Sunday, March 20, 2016

One Last Goodbye


I’m about three drinks deep, smoking a joint while waiting for my uber to the airport. The SFO flight to Taiwan is always at 1am and I have the flight locked down to a science. After the flight takes off, I watch a movie, have the in flight dinner, 2 more drinks and knock out for about 8 hours straight. The flight is 14 hours, so I usually squeeze in one more movie and arrive at 6am Taiwan time.

The trick is not to overdo the drinking which I’ve done once before, projectile vomiting into the toilet mid flight. It’s getting the timing down so that jetlag never becomes a factor, there’s nothing worse than a dysfunctional sleeping schedule while traveling. I transfer flights from Taoyuan to Kaohsiung and my mom is there to pick me up from the airport around 9am.

My mom takes me home and I drop off my bags and pick up my brother and cousin and we head to the wake. It is located in the funeral district of the city a stone throws away from the city dump. My brother, cousin, and I take the morning shift for the wake, to be relieved by other family members later in the afternoon. My grandpa sits in a large refridgerated box behind curtains in the corner of the room.  There are scores of other funerals going on at the same time, mostly Buddhist ceremonies. The air is thick with incense, processions and rhythmic chanting.

In hour into our stay, two men show up at the door and announce that they are here to take the refridgerator housing my grandpas body.

“The ceremony is not until tomorrow morning, will his body be okay until then?”

“Yes, his body has been sitting in the freezer all week. It’s customary that we take it out of the freezer the day before.”

The two men open the box and lift my grandpa’s body onto a steel gurney. My grandpa’s face is thin and drawn, it looks like he is asleep. The two men cover his body with a blanket adorned with a cross on it and cover his face. They pack their things and go. My cousin goes out to buy lunch and asks us what we want. When she gets back I barely have an appetite.

My uncle and his family come in a few hours later to take their shift and we go back home. The house is crawling with activity. Family has travelled from all over the world to attend the funeral. It has been almost 2 decades since all the grandchildren in our family have been at the same place, 11 of us in total spread out across Taiwan, Japan, and the States. Sometimes it takes a death to bring people together. When my brother called me last week to tell me about my grandpa’s passing I was not very sad, I didn’t really think much about it at all.

My grandpa was a deeply religious man who had no vices. He didn’t drink, smoke, or gamble. He was 98 when he passed and I suppose that his lifestyle contributed vastly to his long life. The entire family has dinner at home around 6pm and after that, the family pastor comes over and we have a prayer group and sermon. I know it means a lot to my parents and their generation, but I am awfully indifferent to the whole religious overtones and it is hard to conceal my boredom.

Once the sermon and songs are done, everyone says good night and go off to bed as we have a 5:30am wake up call the next day. A few of the cousins stay up to have whiskey and catch up. One  of my aunt’s finds us in the living room and gives us a stern lecture.

“Can you guys please not drink tonight? Your grandfather just passed and you should all be mourning his death and not celebrating.”

“Ok” I say but pour myself a drink after she leaves. It’s not that I don’t care, i just don’t see how having a drink could change anything any which way.

I wake up early the next morning and there is a bus waiting outside to take us to the morning ceremony. It is going to be a very long day. The first event is only for family and close friends, an intimate open casket. God must have gotten the memo, because the day is dreary and wet, the shower continuing through the morning. There is a lot of crying and sadness. I’ve only seen my dad cry twice, once for his younger brother’s funeral and now today. I feel like Meursault from The Stranger. The only time I really feel anything is when they close and seal the casket. I am in charge of leading the procession to the mortuary where the body will be cremated. We head back home to have lunch.

After lunch I head out with my uncles to pick up my grandpa’s cremated body. When we get to the mortuary, his remains lay in two metal trays. One tray contains the remains from his skull, while the other holds everything else. The earthly remains of my grandpa reduced to dust and charred bones. We are told by the mortician to each place three pieces of remains into an urn. I wonder if my grandpa would be proud of the man I turned out to be.

