The Eyes Have It

When I was in elementary school, I participated in my school’s Young Author’s Conference. I believe I was in the third grade, although it was such a long time ago that I can’t be sure. I was extremely proud of my story, which placed in one of the categories and earned me a spot in the author’s conference session, where we were partnered with actual authors to share our stories, hear the feedback, and get advice from professionals. It was such an exciting accomplishment for me as I’ve shared before on this blog that I have always loved to write. This early experience convinced me that I could have a career as an author one day. As much as I loved to read when I was a child, it was exhilarating to believe that I could grow up to write my own stories for others to enjoy. Not only did I get to participate in the author session, but I was actually featured in our local newspaper. There was a large picture of me with my partner author, whose name I can’t currently recall, right in the middle of the page containing the full article. In the picture we are looking over my story together, and in the article itself, there are a few paragraphs dedicated to me and my story. I distinctly remember how excited I was about this whole event as a child, but decades later as an adult uncovering this article looking over it again brought up so many feelings of ostracism, isolation, and even shame.

How is it that one of my greatest achievements as a child could bring up so many negative feelings for me as an adult? To start, it’s important to understand that I am the first-born, first-generation daughter of a Filipino immigrant mother. I am so proud of my heritage – the way I was raised, the way my mother worked so hard to support me single-handedly the majority of my young life, and even the fact that she left behind everything she knew and everyone she loved to come to this country in order to make a better life for herself and her family. However, often being the only child of Asian descent in white, suburban middle America wasn’t without its struggles – especially as part of Generation X. Other children didn’t understand why I looked different and had no qualms expressing their opinions about it. According to many of my classmates, my skin was too dark, my nose was too big, and my eyes were too squinty or funny-looking. I was often asked what was wrong with me or why I “looked like that.” If I shared these incidents of teasing, ridiculing, or even sometimes outright bullying behavior with my mother, her response was to ignore it, work hard, prove myself by not getting in trouble and getting good grades, and eventually I would earn their respect. (There’s a reason why Asians were called the model minority for years.) Needless to say, that’s not what actually ever happened. While I intimately know and understand that we are responsible for our own choices and behavior in life, I also know that a lot of my younger self’s bad choices and behaviors were impacted by the way others treated me.

As a middle schooler, I went to live in Florida with my father where the racism and discrimination increased even more. To start with, I was the only Asian living in the all white family of my father, step-mother, and step-siblings. People didn’t understand how I was even related to them, and when they were told that my mother was from the Philippines, their initial reactions usually centered around assuming that my father had been in the military and my mom was a “rescued” bride. Disclaimer: my mother was already living in the United States working as a nurse when she met my father, who never served in the military. She didn’t need rescuing from anyone. Additionally, because I am only half Filipino coupled with the fact that in the mid-to-late 1980s the general public wasn’t as familiar with Filipino culture, no one ever knew what my ethnicity actually was. People assumed I was Hispanic, Black, Black/White mixed, Native American, or even Chinese. This ambiguity had me on the receiving end of basically every type of racial/ethnic slur at some point or another in my life as people would place me in whatever box they felt I fit. I could go on at length about those experiences, but suffice to say that they left an impact I can still feel today.

So going back to that newspaper article… When I came back home to Chicago, my mother gave me a keepsake album she had of mine. As I flipped through the pages, there was the aforementioned article jumping out at me. I instantly remembered the excitement and pride I had felt as a child living that experience and began reading the article. When I got to the part where the author was describing me, all I can remember is how the words “almond shaped eyes” jumped off the page and struck me in my soul. I had people make fun of my eyes all through my childhood and adolescence. As an adult, people have used my eye shape to justify their racism and discrimination. Looking at those words in the newspaper, all I could think was that this reporter was just one of countless many who helped shape the negative image I used to have about my eye shape that I still battle today. Even now, my go-to is to deflect my hurt that reading that statement caused for me and justifying it by saying that the reporter probably didn’t mean anything negative with her words and was just trying to describe me.

The eyes are the windows to our souls as they are usually the most honest part of our human bodies. As Asian American Pacific Islander month comes to a close, let’s remember to look past a person’s eye shape or any other preconceived ideas about them and instead towards our shared humanity and ways that we are interconnected so that we can create bridges and not walls.

