National Gallery of Canada – free art-making night

While wandering around Ottawa on foot, we stumbled upon the National Gallery of Canada across the street from Ottawa’s Notre Dame Cathedral on our first day in town two days ago. We noticed there were long lines to enter and was wondering what interesting exhibits might be attracting such a diverse crowd. As Chris suspected, it was a free night: every Thursday night between the hours of 5-8pm, all national museums in Ottawa grant free admission for all. So, we got to enter the museum for free and enjoy music, drink, and an art-making session. There was an open airy space in the gallery where you could sit, drink, people watch, and grab some black paper and a tray of crayons, and just draw. I originally grabbed the paper and crayons for Kaia. Sadly, she lasted about one minute before she grew bored and just wanted to run around and wreck everything. So instead, I ended up using the crayons myself and drawing some different flowers and butterflies. And although I didn’t do it for very long, I actually enjoyed it a lot and found it quite freeing. It was like my mind was unloading all of the crap I had on it from San Francisco the previous week. It reminded me of the trend a number of years ago around adult coloring books: these types of mindless doodling and coloring activities can be a form of therapy. They are soothing, relaxing, and enjoyable to do.

We just ordered Kaia a couple new crayon boxes for her new school’s supplies list that was just shared. Who knows – I might end up “borrowing” some of her crayons for my own art projects in the near future.

Back to Canada after five years

Back when we first got together, Chris and I established some travel goals (at least in North America): we wanted to visit every U.S. state and every Canadian province and territory. Unfortunately, the last time we visited Canada was all the way back in August 2019 when we visited the beautiful and delicious Newfoundland and Labrador. Newfoundland and Labrador and Prince Edward Island are some of the provinces far less traveled to by those outside of Canada, but they were likely some of my favorite places we ever visited up north.

Chris booked a long weekend / Labor Day trip for us to visit Ottawa, the capital of Canada, and Montreal (we had to fly in and out of Montreal since no flights worked that well between New York City and Ottawa). After two days here, I feel about Ottawa the way I did about Canberra, the capital of Australia: while it doesn’t seem particularly exciting or glamorous the way its larger and more traveled to cities are like Toronto or Montreal, Ottawa seems extremely livable and comfortable, with lots of green and outdoor spaces, eclectic and delicious eateries, and diverse people given that it is a government city.

While researching food for this trip, I was a little surprised to read that in Canada, Ottawa and Montreal have a bit of a rivalry when it comes to who has better Vietnamese food (who would have thought that?). Ten years ago when we visited Montreal, although we did have Vietnamese food (based on my photos and saved business cards in my scrapbook; I have very little recollection of that meal), I don’t remember reading about any Ottawa vs. Montreal rivalry. I do love reading about city rivalries though. I had a spot bookmarked on my list in Ottawa Chinatown, but when Chris saw that it had a 4.1 overall Google rating vs. a 4.5++ rating like a spot he quickly Googled called Pho Tuan, I decided I didn’t have any loyalty to my bookmarked Eater recommendation and just went with his.

And, as Chris would also gloat about since he “found it,” Pho Tuan was quite spectacular, likely one of the best Vietnamese restaurants we’ve ever eaten at outside of Vietnam, hands down. It looks quite simple and casual from the outside and the interior decor, but the food was anything but. I ordered two of the specials of the day, the bun bo hue (spicy and lemongrass-y Hue style beef noodle soup) and the bun cha Hanoi (large fat grilled pork meat balls served with sliced pork chop, rice vermicelli, endless herbs, and a semi-sweet dipping sauce), plus an appetizer of the bo la lot (grilled beef patties or rolls, wrapped in betel nut leaves). It seemed like a bit too much meat, but I rarely see any of these things on Viet restaurant menus (and if you do, the execution is usually subpar), so I had to jump on it while I could. When the bo la lot came to the table, it looked quite lackluster… until I dipped it in nuoc cham and put it in my mouth. I was completely floored: the flavor was perfect – grilled, smoky, with good texture. The bun cha Hanoi meatballs were the very best ones we’d ever had outside of Hanoi: I couldn’t get over the little crunchy and chewy bits of the meatball. Someone clearly hand kneaded and rolled these meatballs to perfection. And the bun bo hue broth was incredible, likely one of the very best bun bo hue bowls we have ever had, period. It had the perfect balance of beefy broth and lemongrass grassy-citrusy flavor. I could have just slurped that broth all day long and been really happy. It reminded me of that scrumptious (and super cheap!) bun bo hue we enjoyed back in a Vietnamese neighborhood in St. Louis, Missouri, about ten years ago. And while we were busy slurping away at our noodles and munching on our meatballs, our server was hard at work making our two Vietnamese iced coffees to order. Delicious things take time, and cafe sua da is no exception to this. We were probably over halfway through our meal when our server brought them over and apologized for the wait. But the coffees were worth it: they had a good balance of sweetness from the sweetened condensed milk and richness/bitterness from the coffee.

