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From Facebook to Jealousy and Breaks of Relationships
Posted on August 22nd, 2009 No commentsCouple days ago I was having lunch with two friends, one of them was a Global Marketing Director for a PC Manufacturer based in Taiwan. He was asking about social media network like Facebook and Twitter Read the rest of this entry »
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From Mencius to Strategic and Economic Dialogue
Posted on August 7th, 2009 No commentsThe U.S.–China Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED) is a high-level dialogue for the United States and China to discuss a wide range of bilateral, regional and global political, Read the rest of this entry »
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From Coming Home to Going Home
Posted on August 6th, 2009 No commentsThis morning I needed to run some errands, so despise the threat of typhoon I went out in the pouring hard rain. First I went to the nearby Taipei Fubon Bank Read the rest of this entry »
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From Little Magnolia Girl to Being Grateful
Posted on July 23rd, 2009 No commentsI was waiting for the light to turn green at corner of Xinyi Road@Fuxing South Road in Taipei, and suddenly heard a tiny voice “Auntie, do you want to buy some flowers?” I lowered my head to the source of that tiny voice and saw a girl about 5 or 6 years old. She was very dark skinned and got several Read the rest of this entry »
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From Homebound Packing to Seize The Day
Posted on July 12th, 2009 No commentsFinally I have finished packing for my trip to Taiwan, and the sense of anxiety started hitting me that I wasn’t able to sleep well last night. I was planning to take a bus from the airport into Taipei Read the rest of this entry »
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From Xinjiang Riots to China’s Outbound Marketing
Posted on July 10th, 2009 No commentsAfter the 3 days riots in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang, China clamped down on the Internet, in the hope of stemming the flow of information about ethnic unrest which left more than 150 people dead and more than thousand arrests — the deadliest unrest Read the rest of this entry »
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Emotions and dilemmas are universal – Ocean of Words
Posted on June 4th, 2009 No commentsOcean of Words is not the first Ha Jin book that I have read, but it is the first collection of short stories from him. I like it just as much as his Waitingand War Trash, and again his works seem to have the power to weight my heart down and cloud my emotion. I have never experienced the life described in his book, but was totally taken Read the rest of this entry »
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My Trip to the DMZ South Korea (part I)
Posted on May 28th, 2009 No commentsRecently North Korea has threatened military actions against U.S. and South Korea, and the sights of soldiers marching in the DMZ are aired on major news channels yesterday. This brought back the memory of my trip to the DMZ South Korea couple years ago.
It was June, right after Computex in Taipei, Taiwan. I decided to pay Seoul a visit after seeing it so many times in Korean TV dramas. A friend of mine arranged my staying at the InterContinental in Kangnam area, and I was able to wonder around the city by the metro system efficiently, thanks to the very easy to understand metro map and color coded routes. I did not have any specific plan for that trip, except visiting the DMZ, the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
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For the first couple days I had cruised the city and visited palace, museums, shops, night markets… on my own and love the freedom of seeing a safe and modern city at my own pace. However, I asked the concierge at hotel to recommend an English speaking guide for me, because I wanted to learn about this DMZ. The concierge not only found me a tour guide for me, but later that day they also asked me if other tourists at the same hotel may join me and share the expenses. So I ended up having the pleasure to spend whole day with a marketing exec from AMD, an American woman with her adopted daughter who would turn 18 that summer and this mom-and-daughter duo were visiting the girl’s birth parent (Koreans), plus a pilot and co-pilot from Air France.
DMZ is a strip of land between North and South Korea and works as a “buffer zone” between two countries. The DMZ cuts the Korean Peninsula roughly in half, crossing the 38th parallel on an angle. The 38th parallel north was the original boundary between the US-occupied and Soviet-occupied areas of Korea at the end of World War II. After my trip, I read War Trash by Ha Jin and learned that Chinese POWs (prisoner of war) from Taiwan and China were also there for many years.
Since it’s outside of the capital Seoul we could not take metro, instead we were on a bus ride for about an hour. The ride was pleasant because I got to see the different part of Seoul other than the upscale Kangnam or the very hip Mingdong districts, and the trees lined highways were very clean and beautiful – a nice late spring day in Korea. But once we got closer to the DMZ, I found the landscape quickly changes to boring barbed wire and fences dotted with military outposts.
DMZ is the world’s most heavily militarized area where hundreds of thousands of troops are stationed on the southern side, mostly South Koreans, but there are also some 28,000 U.S. troops supporting them. The soldiers all looked very stern and serious, even a bit hostile in their uniforms, especially the Koreans. Soon I found something very interesting and Hollywood-like though, some American soldiers were wearing sunglasses while the South Koreans not :-p
After a brief introduction upon arriving the DMZ, we were grouped at an observation platform, a second floor balcony area, which is the nearest point to North Korea from South Korea. We were told (or instructed) absolutely no pictures taking and absolutely no gesture communication with the North – this is a military area after all. We whined and complained about the no picture taking parts and were immediately hushed to keep quiet. I was able to see the North Korea soldiers standing on the opposite through observing binoculars, and they looked just like the South Koreans (amused)!
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Investing in Myself 1, 2, 3
Posted on May 21st, 2009 No commentsLast night I got an email from a friend of mine asking me to join a Line Dance class with her; in her email she simply stated “seriously need to exercise and lose some weight, but need a companion to do it together.” Clear enough! I replied, Read the rest of this entry »
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Good Till the Last Drop – My Relationship with Coffee
Posted on May 7th, 2009 No commentsLast weekend I was staying at a friend’s place who doesn’t drink coffee, so the first day was getting really edgy without my morning coffee. I had to drive to a nearby Starbucks in my wrinkled T shirt and crazy hair to get my healthy dosage of caffeine, aah!! The aroma of coffee ignites my day and brings me back to life!
I first contact with coffee came when I was 9 or so; people would give gift baskets to my father Read the rest of this entry »
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