Not a Grandma

You might have noticed the two beautiful kiddos with me on my About page. If you haven’t, you should go check them out because they are truly good-looking. Although I can’t take all the credit since they are not mine but my daughter’s.

Now before you rush to call me grandma, let me say that although I have two amazing grandchildren, I am not a grandma. I am known as Moma, which we’ve decided means “more momma” or “momx2,” whichever you prefer. See, I had my children when I was very young. I was actually still a teenager when my daughter was born. So even though she waited much longer to have her first child, when she did I was still relatively young in the grand scheme of things (pun intended). Trying to decide what my soon-to-be grandson would call me was a pretty complex process. I wanted to be called Lola, as that is the name for grandmother in Tagalog, a primary language in the Philippines, and I am a proud first-generation daughter of a Filipino immigrant mother. However, that’s what my children already called my mother, so having two Lolas in the family would be too confusing. Years prior to this, when my son first adopted his dog, he had declared that I couldn’t be his dog’s mom because he was his dog’s dad. Therefore, he had stated that I was the dog’s grandma. To which I quickly replied, “I am not a grandma.” He then went on to come up with “Noma,” short for “Not Grandma.” So when by grandson entered the world, I decided that Noma would work just fine. My grandson had other ideas. As much as I tried, I only managed to get him to say “Noma” one time. He would say, “no” and “ma” but when he would put it together, he would switch it to Moma. So, Moma stuck, and he loves the fact that he’s the one who gave me my name.

I’m sure you’ve heard the quote, “If I had known grandchildren would be so much fun, I would have had them first.” I had too, but you truly can’t appreciate it or understand its depth until you’ve had a grandchild. I love my children and would still do anything I can for them, but the love I have for my grandchildren is on a completely different level. They have enriched my life in ways that I didn’t even know was possible, and for that I am so grateful. I’m even more grateful for the fact that they only live a couple miles away from me so I get to see them on a regular basis. I have many friends who aren’t so lucky. While my children have always been my inspiration to work hard, set goals and achieve them, and live a life they could admire (or at least not be embarrassed of), my grandchildren are my inspiration to build something that will be around long after I’m gone, to create a legacy that they can one day inherit. So while I might be “More Momma” to them, my grandchildren are the grandest inspiration to me.

The Beginning of the End…and the End of the Beginning

Although it seems as if school has ended for everyone, the district where I teach still has another week to go. The last day for students is next Thursday, the 20th. For teachers? Well, we have not only Friday the 21st to go, but also Monday the 24th. However, it is close enough to the end of this year to finally feel it is the right time for reflection.

This year was one of major changes for me professionally. It was my first year in a new role and with a new district. I had to learn all new systems – and am still learning them. I had to get to know new administrators and teaching staff, and also learn how I fit into this organization. It was my first time not having my own classroom or a home room of my own students, but instead being a part of multiple classrooms and working with a variety of students in all grade levels. It was a year where I often felt I didn’t quite fit in, even though I was serving in exactly the role I wanted for myself. I was no longer a classroom teacher in the traditional sense, but I also was not technically an administrator. It has been a year of challenging myself in new ways and identifying new goals. On top of that, as I shared with readers in a previous blog, this past year was one of great loss and deep grief. Managing all of these obstacles has been hard, but I’ve made it. This is just the beginning of this chapter of my life, so I look forward to how the rest of the story will play out.

For all my fellow educators, I hope you have time this summer to pursue the things that are important to you. Parents, take the time to make memories with your children. Students, be open to explore new places and ideas because you are only young once. Congratulations to everyone for closing out another school year, but remember that summer is just the start of yet another adventure. Let’s go write the next chapter of our lives.

More Than Words

Four months ago today, I lost my soulmate. Her name was Chanda, and she had been my best friend for over 30 years. We had walked this path of life together since we were 11 years old. We were together through puberty, adolescence, college, marriages, children, divorces, and everything else under the sun. I wrote on this blog of her dad’s passing back in 2013 and how it changed everything. However, losing her changes things even more profoundly than that event had. I mentioned previously that there were life-altering events that occurred in 2018, and this is definitely the biggest one. Her passing has changed everything forever and in every way, and although it is still too soon and the wounds are still too fresh to write freely today, I was compelled to pause for a moment to remember her. For in remembering those who pass before us, we honor them and the impact they had on our lives. She was my “Thunder Buddy for Life,” and I miss her more than words can express.

