Posts in category: My Travels


Aug 17

They say that the third time’s the charm, but I don’t know if I would apply that to the third WordCamp conference in San Francisco that took place today. While it may partially have been that maybe I’ve gotten a little bit used to it, now that I’ve been there a few times, a lot of changes happened this year that I didn’t really think were that much for the better. And so my analysis and recap of this year’s WordPress event begins…
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Jul 15

Today I’m at the Social Media Camp taking place at the Swedish American Hall in San Francisco. Admission here is free, so if you’re attending or want to drop by, feel free to do so! (Those of you that are here can feel free to say hi in the comments section.) My friend Daniel Brusilovsky will be giving a presentation here later today, which I’m here to see, and I’m also going to be taking notes on social media/social networking and how a certain non-profit organization that I volunteer for can take advantage of it.

Anyway, for the readers on my blog, expect a report on my experience here in the next day or so. And for everyone at Social Media Camp who have heeded my shameless plug(s), hello and thanks for visiting my blog!

Update: I’ll be doing a session on “The Art of Personal Blogging” at around 2:15 PM today in the second room.

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Jun 30

Well, I’m now back from Boys State, and it’s now the end of a very long, busy, adventurous month of June. At last, even though a full month of summer has already flown by, it’s now finally starting to actually feel like summer for the first time.

Overall, Boys State was an exciting and definitely eye-opening experience. But this wasn’t some trip or some camp for relaxing and having fun, no, my week at Boys State was probably the busiest week that I’ll have had during this whole summer. The way that I’ve been catching up on sleep these past few days since I got back, you’d think that I had jet lag all over again! Now that I’ve had a day or two to recover, and because my last post didn’t have many details about what the schedule of Boys State would be like, I guess it’s time that I provide a comprehensive review of what I had the opportunity to go through. (Oh, and to prove to all of my new friends from there whom I gave the link to this website that I actually do keep it up to date.) ;)
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Jun 19

Well first of all, I am back from China. I got back six days ago–last Friday, but between getting caught up and getting over jet lag and watching two weeks worth of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert, I’ve been a little delayed in getting a blog post up and out. But now is probably the best time, so here goes.
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Jun 03

Well, however nervous I may or may not be, today is the day that I’m heading off to China. I’ll be back on Friday, June 13th and hopefully won’t be too far out from jet lag.

You’ll notice on my blog that I’ve added the current Beijing time (they’re 15 hours ahead of San Francisco time) up above and the current weather in Beijing so that you can see the conditions that I’m in at the time. Our trip also apparently has its own blog (obviously NOT designed by me) where you can follow what we’re doing, see our minute-by-minute schedule, etc.

Anyway, it’s time for me to get packing. Here’s hoping that I make it back in one piece!

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Jun 01

All right everyone, better get your Little Red Books out and handy because I’m off to China!!!

Uhh, say what?

Well, here’s the idea. My school’s band, choir, and orchestra (with me being a member of the latter of those three) has been invited to tour and perform in Beijing, China ahead of the 2008 Olympics (which seem to be on the news constantly these days, and not for good reasons). We were also originally going to spend a few days in Xi’an, but that canceled a week or so ago due to the recent earthquake and the declining political situation in that region. However, as it is, the trip will be an 11 day/9 night stay in Beijing (with one day lost up in an airplane or two), with a couple of concerts and a hopefully-not-too-overwhelming amount of sightseeing. But before I share my itinerary, how about a little peek at everything that I’ve gone through ahead of this trip, eh?
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Apr 26

Well, here I go again. You probably don’t even really care much about all my travel itineraries, but I find that it satisfies myself to spend the time writing them up anyways. (If it turns out that you actually like my travel itineraries, let me know in the comments.) However, this week will be the California State PTA Convention again, my fourth one in a row. The difference about this year’s (other than the fact that it’s in Long Beach) is that as a student representative on the State PTA Board of Managers, I now get to be a part of running the thing, which therefore makes me more committed during the Convention and means that I have to show up two days earlier. Want to see what I mean? Here we go…
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Mar 08

These are diary entries that I wrote throughout my ten-day Sojourn to the Past trip on February 14-23. Each entry is posted here two weeks after it was originally written, due to the provision that I didn’t have any computer or internet access during my trip. Be sure to check out my other Sojourn to the Past coverage. Enjoy.