Delicious food is everywhere. We just have to keep our minds and stomachs open to it everywhere we go.

Family reminders and life savers

Every time I come back from my parents’ house, I always feel like I need to give my mind and body at least several days to detoxify and de-clutter. The whole Marie Kondo idea of having a clean, tidy, uncluttered space to have a clean, tidy, and uncluttered mind is a thousand percent true. I never feel comfortable or free in my parents’ home, and it’s not just because of who they are and how they treat me; it’s also due to how much junk is everywhere in the space they call home.

I’d already tried over the last ten-plus years to suggest to my parents to de-clutter and give away things. While it did look like some random things were gone (like a tall broken floor clock that my mom took, BROKEN, from my aunt’s house up the hill), it somehow got replaced by even more crap. There really is no light way to tell them that they cannot take all this stuff to the grave with them. My mom says to just be peaceful. My dad has repeatedly agreed out loud to me that they need to throw out stuff… but instead, he ends up collecting more junk and piling it all on top of each other.

So I thought about maybe having my aunt or uncle suggest it in some way to my dad. I texted my uncle. Unfortunately, he also knows my dad way too well given they are brothers, and he told me that there’s pretty much no one who can tell my dad what to do or how to live his life: wanting to un-clutter his life will have to come from himself.

He did remind me that this conversation brought up the one, single time that my dad actually was not stubborn: it was almost exactly 10 years ago, in the fall of 2014, when my uncle emailed him to get himself checked out and insist on a stress test from his cardiologist. My uncle said, “He could’ve stuck to his stubborn ways and emailed me back and said there was nothing wrong with him. He never replied but went and did what I strongly suggested. A month had gone by when I emailed him again if he ever did what I suggested. That’s when he replied that his main coronary artery was also plugged and his two auxiliaries were barely passing blood to his brain and that he was going to have a double bypass on that Thursday.”

His bypass was in November 2014. I came back home for two weeks to be with them. It’s one of those times when I really thought, maybe, just maybe my dad and uncle could mend their relationship. My uncle’s suggestion is ultimately why my dad is still around and humming ten years later. But unfortunately, the romantic thought I had in my head was just that: a thought. My dad never truly expressed any gratitude or emotion to my uncle in insisting he move forward with that procedure. It always made me sad and angry for my uncle, but as my uncle and I both know: my dad is beyond stubborn and will always do whatever he wants regardless of the situation.

I am still not sure what my dad has done that has either been productive or made his life happier or better in the last ten years outside of that bypass surgery. But, given that he’s still here and seemingly healthy, I think he owes quite a bit to my uncle. I don’t think he will ever acknowledge it, though.

Imposing our likes and dislikes on our children

Just over a month ago, I went to a friend’s child’s 2nd birthday party, and they asked me to bring some snacks for the kids. So I brought some veggies that Kaia likes: roasted bell peppers and sweet potatoes. The sweet potatoes were roasted in olive oil and tossed with cinnamon, nutmeg, and some allspice. When the birthday girl was eating the sweet potatoes eagerly, her mom asked how I had prepared them. I told her, and she seemed surprised that I used cinnamon. Later on, her husband (my friend) told me that because his wife doesn’t like cinnamon that their child had never been exposed to it. I was a little bit shocked that she hadn’t offered it since cinnamon is pretty ubiquitous in the U.S.; plus, her kid was already 2 years old now! Anyone who has read any baby solids feeding guide (and no, not just baby-led weaning or Solid Starts) will see that cinnamon is one of the most common and popular recommendations to introduce babies to (not hot) spices and build a varied palate.

I suppose I shouldn’t be that surprised, though: we’re all humans at the end of the day with our own preferences for things. It’s only natural that we’d try, consciously or subconsciously, to pass them to our kids. I have hated ketchup since even before I could speak, so up until last week, Kaia had never had any exposure to ketchup. But, I will say that given ketchup does have extra sugar (that’s what gets kids hooked on it…) and salt, there was no real reason to give it to her and even more reason to withhold it from her. While I was at my work offsite, Chris had to make his customary visit to In N Out while in California, so he went to Fisherman’s Wharf to get his fix. While he did that, he let Kaia have some fries and suggested she dip them in some ketchup. He even took a video of it to prove it to me. On the one hand, I was proud that she was finally getting into dips and “dipping” since she seems to have some aversion to sauces and mushy things like avocado and egg. On the other hand, I was completely grossed out that she actually seemed fond of that American monstrosity that we call ketchup.

