10/25/11

UMB Update!

Finally got an instruction email from UMB regarding my housing application! I have officially sent out my application and am now playing the waiting game, which is nerve-racking and exciting at the same time.

I’m going to have to pay rent for a full six months before January 1st… so that’s about:

$500 x 6 months = $3000 that I’ll have to make an international bank transfer plus service charges. Time to put yourself to use, bank account!

10/19/11

Always Ask.

It never hurts to. Unless the worst thing you fear is rejection. For someone like me, asking was always a last resort. Asking for help was a sign of weakness. So I bottled emotions up. I kept to myself and didn’t let it show when I was frustrated or upset. I didn’t really let anyone help me. I broke down pretty easily.

Now, I ask. I ask even if it makes me feel stupid or silly for asking. It’s still difficult sometimes, but it’s getting easier.

I’ve found just ASKING makes my life much easier. Things I initially thought I couldn’t get around I’ve found ways to, just by asking. I’ve learned to rely on people. I’ve learned to recognize when I do need help.

I call for help when I’m feeling a breakdown coming along. I vent. I cry. The people who listen pat me on the back and set me straight. I feel lighter after asking for help. The burden lessened. It’s not weak to ask for help – it’s weak not to.

My life has gotten much more complex as the years have gone by, but I’ve overcome the challenges by asking for help when I need it. I’m much happier now.

It never hurts to ask. You’ll be surprised at how many doors open up for you when you do.

10/18/11

Past the road of broken dreams.

As I’m anxiously trying to catch up with my school work, my mom calls me downstairs. She has on her lap a stack of papers – a time capsule of important documents my dad has collected over his lifetime.

My mom hands me my child immunization record – double-sided in English and Korean – something I asked her in preparation for my trip to Tanzania. Measles, Mumps, Hepatitis B, and a entire slew of shots I had as a child came rushing back into my memory. She told me to thank my dad for storing such important documents safely in his office.

College transcripts. Immigration papers. My dad had saved absolutely everything. She showed me the English-Korean manual my dad had created during his time in the army – a tool that many soldiers found very useful during their time there. She laughed and smiled as my dad passed to her all of the national, school, and newspaper awards for excellence in art and poetry as a child. There were a good ten of them. All very large and prestigious. They dated back to the time when he was in preschool and primary school.

I smiled with my mom as I looked through all of these wonderful awards. My dad said that his grandmother had had him submit his art and poetry everywhere as a child but as soon as he had entered grade school, his father – my grandfather – never let him practice his talent. So I as I looked at the papers from my father’s past, I couldn’t help but feel sad. He had never been allowed to pursue his dreams by his father in his youth. Along with that, a variety of other reasons led to my father hating my grandfather.

I always knew my father was smart. He was talented, artistic, witty, and very well versed in the arts. He still is, actually. But he’s now a real estate agent and he’s not ashamed to say he became one for the money. When I look at my dad, and the stack of papers in my mother’s lap, I see a road of broken dreams. I see pain. I see sadness. And I see his perseverance through it all.

I’ve never been on good terms with my father. Although, I don’t believe I was ever as talented as my dad was in his youth, I did inherit his love of writing and the arts. Music and writing are my muses, and as a child, I was allowed to pursue them. I was never encouraged by my father. He never really made my recitals or concerts. He’s never read anything I read. He wasn’t very involved when I was growing up. But he was adamantly against either my brother and I pursuing a degree or career in the arts. Ever since I was a child, I was told nothing but horror stories about the dead ends in the arts. We had fights. I honestly believe that the fighting would have been a lot worse if I had been dead set on arts (which I’m not, fortunately for him).

I could easily hate my father, for not letting me take my life fully in my own hands, much like his father did for him. But I know his past. I know his talents. I know, as I stare at those awards, that my dad grew up to be a broken man. And since I understand that, I can’t hate him. He has his reasons. But that’s all the more reason why I don’t listen to him.

I have hopes. I have dreams and passions that I’m in pursuit of every day. It is my privilege – something I am so very grateful for. So even if my dreams right now aren’t what my dad had in mind, I am pursuing them. Because when I see my dad, I want to prove him wrong. I want him to see that I can make my dreams come true – that I can be successful and happy without sacrificing my passions. I want him to understand my passion and be proud of what I’m doing with my life.

I want him to know that even though he couldn’t pursue his dreams, his daughter is.

10/16/11

I made a friend today!

I was coming back home after a very long and arduous ordeal of crashing on campus for the night and waking up at 6:30AM to help volunteer for the Food for All: Food Security and Poverty Conference. The conference itself was informative, fun, and an overall great experience. It just left me insanely tired by the time it was done.

So here I am, finally on the skytrain ride home when I meet Deng.

I have a seat to myself, and he sits in the seat in front of mine. Barefoot, tall, and lanky, he smiles at me and greets me. So of course I smile back. I guess I was still in a social mood from the conference because I start telling him how exhausted I am. He says he’s tired too, and he’d love a massage – but he can’t afford one. So we start talking. His english is somewhat hard to understand but with patience, I get the general gist of what he says to me.