I’m writing on the plane right now, up 30,000 or however many feet in the air, en route back to San Francisco. Aside from a near calamity with our return flights, today has been probably my favorite day of the trip, in which we really wrapped up and culminated on everything that we’ve learned over the past ten days.

We had another early morning, once again, and after breakfast, we went back to the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, but this time, we went inside. We were given special players and headphones which amounted essentially to a guided audio tour of the museum, which was a very big museum to walk through. Going through it was like walking back through everything that we had learned for one last time, starting with an exhibit on slavery and various defining events before the Civil Rights Movement began, and then going through further exhibits for each of the major phases of the Civil Rights Movement. The movement then culminated up on the top floor where you could see (through the plexi-glass windows) the two rooms in the motel that were restored to what they were like on April 4, 1968. The room on the left (room 307) was where Dr. King normally stayed (although he didn’t stay in that room in April 1968 because it was occupied), and was a fully made room. The room on the right (room 306) was the room where Dr. King was staying, and was recreated as it would have been at the particular moment, including the sheets partially uncovered, dishes left on the desk, etc. From the observing area we could also see the balcony where he was shot, including the spot where his head hit the ground. That particular spot had been permanently stained because of how much blood there had been, that they replaced that spot with a brick because the blood stain had been too painful to look at at the time.

After we finished going through the museum, we went into an auditorium at the museum where we were greeted by Rev. Billy Kyles, who had been with Dr. King that evening that he was shot in Memphis. He did talk briefly about the evening that Dr. King was shot, but he mostly talked preached about the importance of having dreams, following our dreams, “holding fast” to them. He frequently brought up his favorite quote from Langston Hughes: “Hold fast to your dreams. For if dreams die, you are like broken-winged birds that cannot fly.” His message was really captivating, and you could feel it when, after he spoke, we gave him an eight-minute standing ovation.

After that, we had lunch and the opportunity to personally meet Rev. Kyles, but then we moved on to the wrap-up activity of the trip, and probably may very favorite part of this trip. All 150 of us made a big circle around the room, and then we each had the opportunity to share the biggest strength that we learned and how we were going to apply it when we went home. However, many of us (including myself) took the opportunity to share a personal story of something that affected them, and how what they had learned on this trip had made them look at it in a different way. There were a number of students there that had been struggling to deal with divorced parents and who had had hostility to one of them, but who decided that they were going to apologize and reconnect to their other parent when they got home. One of them said that the trip had helped her get over the grief of having to watch her best friend commit suicide. One of them had talked about how he and his family had built up so much hatred and resentment towards African Americans because of atrocities that a few African American men had done to his family, but that this trip shattered his hate and that he was going to try to live a new life. It was very emotional for many of us, but whenever it got emotional, a number of friends came up to console that person. (And yes, there were plenty of tissue boxes kept handy.) But it was a very special moment for me in a number of ways. First, it really helped to bridge the connection between this trip, the civil rights movement, and everything that I had done, seen, and learned over the past ten days to my life today, and really made clear just how much all of it has to do with our lives. It also helped to remind me how we often make judgments based on what we see on the outside, but just how much more there is on the inside. When I learned about some of the stories that the others shared–these other people who had been complete strangers to me just nine days ago–I ended up looking at them in a completely different light. Even one of the students from my school, who I’ve known for a long time (she’s been a regular volunteer with the Aragon Peace Club), shared a story. She’s the kind of person that you can recognize at school by her big smile and always bright attitude, but she shared about the suffering that she privately goes through inside while her parents are constantly fighting, and she was one of the many who broke down emotionally. For me, those three hours in that circle was by far the most enthralling part of the trip, and probably the part that I will remember most of all.

