Thursday, September 29, 2011

Perspective

Heh.  From the Times baseball blog today:
Just remember that when telling your grandchildren about the Great Collapse of 2011, you must leave out the fact that you attended a Bruins Stanley Cup parade three months earlier. Or a Celtics parade two years before that. Or a Red Sox parade the year before that. And skip the three Patriots Super Bowl celebrations. They all get in the way of a good story.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Important Business



Remember how I wrote about witnessing "courtesy buttons" in a Korean public bathroom this summer? Not getting a picture of it was one of my biggest regrets from my travels. (The other being not buying more squishy toys from the night markets) My layover in Japan 2 weeks ago remedied that situation.  Plus, a bathroom bonus: deodorizing, nay, powerful deodorizing buttons.  People of Japan, I bow to your ingenuity.


Posted by Picasa

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Social Medicine

While eating dinner with my aunt and uncle a few weeks ago, Ah-Bei (as I call my eldest uncle) pulled out a bottle of wine.  (I drank more in that family weekend than I do on a normal weekend.)

Ah-Bei: So, tell us about the health benefits of wine.

Father: They're pretty general and obvious, right?  Good for your heart, anti-oxidants...

Ah-Bei: No, I want to hear it from her.  A Harvard-educated public health expert.

---

Later, debating the merits of animal fats.

Brother: True, they're saturated fats, but they are actually healthier-

Moi: I haven't read as much on it, but I don't think-

Ah-Bei: Hm.  The public health PhD has doubts about this.  I'm going to go with Harvard on this one.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Social Math

Oh that's unfortunate.  Only my fabulous new school friends ("cohort") will get the title joke.  But they will not read this.

Let's cut to the chase for this entry:  I am a winner.  Last night was no different.  A big group of us went to the school-sponsored happy hour for public health/Hopkins trivia yesterday.  Since the MPH program started a few months before us, and all of us were out of towners (except for Cass, our intrepid TA) we were perhaps the newest to the school and knew the least about public health/Hopkins.  It did not help that we did not submit any questions and there was nothing in our specialty (that being disseminating health policy issues in 1500 words or less).  Things did not look good.  We even forgot basic public health law questions we should have known.  Sensing imminent defeat, we were happy to just talk disruptively in the corner and let the night fade away.  Then the final round changed everything.  We discovered that, perhaps due to our careful listening, we had been calculating our points wrong (i.e. doubling them- and still not winning).  The MC corrected the misdeed for Round 3, but never caught it for Round 2.  So we went into the final question neck and neck with two other teams.  Then the first place team made a major tumble while we correctly wagered all of our points to double up the score.  In the end, our team in the corner, the one that that had never won a round, and didn't hear the question half the time, became the shady Cinderella and took home the grand prize.  They'll probably make an HBO special about our surprising comeback.  You should stay tuned.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Like Butter

I refuse to believe that I will never be suave.  So time after time, I allow optimism into my heart and come to believe that I am capable of executing life smoothly.  Take my biostat midterm this morning.  I was convinced that I was well prepared (oh how you proved me wrong, test) but even more, I was convinced that I could exit the test without much trouble.  After all, there was only 1 student to the left of me.  I just needed to pick up my backpack, tilt to the side, and scoot past him with my backpack lifted up, so as not to disturb him, and then I'd be all set.

If only.  If only.  If only.  Instead, I managed to step on my shoelaces for the first time in years, trip, and then miraculously catch my backpack on the handrail at the edge of the row, so I ended up tripping right in front of the guy I was trying not to disturb, and my backpack hung half on his desk and half on the banister.  Of course

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Family Meal

It was an absurd moment in a surreal weekend.  There I was, sitting in a minibus in my nice black dress, trying to balance all that was going on.  My cousin had ordered bento boxes for lunch and I was trying to eat mine.  We were having bentos with fried chicken drumsticks that were actually packaged separately, because they don't fit in the box.  There was no way to properly wield the chicken except to use my hand and try not to get any greasy bits on my face or dress.  But I also had to hold the box, work my chopsticks, balance the rest of the box (which required suspending the drumstick so it wouldn't cover the rest of the food), and keep my drink in place as the driver hit every bump along the way.  As luck would have it, I only had 2 hands.  

Being a part of an extended family, to me, feels like wearing glasses.  Like the new or occasional glasses wearer, I am always acutely aware of being with my extended family because it happens so rarely.  I imagine the rest of them hardly notice the feeling.  For me, it takes some adjustment every time.  Whenever we have big gatherings, I catch myself thinking, "so this is what a big family, my family, feels like."  The feeling reached a crescendo a week ago, eating lunch en route to my grandfather's burial.  Since the cemetery was a long drive away (they are almost always in the mountains in Taiwan and the burial was only for family members), 17 of us packed into a mini-bus for the journey and shared the tragicomic moment..  All of us (eh, most of us) were in our Sunday bests, trying to balance the least fast-food-friendly-meal-ever, all the while passing straws, napkins, and drinks up and down the aisles.  Writers always think their families exceptional.  And I'm pretty sure my family drama is exceptional.  But at that moment-- bickering, joking, catching up (some with more ease than others)-- we were just like any other family.

