My mom is quite the gardener, and as spring came over the southland, our whole yard was abloom!
(Click photos for full size.)
My mom is quite the gardener, and as spring came over the southland, our whole yard was abloom!
(Click photos for full size.)
I usually just write about my thoughts and opinions, or include pictures and videos I find interesting. I think it’s time for a little story – an anecdote from my childhood. After all, stories can be a great thing for entertainment.
When I was about 12 (or maybe I was already 13 by then), I was set to return to China for the summer. It was my first time flying alone, but I loved exploring things on my own and was perfectly happy to make the trip without supervision. I was living in New York at the time and my parents took me to LaGuardia Airport, got me checked in, and sent me on my way. Well, after waiting with me until the plane actually arrived, that is. You see, it was delayed (as planes quite often are).
So when it was finally time, I got on my flight to O’Hare International Airport in Chicago. When we landed there, I quickly exited the plane to rush to the gate of my connecting flight. When I arrived there, I was happy to see they were still boarding. Most people had already gone on, so there wasn’t much of a line left. When I got to the front, the steward took my ticket and stopped just as he was about to rip off the stub for me.
“You aren’t going to Amsterdam, are you?” he questioned.
I paused. “No…” I replied, confused. “I’m going to Beijing.”
“Well,” he said, “this isn’t your flight. That one has already taken off.”
Whaaaaat?! I hadn’t noticed the sign saying this flight was headed to Amsterdam. And I was baffled that I was so late that not only had my flight packed up and gone, the next flight was nearly ready to back out of the gate! Oh no. Not good news. The steward directed me to a customer service area where I could be helped and I trekked over, for the first time unsure of my travels. When I arrived, I found that a lot of others on my flight had come across the very same issue and were all standing in line to work it out with the people at the counter. Frantic, I called home to talk to my parents about the disaster.
I don’t recall much of the conversation, except that they told me to remain calm and go talk to the people at the counter, then let them know what was going on. I obediently went to stand in line and was told that the next flight out was the following day. At this point, realizing I was a minor traveling alone, the airline sent a representative to be my escort. They planned out the rest of my trip and called my parents, informing them of my new itinerary. Now I was to stay the night at an airport hotel and take a flight to Tokyo, then transfer to a flight to China. Slight detour, but that was the next available flight so there wasn’t much of a choice.
The airline stewardess sent to watch over me led me off to a room hidden away, where a whole room full of kids sat around playing with a variety of toys! It was an awesome game room and I quickly settled in to play a Yoshi video game. I’ve never owned a gaming system, so it was a joy to be able to play for hours. For lunch, I was taken out to get some food at one of the food court type areas. The lady had a voucher of some sort for me to use. For the rest of the day I played games until dinnertime, when I was taken out again to eat. Throughout the day, kids had come and gone as they waited for their flights.
By the end of the night, it was just me and four teenage boys left. We were shuttled over to the Four Points hotel and taken to our rooms. The guys each shared with one other boy and occupied two rooms. Being the only girl, I was given a suite all to myself! I remember it was so big I could have done cartwheels all around the place. Now that was some luxury! I happily got under the covers and watched some late night shows, not really caring about TV but wanting to do something. Outside my door, a gentleman sat on a chair all night, guarding my door and watching those of the boys across the hall. I’m sure he got a break from a colleague, but I was too busy resting inside to know.
The next morning, we all got up and headed back to the airport. I stayed in the game room until it was time to go and by that time I’d made a friend with a Korean girl who was going to be on the same flight as me from Chicago to Tokyo, after which she would to to Seoul and I would go to Beijing. We boarded our flight, another delayed one, and sat together for the trip. Arriving at Narita International, we found that we’d missed our connections. We were passed off to Japanese airport officials, who got us flights for the next morning. With our parents informed of the new development, we were taken to a back room where the airport staff hung out.
All I remember of that place was a dingy feel with poor lighting, guys lounging around watching an odd game show that I couldn’t understand, and the air filled with smoke. Hating cigarette smoke, I had a difficult time breathing as the guys puffed away. It was sort of awkward, but late in the night already, so we didn’t have to stay long. My friend and I were taken to an airport hotel, where we shared a room. I remember looking out at the peephole to find a very cute guy sitting in front of our door, guarding us for the night. We girls giggled over our littles crushes and chatted late into the night.
Two days after my initial departure, I finally got on a flight to Beijing. My flight buddy had gone off to her flight to Seoul and I never saw her again. Meanwhile, I was babysat until mine came. I made it to Beijing after many hiccups, but there was one more small one to get through – the train from Beijing to my hometown of Shenyang was delayed! I can’t remember who got me, but we waited about an hour for a train and by this time it was nearly 1 in the morning. Somewhere here the details get fuzzy, since it used to take 12 hours to get between those cities, but I distinctly remember arriving at my grandmother’s door right around 4 AM. The poor woman had been waiting up for me, as good grandmothers are apt to do. 🙂
I’m not sure if I’m imagining it, but perhaps – just perhaps, I had taken a flight from Beijing to Shenyang and then gotten driven back by 4. It does make sense, but I can’t quite remember. One day, I will rifle through my journal entries to confirm the details. I hope I wrote all of it down. And so there you go, a most arduous journey that you could attribute to the domino effect, with pieces falling down and causing the next one to fall down too. Or you could blame Murphy’s law, where anything that can go wrong, will go wrong. Not to say that things going wrong can’t be a beautiful thing! In fact, for me it really was quite a wonderful experience! I had a lot of fun and got to enjoy the type of adventure not many pre-teens can ever say they’ve had.
