Posts Tagged ‘adulthood’

Without Daedalus

June 5th, 2010

“a splash quite unnoticed”
– Robert Creeley, Landscape with the Fall of Icarus

I glide through the velvet sky on Icarus wings,
never to touch the sun, to err once more,
but feel the brush of regaling winds
that push me forward and nothing more.

I leave an island of cold labyrinths behind me.
It has been wrought to ruins by some skyborn hand.
It is useless to try to return it to its glory
for rivers are rivers and land is land.

My only guide is the morning haze
to mark how much further up or further down
I need to be between the kiss of waves
and the rosy fingertips of the dawn.

If only a bird can know the world from overhead
then I must be this unfettered creature
for men were not made to tread the clouds;
they were only meant to dream and to desire.

My Elesion home lies faraway
beyond the bow and bear of stars.
I’ll disappear somewhere along the way
like a stone tossed and lost under Aegean water.

September 1, 2003

Domingo

May 17th, 2010

Domingo

Sunday is walking a friend
to the shore, the hiss of hangover
attending us. He asks which island
is there but hell if I know.

Sunday is scrubbing the char
off the grill; is making old things
almost new again. The coal
crumbles into a riverbed.

Watching a man fish,
watching him whip and winch
and wait out the wildness
that office work brings.

At almost night, we gather
to capture the weird purple god
sitting in the West. Strangers
know beauty when we see it.

Staten Island burnishes like Troy
or the truth and promise in myth
or the fingertip, full-moon shaped,
of a girl I’ve yet to kiss.

goals addendum

April 19th, 2010

long term goals addendum:

  • get a degree in computer science — I really like computer science. it’s easy for me. I think the only reason I dropped it in college was because I was juggling too many things at once. perhaps I can get a BA in it, or a MA even. I still don’t think I want a career in that field, unless it’s teaching.

goals

April 19th, 2010

so the guidance office at my high school says keeping a list of goals is a good idea. here are mine:

short term goals (3 to 6 months)

  1. lose 10 lbs — partly because I want to compete in a different weight class. partly because it will be a marker for a good and active life style. I want to make better choices about what I eat and how I spend my time.
  2. step completely out of my league — I want to take a gymnastics class or a sports class that I’ve never played before. Tae Kwon Do is amazing but I feel like I’m cheating now (or being cheated) by training where I am now. taking Kendo was a step in the right direction (never done weapon martial arts before) but it’s still within my comfort zone.
  3. find summer employment — simply put, I need to pay the bills. hopefully satisfying this will satisfy my middle term goal but I’ll take what I can get.
  4. find a love interest — I don’t need to get married or anything, but I really need someone I could reasonably pursue. it’ll be better for me spiritually and mentally; it will also help my career. a lot of the strong and good choices I made were to impress women, regardless of whether the women were impressed.
  5. get my abs in shape — anyone who knows me knows that I have massive calves and quads. I suspect it’s from the 7 years of kicking, although, as far as I can remember, I’ve always had good muscle definition down in my legs. I’ve recently (last 6 to 8 months) concentrated on my upper body. my arms and shoulders have really taken shape and the only part left is my torso. I’ve got the seedlings of a 6 pack already and just need to put in the work.

midterm goals (6 to 18 months)

  1. find non physical educator positions — I want to teach more than martial arts. teaching for pay, teaching for free, then training on my own is very taxing. I can put up with it now because I’m still relatively young and in shape. but there are starting to be days when my body just doesn’t want to do it. also, it’s dangerous. if I get injured seriously (or even semi seriously) then I won’t be able to fulfill my other obligations. I also see it as a self respect / respect from others issue. I wouldn’t be satisfied with myself if all I did was teach Tae Kwon Do. I’ve already started to work on this goal. I’ve started teaching history and philosophy in my Tae Kwon Do classes, as well as tutoring English and math on the side. but this is not enough.
  2. start a non profit — I’ve done a lot of charity work in the past with regards to poetry. it’s been somewhat successful. I’ve really been inspired to do charity work utilizing my physical kinesthetic knowledge. this actually seems counterproductive to 1 of my other midterm goal but it’ll be for a good cause.

longterm goals (18+ months)

  1. become a father — it seems ridiculous for me to be thinking about this. I’m barely able to support myself. still, I work with children a lot (and am good at it) and am a teacher (for what else is a father but that?). the more I think about it, the truer it feels.
  2. live outside of NYC — this goes back to my area of comfort and stepping outside of it issue. I’m too comfortable with NYC. I’d like to move out somewhere else for a while. not any time too soon. I actually got back relatively recently from living in Boston. only now, only since moving out of my parents’ place, starting my Master’s degree, teaching at NYU and Pace and, hopefully, Brooklyn College, do I feel like I’m finally settling down into things. it would be a shame to pick up and move somewhere else because I’ll have to deal with establishing employment, friends, etc. all over again. but, somewhere down the line, I want to try living somewhere else. maybe not permanently, but at least for a while.

