korb, I can make do and go on. But she is a new teacher and very much so, I remember her last year and she has grown much as a teacher and has much more enthusiasm than I can muster up ever. Now not that I do not teach with enthusiasm but overall I am pretty low key. I think she is on the right path and that she will be a great teacher. I just hope that this transfer does not stunt or discourage her development as a teacher. It is not unusual that the "new" teacher would most likely get the most challenging students and can be really stressful. Heck the relocation is stressful especially in a last minute situation that we are in (we need to be moved and start teaching at our new school by next Monday).

It is hard to pinpoint how I feel. I know that there is nothing that could be done to prevent this from happening on the short term. Teachers are moved based on their seniority and Mrs. Korb and I are both on the bottom of the list because we both joined the district this past year. I think I was having good rapport with my students. The thing that sucks is the I will have a new group of students to get to know and my students will have to get to know their new teacher whoever that may be.

It is hard to not dwell about being abandoned and alone because I have never had an involuntary transfer, I like to staying in one place for a while. I will miss my coworkers here and I will miss working with the Robotics Team students and see the development of this years new students joining the team.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Strangers in Paradise

I was checking some things online when I stumbled upon the Strangers in Paradise Website. Its been quite a while since I had picked up a copy of this comic, I think my last issue was issue 53. I was sad to find that Terry Moore published the concluding issue in June. I had know all about this for over a year and with the year that I have had with my parents moving in with me, Ahmie pregnant with Delano, buying a home, and having concluded my first year teaching at East Tech High School. This reminds me a bit of my first year of teaching, in short I was way busy.

Reading comics had been a hobby of mine for many years I started reading translated manga published by VIZ comics, then I started reading Marvel comics titles like the Punisher, and later the X titles. By the time I reached my later high school years I was looking for something more to read I followed the X men and read some manga titles. As interesting as that was I wanted something more, something more real. A title that I started to read was called Negative Burn, an anthology title that show cased comics of diverse talent and story style. I picked up the first issues of Strangers in Paradise in 1993

From the first panels that I have read I loved this book. I looked all over for the previous 3 issues published by Antarctic Press which is a small independent publisher. I eagerly waited the two to three month times between issues. What interested me was not the way it handled provocative issues such as AIDS and homosexuality. But, rather the portraial of the characters Katchoo, Francine, and David. They were realistic characters it was interesting to see their daily life in the comic and learn about their back history. Also I did have quite a resemblance to David the only main male character in the comic.


Truth is the character David resonated with me. For a short time I felt that what ever happens to David in the comic would happen to me in real life. I mean in the early issues each of the characters seems to be desperately trying to become themselves, there was some type of underlying tragedy. Katchoo was haunted by her childhood and the time she spent as a call girl, this was catching up to her as her past friend with whom she had worked with was dying with AIDS. Francine who was in love and was insecure about previous relationships being only physical in nature. She waited for a whole year before she would allow her boyfriend Freddy to sleep with her. Sadly Freddy was a real dog and cheated on Francine which utterly crushed Francine. David did not seem to have much baggage in the early story, which in time will reveal to not be true. David was in love with Katchoo, desperately so. Unfortunately for David, Katchoo was in love with Francine and Francine did not know it.

It did not stop David from pursuing Katchoo. They had a strange deep friendship that could have evolved to something more. This was how I felt in high school. I was always the friend to many girls that I was interested in. Perhaps that was the reason why girls were not interested in me I became their friends and had gotten to know about them before I felt comfortable enough to try asking them out. This was the same in my freshman fall in college also. I asked 3 different girls out and was rejected mostly due to the fact that we had known each other (i guess) too well.

Then in my Spring semester Literature class I met Ahmie, granted I never changed my tactic I always wanted to know and get to be friends with women that I was interested in. (Now this is does not mean that I only get to know women that I am interested in.) I believe that this was also about the same time David and Katchoo was together as a couple.

I never knew when I first met Ahmie that I was going to be with Ahmie for the rest of my life. I have to say that the past eleven years has been quite a ride with highs and lows much like a comic book story.

