Divided

This week has been dismal for multiple reasons for me. This week ends in the third anniversary of my brother’s passing. This week contained my first experience firing someone. And, it is the week of the Republican National Convention, where I heard so much fear and hatred among the Republican speakers and audience, with the exception of Melania Trump and Ivanka Trump’s speeches, that it honestly made me fear for the future.

I’ve never seen a series of speeches that tried to instill fear in the American public. Usually when I think of Republican or Democratic national conventions, I tend to think of them as a time to instill hope for the future, but these speeches were all about how we should fear for our lives and fear our neighbors and potential immigrant neighbors, load our guns, and defend and preserve what is America. I don’t know what America is if it’s a place that is hostile to neighbors, or thinks that it’s actually an easy feat to immigrate here. The “facts” that were discussed during this convention did not appear to me to be facts, but more lies that try to make people hate Hillary Clinton, who really doesn’t deserve that much hate and is frankly getting a lot of this hate because she’s a powerful woman, and make us hate each other more. It felt hurtful to me to watch these speeches, and it pained me to think of the future ahead of us with a potential leader who has no true game plan at all.

Bill Maher and Michael Moore are right. We’re a nation of people who are idiots who will likely be led by Trump because of our laziness to see the truth and cut through all of the Trump campaign’s bullshit.

Plagiarism

What is really amazing is all the crap that the Trump presidential campaign has been able to get away with simply because it is Donald Trump running for president. Every time something stupid has been said or done by this campaign, I always wonder: what would America have said if Mitt Romney said that Mexicans were rapists? How would people have responded if Obama had said he wanted to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico? And if Michelle Obama had plagiarized Laura Bush’s speech from a major convention, the right would never have forgiven Michelle.

The plagiarism of the speech speaks to several things: Obviously, Melania Trump likes Michelle Obama; she admired this speech so much that she read it to her speech writers for her inspiration, leading to this plagiarism (gasp, looking to the other side for inspiration!). Melania can’t write, even though the Trump campaign insists she wrote the speech herself. And, this issue also raises the issue that I know will be raised by the further left in the media and by black people (and really, anyone of color who thinks deeply about this, including me): white people stealing the work of black people and claiming it as their own — an ongoing battle since forever.

Oh, dear. This is the world we are a part of.

Getting fired

No one wants to get fired. It’s not easy to get fired, and it’s also not easy to fire someone. Seven years ago, I was laid off due to the big recession. Sometimes, people don’t differentiate getting downsized due to recessions/overall company layoffs or actually getting let go because of performance, but I think that either way, it’s a pretty miserable experience. I’ll never forget how terrible I felt the morning it happened. It’s funny because I actually had anticipated it for weeks and had even cleaned up my desk and taken home all my belongings two weeks before. I had already started applying for new jobs. But on the day, I still cried and felt unloved, unneeded, and like no one cared about me. I felt like a complete failure. My friends and family called to comfort me. My roommate held me when I got home. But I still felt useless and unneeded.

So, I thought about this throughout today as I prepared to let someone on my team know her employment would be terminated, effective today. It had been a long time coming; she’d dictated to everyone else what days she’d choose to take the liberty to work remotely, was argumentative when I asked her to come into the office during normal office hours during work days, and consistently tried to tell her teammates that she knew better than they did because she’d been at the company longer. She refused feedback constantly and perceived everything as an attack. But despite all this, I felt terrible because I knew how she would feel. She would feel betrayed, like I had pretended to help her since her performance improvement plan but had never really intended to at all. She’d feel like we never appreciated her hours and devotion to the company. She’d feel worthless the way I felt seven years ago when I got laid off. Regardless of whether it’s true or not, she’d feel like she did not deserve this and that she’d done nothing wrong.

It’s cliche, but I’ve learned a lot since that day I got laid off. I learned that my loyalty to a company should never be that deep because frankly, loyalty is dead today. People don’t get pensions anymore; time devoted to a company is now meaningless. I learned that I can’t fully trust anyone I work with while we are still at the same company or in our current partnership, that there would always be things I wouldn’t know that would have the potential to harm me (two minutes before she came downstairs for our final meeting, she went into my manager’s manager’s office and asked him, “If you knew I was getting fired, you’d tell me, right?” He said, of course!). You can be friends with your colleagues; no one is arguing against that. But you should also be very careful what you say, especially when it has to do with the company or others who work there.

I also learned exactly how important perception is; just because you think you work hard doesn’t necessarily mean anyone else thinks you work hard; you need to make that shit obvious. Also, working hard doesn’t mean working longer hours; it means working smarter and more efficiently. Oftentimes in this brainwashed American society we live in, we confuse working hard with working long hours, which is so flawed and simply stupid.

I feel bad for her, and I know she cried on her way out. But I do hope she saw this as a learning experience as cliched as it is, and that she does try to improve herself in her next role. I don’t wish ill will on anyone. Although I still deal with my own trust issues, I really do wish the best for everyone I know, even if I absolutely cannot stand them. Some people I know will never improve (mostly my family, sadly), but it doesn’t mean I don’t still hope for positive change.

Planning to go home

I booked my flight to go home for about a week and a half from the end of August through the first week of September. It’s always one of those bittersweet tasks for me. I love so many things about San Francisco, and while I do love my family, each member of that family drives me up the wall so that I know I can never sanely be home for that long. I told my mom I booked my flight. These are some excerpts of how she responded:

“I’m not trying to be nosy, but can I ask (that’s code for: I’m about to berate you and yes, I am nosy): Why are you staying for such a short time? You should be coming for at least a month. You should do things that make your mummy happy.”

