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Saturday, August 30, 2008

And the Winner is....

CAS!!! AIESEC Central America South won the UBS award of excellence for 2008!!!! AAAAAOOOOOOOWWWWWW!!!!!!

For those not too familiar, the UBS award is given each year of the best region/country who has demostrated excellency in performance. In other words, it's a BIG DEAL.

=) GO CAS!!! I'm so proud to be part of that!!!

yes, Ethel...maybe there IS something to blog about. hehe...

Thursday, August 28, 2008

My own tram.

Weird dream last night. I dreamt that I had my own tram. It wasn't a double-decker one like the ones in HK, but a single one. I remember waking up from the dream, smiled...and wanted to dream back the same dream. And I somehow strangely succeeded in going back inside my tram...touring around a city that I do not know of.

What does having your own tram in your dream really means?

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

To miss

It's a hard feeling as I'm understanding two different meanings of the word 'miss'.

I am missing IC 2008, and I am missing IC 2007...

Saturday, May 24, 2008

A sweet dose of Canadiana

"travelling is an addiction." - that was one line from a gongshow ;) evening with Carol. (Yes! here to visit! AAOOOWwww!) It was absolutely enjoyable to see her after a year and a half since we first met in NC back in Edmonton. I definately missed her, and also Canadians in general. Ufff, it was nice speaking English with native speakers again - my English sucks! (don't tell that to my students =P)

Apart from this sweet dose of Canadiana tonight, I would have to admit I'm starting to like Hong Kong more. It was not always the case, especially in the beginning. Without recognizing it, I think I went through the entire cultural shock cycle during the past 9 months, and am coming out of it alive and becoming a Hong Kong-lover.

Maybe a chilled Tsingtao or two at the Hong Kong harbour-front with a familiar visage has a little thing to do with it ;) Thanks Carol!

Monday, March 31, 2008

Pura vida TtT

An expression to describe how I feel about the TtT is the quintessential Tico expression: Pura vida!

University of Science and Technology is were the Train the Trainers conference took place this past weekend. It's in a part of Hong Kong that is away from the city, very close to where my old school was. I love the serenity of the UST campus. With the mystical spring fog shrouding the sea view from the spacious campus, the inner-peace I found in being in that setting reminded me of how much nature means to me. - magistic seaviews everywhere. And at night in the sky unlike the more urban area where I live, if you look up, there are actually stars ;)

During the 'showtime' portion of the TtT conference, where the delegates present a 15-minute presentations utilizing the skills they were trained to do the last two days. Each presentation was creative, and I see them applying a lot of what they have learnt. It's a rush of a satisfying feeling that brought out a giant smile within me. What was especially encouraging was the pro-active environment with a very willingly contributing individuals.

There is a bright future for these talents. And the world will be a brighter place just because of them. Proud of these newest trainers! I'm one pura vida alumnus :)

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Decision made.

Yes, I'm here. And so is the blog. =) Still alive in Hong Kong now after an intense experience in Russia to say the least ;) Will be back, will definately be back. That is a promise.

My brief perception of AIESEC in Russia?
The members are super friendly and very smart! I think one of the (many many ;) shocks was the age of the AIESECers. I met many 16 year olds during the conference, and I was later explained that you start university at age 16 or 17.

The experience for me was quite extreme as I fell ill, but I think I learnt a great deal. I was also reminded how caring and accomodating AIESECers can be, and how positive thinking is a valuable attitude. Спасибо AIESEC Россия! =D

Me, Katia and Masha, during a very beautiful snowfall in Ufa!

I have made lots of decisions recently, and one of them is take on the 'Head for the Future' of my AIESEC experience rather than go on an internship to launch my career. Yes indeed, I have decided to stay in Hong Kong. Many factors built up to this decision, the most important one being Family.

There is a traditional Chinese saying which I believe in:

修身、齊家、治國、平天下

Self, Family, Country, Universe

If you want a peaceful universe, a country well-led, a happy family, you will have to start from the core, which is yourself.

This is quite similar to the Circle of Influence model, or as Ghandi put it: ´Be the change you want to see in the World'

I remember clearly one of my euphoric emotions I had after my first AIESEC conference in Canada back in the Autumn of 2003. I came back and told my friends I had a dream to change the World, and I had found my first stepping stone to reach my goal.

So am I still living a 'nomad life'? After so much change, the inner voice within me is crying outloud for some stability...and it's only fair to satisfy it. No matter how much we say we can get used to change, (I, myself, often claiming so!) it's innate for all of us to be actually looking for that stability.

Since that long weekend in the autumn 4.5 years ago, I've hopped from one stone to the next, from the next, to an other: through my experience during my years in locally as a member in Queen's, as an intern of UCR, as a member of CAS and Southern Cone, and now of Hong Kong...I don't know how many faces I have come across, how many lives I have made an impact on... in retrospect, I am quite content with how much I have discovered and developped on this platform. Thank you AIESEC, I've had the time of my life.

Now I feel I've reached the edge of the current stepping stone in life. Looking for the next stone, in the hope of changing more lives on the way. Ready to take that next leap!

Hmmm...Maybe tomorrow being involved with AIESEC Hong Kong's first Train the Trainers conference will be a good start as a responsible alumnus =)

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

the terminal

so my visa is valid on the 2nd and my booked flight arrives at 17.35 on the 1st. (any flight later, I will be missing the premeeting of the conference for sure). Planning to try immigration if they allow me in, otherwise, will loiter until midnight. 6 hours or so, ain't that bad. I called the Russian consulate in HK, and they said it's ok for me to stay at the airport. So that is more of a positive sign. But will never know what happens when I'm there! Hope I won't cause too much of trouble! Thinking about that movie Terminal =)

in the meantime, packing for the winter, as most of my winter stuff is still in Canada...bought a sweater and toque today...yeepeee...