Unlike my relationship with Ahmie, my relationship with the comic book Strangers in Paradise eventually ended as the story became exceedingly outrageous with the Mafia story line and its repercussions and I found it hard to connect with the characters and how they dealt with everyday life.

Even though I have not picked up an issue in a good 3 years I think I will go back to the beginning and read it all including the ones I have not picked up yet to see how the story goes.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Catch Up

Well as I have posted several weeks ago, Ahmie was in labor and the birth of the baby was imminent. As I have posted before birth of a child is a life event and well ... the baby was not born within 24 hours of that post instead it was more like almost 3 days before the baby was born.

I have reflected on this birth experience that we had at home. We had many people over sunday night: Serena, Clare, Sabrnia, Cindy (Ahmie's Mom) and the person who helped us with the Homebirth. As nice as that was to have so many people present it was hard to have so many people there.

It was also hard to have a sense of intimacy because there were so many people around. Ahmie and I have discussed this and have decided that as nice as it was that so many people showed up at Ahmie's call perhaps it might have been better if there were fewer friends attending at a time but have people rotate and take a shift. This is because, Ahmie felt that she needed to give birth sooner because everyone had an emotional investment with Ahmie and wanted to see the birth. However the side effect of this is that life goes on we don't go into our own pocket universe when a child is in the process of being birthed. Life outside of the birth was seeping in and Ahmie sensed tension this prolonged labor is causing in her friends.

However I cannot express in words the gratitude I feel for all the people who were present for the birth. Even though it was a long and tiring experience it was wonderful to catch my second son in the intimacy of home.



At 7:17am on Wednesday June 27th 2007 Delano Cheuk-Sing Yeung was born. His weight was 7lbs 12oz, 19 inches long. Now Delano's name comes from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who is one of Ahmie's favorite Presidents.

I have to say that Delano is a very different he sleeps so much. it seems that Delano is closer to what is a normal activity level for a baby. He will nurse and sleep for 2-4 hours without waking up. This is much different from Liam who would nurse every hour or so and sleep for 45 minutes to a little over an hour.


Liam is adjusting well to having a younger brother. I is incredibly endearing that LIam is so attached to Delano. Liam tries to be helpful and help take care of his younger brother which when directed was helping bring diapers and wipes and other things. When not guided meant trying to pick Delano up or poking at Delano's umbilical stump. The first night Delano was crying and Liam was crying hysterically thinking that it was his fault that Delano was crying.
Liam said to Delano:
Liam broke Jiue Jie(Piglet in Cantonese) tummy.

Ahmie explained to him that Delano is crying because he does not like his diaper being changed. I think we told Liam that he could help comfort the baby by saying Jiue Jie all safe. He still does this when Delano is crying.

Delano's two weeks old today!

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Piglet is coming soon.

Ahmie has been having more consistent and closer contractions throughout Sunday. We went to church and I was not with Ahmie during the service because the childcare was loaded with kids and I opted to help out. During the service I checked in on her and she told me that she was having a period of 3-5 minutes between stop and start of contractions, with the contractions lasting for about a minute.
After church we went to Malley's and Ahmie picked up an Ice Cream Sunday. (She promised herself that in early labor she would have a Sunday.) We had called our Midwife and she came and checked on Ahmie and found that she is about 4 cm dilated and thinks that she would likely deliver in the next day or so. While this is all happening I was furiously trying to clean up the blue room.
It seems that Sabrnia (one of Liam's Godparents) is coming up from West Virginia to be here for Piglet's birth. Also Ahmie's mother Cindy will be arranging time to be here also for the birth.

Ahmie thinks that Piglet will come in the next 24 hours.

Is Piglet's arrival imminent?

Ahmie has been feeling more contractions this past week and over the past two days she has been feeling them a little bit differently. She has been noticing contractions since before Summer break started but they were irregular and infrequent, they were a bit more frequent last week and it seems that as this week (week of June 17th). She has been feeling them come with more frequency and this evening she had been noticing that they are between 5-10 minutes apart. Ahmie had a glass of wine this evening to help slow down these contractions.