Deng is Sudanese. He came to Canada alone, leaving his mother, sister, and girlfriend behind in Sudan. When I ask him how long he’s been in Canada, he replies ‘a very long time’. I can gather from the brief snippets of his story that he came to Canada to find work to most likely send money back home in order to support his family. Maybe a refugee. I had learned about African men coming to more developed nations in my studies, but actually meeting Deng and hearing his story was an entirely different experience.

I ask him if he is lonely, being all by himself in Canada. He tells me he is. When I ask him where he is off to right now, he tells me he is just riding the skytrain back and forth because he doesn’t want to go home where he would be by himself. He tells me he often gets drunk to fall asleep quicker. I listen with an open ear. Here is a fellow human being, going through his own hardships like everyone else. Although I can’t ever imagine what he’s been through – I can empathize with (if only maybe a little of the extent of) the loneliness he feels. No one wants to feel alone in the world.

So I do what the people in my life do for me. I talk with him. This simple human interaction is the only thing I can offer Deng, just like I would offer any other person who welcomes my company. Even though we have only just met, it’s incredible how friendly and warm he is as we talk. Not at all like strangers.

He greeted me pleasantly, and I greeted him back. This isn’t an act of charity or good will. This is the start of a friendship.

I keep asking him questions from what kind of music he likes to what he spends his spare time doing. He tells me stories with an animated expression. He tells me the vision he has for wanting to start a family and how he would raise his kids (a boy and a girl). I listen and then tell him about my studies at UBC and then listen some more.

Eventually, I reach my stop and we have to part ways. I’m actually a little sad that the skytrain ride is so short – he was so interesting to listen to. He says I’m interesting too.

He offers to give me his email address, and I figure it won’t hurt to keep in touch to chat. When I reach my stop, we shake hands as friends, not strangers.

We hope we meet again one day.

10/13/11

I started vlogging!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BRZO_COZLuM

First time ever vlogging! This video was a test run to see if I could even manage to record myself, edit, and create a vlog. I only took one take and used what I had to make this… instead of studying. I’m planning on doing periodical videos on my exchange abroad to Norway. I’ll probably have one done more closer to my departure date and one when I get there. We’ll see how things go. 🙂

10/7/11

I booked my flight ticket today.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012 || Icelandair # 680:

  • Seattle/Tacoma Intl (SEA) to Reykjavik Keflavik International (KEF)

Departure (SEA): January 24, 3:30 PM PST (afternoon)
Arrival (KEF): January 25, 6:45 AM GMT (morning)
Class: Economy Seat: 18C

Wednesday, January 25, 2012 || Icelandair # 318:

  • Reykjavik Keflavik International (KEF) to Oslo Airport (OSL)

Departure (KEF): January 25, 7:35 AM GMT (morning)
Arrival (OSL): January 25, 11:05 AM CET (morning)
Class: Economy Seat: 15C

One-way ticket for $466.

The difference between YVR (Vancouver) and SEA (Seattle) was about $150, hence why my mom is driving me 3+ hours down to Seattle for my flight. That’s going to be an emotional road trip.

My classes officially start on January 31st and end in late June. I have about a week to get settled at UMB before the real game begins.

I may not know shit about travel logistics, but I’m slowly getting everything together piece by piece.

Breathe, Megan, Breathe.

10/3/11

A New Direction?

I’ve reached a point where I’m actually not sure if I have more of an interest in Global Health or International Development. Yes, the two fields are heavily intertwined, but there are distinguishing differences between the focuses of each field.

I first entered GRS declaring a specialization in Global Health. When I planned out my future courses, I jotted down a lot of nutrition courses, figuring I would probably go that route. To my surprise, nutrition, although fascinating, did not hold my attention as much as I though it would. A subject I never thought I would be interested in – economics – however did. Not bland microeconomics, but economics in the context of international development.

Maybe it’s the influx of international development related courses I’ve been taking, but I find it quite enlightening how initial plans and interests shift with the various courses I take. I’m still quite interested in Global Health, but this increasing interest in International Development is quite unprecedented.

I’m glad GRS is so flexible when it comes to specializations – plus I’m extra lucky that Global Health and International Development arenas interlink – if I do decide to switch to the latter, the transition will be smoother.

But I’m still quite interested a number of topics in Global Health – topics that I would love to learn more about:

-Epidemiology & Diseases: bacteria and viruses have always fascinated me [I’m planning to take MICB 202 in my fourth year…]

-Social Determinants of Health

-Ecohealth

-Health Systems & Policy

In the field of International Development, my interests are (so far) as follows:

-Food & Resource Economics and Trade

-Gender Equity

-Governance & Policy

-Food Security

-Rural-Urban Migration

I guess, to put it one way, Global Health could count into the larger arena of International Development. Actually, that fits rather well. I’m extremely interested in domestic and foreign policy regarding development and healthcare systems in (or not in) place. Hmm. More to think about.

10/2/11

A quote for self-inspiration~

I thought up a great little quote to keep in mind for myself. 😀 Here it is!

“Don’t look back on the past to regret the steps you’ve taken. Look back to see how far you’ve come.”

This quote will remind me not to compare my life with others. What experiences I have are just as valuable as anyone else’s. Must not forget that!