A New Beginning

I’m here! Even though I am currently in my brother’s apartment in Chicago, the fact that I am not just here for a visit has not quite sunk in yet – even with the knowledge that I start work on Monday and start my second job on Tuesday. After saying I was one day returning to the city, today is that one day. The journey was arduous. Everything that could’ve gone wrong did. It took us almost 30 hours to get here, we drove through rain, fog, mountains, and even had a flat tire. First we drove to Michigan to drop off my daughter. We had to unload her stuff from the truck, then go to the storage place, load up that stuff, and bring it back to her apartment. That was definitely a milestone moment. I’m grateful I got to be there with her as she began the process of moving in to her own place. We went grocery shopping together, and I was able to share her first meal in her new home with her. Moments like that are priceless. Watching her unpack her kitchen and decide where to put things really impressed upon me the circle of life. That and the fact that my son is no longer with me. Leaving him behind in Florida was heart-wrenching. It is hard to write about because I miss him terribly. I wasn’t ready for him to leave, not that parents ever are. (Well, maybe sometimes.) However, ready or not – here I am. New job, new city, new opportunities, and new adventures. Let the journey begin…

The Back Issue

I believe that I have established the fact that I am passionate about running. It is an integral part of who I am. So, when I am not able to run, I do not feel like I am myself. And in the middle of all the turmoil in my life right now, not being able to run is driving me batty.
I have always had issues with my back since being injured in a severe car accident at the age of 15. Every once in awhile, it would act up more than others. I would visit a chiropractor, have some adjustments, and then everything would return to normal. Several years ago, my lower back started causing me even more difficulty. It would start to “go” more often. There are two specific incidents I can remember that foreshadowed the current conditions wherein I now find myself. The first was when I was rolling my compact refrigerator from my regular classroom to the room where I would be teaching summer school. There was a slight step up from the hall into the class. I went to lift the cart up slightly and felt a sharp pain in my lower back. It shot up my back and down my leg, but after stretching for a bit (once I recovered from the pain), it seemed to be okay. Then, right before New Year’s Eve a few years ago, I went to get out of bed and felt a pop. At the same time, pain shot from my lower back all through my body. I was unable to move. Thank God I had my phone right next to me. I texted my daughter, who was across the house in her room. I still remember how the color drained out of her face when she walked in my room and saw the pain I was in. It took almost 45 minutes to get me from the bed to the car. Then, the first walk-in clinic I went to wasn’t that helpful. I then spent the next few weeks going to the chiropractor three times per week getting my back fixed. However, I never visited a medical doctor, and that was probably a costly error on my part.
Fast forward to 2011. In October of that year, I ran the Atlanta Marathon. Somehow, the fact that Atlanta was so hilly had escaped me during all my training. I don’t like looking at course maps in too much detail because I don’t want my mind to start envisioning worst-case scenarios. I don’t pay too much attention to the elevation because I’m going to run the course anyway so why freak myself out? However, up until that point, I had ran (mostly) only flat courses. I had driven through Atlanta, but had never walked through the city. So I had no frame of reference for this race. It was 26.2 miles of grueling hills. I remember how disappointed I was at the finish because I didn’t set a new PR. Little did I know that that should’ve been the least of my worries.
After the race, I took off a couple of weeks to rest. Yet, once I started running again, something wasn’t right. I felt achy, but different from the normal, “I just ran a marathon,” achy. My running was sporadic at best, even though I had an upcoming half-marathon. Although I knew I didn’t train properly for that race, it was my favorite course, I had already registered, so I was running it anyway. Probably not the best decision. At the end of that race, I fell to the ground in such pain I knew I had to give in and go to the doctor.
Long story short, I eventually found out that I had two “severely ruptured” discs in my spine: my L5 and S1. My running, and all other physical activity, came to a screeching halt. I went through physical therapy and epidural injections. After what seemed like an eternity, I was cleared to “run” again. I had to start with strict walking and work my way up, just like I do with brand new runners that join my cross country team. I also started going to yoga as soon as I was cleared by my sports doctor. At this point, I have been running fairly consistently for almost a year, but not without setbacks. When they occur, I try to keep perspective, but sometimes it’s hard. Right now, my back seems to be hurting more than usual. The pain that runs down my right leg has been acting up quite a bit. So, I have tried to be smart and not force anything, but it’s hard. With everything in chaos around me, I yearn for the open road. Yet, since I want to run for the rest of my life, I will be patient, rest, stretch, and take care of my body. Therefore, if you are a runner, count your blessings and go run one for me today.