Once the urn is packed and readied we head over to the public funeral ceremony where about a hundred  and fifty people show up at a church across town. The ceremony takes about two hours and I try my best not to nod off by reading the event pamphlet. There are short musings and essays contributed by family members. My mom had asked me to write something a few days ago, here is my portion of the writing:

My memories of grandpa begin when we moved to America into our first house in Union City. We had moved from our cramped space in Kaohsiung into a large house with a large backyard in the suburbs. We had a basketball hoop, a park around the corner and American cartoons. Grandpa was a pretty quiet person, but always affable and with a smile on his face. While on car trips, grandpa and grandma would put on a tape of Taiwanese folk songs and sing along, teaching me and my brother the lyrics.  

After a few years we moved to Millbrae into our house on Bertocchi. Grandpa told me stories about his past, our culture and his stance on Taiwanese independence. We would play ping pong together in the mornings and in the afternoon, he would be at his desk writing in his notebook. Everyone would always sit around the table for dinner with the TV on the Chinese news channel. I am still very fond of that period in my life.

Eventually my grandparents moved back to Taiwan and I would see the family twice a year, summer and winter vacation. Each time I went back my grandpa would be a bit older and a bit more withdrawn. The man who had taught me about my family history, culture, and my native country was slowly slipping away. As I became an adult, the grandpa I knew growing up was no longer there, just a shell of the happy, smiling man I had known.

I remember riding in the back seat with my grandpa on one occasion when I was about 12 years old. My Uncle Johnson was driving and my father was in the front passenger seat. It was one of the last times I was to have a lucid conversation with him.

“You know why we brought you to America right?” my grandpa asked me in native Taiwanese.

“Yes grandpa.”

“We want you to make a name for yourself and for our family name. Our family has worked very hard for you grandchildren to have a better future.

“I will try my best to make our family proud.”

“Remember to always put your family first and to be proud of be a Taiwanese citizen. Whatever you do, always have a good conviction and a humble heart. Hard work, family, and belief in God will provide you everything you need in life.”

“Yes grandpa.”

“Did you understand what grandpa said?” my dad asked.

I shook my head yes. It was one of the very last times grandpa would would have a full conversation. And as times goes on and life proceeds, it’s the memories, stories, and the wisdom grandpa shared with me that lasts forever. As a patriarch he has left a great legacy in 3 different countries, a loving family, and imparted his heritage onto the next generation.

He had lived a long beautiful life full of success and love. I always thought that he held on to life because he never wanted my grandma to be alone. He has been the cornerstone and rock of our family and he has left us with a strength that will transcend even beyond his physical being. I choose to remember the grandpa I knew when I was a young boy. And know that he is somewhere out there, smiling down on all of us he has left behind.

It is a little cheesy for my taste, but I am playing to the crowd.

The last part of day is going to the cemetery and burying the urn and remains out in the countryside. There are more sermons, crying, and songs. I remember why I never liked going to church as a child. The air is thick and hot and there are mosquitoes everywhere. The final act is for each of the family members to grab a handful of dirt to cover the urn. And then the day is done as fast as it started. Everyone heads back into their cars and buses and head towards the restaurant where we are to have dinner.

I have not really talked to anyone all day. Usually when I come back to Taiwan, family and friends will ask how I’m doing, if I have a girlfriend, if I’m going to come back to work for my dad, but this time no one asks me anything and I’m okay with that. It’s nice seeing everyone, but my threshold for bullshit is at an all time low. As dinner goes on I start feeling the jetlag and mostly I just want to go back into my room and be by myself.

When I get back I check my email and social media and find an acquaintance has left a particularly snide comment on one of my posts. At first it doesn’t bother me much, but it just eats and eats at me until I feel like I have to say something. I suppose in any other instance I would’ve thought it was funny and let it go, but instead I PM him and tell him that I was going “cut his tits off and feed them to his cat.” It definitely wasn’t the proper way to handle things, but it feels right at the time.