After wrapping up the trip by singing “We Shall Overcome” as a group, we left for Memphis International Airport, where we proceeded with check in and then bought ourselves some dinner. We all had a flight from Memphis to Atlanta, at which point the Los Angeles folks connected on a flight to LAX, and we connected on a flight to SFO. (The New York folks are staying in Memphis one more night and are flying home tomorrow.) However, our group pretty much filled almost all of the Memphis-Atlanta flight. Unfortunately, around the time that we were boarding prior to our 6 PM departure, we learned that our plane had a fuel leak, and that they were waiting for maintenance to come and fix it. We were worried that we would get stuck in Memphis, but luckily, they were able to fix the fuel leak so that we boarded at 7:00 and took off around 7:20. (Due to the large size of our group, Delta made the very wise move of asking our connecting flights to wait for us. The San Francisco layover had gone from 90 minutes to 10 minutes, and the Los Angeles layover had gone from 60 minutes to -20 minutes.) However, when we arrived in Atlanta, we hurried to our gate only to find out that our flight had been delayed anyway half an hour, so we were luckily able to catch our breath before we had to board.

We’ll be landing in San Francisco in a couple of hours (around 1 AM local time, about 21 hours after we woke up this morning!). It’s hard to believe that Sojourn to the Past is now over, but boy, it was an excellent experience, and certainly one that I’ll always remember.

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Mar 07

These are diary entries that I wrote throughout my ten-day Sojourn to the Past trip on February 14-23. Each entry is posted here two weeks after it was originally written, due to the provision that I didn’t have any computer or internet access during my trip. Be sure to check out my other Sojourn to the Past coverage. Enjoy.

Today was another very interesting day, but it was one that I had been looking forward to during the whole trip. After breakfast at our hotel in Memphis, we boarded the busses and took our two-and-a-half hour drive over to Little Rock, AK. Along the way, we had a review bus lesson on the Little Rock Nine, and then we watched a documentary film called Journey to Little Rock: The Untold Story of Minnijean Brown-Trickey.

We arrived at Little Rock Central High School, home of the first integration of a public school in the South fifty years ago this year. And man, the place is huge. The whole campus is two city blocks by two city blocks, and as for the campus, it starts out on the sides at two stories, moving towards the center at three stories, then going up to four, and then finally the center of campus has five stories! All I can say is that I assume that the kids that go there sure get their exercise during passing periods!

We started out by visiting the Central High School Historical Site Museum across the street from the school. (Imagine your own high school not only being a National Historic Site, but also having its own museum and gift shop across the street!). The museum was quite a bit smaller than that huge multi-million dollar place we saw in Birmingham, but this one focused on the 1957 integration, on the issues surrounding the integration (such as comparing how Central was funded in comparison to the black high schools in Little Rock), and life after the integration crisis in Little Rock. After that, we had the opportunity to hit the gift shop, where I spent my last dollars on two books and a T-shirt. They also had a corner where they were giving away leftovers from their 50th Anniversary Celebration last September.

After that, we went to Central High School and sat down around their courtyard/reflecting pool. The school doesn’t allow most outside groups to come onto their campus, but they allow our group to come on, which is very exciting. We sat down there and reflected on everything that we learned about in the integration, and asked ourselves if we would allow our friends and classmates to use violent, racist, or other hurtful language towards others without intervening, resolving that we would not do so. We then recreated the experience that the Little Rock Nine had in September 1957 by walking up the front steps of the school.

After that, we all went inside to Central’s auditorium (yes, it’s bigger than the puny auditorium that we’ve got at Aragon), where we met Elizabeth Eckford, one of the Little Rock Nine. We welcomed her by giving her a standing ovation in sign language, because she still has flashbacks of her first day at Central and loud noises sometimes cause these flashbacks to occur. In addition to talking about her experiences, she talked about how hurtful language truly was in her life and how it is up to all of us to stop it from spreading. She then had to go back to work (she gave up her lunch hour to come and speak with us).