Going Forth

I think this is one of the most discombobulated times of my life. Everything is changing. Some of the changes are self-induced; some of them are circumstantial. Regardless, half the time I’m having difficulty keeping track of whether I am coming or going! Part of that might be related to the fact that I am currently based out of two separate houses while I am preparing to make my big move.
Since my last post, we had the memorial service for Dad and the installation service for his son as our new pastor. That was the most emotionally-draining weekend ever. While I believe that everything went just as Dad would’ve wanted it, it is still hard to wrap my head around the reality that he is gone. Although it is impossible, I keep thinking that at any moment he will show up and this will all have been some horrible dream.
Yet, as further proof that life goes on, I flew up to Chicago last week for a final interview and left with the job. I am going back to my roots – teaching a self-contained middle school class for students with severe emotional and behavioral disabilities (EBD). Students with EBD are my passion. I feel that I am best suited to teach these kids and am so excited about this position. I truly feel that I have been given my dream job. In fact, when I first graduated from college this is the exact type of position for which I was looking.
As excited as I am about this new opportunity and returning to the city, I also feel a deepening sadness about the people I am leaving behind. The fact that my son is staying here until he goes off to boot camp is overwhelming. I feel guilty about leaving my best friend and family right when I feel they need me the most. My boyfriend has to stay here for now because his children are much younger than mine, and he can’t leave them (nor would I want him to). Plus, I have many cherished friends I am leaving behind in exchange for a city where I will only know a handful of people (at first). Yet, every time I start to feel a little panicked, I remind myself that this was my decision. I want to be back in the city. I want to be closer to my daughter, and my son will soon be gone anyway. Many people have had successful long-distance relationships, and I will always be here for my best friend and adopted family – no matter the miles between us. This is my path, and down it I must travel. I still have goals I need to accomplish, and I know I am heading to a place where I can best do that. It is time for me to do in my life exactly what I always tell my students, “Go forth and conquer.”

Just Keep Running

Yesterday was the first time I went for a run since the day that time stood still. There was a part of me that felt that it was too soon. I felt I was being selfish for wanting this time for myself when there was so much to do and people who need me. However, running has always been my therapy. Anytime my heart has been broken, I have taken solace in my running. It comforts me, strengthens me, and helps me feel there are still areas in my life of which I have control. So, I laced up my shoes and hit the road. The first mile was hard. I reminisced, I cried, I struggled to put one foot in front of the other. As I kept running, the messages that my “dad” preached over the years started to fill my head. Messages about running a good race, pressing on despite the circumstances, being strong in the face of adversity, trusting God in all things, hard work, sacrifice, and the like. The more I ran, the more I realized and believed that this run was my best way of honoring him. For this is exactly what he would want for me and everyone else affected by his death. He would want us to press on, to keep dreaming, setting goals, and working to achieve them. That is the truth for anyone who has lost a loved one. Yes, we mourn, and yes we are broken-hearted. But we are still alive. And we must carry on. That is how we pay tribute to our loved ones who have passed on and strengthen our spirits.