As I lay in bed, I begin to cry and it comes slow and steady until I cannot stop. I feel like going out, getting drunk and hurting someone or myself. I want to forget the day, but it is too fresh in my mind. I want to yell, scream and destroy something, but do not have the energy or heart to do so.

After awhile, sleep comes and I am transported to my youth. My family has just moved to America and I am walking to the park with my grandpa. He has always been a very quiet person and in my dream he is no different. He doesn’t say anything to me, but takes my hand and we walk down to the park of my childhood home. I try to talk to him, but my voice is not working, he gives me a reassuring smile and strokes my hair. I want to say something to him, but nothing comes out. I feel like I never got to properly say goodbye and I want to let him know how much I love him and he just gives me a look like he understands.

I wake up and it is morning. The sun is out and the morning traffic has begun to stir. Nothing has changed, but the world is different and so am I.















Saturday, March 19, 2016

Happy Hour till Close







































"Looking In, Looking Out" Mixed Media on Canvas 60x48 2015





“I’m still in love with her.”

Jack nodded, it was a rant that he heard about 100 times before. “I know man.”

“You don’t understand, Jack. I messed up. It was my fault.”

“Well, at least you can admit it.”

“I’m going to get her back.”

“How do you suppose you’re going to do that Sam? That’s not how that works. She left you man.”

“I’ll wait for her. I’ll do anything for her” Sam said as he pulled at the last of his beer. They had been drinking since happy hour and Sam showed it. His face was sallow and he was in the same work clothes that he had been wearing all week. He looked like a sad puppy dog that had been kicked one too many times.

“You think I don’t understand? After all that bullshit that just went down with me and Suzy?” Jack paused for a moment. “Listen… it happens to everybody, it’s not like you’re the first person to have ever been hurt. It’s not easy. I know, but you’ve got to pull it together.”

“You’re a different type of person than I am Jack. You’re okay being single and dating around. You’re good with girls. I’m different. I’ll never get a girl like her again.”

“Well that’s exactly your problem, if that’s your attitude about things, things will never get better.

They were sitting at the back corner of their neighborhood bar in the Richmond. They both worked corporate jobs and although they both ended their relationships recently, Jack was doing quite a bit better than Sam. They met in grad school and moved in together afterwards, both worked in tech and were bachelors in their 30s.

Jack was a single child, the only son and spoiled with attention from birth. Life of the party and social he was everything Sam was not. Sam was from a middle class family with 3 siblings, shy, reserved and hard working, he had always been more bound to work and studies.

Sam got up from his seat wobbly.

“I’m going to use the pisser.”

“Don’t you fucking call her man.”

“I’m not going to call her. Can you get me another round?”

“Yeah.”

Jack walked over to the bar.

“Hey Sally, can we get another round?”

“Yeah sure Jack, how’s Sam doing?”

“Not too great, I can’t get his mind off things.”

“I saw his girl in here last weekend with a group of boys.”

“Well make sure you don’t go telling him that. Better yet, it might be time for us to find another bar.”

“You still seeing Suzy?”

“No we broke up, you want to go out with me tomorrow?”

“Don’t be a fool Jack.”

Jack walked back to the seats with the beers where he found Sam on his phone.

“Are you texting her?”

Sam didn’t answer.

“Jesus, put the phone away.”

Sam put his phone down, his eyes were red and he muttered thanks as he grabbed a beer from Jack.

“Remember the time back in school when we were dating those two girls on Shasta?”

“Yeah I remember” Sam replied with a faint smile. “Those were good times weren’t they?”

“We never called them before 12 and they always made us food, smoked us out and let us crash.”

“You still talk to Anna?”

“No last I heard she was married with a kid. Dorothy?”

“Nah, not since school. You ever think about past girls?”