If Kaia likes to dip an occasional fry into ketchup, I guess I will have to just suck it up and turn my eyes (and my nose, ugh) the other way. But, if she even attempts to squeeze ketchup onto her white rice or add it to steak…. then we will have a very serious problem on our hands that will need to be addressed as soon as possible.

“No alone time to talk”

My mom called this week to vent to me. Predictably, she was annoyed we had limited 1:1 time while I was in San Francisco since I was out and about with Kaia and friends. So she used this time to complain about my dad, how filthy and unmotivated he is, how almost all their rental units are vacant. She complained about all the mice in the house, the lack of care being done to their own living space, my dad’s general lack of empathy and feeling around everything, including the recent death of her sister. “You think that when your sister dies, your husband would say things to comfort,” my mom lamented. “But no, he just says things to hurt.”

As though to criticize and defend him in the same breath, she also started preemptively saying that regardless of all his flaws, she still needs him to drive her places, to pay all the bills, to take care of the property (not sure what he’s doing in that regard, but this is what she said). She said her back is in bad condition, so she even needs him to help bathe her. But I insisted to her that all the excuses she makes can be taken care of; she can get a scrubbing brush to clean her own back. She can find and hire support online for things like cleaning or sending money to Vietnam. She just got angry, as per usual, and said I didn’t understand. I don’t have wisdom, she said as always, so I wouldn’t know.

It’s the same annoying conversation every time I come home, except now that I didn’t spend time talking to her at home, it’s a post-visit “talk.” And luckily for me, it didn’t go long enough for her to start criticizing me and my life and my choices as it usually does. I understand that my parents both come from places of trauma. They were both unloved and barely cared for as children. They barely had enough food to eat growing up and were both constantly criticized. But I always hoped that one day when they got to retirement, they’d actually start… trying to enjoy life. But as my therapist once said to me, maybe my definition of “enjoying life” is different from theirs. Maybe they’re just very content constantly complaining about and to each other and living in filth and squalor. Maybe they are so used to each other and each other’s snapping that to know anything different is to be in a terrifying world.

I know I am lucky to be in my late 30s and still have both my parents living, even if I am not close to them. A number of friends, former classmates, and colleagues over the years have lost one or both parents. But I always wonder what life will be like for one of my parents once the other one dies. It’s unlikely that they would die at the same time unless a freak accident happened. So how would one handle the other’s death? And what expectations would they have of me in that event?

My mom used to say that if she died before my dad, she would expect that I would quit my job in New York and move back to the house in San Francisco and take care of my dad. I openly scoffed at the idea to her, said that was ridiculous, and I’d never do it. She got upset, responding somberly, “You’ve changed. You’re not the same as before,” in a negative way, clearly.

I don’t know what the future holds for any of our deaths — when, where, how. But I do know that I never, ever want to move back into that awful, decaying house ever again. I call it that because that is what that house is: a place of constant decay where nothing will ever grow or flourish. It’s seriously in need of a thorough Buddhist cleansing or something equivalent so that anyone who chooses to live in a future iteration of it at least has some shot at happiness and success — however they want to define either of those two terms.

Happy 45th birthday, dear Ed

Dear Ed,

Happy 45th birthday. I wonder what you are doing to celebrate… another year not around the sun?

Guess what? I managed to survive the trip to San Francisco this year, and it was actually quite enjoyable, more so than the last one two years ago! It’s likely because I had very small windows to have one-on-one time with our mother, who would likely use the time to complain about our dad or me. But all in all, it went better than I expected. Our dad actually had small spurts of a minute here and there interacting with Kaia directly, after our mom would hiss at him to get off his phone (which he had, up to his face, almost every time Kaia was around), play with, and talk to her! Was it pathetic? Of course, but it was still more than I expected. Our mom took my words to heart when I told her that she barely spent any time with Kaia when we came two years ago and instead, always made excuses to go clean or walk somewhere. So this time, she actually did make an effort to play with and talk to her.