I’ll Be Missing You

Last week, my entire world changed. When I last wrote to you, I was packing for my move. Five days after that post, as I was knee-deep in boxes with my childhood best friend, we received a phone call from her brother that shattered our day. Her parents had been traveling on their 40th wedding anniversary when her dad died suddenly during a snorkeling excursion off the coast of Honduras. Watching my best friend crumple to the floor, taking the phone and hearing the news from her brother, I knew that from this moment on life would be forever different.
I first met Dad as an angry, almost 12 year old girl. I had recently moved to Florida to live with my father, step-mother, two step-brothers, and a six month old half-brother, and he was the pastor of the church they attended. I was very angry about the move. I did not want to be here, and I expressed my displeasure with the situation often. My father had convinced my mom that he wanted to make up for all the lost years between us (I hadn’t seen him since I was around 4-5 years old), and my mother truly believed it would be good for me. To make a long story short, it wasn’t. I will maybe discuss that another day, but suffice to say, I left home one week after my 17th birthday and never looked back. However, during those turbulent five years, the one constant in life was “Dad” – and his daughter who is my best friend to this day. He was my champion. He believed in me and encouraged me even when no one else did. He took me in as one of his own, and I was often referred to as another daughter. He married me and was there when both of my children were born. He comforted me when that marriage began to crumble due to my husband’s ongoing battle with mental illness. He was there when I thought I had found someone new with whom to share my life, and was still there when that ended up not being the case. All of my holiday memories revolve around him, my best friend, and our families because we spent them all together. He attended all of my children’s birthdays, and more recently, both of their high school graduations. He was so proud to see the woman I had become and the adults my children were turning out to be, and we spoke often about what the future held. He was the only grandfather my kids really knew, and in the words of my daughter, “The only one who has stayed” for their entire lives. Right before he left for his cruise, I saw him in the parking lot of Home Depot. We talked for just a short while. Most of the conversation revolved around his displeasure about me moving back to Chicago. He has been trying to talk me out of it for as long as I have been talking about going. The conversation was short, but light-hearted, silly, and full of love. I am so glad I have that moment to cherish.
Because of his position as a well-known and highly regarded minister, people all over the world are mourning his loss. He was the founding pastor of our church and had affected thousands of lives. He leaves behind his high school sweetheart, three children who loved him dearly, and three grandchildren who adored him. More than that though, he leaves behind an extended family that spreads all around the globe. This week has been one of the most difficult in my life as we have been dealing with our grief about his death, planning his memorial service, guiding the church members through this difficult time, and most importantly, supporting the family with whatever they need. I feel like everything I do is inadequate to express my love for this man I called “Dad.” Even what I have written here does not portray the full picture of who he was to me. Suffice to say, I loved him completely, and he loved me unconditionally. I miss him.

And I know you’re shining down on me from heaven
Like so many friends we’ve lost along the way
And I know eventually we’ll be together
One sweet day

Read more: MARIAH CAREY – ONE SWEET DAY LYRICS /blockquote>

I am a Runner

It is fitting that my first blog about running is being written tonight. Tomorrow morning, I am running our local art festival’s 5k race. Seven years ago, this is the race that started it all. I have ran at various times in my life. I was on my middle school track team; I ran for fun during high school (too bad my tiny private school didn’t have a track team); I ran for fitness. However, that first 5k is when I became a runner. I loved the camaraderie, the challenge, and then the thrill of finishing. I was hooked. Later that same year, my marriage began to fall apart as I found out that my now ex-husband was seeing another woman. It crushed my spirit. Even though this was my second marriage, I had poured myself into making this family work so my children could have the stability of a two-parent home. Their biological father had all but vanished from their lives due to his struggles with mental illness and addiction. My son didn’t even remember him and considered his step-father to be his “dad.” I thought, although we had our struggles, overall we were a happy family. Imagine my shock to find out this wasn’t the case. In the middle of this heartbreak, I turned to running. Out on the open road, it was just me and God. As I ran, I would pray, reminisce, sort through my thoughts, meditate, and just be. My runs were a respite from the circumstances in my life I couldn’t control. I could control every aspect of my runs- how far, how fast, how frequent. A year later, I ran that same art fest 5k. This time, there wasn’t anyone waiting for me at the finish line. But I ran it quite a bit faster than I had the year before 🙂 And I felt like a load had been lifted off me as I crossed that finish line. I knew I was strong. I knew I could overcome. I knew I wanted more. So I signed up for my first half-marathon seven months later. Training for that first half gave me so much strength, physically, spiritually, and emotionally. So of course, when I completed that one, I a) signed up for another and b) signed up for my first marathon. Running my first marathon was an experience that deserves its own entry, but suffice to say for now that it was one of the crowning achievements in my life. And here I am, seven years later….still running. There have been obstacles along the way – a fractured foot, ruptured discs, grad school. Yet, I always return to running. A happy life requires balance. My family fuels my heart, my faith fuels my spirit, but running fuels my soul.