I wonder if his arrival is imminent because the contractions she had this evening, as she described them "they are inwardly focusing" and she said that she felt the contractions "starting higher up and washing downward towards her backbone and pelvis". Ahmie's due date is July 7th which I think would be really cool. Ahmie is however not disappointed if our baby piglet (because this is the Chinese year of the Boar/Pig) were to be born sooner because she does not like hot weather. She does not look forward to the hot weeks ahead. Suprisingly it has been quite cool the past several days.

We have been cleaning sorting and rearranging the house a bit. So far the living room, office, and kitchen are pretty clean and tidy. Our bedroom needs to have clothes hung up the bathroom needs some attention and the blue room has had much improvement but we still need to vacuum and organize some things in there. Our bedroom is getting there we have our mini cosleeper set up next to Ahmie's side of the bedroom.

Ahmie wanted to give birth at home for Liam's birth but due to several reasons we decided not to give birth at home but instead at a hospital attached birthing center. Most of the hang ups were with me. I did not know for sure how Ahmie would endure labor with Liam. I just was not sure what happens during a birth. I was concerned what if something went wrong. Personally being part of Liam's birth and being there and seeing how Ahmie knew and was very aware of birthing Liam. I was much more comfortable with Ahmie having a home birth with Piglet. I however wanted to have help and assistance to oversee Ahmie's labor. We decided after moving to our new house that we should home birth.

Reasons (in no particular order)
1. We are really close to the hospital. In the back of my mind I do fear some sort of complication but we are like 3 blocks away from Lakewood Hospital.
2. Birth is a life event and rarely a medical event. Since we are in a home that we own and plan on living here for many years to come . I think that it would be great that our children born at home and have a deep connection to the home that they live in.
3. Both of my parents were born at home.
4. I know Ahmie can give birth and I have faith that she will be able to bring Piglet into this world also.

Liam is so wonderful it is hard to imagine life without him. I think he would be a great big brother. We knew that he understood that there was a little baby inside Ahmie and it is just priceless during winter when he would say:
Piglet come out mama's tummy help Liam shovel (snow).
Recently, Liam has been in the habit of pretending to take Piglet from Ahmie's tummy and holding the pretend Piglet in his hand and carefully holding the baby. When we had the mini cosleeper set up he did exactly that and he placed Piglet very gently in the cosleeper and then gave the imaginary Piglet a kiss. It just melts your heart.

We have also decided to start really potty training Liam, he can go most of the day without accidents if we ask him to go every 30 to 45 minutes it seems that he can hold it while he naps so things are good.

But Friday Liam developed strange red splotches all over his body and on his face. We were concerned and we took him to an Urgent Care and the doctor said that he may have a systemic allergy attack, meaning he ate something he was allergic to. He seems alright but he looks horrible with the splotches all over his face. Obviously this puts a hamper on the potty training and complicates preparing for Piglet's arrival. He mostly seems to be itchy. We give him Oatmeal baths and lotion him up and give him Benedryl to try to treat this. Tho the doctor at the urgent care gave a prescription for Zyrtec I wanted to try to give him something over the counter before giving him a prescription. He is still splotchy but seems to be diminishing, still itchy but lotion seems to take care of that along with the oatmeal baths.

Its getting late and I should make sure I rest up. Because I know I won't pretty soon.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

I know it's been 10 months, anyway My 30th birthday and Scrapblog

I know it has been about 10 months since I last wrote on this blog. Indeed much life has occurred during the interim I started teaching at a new school, most likely I will be back teaching there again this year. Ahmie became pregnant again and is due soon. Along with my parents we bought a double house in Lakewood. I think other than the year I started teaching in Virginia this has got to be the most stressful and action packed year in my life.

April was my 30 birthday and it went okay. I have to say that I probably should have invited my friends to the party earlier but having been so busy with work and the Robotics Team and home life I just did not muster the energy to call anyone any sooner. I invited my co workers and ex-coworkers and friends. I had hoped my ex-coworker friends Josh and Clark would have made it. However the party went well anyway. More the problem was the foot plus of snow that we had the week before the party and I had wanted to have a party in the back yard. But the yard was muddy from all the melted snow.

Check out the scrapblog below for pictures of the party and my brother visiting for my birthday.