promotion

February 26th, 2010

I wasn’t going to blog about this but I read (still am reading) a heated debate on Fark.com about teachers and performance and salaries and firing and … the age old stuff. I can’t really weigh in on the subject considering I’ve never been directly employed by the BoE, never had to work within the “system”. that being said, I’ve been teaching / tutoring for 8 years, in martial arts (2.5 years), computer science (4 years), and highschool math / English (2 years)

I gave a student a promotion test on Wednesday for his orange belt in Tae Kwon Do. I’ve only ever given 1 other promotion test and that was to a 3rd / 4th grader who had me for 1.5 to 2 years. this was a high school student who had me for 1.5 years already. it was a pretty intense test, up to the caliber of the promotion tests I took under Master Orlove. (perhaps my memory distorts the truth; maybe my tests weren’t that hard, maybe they were). about 50 minutes into it (I was aiming for about a 60 or 70 minute test), he says “Mr. Chin, I don’t feel so good. I feel dizzy.” I had him at a stationary fighting stance; I was pushing him physically pretty hard and decided to give him a “rest”; asking questions and testing him on his intellectual knowledge before continuing his physical testing. most students get winded like that and I thought it was a minor thing. it wasn’t. after a minute or 2, I wised up, walked over to him (I had spent the entire 60 minutes behind a desk, scribbling notes, being unattached, academic, and intimidating, like I how I had been tested), and inquired further. I told him to take a knee and when that didn’t help much, to lie down on the floor.

he pushed himself so much to meet my expectations that he put himself in physical harm. he committed. what really made my day was after a while, I asked if he wanted to continue. he had been doing phenomenally up to this point, banging out his pushups, his kicks, and his Korean language without complaint and pretty much flawlessly. I was ready to cut the test short, continue a few days later. I was proud when he said yes, he’d like to continue. I was even prouder when, after literally 3 minutes of continuing, he admitted he can’t continue. it showed that he is determined but also honest.

he propped up against a wall, I ran to grab a bottle of water for him, and spent the next 15 minutes telling him horror stories about my own promotion tests. how I was basically crippled after running the Law Tower my first time but pushed on anyhow for the 2nd day of testing; how 1 time, close to my black belt test, I felt dizzy just like him, excused myself to vomit, rinsed out my mouth, and continued the test. I gave him a flyer for my Tae Kwon Do club at Brooklyn College; he’s graduating this year (everyone in the school is, it’s being closed down) and hopefully will be going to college next year. he didn’t apply to BC but to a lot of CUNY schools.

it means a lot to me, a marker / reward of my ability to teach. his neighborhood is not a good 1. there are gangs in the school, probably worse things I don’t know about. I went on a field trip with his classmates 1 time and I learned that 1 of the students is an expecting father. he was 17, didn’t know water came free in restaurants. that’s the kind of environment my student is in and to think I inspired him so much to commit so hard to something that, in the scope of his academic education, doesn’t matter much, is … bewildering.

his grades are not the best. he’s struggling with math; he blames it on his math teacher, which I don’t think is completely a cop out, because he goes to after school math tutoring very regularly. I’m considering, in the last few months, that instead of teaching Tae Kwon Do, I would help him with his school work. I’d have to brush off my high school math, but that shouldn’t be too hard. as a graduating senior, he’s doing work I was doing my freshman year. (I know I got lucky and went to a good high school. I don’t take that for granted.)

I am a good teacher. back when I was tutoring computer science in Boston, I turned uneasy 75′s into sure 90′s. the tutoring service was free for students but I was so effective that a few students paid out of pocket to get extra time; that people were recommending me to their friends. I remember 1 girl, 1 of the first I tutored, who started out as a complete technophobe. by the end of the semester, I got her so interested in computers that she wanted to take a computer apart and poke at the internals. for fun.

more recently, last year when I was also teaching poetry at my high school, we did workshops 1 class. poetry was never really popular so my classes were always small (3 to 6 kids) but this was a particularly small day. 1 student. I spent the entire period workshopping his work, as my (outstanding) teachers taught me how to workshop. at the end of the period, he didn’t want to leave. he ditched his English class to stay while I taught him English. it wasn’t to get out of doing work, etc., but because I was giving him sincere and quality attention.

even more recently, I had a student in my Pace class come up to me. she has only been taking Tae Kwon Do for a month so far. we’re really only now moving on from the basics. she told me that her schedule next semester will be overloaded and that could she still audit the class for free (I, of course, said yes). this is phenomenal considering so many things. (A) it’s more of a recreation class than anything. (B) she’s not only thinking a semester ahead, but an academic year ahead. she basically said that 7 months from now, she still wants to be taking Tae Kwon Do. (C) I haven’t taught her anything other than the basics yet. it made me smile (wide) and when she thanked me for letting her audit, I thanked her for her dedication.

twice, in my kids classes at NYU, of which I have only taught 6 or 7 classes so far, a kid has said “Tae Kwon Do is a pretty fun sport.” the first time, it took me by surprise because it was a student who had trouble focusing, who acted out. he was particularly bad 1 class but at the end, he stood there, in his uniform, and said it completely unexpectedly. him and his father stopped by my class last week; said they were taking a break, trying out new sports, but might come back next year. the second time was a different kid, both of them were about 6 years old.