I took a photo of our parents’ yard. It looks just as awful, if not worse, than two years ago: completely overgrown, weeds galore, and turned over buckets and flower pots everywhere. At least Kaia enjoyed rummaging through it and searching for big sticks. The one tiny thing that my dad did to improve the room going into the yard was that he actually put in mini blinds (ugh) instead of those ugly black tarps used in cheap housing. At our family dinner the first night, our uncle was showing the family his flourishing orchids (you know, the ones our dad got me one birthday that he failed to take care of, so our uncle took them off his hands… and then now, so much time has passed that now, he thinks they were his all along. He denied that they were actually mine…!), and our mom makes these ridiculous remarks about how — of course he’s able to grow things in Pacifica because the weather is better there. The weather in Pacifica, as we all know, is the same or worse as in San Francisco. How about we just say what this is really about: one of them was able to put the time and effort into the flowers blooming, while the others didn’t and so that’s why they have the yard of shame? I didn’t bother taking photos of the inside of the house. I think the outside yard says everything about what inside looks like. It’s the house where nothing thrives or grows, just as that dream I had in my senior year of high school so clearly illustrated.

Our mom whined to me and said that she spent so much time cleaning the house before we arrived. I don’t doubt she did. I know she probably spent a lot of time taking care of all the bedding and cleaning the bathrooms. But honestly, with everything else, you could have fooled me. There was not an uncluttered area to walk in a straight line through, not even from the living room to the damn dining room. All table surfaces in every single room were completely covered. The few surfaces of my book shelf in the bedroom I could see were covered with at least a half-inch of dust, which I actually cleaned off (but they’ll never notice). She said our dad is filthy and never cleans anything. How did he get like this? He was once a minimalist and always throwing things away. And now, he hoards like the world is ending. Is this what old age has done to him?

Chris, Kaia, and I went to visit you at the Columbarium on Saturday. When we arrived, Kaia had to go to the bathroom, so Chris went to take her (with her little potty seat). And in those moments alone with you, just staring at your urn in your niche, I started sobbing. I felt so terrible looking down at you, knowing you weren’t here to see and hold and play with Kaia. You’ll never be able to see her, and she’ll never be able to see you. I felt like she and I had been robbed. It didn’t seem fair to me at all. You should be able to meet your niece and enjoy her company. Kaia should be able to enjoy time with her jiu jiu; that was the way life was supposed to be for us. And it isn’t. I also felt guilt I hadn’t come back to see you last year, but I honestly just could not stomach it as I told you. But it felt like in not coming, I was also abandoning you. And that made me think about all the guilt I felt about leaving home, and leaving you to rot there under the constant bullying and criticism of our parents. I’m sorry I was never enough for you. I’m sorry I could not save you.

I told Kaia it was your birthday today, and she said, “Happy birthday, Jiu Jiu.” She has seen lots of pictures of you. She even recognizes your face when I show her photos of you. I thought about going to the Golden Gate Bridge to see the suicide barrier this trip, but a big part of me didn’t feel I was ready to see it myself. A former colleague had messaged me about it late last year when the construction had completed. It made me happy to hear it had completed, but I also just felt sad thinking about you. Maybe I’ll go see it next year. At least that barrier will hopefully save other lives.

I’m getting older every day and aging without you, Ed. We were supposed to age and get old together. You’re eternally 33, and I’m 38 going on 39 soon. I’m not sure how this happened or why. Kaia will get older every day and not know what it’s like to know you, and that will always be something I’ll be sad about. Though I will do my best to have her know you as much as possible. We won’t ever forget you or pretend your life did not matter. You will always, always matter to us and live on through us. I love you so much and hope you are feeling peace.

Love,

Your little sister, Yvonne

California produce >> New York produce, and another excellent San Francisco dim sum and friends experience

Every time I come home to San Francisco, I am always immediately reminded of how much better all the produce is in California versus New York. Aside from the obvious point that a lot of the produce we eat in the U.S. is grown in Mexico, and thus travels a far shorter distance to California than New York, California also produces a sizeable chunk of the nation’s produce. This shouldn’t surprise anyone, as California, if it were its own country, would stand as the fifth largest economy in the world. Plus, the produce in California just comes out tasting better. I’ve long thought that California peaches and oranges are far superior than any others grown in other states. Florida oranges are shit; I stand by this statement. I don’t even know why people think Florida is great for oranges when Florida Naturals, the juice brand, makes the most hideous processed orange juice I’ve ever tasted. There is something about California oranges that makes them so delicious, perfect for both juicing and eating. They are extremely sweet with just a hint of tart (and just enough), but their flavor is complex, and far more so than oranges grown in Florida and elsewhere in the country. Georgia and New Jersey loves their peaches, but I have always found them a bit blander and more one-noted than the California peaches. Is there a water issue with California? Yes. But that’s completely beside the point that California grown food just *tastes* superior.