Marvin called me Saturday morning from the airport asking for me to text him his ticket confirmation number because he had forgotten it. He arrived at about 11 am and we went out to eat and afterwards we went to church for an evening of boardgames. We spent Sunday afternoon together after church. Dropped Marvin off at the Airport Sunday afternoon around 4pm and had to pick him up because of heavy rains canceled his flight and the next flight would not be until early in the morning. It was great because Liam was heartbroken when we had to drop Marvin at the Airport and Liam was so surprised when Uncle Booger... ahem I mean Uncle Marvin came back. This meant I had to wake up extra early to drop him off at the airport so he can be harassed by the TSA and not miss his flight.

I think I will most definitely post some more soon.

Monday, August 21, 2006

Liam Used the Toilet Today

Liam after taking a bath this evening was walking around the living room naked like he usually does before settling down for a diaper. He told Ahmie "potty" and lead her to the bathroom and stood on the stool and peed into the toilet.

Hopefully, he is ready for potty training.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Well I'm Back ... (home that is)

The trip back to New Rochelle was eventful and while traveling I took notes on my trusty palm pilot, but I need to go back and finish editing and adding to those entries as I took spare moments to jot down my thoughts. Hopefully they will be posted soon.

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Old Friends don't die or do they?

(I know I haven't written at all for the past several months and I should write more often, but you know that life happens while your making plans to something else)

Every once in a while I get an urge to try to get back in touch with old friends. This would not be very difficult if I was an organized person. For those who know me, they should know that being organized is a difficult thing for me. Having a two year old in the house does not help either.

I have a crate that I have my very most important things in the world. I try to rifle through them and find things that I do not need as urgently and sort that out somewhere else and then place other things that I do hold high in importance in. Mostly I have old journals and yearbooks that I hold for memory and names. I also have correspondences filed in there for recollection.

Usually these are the same times that I get nostalgic and have an urge to get in contact with friends that I have lost touch. So if I know you and have not seen or have talked with you in the past year look out, I may just give you an e-mail or possibly a phone call to try to get back in touch.

With Google on my side who knows who I may find!

Friday, April 21, 2006

When Stepfamilies don't mix

I haven't written much lately but I was watching Primetime tonight and was outraged by their story on Stepfamilies. It was shocking to find out that within the next few years that there will be more stepfamilies then the traditional first marriage family. However what was more shocking was the segment on the Nelson family where the segments shown on how the parents Joe and Lynn targeted the daughter Kyle who came from Joe's first marriage. Kyle is a teenager who had depression bouts and ADD. She lives in a home environment where she is belittled and terrorized by her parents on a regular basis. On one occasion shown in the segment Joe (father) jumped on top of Kyle and slapped her many times. I was shocked that there was no mention of Child Protective Services called on the Nelson family by the producers of the segment. I was so upset that I wrote this letter to Primetime.

All of the people involved in this program dealing with the Nelson family should
be ashamed of yourselves. It is abhorrent that when the abuse surfaced the story
should have stopped there. But instead of doing the right thing you allowed the
girl Kyle to be subjected to further verbal and physical abuse. The abuse does
not end at her, your own footage shows that the other children in the Nelson
household are clearly affected by the verbal abuse, the children covering their
ears and saying prayers is telling.

From the shaping of the story there seemedto be NO consequence for the parents in the Nelson family to the physical abuse and verbal abuse that they inflicted on Kyle and the other children. Child protective service should have been called the moment you observed abuse.

The message that I get from watching your program is that it is OKAY to physically
and verbally abuse your children, BECAUSE there appeared to be no consequence.

I hope that the people involved in the production of the Nelson family segment,
are found guilty of child neglect and endangerment because they failed to their
human duty to report the abuse of the children in that family.


Anyway from reading the message boards for Primetime I believe the Nelsons address is this Joe and Lynn Nelson 1166 Fletcher Farm Road Bloomingdale, NY 12913
I hope that CPS is called upon that family and that the remaining children in that family will be given a better environment to live while the "parents" get the help that they desperately need.

And I hope the Primetime segment producers gets charged and found with child endangerment.