It meowed at us first! So of course we had to meow back until it meowed for the camera…
meowing parrot from Mary Qin on Vimeo.
Very early this morning, at 2:17 AM, there was a tremor from an earthquake that occurred just off the coast of the Hermosa Beach area. Somewhere in the ocean, the earth moved and we Angelenos shook with it. Panda and I were still up and felt the swaying sort of shaking motion for just a few seconds. I watched as his laptop and desk lamp jiggled before settling. We looked at each other, alert and ready for any signs of a larger quake to come. I contemplated the size of the space beneath the desk.
And of course, I went to the place that gives me all the buzz – Twitter. Plenty of others had felt it and soon enough, I found a map and details of the 3.6er. I always get a bit nauseous when I experience a rolling quake and definitely felt a little seasick afterwards. Kind of ironic since I don’t get seasick easily, if at all. Then again, the ground moving beneath you can certainly be a powerful force.
Naught but 15 hours later, I was at work, closer to the epicenter of that quake when another one, a 3.7 this time, jerked our little office building. The earthquake seemed to pretty much come from the same spot and I wonder if these are precursors to the large one everyone’s kind of been waiting for. The one in the afternoon was far more abrupt and seemed like the shaking, shuddering kind of earthquake you see in the movies. Usually I get the rolling wave kind of feel, which might be due to the structure of the earth beneath the areas I was in. Panda says the LA basin’s sediment is not as hard as other areas so we tend to feel more rollers.
I hope we’re all prepared for when that scary one comes along to rattle us all, and certainly do some property damage.
Every year, the Getty invites college students to come hang out and check out their exhibits. Panda and I went to enjoy the views, the art, and the free food! They had delicious garlic fries and sweet potato fries, along with a myriad of other tasty items.
Click through for the full picture!
Funny, I was just thinking about how I always seem to be the exception and never quite fit into a category. One such case is in eating habits – I’m not a “true” vegetarian, but practically am most of the time. Then I come across this video, talking about breaking down the idea that you either have to be a vegetarian/vegan or a crazy carnivore. I consider myself neither, really. In fact, I like to say I’m a pseudo-vegetarian. I don’t eat meat much but I do have some periodically. And so now, a new breed of vegetarians can emerge, treating their eating habits sort of like a job… meanwhile, I think I’ll stick to my own brand of “vegetarianism.”
I just learned that John Wooden died today, and what a sad moment that was. After yesterday’s false alarm, I was hoping he’d get through this trial and make it to 100 and get that letter from the President! How cool would that be? But unfortunately, whatever ailed him got the better of him today and now I will never fulfill my dream of meeting him in person. I suppose I still could, but not at the book signing I had imagined.
I wonder if part of it was because he’s lived a long, fulfilling life and he was ready to go. Perhaps he just didn’t have the willpower to fight whatever put him in the hospital because he would be perfectly content dying now. I think that was part of it. Without a compelling reason to live, it’s very easy to let go. Certainly he deserved to not have to struggle in an aging body. After all, it seems the only thing he didn’t accomplish was being a centenarian!
It’s amazing that I can feel so sad that this man is gone. I never met him and haven’t even read his books yet. But there’s a deep-seeded respect that runs through every True Bruin, for he was a respectable man who led like no other in the short history of our school. (Random thing I noted was that he’s 9 years older than UCLA. Puts into perspective just how young our school is!) The good thing is that I’m not sad in a bawling all over the place kind of way. I’m sad in a “I missed out and it’s unfortunate the world has lost a great influencer” type of way. A pensive, curious, questioning kind of way.
I wish I could have joined the hundreds of students who gathered at the Ronald Reagan Medical Center today, to pay tribute to this great legend. May his legacy live on to inspire generations to come. 🙂
One of my fraternity brothers shared this link today, which I thought was a compelling image. It takes you to a map displaying the approximate area of the spill, then allows you to overlay that to whatever area you want, just to see how much it would cover if it was in your city! Here’s a look at LA (click to see a larger image):
The Counter is a restaurant where you check boxes on a list and piece together your own meal, from the bread to the dressing to the meat to the toppings. It’s pretty fun and you never know if your combo will be that great, but that’s the fun of it. They have these amazing onion strings (kind of like shoestring fries) that are perfectly thin and lightly breaded and fried! Yum.
los dos performing “our youth” from Mary Qin on Vimeo.