Friday, January 25, 2008

waiting.

Waiting patiently for that Russian visa. Will be Chair of the National Exchange Conference =)))

The challenge starts now with time:
Collect visa on 31st.
Book earliest flight to Moscow.
Fly! =)
Travel to Ufa (~40 hrs train)
Premeeting starts on 4th.

Let's see how it turns out. Excited!!

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Where the streets have no names.

I recently came across this interesting article from TIME.com. It had an interesting title - 'How Far Are You From the Place Bono Sang About?' so I clicked on it...and a smile grew on my face as I realized I could say I was very close!

During my stay in Central America, I had a chance to visit the northern neighbour of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, including the capital Managua that the author writes about. The most entertaining part for me is about the house he refers to in the christmas-card story of Costa Rica. I know exactly which house he refers to because I was about to live there in that exact same two-story white house with a black gate, where the gringos live. =)

It's a small world, isn't it? Even Where Streets Have No Names: /Where%20The%20Streets%20Have%20No%20Name.mp3


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'How Far Are You From the Place Bono Sang About?'
By Tim Rogers/Managua

A year after Irish rocker Bono visited Nicaragua in 1986 in an effort to raise awareness about Central American war refugees, U2 released its smash-hit album The Joshua Tree and Nicaraguans immediately recognized that one of the songs was written about their country. Twenty years later, most people here still hold as fact that "Where the Streets Have No Name" was written about Managua, a squat and sprawling capital city where... well, the streets are unnamed.

The Managua of today still has the feeling of a rural backwater that hopes to one day grow up to be a capital city. No building is taller than 10 stories. There are still more trees than buildings, and going "downtown" means going to the Metrocentro shopping mall.

Finding one's way around Nicaragua means developing an intimate understanding of the spatial relations between current and past landmarks, some of which were destroyed more than 30 years ago in the 1972 earthquake. Stephen Kinzer, a former New York Times bureau chief based in Managua in the 1980s, accurately describes the fine art of giving directions in Managua as a "Socratic" technique, based on first determining what the direction-asker knows, then working backward from there.

For example, if a foreigner were to ask, "how do you get to the Nicaraguan Tourism Institute?," the conversation might go something like this:

"Well, do you know where Casa de Los Mejia Godoy is? Where Antojitos Restaurant used to be?"

"No."

"Do you know where the former Lips strip club was?"

"No."

"The Hotel Crowne Plaza, which used to be the Hotel Inter-Continental?"

"Bingo."

"From there, it's one block south, one block down."

One block "down," of course, is Managua code for "one block west." And, in the case of the Tourism Institute, west is literally downhill, so you can't get lost. In other cases, however, "one block down" really means one block uphill, adding a new level of adventure to the game. To further confuse things, directions are also given in an anachronistic unit of measurement known as a "vara," which is apparently based on the arm-length of a former nobleman from sometime and someplace in the distant past.

Outside of the capital, giving directions is an equally colorful experience. My girlfriend's college friend lives in Jinotepe, "half a block north from where the Indian died." Even on the Caribbean coast, which was settled by the British rather than the Spaniards, things are equally relative. British expatriate Louise Calder lives in the Caribbean city of Bluefields, "in front of Francisco Herrera's house." Her neighbor, Mr. Herrera, in return, lists his address as "in front of Louise Calder's house."

My favorite address story, however, comes from neighboring Costa Rica, where I lived for several years before moving to Nicaragua. Six years ago, my friend Blake Tenore sent out an e-mail to a list of old college friends, asking for people's addresses to send out Christmas cards. Since I lived in a house without a street address, I jokingly e-mailed him back with the directions that I used in Spanish to tell people how to get to my house: "From the Lourdes Church in Montes de Oca, two blocks west, past the Pali supermarket, take a right at the next corner where an old woman sells fruit, past the Bar Maguey and go to the end of the dead end street, where there's a two-story white house with a black gate, where the gringos live. Costa Rica, Central America." To my surprise, a Christmas card arrived three weeks later, with the smallest and most careful handwriting I have ever seen printed on an envelope.

The funniest part about giving directions in this corner of the world is that some streets actually do have names, but no one knows what they are. My girlfriend, by chance, recently saw an official government map of her hometown, Masaya, Nicaragua, and discovered that the street where she had grown up in fact has a name: Calle Palo Blanco.

Now, as a joke, sometimes when we get into a taxi, we tell the cab driver to take us to "Calle Palo Blanco," to which he invariably responds by staring at us blankly in the rearview mirror. Then we give the more common address, "From the San Jeronimo Shell Station, two and a half blocks down." And off we go without further question.

So perhaps Bono did in fact write a song inspired by his trip to Nicaragua, but my guess is that it was "I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For."

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1701487,00.html

Saturday, January 05, 2008

holiday season

The holiday season has ended, and thankfully, like all the other years in the past, I still had my x'mas and new years holiday =) I know that will be gone very soon, so better treasure it while I can!

I will always remembering this year's holidays as meeting up with some old friends, spending a magical x'mas day in Disneyland, teaching the kids how to sing 'jingle bells', and telling them who Santa Claus is.