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Meeting Strangers

Last week I finally sat down for an entire service at church. Usually I try to sit for the service but eventually I would have to walk Liam down to the Nursery room so that he could play and not be too distracting in the sanctuary. The sermon last Sunday was titled "Guests in our own home." The ministers were talking about meeting strangers, the ones without and the ones within. It was a very moving service, or perhaps it was so moving because this is the first time I attended service with Liam in the Nursery. Anyway during the sermon I was thinking about the strangers that I have meet on my travels on the Greyhound bus.
Before I met and started dating Ahmie I went everywhere by bus. I grew up in the suburbs of New York City; I grew up riding the subway and the busses everywhere. I remember before my dad bought a car we took the train and subway to Chinatown Sunday for Chinese school and grocery shopping. As I grew up I went into the City all by myself to wander around, go to shops and museums, I loved being able to go anywhere I wanted by public transit. As my junior year in high school rolled by I started to visit colleges on my own by taking the Greyhound. I visited University of Rochester, Cornell University, and Case Western Reserve University (now known as Case).

For the most part the University visits were fairly generic and did not stand out very much in my memory. What do stick in my mind were the discussions that I had with some of the people traveling on the Greyhound with me. I remember a discussion that I had with an elderly gentleman on my way to Cornell. The elderly man was taking the bus to visit some family upstate. Although the key points of the discussion are lost in my mind, what I remember was camaraderie and the almost instant connection we had when discussing the many topics we talked about, I remember talking about Kierkgarrd and existentialist philosophy.
I also remembered talking with a black gentleman on my way to Cleveland to visit Case we talked about family and family obligations and how he is helping his sister move and that is what families do for each other riding hundreds of miles to help move and drive the moving truck. What I thought about during the service was that I was able to open up to strangers, not necessarily minute details about my life. But rather having an honest discussion with no pretense.
Perhaps it is my introverted nature that I find these transient conversations worth thinking about. I think it is being in transit that people are the most purely themselves, knowing that the scenery will change as surely as the people will change there is no need to pretend to be someone that you are not. Since the people encountered while traveling, are not in the usual cast of characters in ones life story, there is no need to be guarded and play the same role that one normally plays.

Sometimes I miss riding the Greyhound.

Monday, January 16, 2006

Looking into the long past

Over the Christmas break I worked on digitizing the family tree. It was quite interesting work, apparently my family from Liam goes back twenty nine generations. From the fourteenth generation on there was detailed description of birth day on the Chinese lunar calendar, birth year under which emperor's rule, marital status, sons born, and when they died. I know that at least the family goes back to the Qing Dynasty but what my parents have is only a copy of the cliftnotes version of the actual family history, apparently there is an entire box of books with family history somewhere out there my father believes with one of the uncles.

My parents want to at least scan in the documents so that there will be a record somewhere in case the paper copy disappears. I want to do one better, I want to do as through a genealogists work up with a computer program so that we can have a more meaningful understanding of where and when my ancestors existed. Also I would like to have that genealogy reach to the modern generation of Yeung/Young family members (the east coast are spelled Ye/the west coast are spelled Yo). My father is one of ten children and from looking in the history my grandfather had the largest family in history. My grandfather and grandmother had 6 sons and ironically of those six sons only three of those sons had male children, which would make it my generation there are in total four male children who carry the family name, two already have children, myself and a cousin in California who is the son of my fifth uncle. My cousin Gene who is not really into making a family, and my brother Marvin. I would love to see the Yeung family name carried on to future generations.

Of course there are a number of problems in finding a genealogy program for recording the family history.
  1. That is all of my ancestors had Chinese names, therefore any software I use must be able to support Chinese characters if nothing else just for their names.
  2. I want to use a program that will exist for years and generations to come so I need a program that will be continued to be upgraded for a long time.
  3. I don't really know enough Chinese to do justice for my ancestor's history.
I have been looking for a software that will do family trees but the only one that I have a sustained interest is Personal Ancestral File which is published by the Church of the Latter Day Saints. I do not agree with the beliefs and practices of the Mormon church, but the thing that they do well is genealogy, I know that this software will be supported for years to come since they have a fascination with genealogy.