“Yeah of course I do, I definitely miss Suzy’s body….”

“Not like that, like I mean do you ever wish you would have settled down with one of them?”

Jack thought for a moment. “No never really. Not like that. Things end for a reason don’t they? Sometimes things just don’t work out. Can I imagine myself with a wife and kids right now? Absolutely not. They were great girls, but I’m happy with being by myself. There’s so much I still want to do and having a girlfriend, much less a wife or kids would definitely put an end to that.”

“I wanted to marry her Jack. I was prepared to ask her parents.”

“Well, things didn’t work out that way did they?” Jack said exasperated. “Look Sam, she was a great girl and she was a lot of fun and smart with a great job and all that. But fuck her man. Fuck her. She’s gone and the sooner you accept that fact and move on. The better it will be for you.”

“Stop, just stop.”

“I love you man, I just don’t think you should put yourself through this over and over again.”

Sam rubbed at a vertical scar on the inside of his right forearm. They both sipped at their beers in silence for a few minutes. Both knowing that their stances on the subject were vastly different and that no matter how hard either tried to convince the other, they would stand their ground.

“Are you alright Sam?”

“Yeah I’m alright.”

“Time heals everything.”

“That’s cheesy, Jack.”

“It’s true, however you feel about it.”

Sam thought for a moment before he spoke. “Sometimes when I’m driving, I just want to swerve the car hard into oncoming traffic.”

“What the fuck man.”

“It’s not like I would actually go through with it. It’s just a thought that runs through my brain sometimes.”

“Don’t say shit like that.”

“I didn’t mean it.”

"You just can't go about saying things like that."

"I was just joking."

“Sam I don’t want to go through what happened in December again.”

“That will never happen again.”

“I don’t want to have to see you do that again Sam. Listen to me. You’ve got a lot going on for you. You’ve got your dream job, we’re making stupid money, and we live in this beautiful city… a lot of people care about you.”

“It was just that one time.”

“Promise me that it won't ever happen again”

“I promise.”

"Promise?"

"I said I promise."

“Damnnit Sam. There’s more to life…” Jack didn’t finish his sentence.

They sat through the rest of their beers in silence, knowing that nothing had been resolved and nothing was ever going to be the same again.






Monday, March 14, 2016

Finding the Past in Paris

"The Artist in Paris" Acrylics on Canvas 16x10 2016

10 years ago I was 21 years old and doing a study abroad across the street from the Luxembourg Gardens in the middle of summer. 10 years ago I had about 2 semesters to go before graduation. I was young and naïve, full of ambition and anxiety about what was to happen next in life. I was single in a seductive city with a class full of pretty girls. It was a beautiful time to be young.

I am visiting the city again as an adult. There is a pull to the city and something I have left behind. I am looking for a piece of my past, something to make sense of my present. There was a mother traveling alone with her infant in the seat in front of me on the flight there. I barely sleep for more than an hour on the flight getting into Paris. I land and take a taxi to my apartment for the week. I meet some friends for lunch and don’t find my way back into bed until 5am. I wake up at 4pm the next day and curse myself for wasting so much time.

High moral values wouldn’t be the way you would have described me as a young man. I believed that I wouldn’t ever marry, wouldn’t have a family, and as age creeps up, the reality of things becomes a bit more clear. I was not a good son or human being for a long time. I blew off my family for things I deemed more important, things which were quite fleeting in retrospect. I negated a lot of those closest to me for my own wants and desires. I felt a need for individualism and to break away from my own innate background.

I step outside of the apartment and it is biting cold with a light snow falling from the sky. I have no phone and want to know that I am able to find ­­­my way back to the past. I am hoping that my memory will serve me well enough to navigate the streets. I feel very lonely in the city knowing that the only goal is a destination to a time in my life that had long ago slipped away. Like picking up a book and rereading it a decade later, the meanings change.