Here’s something seemingly silly I always marvel at every time I come home to my parents’ kitchen: when my mom has bought cilantro (which is fairly often, since she loves it and uses it to garnish almost every Vietnamese dish and many Chinese dishes), I always notice that it just looks that much fresher, healthier, almost fluffier or bouncier, if that makes any sense. I’ve never seen cilantro wilt in her kitchen; it seemingly always wilts in my New York kitchens. In addition, it also seems to last longer, and my mom doesn’t even store cilantro in the “recommended” ways that food guides I read suggest!

After dim sum in the Embarcadero with friends yesterday morning, we walked around the San Francisco Ferry Building farmers market, which I haven’t visited since my early working days back in 2011-2012. It seemed so much bigger than I remember: there were far more prepared food stands than the last time I remember visiting. There were cider stands, many types of pie and cake stands, even an Indonesian dessert stand. I loved seeing all the fresh produce at semi-reasonable prices, looking and smelling quite vibrant. I marveled at all the varieties of heirloom tomatoes, clearly marked, all looking like they just got plucked off the vine yesterday morning. The sight of all this fresh produce was really stimulating to me, even though I had zero intention of buying any since we were leaving today, and I knew my parents wouldn’t appreciate any fresh farmers market haul. I was excited to see that the Roli Roti stand was still there, humming along with its very long but efficiently moving line, churning out the most delicious roasted chicken, porchetta, and crispy pork belly that we could smell, served in local, crusty Acme Bread loaves. I fondly remember working out of my then-company’s San Francisco office and asking my colleagues what their favored lunch options were. A bunch of them insisted we all walk over to the Ferry Building Farmers Market to get the famous Roli Roti sandwich. And before we even got to the growing line, I could smell the irresistible scent of slow-roasted rotisserie chicken and juicy, crispy porchetta. We were a chatty bunch, but when we sat at a bench and ate our sandwiches, we all became silent, just enjoying the taste of that amazing sandwich.

I almost wish my stomach had space for that sandwich, but sadly it didn’t after the sumptuous dim sum we had at Harborview Restaurant and Bar, which was one of the best dim sum experiences I’ve had in ages (next to Hong Kong Lounge Bistro on Monday with my parents); every single dish was perfect. I am normally not a huge siu mai / shao mai person, but the ones at Harborview were truly exquisite (and I never use that word). They looked beautiful with their intricate pleating and were topped with some sort of fish eggs. The mouth feel and crunch of the shrimp against the rich, fatty, silky kurobota pork were the biggest highlights for me in this siu mai experience. I also loved the custardy, silky milk pudding with a hint of ginger juice (it just dissolved on contact with my tongue!), the creamy yet firm and fruity mango pudding, and literally all the sugary-crusted buns we got, ranging from cha siu to coffee. And though I was full at the end, I still was tempted to keep slurping the pi dan shou rou zhou (century eggs and pork jook), which was made even more special with finely shredded dried scallops. Dried scallops were also shredded in the nuo mi ji, the sticky rice with chicken and mushroom wrapped in a fragrant lotus leaf. Harborview is an upscale dim sum experience, and with the scallops and other fine touches and details, it was certainly more than worth it.

My friend (who I have known since I was in middle school), her husband, and their almost-2-year-old met with Chris, Kaia, and me for dim sum. We sat the two kids together in their high chairs at the restaurant. Given we were all eating out with our two toddlers and attempting (and mostly failing) to have a meaningful conversation, it was definitely a little chaotic. While it would have been more peaceful without the kids, it also wouldn’t have allowed for all the cuteness to be witnessed and documented by our phones. Neither child ate particularly well, but when they did eat together and interact with each other, it was a little bit of magic. It was endearing to see our babies interacting with each other since we have been friends for over a quarter of a century now. I always hoped that Kaia would like the children of my closest friends, but I wonder if they will know each other well enough to want to be friends and maintain contact with them given they will not see each other as often as their school friends. But I suppose only time will tell.

Visiting Sacramento after three years

If you asked me ten years ago if I had any interest in going to Sacramento, I would say… absolutely not. I had visited once years ago with my parents, and I found the place fairly lackluster and dull, especially when you compare it to other cities across the U.S. But given the increasing cost of living in major metro areas in California like L.A. and San Francisco, a lot of people who would have liked to live in those areas have now been moving further north to the capital of California. One of our friends grew up in Sacramento, so she and her husband returned to Sacramento to settle down several years ago. Then, my good friend from college ended up getting a job in Sacramento, and she relocated from Arkansas for work. Now that we have friends in the area, it makes more sense for us to go visit.