“Just tell your uncle that you are coming home. You told who? Don’t tell anyone else. Did you hear me? Don’t tell anyone else.” (that’s code for: don’t tell your aunt who lives upstairs because I’m mad at her for some nonsense I made up because I enjoy being mad at someone at all times).

“Are you going to be working while you are here? You should take some time off and spend it with me. Always working. You never spend enough time at home. You need to think about me more.” Right.

It could have been worse. This was very mild in the overall scheme of things.

 

Summer cooking

I can’t believe that summer is already half over. I feel like we really just got started, yet it’s already half done. My summer cooking list has barely been touched, and the list keeps getting longer the more I read my favorite food blogs and newspaper food sections.

Two of the more ambitious things that are high on my cooking list this summer are rasmalai, or Indian milk-soaked cheese balls (the description sounds odd, but these little things are so good) and Japanese milk bread. The rasgulla, the cheeseballs of the rasmalai, require milk curdling and straining through a cheesecloth, while the milk bread requires yeast and lots of waiting. But during the times when we aren’t traveling, I want to experiment with new recipes as much as possible to diversify the foods we are eating. It makes home-cooked meals more interesting when you know you aren’t eating the same thing over and over again.

One week visit home

Last night, I dreamt I went home again, and this time surprisingly, Ed was there. My scheduled visit was for one week, and when I realized Ed was home, I was so happy to be there for a full week and wanted to soak it all in… except, he didn’t really feel the same way. He was being moody and negative the entire week, making passive aggressive comments here, snapping at me over there. It was not fun at all.

When it came to the seventh day and I was packing my bag to leave, he said to me, “You must be really happy to be going back to New York.”

I was furious and let him have it. “Happy to be going back to New York? Happy to be going back to New York? I spent an entire week here with you, and you were being negative and annoying the entire time!” I yelled. “And now, I won’t be able to see you ever again! We wasted an entire week together!”

He was quiet for a moment and wrinkled his brow. Clearly, he felt confused. “What do you mean you’ll never see me again?”

My frustration was growing and growing. “What do I mean? I’m never going to see you again BECAUSE YOU ARE DEAD! You aren’t even alive! You aren’t even really here right now!!”

It was as though someone hit him over the head, and he finally understood the situation. He really wasn’t alive. He wasn’t human. He was just a spirit visitor pretending to be one of us. He perked up for a bit and said, “Okay, why don’t we go out together now, then?”

“Okay,” I responded. At least we could have an hour together alone and being seemingly normal without the watchful eye of our parents. And together, we left the house.

We’re almost at the three-year mark of his passing. He always manages to come back around this time, as though he thought that somehow, I’d manage to forget. Little does he know that I’ve never forgotten — in fact, that’s quite impossible, and not a day goes by when I don’t think about him and his eternal absence in my life. It doesn’t really matter where in the world I go or what current events are happening or what people I meet or how I may choose to ‘escape’ my reality — he’s always there in the shadows of my mind.

Adjusting to being back

This weekend will be our first full weekend in New York City in a while. The last two weekends were spent in Korea, while the previous three weekends, Chris had to depart on Sundays for his hectic work trips across the country and to Europe. I’m not sure if he hasn’t adjusted yet to New York time given the chaos of adjusting from East Coast to London/Paris to Seoul time, but all he seems to want to do is rest and be on the couch. I spent the first day back from Korea and Dallas soaking laundry and unpacking, but he still hasn’t unpacked. I’m organizing gifts to give away from our Korea trip, reorganizing the cabinets, and cleaning the bathroom tonight, and he’s snoring on the couch.

This just proves that always being on the go isn’t that good for one’s body. He’s sleeping and it’s only 9pm on a Friday night.

Another year

We decided to stay another year at our current apartment. The benefits are that we a) don’t have to move and deal with all the stress and money around that, b) we’ll be saving a lot of money since wherever we ended up moving would have cost a lot more than what we’re paying now, and c) I don’t have to hear my mother whining at me for living a wasteful, extravagant life.

I was kind of happy about staying, mainly because of the savings part and my lazy attitude around moving, but then the laundry dryer downstairs still isn’t working. So I spent the evening two nights ago hanging all our half-wet clothes literally all over the apartment and feeling irritated. Our apartment, already small, was clutter central.

But at least we’re saving a lot, right?

Humid, humid

It’s so hot out now that it’s nearly stifling. I tried to take a quick walk during a break today, and the air just feels very thick, like it’s harder to breathe because of the high level of humidity. I came back to the office feeling sticky and sweaty — not a good physical state to be working at a computer. I’ve never been more grateful for air conditioning.

It was one thing to be hot and humid in a place like Busan, where we were exposed to gorgeous coastal walks and seemingly clean air. Here, we’re just surrounded by lots of bodies walking around and too many cars and a lot of pollution. Back to summer city life, it is.

Pokemon Go craze

When I was in Seoul, my friend texted me to suggest that maybe I should consider downloading Pokemon Go and playing it in Seoul, where she heard this game was huge. I didn’t really know what she was talking about until I came back to the U.S. and heard many conversations at my office and on the street about it, not to mention my entire Facebook and Twitter feeds full of people “catching” things via Pokemon Go, as well as news stories of people getting robbed due to location targeting in quieter places due to playing this game.

My colleagues have complained about people running into them while having their phone up looking for the next thing to catch, as well as people walking into oncoming traffic because of this ridiculous game. Two people have reportedly fallen off a cliff from playing Pokemon Go and not paying any attention.

These are the moments when I think that technology is making a lot of us a lot, lot stupider and less aware of the real world around us.