It is somewhat humbling to realize that I am part of a much larger family, a family that has history that goes into the past for hundreds of years, that has survived war, plague, and hardship that are inconceivable today. I look at Liam and hope that he will help carry the family name for generations to come. On the other hand I hope there will be a world for Liam's children and his children's children to inhabit. I fear that humanity may have reached its peak, I fear that life will become increasingly harder, our resources depleting, the rise of extremism all around the world. I fear that within 30 generations humanity will cease to matter because we would have choked ourselves out of the picture with war and or pollution.

I hope that thirty generations from now some one like me is pondering the same questions as they try to create or update a family history for the Yeung family.

Garvin, its nice to meet you my name is Garvin

When I post enteries on the blog I often click on the Next Blog button and scan for interesting blogs to read while I perculate my thoughts. Well tonight I stumbled upon GARVIN. From scanning his blog and reading his profile I find some interesting similarities between us.

  1. He is Canadian and I was born in Canada.
  2. He is Chinese or of Chinese heritage and I am also Chinese.
  3. He likes pho and I like pho.
  4. He is an Aries and I am and Aries also.
  5. He is a technophile and I am a technophile.
  6. He dislikes the Bush Whitehouse, I also dislike the Bush Whitehouse.
I emailed him, I hope that he writes back.

What a strange little world.

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

The Christmas Plague

I love teaching; there are very few jobs where you can have Christmas and New Years off and all the days in between. The trade off of course is that when you are teaching the rest of the year you do not have a life.
I have been working myself too hard in December. It seems for me work doubles when I am preparing for time off, you know tying up loose ends, grading everything and so on. So naturally when I have some down time I get sick, almost no fail. I started feeling unwell Saturday the 24th and by Christmas I got full blown sick, coughing, feeling like you cannot breathe because you are so congested, ears clogged, sinuses hurting because you are stuffed up.
I should have known something was coming up when my ears felt like something were inside them on Wednesday the 20th. As usual I went on, and kept going on and on.
My parents arrived Friday Dec 23rd, of course Ahmie and I spent all day cleaning preparing for my parents visit. It was not too bad mess wise, we are settling in our apartment and much of our things have a place. They came on Greyhound and arrived about 7 in the morning, I picked them up and showed them a little bit of Cleveland, and where I work. Liam slept in that morning and Ahmie and I got a chance to chat with my parents, which was nice, and Liam had a chance to sleep well and greeted his grandparents (nai-nai, and yeh-yeh) with bright eyes and full of cheer. It has been several months since Liam has seen them. Later that day we went out for Dim sum at C & Y Chinese restaurant. We also invited our friends from church Serena, Jasmine (who returned from her first semester at college), Carlos and Sharon (Serena's parents). The food was wonderful; it was interesting having dim sum with two vegetarians. They do have some excellent dim-sum dishes for vegetarians. Afterwards we did some shopping for Asian goods.

We decided to lay low for the rest of Friday and Saturday to have a nice dinner, relax and enjoy each other's company. Saturday night we attended the Christmas Eve service at Westshore. Saturday night we enjoyed a delicious turkey (which started the week of turkey leftovers, turkey soup, turkey lo-mien, turkey fried rice and so on). Sunday we opened our Christmas gifts before church. I started feeling unwell Sunday morning, my throat started getting horse before church, however I was convinced to do a reading that morning and apparently I did some justice to the piece even though my voice was a little horse. I got to feeling really unwell Sunday afternoon, I had to sleep a little bit and I really felt sick.
I felt unwell until Wednesday, which meant I could not participate in the usual after Christmas bonanza of clearance deals, probably a good thing. Of course Wednesday was when I went to see my doctor. The doctor gave me a prescription for antibiotics, and a steroid/
broncodialator for my cold and chest congestion. I started feeling better almost right away.


Starting Thursday I worked on scanning in some family documents for my Dad. By then everyone at the apartment was feeling a little under the weather except my Mom. Ahmie and Liam had a bit of a cough, and dad was coughing also. None of them got as bad as I did.


My parents returned to New York on Sunday night and it was a very long but enjoyable visit from my parents.

Christmas Service

Even though I was feeling sick on Christmas day, my parents and my family all went to church on Christmas day. The service was very interesting, the congregants were asked to share something with the congregation, which was very nice. I was asked to do a reading for a fellow church member; I was told that he could not read what he wanted to share with out getting very choked up. I agreed to do so even though my throat was full of phlegm and my voice seems to be on the verge of going.