I had classes in the mornings and would spend the rest of the day at the garden or exploring the city. My classmates and I would buy out the entire 4 Euro stock of cheap red wine from the local corner market and smoke hash we scored from North African immigrants in the park. I didn’t think much about the class or our assignments and was mostly checked out of college and classes in general. It was my one last hurrah before I was to move away from the safety of my little college town and into the work force, away from the friends I’d met and the unscrupulous abandon of my college life.  

I make my way down Rue du Renard towards the River and the Notre Dame. I walk past the people hurrying about their way home through the growing evening. There are large crowds of tourists taking pictures at the Hotel de Ville. I stop on the Seine and watch the sun set and the water sparkle and shine with the city. Lovers huddled close together as they make their way across the bustling cobbled streets. The city is romantic and very lonely at the same time.

I remember B______. She was a girl from my class that I liked and we would hold hands down unfamiliar streets and discuss our dreams and desires for the future. We talked about our class and friends back home. She had eyes like a cat, and would always smile slyly at me like she knew a secret that I didn’t. She had a boyfriend at the time so nothing ever got too serious even though I did try to persuade her otherwise.

"Another Time, Another Place" 28x22 Acrylics on Canvas 2016

I get to St. Michel and the streets become familiar. The storefronts new, but the same. In college I had very romantic notions of becoming a writer and painter; I would have never thought I would be where I am today. I was not hungry enough as a young man and was chasing the wrong things. Life was a series of meaningless achievements lined up on a forgotten mantelpiece back home. There is an oceans distance between stability and chasing a dream. My present still seems uncertain, so I search in the past. I know I will find nothing there, but truth and destiny seem to be always right around the corner.

As a young person I didn’t really think about life or time. I mostly chased women, knowing that I would pass my classes through wit, cheating, and charm. It was the way that I had mostly gone through life and it was a horrible way to go about things. I know that I’ve made some bad choices, but life is a series of mistakes until you find the truth, or at least your own truth.

The crowd thins as I take a right on Medicis which turns into Vaugirard. The streets are now quiet except for the occasional pedestrian. I panic a bit as I realize that I am not quite sure of where I am, and that maybe I’ve lost my way. I cross back and forth a few times but find the Rue de Fleurus and take a right on Jean Bart. I finally find the old Hotel, which sits adjacent to a police station in a quiet neighborhood. I peer inside and the place still looks the same. A small quiet waiting area and a front desk which the old front desk man takes his night shifts. My roommates and I would stay up late in bed smoking cigarettes and talk about what we wanted to have accomplished by the time we were 30.
Would who I was back then be proud of who I'd become?

It makes me sad a little bit to think that this hotel has not changed at all. And I think that maybe that’s the case with most things and that only people change. I don’t know why I had to make it all the way across town to look at this place from my past, but I knew that I wanted to see it. I look at my watch and it is already 9pm. I grab a sandwich and soda from a convenience store and eat it on the way back across the river. I am content knowing that I have found what I was looking for even though there was no answer.



I am in my 30s. My parents are getting older, women have come and gone, and sometimes people just say good bye. The man I was in my 20s is not the man I am today. People change, thoughts change, and beliefs change. I went looking for my past in some old landmark and there was nothing there. I am just another cynical, broken man with a string of bad relationships and a half-realized dream. Life is made up of memories and I certainly don’t want to spend the rest of my 30s in meaningless pursuits. I went looking for an answer, but those things never come easy. The answer was never in the past, but is a nebulous beacon somewhere ahead, like Gatsby looking out across the bay.

I make my way home out of the chill and the darkness to the quiet and solitude of my clean, well lit apartment. The world is silent besides the late night drunks wandering the streets. Everything I know is half the world away, but I find solace in knowing that I am the same person here as I am anywhere else. I have a moment of doubt and feel like I have not yet done anything with my life, but it passes. I am free, I am young, and I can yet achieve anything. I have all the potential in the world, it’s just a matter of moving forward and into the unknown.