I am a good teacher; I think I want to teach for a long time in the foreseeable future. I do want to work in the public schools, where good teachers are needed. preferably with high school or middle school students; I can do more with them than the K-5. I’m willing to accept the stress and poor public view. I do want to teach college level courses also but feel (or intuit) that a few years in high school or middle school will teach me quite a few things I won’t learn anywhere else. I want to teach Tae Kwon Do less (my body just can’t handle 6 to 8 hour days of teaching and training). I’d love to teach poetry; also love to teach English, though that’s scary cause I’ve never taught a class like that, where we discuss novels and such. it’s weird, but I would LOVE to teach math or computer science.

I’ve been reading the article on Fark for an hour and a half. been writing this post for an hour. there are a lot of issues tacked on to the Board of Ed, the system for hiring / tenuring teachers, unions, etc. I have my own views that I’m not going to share, partly because I don’t feel qualified and partly because my views include that all sides are right to some degree and arguing won’t change anything.

1 last thing I want to say about teaching: it’s scary. often, 10 or 15 minutes before teaching a class (especially the first class of the day), I have panic attacks. when a student fails to learn or when I teach something incorrectly or when I don’t teach something in the most efficient and effective way, I feel like it’s an act of betrayal. sometimes I dream about an easier job, like stock boy or something.

Gumji

February 18th, 2010

Gumji

I never spoke Cantonese.
I knew the words for rice,
bath, homework, hurry, go, late;
for give, thanks, big and little brother;
for masturbation and porn and salt
(they’re all the same)
but I only mapped the shapes of their sounds.
I couldn’t produce them with my New Yorker tongue.
Damn, dad must have been the same
except reversed. Somehow, our babble worked.

But then, in parts, we grew apart.
I pretended to forget our code.
We didn’t talk, didn’t leave notes,
walked the same hallways in silence,
and soon, with college abroad,
I forgot his language whole hog.

These days, he’s lost it all.
We watch the news the 2 Saturdays
a month I visit. There are only bombs,
new strains of flu, angry parents
complaining about the sorry state of our schools.
He asks for the … …
I can see his hand form the mold,
his thumb jab at his palm for imaginary buttons.
“Remote?” I ask but really tell.
I wish I remember Cantonese
so I could say “gumji”;
that instead of giving him what he can’t find,
I could restore what once was there
but now is gone.

The Dining Philosophers Problem

February 8th, 2010

The Dining Philosophers Problem

We talked how fresh new dancers talk: code words
unlocked the unvoiced sentiments that were
too large to fit between our shorted breaths.
My father never made me learn Chinese
and always left his English back at work
but still our ears had found an easy peace
although his golden wisdom passed like sand
through the pinched middle of an hour glass.

For years this slow art worked out well for us
until I went to college out of state.
My need for token talk had come apart
like ants that spiral and who march too far.

His mind, the battered gate, is worse today.
He will forget the name of common things
like dinnerware or children whom, now old,
he leans against to lead him back to home.
We talk how wintered dancers talk: no words
at all or to each others collarbones.

Vita Nuova

January 25th, 2010

Vita Nuova
–Oscar Wilde

I stood by the unvintageable sea
Till the wet waves drenched face and hair with spray;
The long red fires of the dying day
Burned in the west; the wind piped drearily;
And to the land the clamorous gulls did flee:
‘Alas!’ I cried, ‘my life is full of pain,
And who can garner fruit or golden grain
From these waste fields which travail ceaselessly!’
My nets gaped wide with many a break and flaw,
Nathless I threw them as my final cast
Into the sea, and waited for the end.
When lo! a sudden glory! and I saw
From the black waters of my tortured past
The argent splendour of white limbs ascend!

2010 Resolutions

December 31st, 2009
  1. Be a good person
  2. Never be late for anything
  3. Continue trusting people
  4. Have as much fun working with kids as I used to have
  5. Be better to girls
  6. Be an outstanding teacher
  7. Be a great poet
  8. Get in tip top shape
  9. Dedicate to Brooklyn College Tae Kwon Do
  10. Fill each hour with something meaningful
  11. Stop relying on parents
    1. Start giving back to parents
  12. DON’T give money to charity
  13. Read more
  14. Connect and keep in touch with old friends
  15. Be a good person
  16. Simplify
    1. Simplify
    2. Simplify

My Calling

November 2nd, 2009

My Calling

“you lie,” he cried
and ran on.
–Stephen Crane

It’s the knowing that kills me
not the knowledge I seek
or the chase of distant things
like mountain peaks.
Journey is unavoidable
in lives like these.

We count the nights
like treasure among thieves.
I can tell already
it won’t be enough. I know
my own strength, my own reach.
I won’t survive
even as an inkling.

If I aim too high
at least I’ll be called
a dreamer.