I got the reading, it was titled Christmas at Aunt Ida's by Dick Feagler who is a long time columnist at the Cleveland Plain Dealer. I read the column twice before I read it aloud before the congregation. I was very moved by this piece, since I am so moved I would like to share this to the readers of this blog out there in the blogsphere.

Christmas at Aunt Ida's

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Dick Feagler

Plain Dealer Columnist

With a nod by Dick Feagler to the issues of today, we republish his Christmas column, which first appeared in The Plain Dealer in 1993.

On Christmas, when I was a kid, we all went over to my Aunt Ida's house -- an old house in the old neighborhood.

Just what did you think I was going to do today? Talk about politics? The chaos and uncertainties of Iraq? All of our fellow Americans who dream of a white Christmas but see one the color of sand? All of the fears and uncertainties that lie before us? Not today, my friend. No fears today. Not on the day when an angel once said, "Fear not!"

Let us rest our weary brains. Let us consider matters more lasting than the day's headlines. Let us turn our backs on all earthbound dramas and traumas. Let us ignore notorious tyrants made famous in headlines for their infamy. Let us visit some people whose names get into the newspaper only when they die. And even then, just in the tiny type of the death notices.

Let's go to my Aunt Ida's house. Come on. It'll only take a couple of minutes.

You'll be home in time for the 11 o'clock news, I promise you.

The house wasn't far from the steel mills, and the fallout from the mills made the dirt in Aunt Ida's yard black and rich. When the wind was wrong, the air in the neighborhood smelled like a chem lab. Breathing it might have been bad, but nobody knew that then. My Aunt Ida had great luck with flowers.

On Christmas, we'd all be there. The old folks, the young folks and the kids. The young folks were the young men and their wives still recovering from the great upheaval of World War II. The old folks could remember World War I.

The kids, like me, weren't old enough to remember much. We were busy collecting memories, and this is one of them.

There was no TV. The only one among us who had a TV was my cousin Stanley, who sold them. He hasn't yet sold one to any of the rest of the family, but he keeps trying. He knows it's only a matter of time. For, what isn't?

"I have a 10-inch screen," he tells us, a cigar stuck in the corner of his mouth, a tall brown beer bottle at his elbow. He's sitting at the dining room table with the rest of the young men, playing pinochle. You'll notice that they have all, just for a little while, assumed the present tense. A Christmas present tense.

"They are never going to be able to make a screen bigger than 10 inches that will give you a decent picture," Cousin Stanley lectures. "According to the laws of electronics, 10 inches is as big as you can go."

The Army Air Corps gave Cousin Stanley a job fixing radios. That's where he got his electronic knowledge. So my Uncle Ziggy, who flushed out snipers on Okinawa, and my Cousin Melvin, who knocked out tanks in Italy, listen to Stanley with respect. Stanley - the trumpeter of the dawn of the age of television.

By now, the tiny type has recorded Stanley's name. And Ziggy's. Melvin's, too. And my Aunt Ida's. Time killed them. The tanks couldn't do it and the snipers couldn't do it. But Time? It does it every time.

Time erased my cousin Billy's name. He crossed the Rhine River in the bloody, final act of his war. He lived through obscene and notorious battlefields. He died at 85 cutting wood in his front yard in Parma.

Time is the inevitable eraser, but it does not erase cleanly. If you look hard enough, you can still see traces of them all, faintly. And if you look even harder - why they are right here!

The women are gathered in the living room, talking about babies and recipes and operations. Nylon stockings that have come back again, so you can throw the leg makeup away. Electric stoves that practically cook your meal for you. Jobs they can quit now - are expected to quit now - because the men have come back from the war.

Their woman talk would make a feminist despair. They talk of "female trouble" and permanent waves. And the Christmas crowds at Halle's and Taylor's and Bailey's. And the big Sterling-Lindner tree that looked even a little bigger this year. And Hough bake shop cookies. And trolley cars that turn on Public Square, showering the safety zones with a blizzard of sparks.

