the neighborhood cat

I found a cat outside my apartment door. I don’t know whose it is, or if it has a home. No name tag either. I held my hand out and it started purring and rubbing its head against my knuckles. And when I opened the door it walked inside.

Then it went over to my neighbor’s door. They have a straw doormat — great for scratching the hard-to-reach places.

Now I can’t stop thinking about cats. Each time I return to the apartment I wish it were back to greet me. I even stocked up on canned fish from Trader Joe’s. Herring for me, tuna for the cat.

going out for ice cream

The Salt & Straw ice cream store in Palo Alto has lines out the door. But if you stroll in fifteen minutes before closing you can avoid all that traffic, and sample whatever fancy flavors they have without feeling rushed. Sometimes I walk by just to smell the sweet waffle cones.

If you were there today, you’d have seen Valentine’s Day couples pecking at their cones and then at each other.

Fruit sorbet with cocoa + waffle cone! It’s half-eaten at this point. Tastes better in the rain.

snow in the bay area

I was about to sleep last night when my dear college roommate sends me this message:


Snow doesn’t come to the Bay Area often. One whiff of a breeze and people start breaking out their fleece jackets.

The game plan: wake up at 4 AM, meet somewhere up Page Mill Road at 5:30 AM, and enjoy the California snow before driving back down the hill to work in Mountain View.

We took different routes and got stuck on opposite ends of a road enclosure. Whoops. Back to the offices we went after our morning adventure, as if it were any other regular day.

(Happy lunar new year, too!)

thoughts on being 24, and the past year

At the start of age 23, I was largely underemployed. No swanky job at a hotshot company, no grad school, no round-the-world romps or Peace Corps volunteering. But I did get to be a barista during the early mornings. If you were a frequent visitor to the Peet’s Coffee on Castro Street in Mountain View last year, there’s a good chance I made your latte or cappuccino and charged you four bucks for it.

In the afternoons and evenings, I held a part-time gig in research for mobile app & web designs, where I had a taste of remote work and the digital nomad lifestyle. Work anywhere you want! Work from the coffeeshops! Work from the beach! (Just kidding, San Jose suburbs for me). It ended up being a constant hunt for public power outlets. Then I found a research internship with a company that asked for animated GIFs in lieu of a cover letter.

I chose Mr. Bean.

All the while I was living at home rent-free with family. In the Bay Area, it’s considered the responsible choice to move in with family when you’re first starting your career due to the ballooning housing prices. I was too prideful to view it that way, but not so prideful I wouldn’t scarf down homecooked meals and enjoy Mom and Dad’s love and support.

One year later, my life seems peachy keen on paper. I’m living on my own in a cozy studio apartment above a bakery. I pay my own rent and utilities, which feels lovely and not-so-lovely at the same time. And my first two breakfasts as a 24-year-old were pumpkin pie and ice cream. I can thank Colleen and the Thanksgiving holidays for that.

Moving out to Palo Alto on my own was a good choice. I appreciate home visits to San Jose a lot more, and I’m grateful to still have the chance to spend time with Mom and Dad as an adult. Plus I save two hours each day on commuting to my new job in Mountain View.

In San Diego, Prof. Jim Hollan usually spends the first lecture of his classes with this presentation: “General Advice for Students”. One of my favorite lines: “Do what you love (that’s easy) and love what you do (that’s the challenge).”

Here’s a slightly different phrase: having what you want is easy, wanting what you have is harder.

Do I want what I currently have? I’d like to think so. I love the newfound independence, and the research work I do with Google Assistant + Maps is fascinating, all-consuming even. (Dealing with product lawyers, too. Although those dealings tend to come packaged with heart palpitations for me).

Most of my waking hours and thoughts revolve around my career and work. I’ve become a workaholic, even for Silicon Valley standards. I am less proud of this. It hasn’t affected any friendships and relationships yet, but I can feel my health deteriorating. Waking up with stomach acid is not fun. So uh, that needs to change.

My research contract ends soon. It lasts six months, and I’m already four months in. I don’t know what will happen next, but if I prioritize interestingness over stability and safety over the next year, I think I’ll continue enjoying the ride. Even if it is a bit bumpier.

signs of air quality

From the office in Mountain View — Halloween, 2018:

During the fires in Northern California:

And now the week after Thanksgiving, after several days of rain (dinky by international standards, but a cause for celebration/car accidents across the state):

I don’t know the mystery do-gooder who gave their air mask to the pumpkin, but I wish I did. Maybe they’re the reason why the pumpkin hasn’t turned to mush after four weeks on the ledge.

today’s google walkout

Last week the New York Times published an article about Google’s history of handling sexual harassment in the workplace (hint: it’s not good). Today there was an employee-organized walkout across company offices worldwide.

Here’s what it looked like at the Mountain View headquarters:

Many of my friends, colleagues, and mentors have their own stories. (And that’s only counting the people I know comfortable enough to share them). I know yours do, too.