Friday, September 16, 2011

The RidicuList

On the same day that Hopkins (OK, a Hopkins-affiliated institute) is being sued for sued for exposing poor black children to lead paint, I learn that the ol' H'Bomb (the Boston-based major H'Bomb) has gone in the other direction in taking on the public image.  Just check out this catalog listing: Oh, that's right.  It's a dog.  That you can use at the medical library.  But remember, just like that December 1813 issue of NEJM, you can use it in library, but you can't check it out.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Accidental Scenester

Do you know what guabao is?  If you do, chances are, you are either Taiwanese or knowledgeable on foodie trends.  As part of the pork fad of the last decade and also the rise of less-known Asian food in the States (read: Korean tacos, Taiwanese, Chinese provincial specialties over pan-China classics), guabao has become trendy.  It's what's described as a "Taiwanese burger"- fatty braised pork belly sandwiched between soft, white bread pocket with cilantro, pickled cabbage, and the all important sweet peanut powder.  The perfect melding of crunch and softness, sweet and salty, greasy and dry.  I love me a guabao.  But I especially like that this esoteric trendy food item here that isn't served in every city (because how many of them have Taiwanese food?) nor every Taiwanese restaurant, is so common in Taiwan that I had this for breakfast at the airport.  I love that I come from a food history so rich that what is available here in the States is only a speck of what is available at home.  And that I can eat guabaos in peace in Taiwan, without food trucks or eating local.


Posted by Picasa

It Is Happening

Is it here already?  It feels like it is too soon.  Is this what everyone feels like when the moment is upon them?  I am too young.  I am not ready.  But fashion and pop culture are now mining the 90's, the decade during which I grew up (I suppose I could still cling onto the 00's).  The decade that seems too recent and unremarkable to be emulating.  From today's New York Times

While the indie rock band Dinosaur Jr. played on Topshop’s sound system, Ms. Callis [17] noted that she approves of the ’90s, which fashion seems to be mining. “You couldn’t even tell what anyone’s bodies looked like,” she said approvingly, while eyeing a cocoon sweater that was “very Alexander Wang.”

Friday, September 09, 2011

The Children's Bread

A title with a theological allusion.  Kingdom points for that.

By now, you and I should be fairly acquainted with the opposites-attract approach to life that is my parents' marriage.  Yet the way it plays out in real life still surprises me.  My family and I are staying at my uncle's for the weekend.  Last night, they had already gone to bed when I found out that the guest bathroom didn't have any shampoo, so I went to the parents to see if they had any.

Mother: Do you have any soap?

Moi: Yeah, there's a new bar of soap in there.

Mother: Just use that for now on your hair.  They're all the same.

Father: I have a bottle of shampoo here and one of those hotel packets.  Why don't you take whichever one you want?

Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Stylus of Champions


A whole box of my favorite pen. Have you ever seen anything more beautiful?

I'm going away again for a long weekend and coming back disoriented and jet lagged. Will tell you tales from the journey if I make it back sane and alive.
Posted by Picasa

Monday, September 05, 2011

Audio 2: Childish Analogy

If I had to choose one piece of work that I am most proud of- one cupcake, one publication, one gesture, one anything- this may be it. So if you listen to it and like it, I'm sorry. There isn't more where this came from. This is the best that I can do. I wrote this my freshman year at the Bo' and it's been downhill ever since (for more things that have gone downhill since 2003, see also: this blog, physical shape, grasp of calculus etc., etc.).

Audio 1: Work in Progress



Haven't done this for forever and thought I'd share a piece I'm still working on.  It's long (2.5 min), so you have to really like the sound of my voice to sit through this.  I think I have the words down, but the timing is still a little off at parts, and I misspoke a line.  But I haven't done anything productive and creative like this for so long, I thought I'd share anyway.  We'll go back to awkward stories tomorrow.  Today, it's all vulnerable soul baring, all the time.

Saturday, September 03, 2011

At Some Point, It's Just Lunch

I never thought I'd miss the food at Sebastian's but after six years of institutional coddling and excellent salad bars, I'm finally at a school without good food.  The cafe at Hampton House has great free iced water, wifi, and a very friendly staff, but I miss my "cheap" and healthy "Indian" food, surly cashiers, Heart Healthy entrees, and all those pictures of Walter Willet telling me that I should have oatmeal. 

What I don't miss about Boston, however, is having great brunch options within walking distance from my place.  I have that here.  Just came back from my first B'more brunch (with Sachini-- whose frames of reference include Boston, Harvard, Hopkins, B'more, California, Asia, and Beyonce's baby-to-be, which makes her perfect brunch company) and licked my plate clean.  How could I not, when it contained some of my favorite things?  Poached eggs (my brunch egg go-to), fried chicken, and biscuits.  I can't even think of anything more perfect and I certainly can't wait to brunch again.