As more people have moved to Sacramento, the food options have gotten better and better. There’s two major Vietnamese areas with good restaurants and grocery shopping. It has a budding Indian population; I was thinking of the South Indian spot we went to three years ago and thought it would not be the worst idea to go back and eat there again. And tonight, we went to a delicious Burmese restaurant called Burma Light in Folsom, where pretty much everything we ordered (especially the tea leaf salad and the Burmese style lamb curry) was very, very good, minus the garlic noodles, which were quite plain. I didn’t think the garlic flavor was that pronounced.

Our friend who grew up in Sacramento had a baby, and sadly, just weeks after her baby was born, her husband, our friend, died. We still don’t know what the cause was. Sometimes I think about it, and I’m still haunted by his death. When we last visited, it was just months after his passing, so it was still raw for her and the family; it was terrifying for all of us. Three years later, she’s adjusted to life without her life partner, raising their son alone. She used to have the support of her mom and younger sister, but since her other siblings (she’s one of nine kids!) have been having babies, her mom hasn’t been helping her much anymore. So somehow, our friend manages to work from home full time AND care for her son, who is now 3, full time. Luckily, she has at most 3-4 meetings a month, but still: I have no idea how she gets anything done at all. Babies and toddlers are so demanding. She manages a full house, all chores and errands, a full-time job, and a toddler all on her own. I was just in awe when she told me this. She’s truly super woman.

Pandora’s box gets opened: the endless piles of letters from my middle and high school years

A few months ago, one of my close friends from middle/high school said her mom was cleaning out her garage, and she noticed that there were two boxes with my name on it. My friend retrieved the boxes, messaged me, and asked if I could take them back the next time I was in town. I remember asking my friend to store these for me back in high school: it happened after a very painful and excruciating episode of my mom going through all my belongings (even my electronic files on my computer) and reading things that people had written me, as well as things I had written. My mom even went so far as to call one of my friends and ask what she meant when she wrote, “I don’t know how you deal with your parents.” My mom never wanted to have conversations with me about life or how I felt; instead, she always went through my things and claimed that she had a right to given that she birthed me, raised me, and put a roof over my head. We screamed and yelled. I even considered suicide for about a minute. I felt trapped in that prison of a house. I felt angry and violated, and I wanted to remove anything that could be spied upon or read far away from my parents’ house and in a place where they would be safe.

Fast forward 23+ years later, most of these letters and their contents are completely meaningless to me. Though there are a handful of funny and sentimental gems, nothing here could possibly be “used against me” today. Though I will say: I am truly amazed at the sheer volume and quantity of letters and cards from a number of friends who still remain and are close to me today. After spending a lot of time reading and sorting through old cards and letters this week from middle and high school friends, I realize that I’m really lucky to still have a handful of those friends still in my life in a meaningful way. As life goes on and people mature, have different experiences and priorities, move away and come back (sometimes), have intense jobs and have children, people evolve and grow apart. Yet, we’ve managed to stay friends and make the effort to keep in touch. Not everyone is as lucky as me in this regard. I went through the piles and piles of letters, each organized by the letter writer, and I could not count with all my fingers and toes how many letters (and even more pages) were all handwritten just for my reading pleasure. I admired the cute stationery (ranging from Tare Panda to Hello Kitty to various other Japanese characters I no longer know the names of) and the still-in-tact writing done by endless glittery and sparkly Sakura Gelly Roll pens (one of our teen obsessions!). Some letters were painfully emo. Others were more on the mundane side obsessing over SATs and grades. A handful were so heavy with then-current slang and Asian ghetto expressions that I could barely understand what the point of the correspondence was.

Of course, I couldn’t go through everything; to save time and effort, I immediately discarded all piles from former boyfriends, guys who were interested in me, and friends/acquaintances I no longer keep in touch with. Some of the letters were absolutely atrocious to read (oh, the teenage angst I had managed to block out of my memory all these years!), but some of them were truly endearing and laugh-out-loud hilarious. In one letter, my friend wrote: “You are like my mommy, always scolding me and making sure I stay in line.” I laughed to myself reading that.