Jay Leno is not here. I told you, there is no television set, except the one Stanley is describing - sketching it in the air with the smoke from his cigar. Nobody has bothered to turn the radio on. There is just talk - endless, trivial, sometimes mysterious. Sometimes, if a kid comes into the room, the talk suddenly stops. "Ix-nay," one of the aunts will say. "Little pitchers have big ears." There are things, in this long-ago time, that a kid is not supposed to know about. If for some unfathomable reason anybody said the word "condom," it would take the room an hour to recover its equilibrium.

Where are the kids? Would you mind, my friend, if I went in search of myself? It won't take long. I know just where to look.

I am with my cousins in the unheated bedroom at the back of the old house. We are burrowing under the piles of coats that have been dumped on the bed. Moutons, mostly, with a few Persian lambs, for animals do not yet have rights. Just a glimpse of myself is all I want. I don't want to look too hard. Because for me, this trip is a wistful mirror.

The bedroom door opens and Aunt Ida is standing in a rectangle of light.

"You kids go into the living room now," she says. "Santa Claus is coming soon."

We go. And as soon as we leave, Aunt Ida opens a bureau drawer, reaches under some flannel sheets and pulls out a moth-eaten Santa Claus suit and a scraggly beard. The pants of this suit have long since disintegrated. So my Aunt Ida hikes up her dress and yanks on a pair of my uncle's blue serge pants. Over these she tugs galoshes.

She takes a pillow from the bed and plucks off the pillowcase. She stuffs the pillow under the Santa jacket to give herself a tummy. She fills the pillowcase with toys from Woolworth's, Kresge's and Grant's She puts on the beard, the cap. She tiptoes out into the hall. Then out the back door and into the night - air so cold it makes her nose sting, sky lit with a faint glow from the mills.

Around the house she goes and up on the side porch. She pauses and peeks in the window.

She sees what we see now. Me at 7. My young, handsome father and pretty mother.

(Death took my mother gently, during a nap. My father followed her the next year. But memory brings them back now, and makes them young again.)

On the frosty porch, my Aunt Ida sees us all - the old folks, the young folks and the kids. Moving, though we can't feel the current, down a river of time.

We don't see her. She is on the other side of the dark windowpane. The adults know she's out there. We kids aren't sure. It's a moment of great suspense for us. We are not yet old enough to understand that life is fairly predictable. That you can usually tell what will happen next. That there are only a handful of plots, endlessly repeated.

I promised I'd get you back. But let me take a last look into that room. Almost all of the people we see there are gone now. But they haven't gone far, and on Christmas they are very close. They are just the other side of the windowpane.

We can't see them. But we feel them there, those simple people who loved us and took care of us. They left us blessings we too rarely count. And, if we let them, they come back at Christmas with gifts of everlasting life.


The church member who could not read this himself I could only imagine that many of his family members are now on the other side of the windowpane and that he would like to be reconnected with those dear departed family members.

I was also very moved myself fortunately I never had to deal really with the passing of close family members except for my Uncle Joseph in 2004. I have been blessed with a child hood where nobody dies, nobody that matters, that is. I however saw myself in Dick Feagler's character and some day in the future thinking of resplendent Christmases of days gone by.

I know that my aunts and uncles will die someday, I know that my parents will die someday also however I hope that it will be far off from this Christmas, and many Christmases to come.

Saturday, December 31, 2005

T-minus 13 minutes

Well its about 13 minutes to 2006, thus far the evening has been nice. My parents, Ahmie, Liam and I went to a Chinese Buffet tonight. For this night we also made Tong Yun which are flour dumplings with sugar and (my father's favorite) peanut butter fillings, in a simple syrup broth. It was a family affair, Ahmie and my mom made the dumplings and I cooked the dumplings and made the syrup broth.

Still waiting for the ball to drop.
My resolutions for this coming year.
1. Get a better teaching job, time to start looking is in January.
2. Get our fiances in better order. (getting a better job helps)
3. Try to reach my students better (its going to be tough, I think resolutions are supposed to be hard)
4. Lose weight (currently I weigh about 210 lbs)

...5, 4, 3, 2, 1, open sesame, Happy New Year!
Have a Happy New Year! ...