We then got our lunch of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and boarded the bus for the two-and-a-half hour drive back to Memphis. During the ride, we had our final bus lesson, reviewing Dr. King’s last day on earth. When we arrived in Memphis, we went outside of the Lorraine Motel (now a National Civil Rights Museum), which was where Dr. King was shot and killed on April 4, 1968. We sat down in front of the commemorative plaque beneath the balcony where Dr. King was shot, and we listened to King’s “I Have Been to the Mountaintop” speech, which he made the night before he was killed. We then spent time there reflecting on Dr. King, and then boarded the bus.

The bus returned to the hotel, and after about an hour of free time, we went to our last night activity: clubbing on Beale Street. Though frankly, I didn’t really participate in the dancing (not my thing), however the food was good, and inside, there was a family of five that was playing live country music, including the lead singer who was a boy of five or six years old and who also played the accordion, and boy, he was pretty good. I personally had a better time listening to that inside then dancing to the loud godawful rock music they were playing on the cold, outside patio for the majority of the Sojourn group.

Tomorrow will be our last day in Memphis, and then we’ll be headed back home. My, time flies, doesn’t it?

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Mar 06

These are diary entries that I wrote throughout my ten-day Sojourn to the Past trip on February 14-23. Each entry is posted here two weeks after it was originally written, due to the provision that I didn’t have any computer or internet access during my trip. Be sure to check out my other Sojourn to the Past coverage. Enjoy.

Today was another full day. We started with a 6 AM wake-up call, and jumped right into a lesson in the hotel about the KKK’s murder of Vernon Dahmer and their firebombing of the Dahmer’s house.

Vernon Dahmer had been a voting rights activist in the sixties, and a well-off farmer and grocery store owner. His motto was, “If you don’t vote, you don’t count.” He even used his means to offer to pay the poll tax of those who couldn’t afford it, and so, on January 10, 1966, his home was firebombed. While his family made it to safety, his lungs were irreparably damaged and he died, arousing the response of both blacks and whites who had admired him. His murderer was only recently convicted in 1998.

After the lesson, we got to meet sons Vernon Dahmer, Jr. and George Dahmer, and daughter Bettie Dahmer. Normally, we would also have been joined by another son, Harold Dahmer, and by their mom Ellie Dahmer, but the former had the flu and the latter was recovering from a recent knee replacement. However, they told us a bit about their story and the aftermath and then answered questions.

Afterwards, we left to the hotel and stopped off briefly at the Dahmer’s house, where they shared the area with us and did some show and tell. We then moved on to Vernon Dahmer, Sr.’s final resting place, where we reflected and paid our respects.

We moved on to Jackson, Mississippi. We first went to the offices of the Clarion Ledger, the newspaper where reporter Jerry Mitchell works. Jerry Mitchell uncovered and leaked various information in the 1990s that has helped many of the criminals of the civil rights movement come to justice. We were going to get to meet him, but unfortunately he was not there today, though the editor of the paper did welcome us for a few minutes before we went back to the buses.

Our other spot in Jackson was the home of Medgar and Myrlie Evers (see last Friday). Myrlie wasn’t home (she owns another residence elsewhere in the country), but we sat on the driveway, despite the rain, to reflect on Medgar Evers and pay respects.

Finally, we embarked on the three-hour bus ride to Memphis, Tennessee, during which we had a talent show on the bus, one in which everyone had to participate. (This was evident when one person led us in The Alphabet Song.) I did a comedic monologue about the “chicken crossing the road” joke.

When we got into Memphis and checked into our hotel, we grabbed dinner and then split up for the first time into groups by school. The objective was for students from each school on meet and discuss ways for us to share what we learned and spread a message to our school to help make change on our campus. We didn’t quite have time for our Aragon group to narrow down an idea, but we’ll have the opportunity to meet again back at home to work on this project.

Tomorrow is a day that I’m really looking forward to: the day when we go to Little Rock. I’m in need of sleep now though, so good night.

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