I also had some cards from people I had completely forgotten about: a good friend of my mom named April, who she knew from work, would regularly send me very fancy (for me back then, anyway) birthday gifts every year along with a card. She gave me beautifully wrapped and packaged gifts, things like wallets and watches, in brands I never thought I’d ever own. In one card, she wrote, “I’m so sorry that I am late, but happy belated birthday!” I laughed, thinking, why are you even apologizing? You don’t need to send me anything or acknowledge my birthday at all! Then, there were a few birthday cards (which likely came with accompanying gifts) from my mom’s former boss Chris(tine), who she got along with very well. And lastly, some of my most treasured (and all beautifully handwritten) letters came from my sixth grade English teacher, Mary Rudden, who I still think of today as one of my all-time favorite teachers in the world. She was the one who made me feel like I had a voice, a real talent in writing and expression, and as though I actually mattered as a kid. I look back at my childhood, and I truly credit her plus two other teachers for my general confidence and self esteem. Adults who speak to young children like their voice and opinions matter can truly help children grow into good, self-confident, well-meaning adults who contribute to society. These are letters that I am definitely not tossing into the recycling bin.

The rest got ripped up and tossed into the recycling bin. I re-read them, wished them well and thanked them for their place once in my life, and bid them adieu. I don’t want to hold onto the past… well, maybe just a handful of them.

A complicated history with our dad

Since the incident with my dad calling me a bitch over nothing about two years ago, I actually haven’t had a real conversation with him at all. I haven’t had the desire to engage with him and just have not felt up to putting in the effort. He never calls or texts me unless I initiate. He also doesn’t e-mail me unless I’ve sent him a gift. Even when he does e-mail me to thank me, most of the time, it’s because my mom has urged him to reach out to thank me because he doesn’t have any commonsense himself to thank anyone for anything. 

We were altogether on Saturday for a few awkward and pretty quiet meals. We barely talked about anything at all, if any words were actually exchanged. And the few times Kaia was playing in the same room, he barely engaged unless forced. My mom would yell out orders to him repeatedly, as though he was blind, deaf, or just a child: “CAL!! Hug her! Hug her! Give her a high five! She wants to see you! She’s trying to play with you!” This is all while he had his Android right up to his face, too busy in his own world called the Internet. While he did engage more with Kaia for these three days than he did during our last visit two years ago, the bar was already set quite low. He constantly needed to be directed (by my mom) to interact with Kaia. He just doesn’t know how to be a grandparent, much less a parent. 

Needless to say, I’ve had a complicated relationship with my dad over the course of my 38+ years. As a child, I used to be terrified of his outbursts; while they were quite rare (especially when you compared them to my mom’s almost constant yelling), they were very explosive and violent when they did occur. That’s why Ed used to be so terrified of him. All our dad had to do was yell out one short, harsh sentence, and he could render Ed to immediate tears. He oftentimes belittled and name-called us. I do not remember a single time when my dad ever expressed any compliment to either of us. He definitely never complimented Ed. Our mom often times spoke to our dad like he was a child, so once I got to my teenage years, I started thinking that our dad was like the third child of the family. 

My dad was always busy, or at least, he gave off the perception of being busy. When he wasn’t at his day job, he worked most weekends at one of his apartment complexes, which he owned and managed. That was his way of making “real” money and freedom from working under “the white man.” And when he was actually home, he never really engaged with us or spoke to us in any meaningful way. He’d tinker around in the basement. I used to think he spent more time with the family parakeet than he did with either of his actual children. Ed and I rarely interacted with him, and when we did, it was mostly when our dad would criticize us or act like a child with us. I didn’t quite get that when I was young, but I do remember the stings of my dad’s name-calling me as young as four years old. Still, I loved and admired him, as most young children do love their dad. He provided for us. He made sure we had a roof over our head. I always had the necessary school supplies bought on time and in order. He indulged me in little hobbies, like reading (he never said “no” to any book club order I requested), teen magazines, beading/jewelry making, and painting. He was the reason I even got a pet parakeet as a kindergartener.

