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Hong Kong, China.
Phillips Exeter Academy '08.
University of Chicago '12.
I interned for Landor Associates in New York, Ogilvy PR's 360° Digital Influence practice in Washington, D.C. and Hong Kong (Asia Pacific Regional Team).
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"Living here day by day, you think it’s the center of the world. You believe nothing will ever change. Then you leave: a year, two years. When you come back, everything’s changed. The thread’s broken. What you came to find isn’t there. What was yours is gone. You have to go away for a long time… many years… before you can come back and find your people. The land where you were born."
Cinema Paradiso (via Weiling’s Exeter senior meditation” (via eveningsmorningsafternoons)
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On my recent visit to Exeter, I helped my sister decorate her dorm room’s bulletin board with lace from her friend, poster from Mom, lantern from Dad, and ribbons and tissue paper from opened gifts. See the postcard on the lower right corner? That’s a pig in muddy soap, from me :P
(P.S. This is also my first autopost from posterous, a blogging platform I’m trying out.)
One of my bitterest misgivings is that I never quite figured out who I am or what I stand for. In some ways, I stand as a paragon of rationality: I carefully think through my lifestyle decisions to make sure they are coherent. But at the same time, I realize that in a larger sense I am not rational at all. Logical systems need frameworks of assumptions to have external purpose. No matter how efficiently I drive myself, it’s useless in the end unless I have a destination.
I am a very different person from when I was in high school, and yet, those ghosts still haunt my life. Paul Graham wrote that the best way to determine what you love to do is “to try to do things that would make your friends say wow.” I think this cuts to the heart of my problem: I am not good enough at being pressured by the rest of the world, by prestige.
Let me tell you a little bit about Exeter, the high school I attended. It sits on 619 acres of gorgeous wilderness — rivers, lakes, forests, plains — nestled next to a sleepy New Hampshire town. Autumns and winters are especially breathtaking: one constantly feels part of an elaborate landscape oil. Maybe one of the anonymous weekenders in Seurat’s famous Un dimanche après-midi à l’Île de la Grande Jatte:
Just as they observe time sail slowly by, one can’t help but begrudge a feeling that these might be the best years of my life. Not a constant reminder, but more of a background hum that sharply spikes on particularly winsome days. One moment you’ll be fading asleep against a languid spring sun, and the next you’ll feel a sudden chill as dusk presses overhead. The passing of seasons is particularly poignant in New England.
It was a collective feeling. I think the greatest gift Exeter gave us was not an education or a passing ticket into college — it was a glimpse into our own mortality. It was an unspoken thought that what we were journeying through was not some passing phase: it was a camera pinhole into our days in the wider world. Like that old Semisonic song: “time for you to go back to the places you will be from…”
Even years afterwards — years after I have last seen or heard from many, if not most, of them — when I think about what I want to do with my life, I recall their voices. What we had in common was a sense of our own urgency. That what we do with our lives is sacred, that it matters deeply. No where else begs that sense of sincerity.
Their voices tell me that I should try harder. Strive to make something of myself. Reach for power, the ability to make a difference. It doesn’t matter what you do so much as being unique while doing it. To rise up the corporate ladder is good but not enough. The important place is not the bottom-line: it is in the starry sky.
I’ve followed this exhausting compass for years. It has been with me through rough roads, calm skies, euphoric celebrations, abject failures. Ultimately, I believe it is a gift. To regard one’s own life as a noble undertaking is enough a reason to live it. But it is also a curse. Throwing away the mundane means foregoing pleasant commonalities and feeling every disappointment deep in your bones.
“Life would be so much easier to live if I hadn’t met you.” I’m sure the saints and martyrs had their own private moments of self-doubt. I’m no saint. I long for the familiar, for the easy. I wish life were a happier coincidence of moments. I wish my ambitions were smaller; I wish more things made me happy. Every lover has wondered is there a way to go back in time, to when things were simpler…
EMILY: I can’t. I can’t go on. It goes so fast. We don’t have time to look at one another.
She breaks down sobbing. The lights dim on the left half of the stage.
I didn’t realize. So all that was going on and we never noticed. Take me back—up the hill—to my grave. But first: Wait! One more look.
Good-by, Good-by, world. Good-by, Grover’s Corners. Mama and Papa. Good-by to clocks ticking… and Mama’s sunflowers. And food and coffee. And new-honed dresses and hot baths… and sleeping and waking up. Oh, earth, you’re too wonderful for anybody to realize you.She looks toward the stage manager and asks abruptly, through her tears:
Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it-every. every minute.
STAGE MANAGER: No.
Pause.
The saints and poets, maybe— they do some.
An artist’s interpretation of Exeter’s Louis Kahn library; @reggietweets I think you mentioned this to me earlier! (via Academy Library blog)
Tonight, I think of Eurge, and I also think of Pat and Poon. I didn’t know them well, but each time, I was struck by the unexpectedness. “Life changes fast. Life changes in the instant. You sit down to dinner and life as you know it ends.” — Joan Didion
Every term, Phillips Exeter Academy mails its alumi copies of the Exeter bulletin that contain marriages, births, and deaths. I’ve always wondered who would be the first among our class to marry and to have children. But never the first too die - we were far too young for that.
But to read the death of a classmate on the news, to hear him described as “a 2008 graduate of the exclusive Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire” - to think of my school that way, is sobering.
Exeter is a community. And it’s during times like this that I truly, truly appreciate Exeter and miss the warmth of Phillips Church.
Rest in Peace
office cat :) grablife: The Exonian Office: This was a similar promo video made by the board below mine, The Upper Board ‘08. It was created by a current USC film student— Matt Berardi (PEA ‘08, USC ‘12)! He’s got a ton of talent, and USC is lucky to have him! Enjoy!
Sometimes I watch this just for old times’ sake. Good times, good times. I miss all these people— I should get back in touch with them, since the only person I’ve really spoken to recently out of this group is… Liani. Shame on me…!
(Anyone who doesn’t know: Every year my high school’s newspaper made a video to show at an assembly to drum up interest in The Exonian. This is the year that my grade, Class of 2007, were on the Executive Board of the paper (I was one of two Arts & Features editors), and we decided to model it loosely after “The Office,” spinning it as “The Exonian Office.” I hope you enjoy the short film!)
@mitkeone Oh, K1! Running the numbers: Possible answers to improbable questions about the Boston Marathon
from earlier this term.
Mark Zuckerberg’s Exeter facebook headshot, article (via @ClaireAbisalih)
wow, yay! must visit next time i go to boston (hopefully, it won’t be long).I can’t believe there’s now a Friendly Toast in Boston, too (it used to only be Portsmouth)!
gorgeous. damn i miss this school
courtesy of Josiah Tsui (http://www.flickr.com/photos/josiahtsui/3426650083/sizes/l/)