 As I grew older, I realized that while my dad was certainly adept at many things, such as general trade work, house repairs, and making money, he was sorely lacking in general maturity, emotional intelligence, socialization, and basic communication and understanding of the entire world. He had strong opinions on food, things, and places that he had zero experience with; he could not carry a simple conversation with almost anyone without assistance. He had only one friend, who he spoke to maybe once a year (and only when that friend called HIM, never vice versa; that friend died just months after Ed died in 2013, from a sudden heart attack). My dad could barely even write a coherent sentence without a grammatical error, even as someone who was born and raised in the U.S. I always thought it was strange that I received so many clear, thoughtful, and eloquent emails from his younger brother and sister (my uncle and aunt), who were just a couple years younger, yet their communication with me was like night and day vs. with my own dad. You would have thought my dad was the immigrant who learned English as a second language based on his writing proficiency, but he actually wasn’t. And while he was certainly capable of many home repairs and renovations, he rarely ever did them to the house unless my mom yelled or threatened him. The main bathroom tiling rotted during my elementary school years, and for over two years, we had to take showers in the crappy in-law shower downstairs. My mom had to scream at him to finally get his act in order and repair the bathroom. The carpet was hideous with age, installed from the time my grandparents first moved into the house in the ’60s. In the year 2000, my mom finally stopped waiting on my dad and sought out a carpet installer to get new carpet in place. Any time of major repair or furniture decision (like sofas) always happened because of my mom, never my dad. My dad was generally a talker and never a doer. That can be interpreted as laziness, cheapness, or any combination of the above, but it was always infuriating to experience as a child. 

Later on, his laziness and inability to see any project to completion just became more apparent and painful: he started renovation of the kitchen and even pushed back a wall around 2010, but then he never completed it. The wall still has holes in it, and it looks dilapidated and as though rodents could make a home in it. He half installed a hood over the stove, but then he never completed it, so it cannot be used. All of that is in the same state it was back then, and now it’s 2024 with zero plans for completion. He started growing some plants in the garden, but then he got bored of them and tired of weeding, so now the whole yard is overgrown, covered in weeds, with endless piles of dirt and homeless flower pots lying around everywhere. He keeps saying he will work on a compost pile to enrich the soil, but he’s been saying that for over 10 years. None of his efforts have any visible return or benefit. The backyard, which used to be a flourishing garden under the care of my grandma, his mom, has now been a wasteland, a total eye sore. So, that’s been 30 years of rotting away. When she died, the garden died, too. 

My mom has complained and said that my dad is filthy and getting worse. He doesn’t clean anything, so it’s up to my mom to do all the chores to clean the house, despite her misaligned disc in her back. And the hoarding he has done from all the Craiglist and Next Door groups has truly been out of control. The basement does not have a straight line you can walk through. When I am not there, my bed, according to my mom, is covered with “all your dad’s junk.” It reminded me of my grandma yelling in Toisan all the time, that her middle son (my dad) “just likes to break things.” I’ve contemplated hiring a housekeeper for them, but that idea is almost immediately squashed when I think, How the hell is a housekeeper supposed to navigate all their junk?! Spider webs are hanging in almost every room. most surfaces, even the uncleared ones, have a thick layer of dust on them. It’s the house of rot and decay. 

Part of me wonders if my dad is depressed. He has so much time to do things, yet he wastes it all away on YouTube and his supposed “compost bin.” He doesn’t exercise or do anything active. Sometimes, it almost feels like he is just waiting to die. I always hoped that when my parents reached retirement age that they’d actually do activities that they enjoyed and found fulfilling. But all they do is…. nothing. The rest of the time, they spend too much time criticizing others, gossiping, and complaining about how bad San Francisco is becoming. They are both too stubborn to listen to me. 

I wonder if my dad ever thinks about Ed in any deep way. To date at his current age of 76, my dad has lived 12 years longer than he ever expected, given the lengths of the lives his own dad and older brother have lived. Ed used to say, with deep hurt in his heart, that he looked forward to the day my dad died (he anticipated 64-65) because he’d be free of his bully. But Ed took his own life, so instead, my dad had to see Ed die. The house was already rotting and piling up with clutter when Ed was there, but it’s only gotten infinitely worse since then. I only wish Ed had moved out, as if he did, I always thought he’d still be alive today because he wouldn’t have been so heavily oppressed by the two people who were supposed to be his parents. 

It’s hard to fully fault my dad, though. It’s not like he had supportive parents who spent any time with him at all during his youth. His mother, my grandma, was deeply critical and criticized pretty much everyone every chance she got. She didn’t know how to be loving or affectionate. She was cold and never hugged or kissed any of us. That’s why he was so mean and abrasive to us every time we asked him to teach us anything or showed any emotion outwardly; he had no one to teach him anything and had to learn it all himself. He had no one to show him affection. And he lacked the emotional maturity to take the time to think about how he could improve as a parent. The one thing he did do far better than his parents, though, was provide food and shelter for Ed and me. The reality is that our dad is just a product of intergenerational trauma. He had terrible role models, and so he became a not-so-ideal role model and father figure to his own children. The trauma persists through generations. I am trying to be the one who finally breaks it. So we shall see if I am successful.