I am 31 now. There was a snowstorm in New York a couple weeks ago, the coldest in 8 years — the perfect excuse to stay cozy, stare at my bellybutton, make a few snowballs. Friends in the midwest and the Nordic regions will laugh at what’s considered a snowstorm here, but it’s big in my California mind. There’s still snow on the sidewalks today.

I’ve been staring more at my phone recently: just in the past month there was an almost-war with allies over Greenland, friends with family in Iran during their protests, that recent news with Jimmy Lai sentenced to 20 years in a Hong Kong prison. Watching the Minnesotans and more people I look up to speak out & push back against ICE and the current administration gives me hope. I worry it will get worse this year; I hope I don’t fold under the pressure.
Some personal anniversaries to note:
- This January marks my 6th year in New York City, the longest I’ve lived in one city in adulthood. San Diego gets second place with 5 years.
- Last December marked my 5-year anniversary of working at the big blue tech pretzel, the longest I’ve stayed at any one company.
- Last October marked my 3-year anniversary of working part-time as a bookseller at Yu & Me Books. The bookstore itself turned 4 years old last month.
All this is to say: I think I am nesting well here in the big apple, especially as someone who does not sit still often.
I traveled more in 2025 than any other year in my life — 4 Amtrak train rides and 24 flights — mostly for research work, but also for weddings, milestone celebrations, reunions with family & friends, and even once to give long-distance love a shot. (That didn’t work out, but it did feel lovely to experience a whirlwind romance at least once in a lifetime. In another universe there’s a version of me shifting my entire life around to be in Korea or Singapore).
I was gone from NYC for 97 days, or more than a quarter of the entire year. My brother says that’s a lot of wasted rent money. I’m not even a consultant or wear a suit!
To me it’s still worth it. But it’s also the first time I felt disoriented from all the travel. Establishing a regular sleep & social rhythm gets tougher, and it starts to feel sad when you miss people’s birthdays or celebrations, or even watch neighborhood NYC life go on without you (see: FOMO). Then again, I also had the chance to see faraway friends I hadn’t seen in years, multiple times! So it evens out.
Better to do this while I still have the energy and desire, and while my family is still healthy. And while I don’t have any little ones to take care of, human or otherwise.
Some events to note:
American passports expire once every ten years, and I renewed mine in the summertime. Ada let me borrow her living room wall in Seattle and took my photograph (thanks Ada!). I was relieved to part ways with my old chipmunk cheeks photo from 2015.




- Leading an international study for the first time in India, and making new friends there! The company had just done a giant round of layoffs the week before, and I worried I’d be next on the chopping block if I didn’t get it right. One week in Delhi & Gurgaon, one week in Mumbai — a combination of home visits and office interviews, more than 30 in total (big thanks to Ankit for making those happen!). Ankit, Flavia, Mihir, and Maithili generously showed me around Mumbai, and Ankit’s mom even spoiled me with her home cooking and chai. South Asian hospitality is next level. Even while doing research interviews and entering people’s homes as a stranger, I’d get spoiled with chai and treats, and it got me thinking I need to step up my own hosting skills for friends and guests. Their level of generosity towards a clueless foreigner like me was really touching. On the way back home I even experienced my first bomb threat on my Air India flight (turns out it was a hoax). Someone had scribbled a bomb threat on a napkin and left it in the bathroom, and the police in the Mumbai airport made every passenger recreate the bomb threat note via their own handwriting.





- Joining Roxie on research work she was leading in Brazil & Korea! Great to see an old friend & collaborator lead fantastic research work — and to meet teammates from the international offices. This was also the first time I’d ever been in Brazil & Korea. In Rio, I was surprised by the wonders of cheese bread and how people regularly wake up to see the sun rise or get a beach workout in, even during the regular work week (there are so many people out even at 6 or 7 AM). In Seoul, I adored the open picnic culture at the Hanggang River Park (so many people brought their own lawn chairs and blankets, and plenty of soju bottles, too), and all the late-night cafes, pochas, and 24/7 hangover soup shops. After the business trip was over I spent a few extra days in Seoul, and stayed at a hostel Samson recommended after he befriended the owners — the hostel doubled as the owners’ family home, and we both wonder what it must have been like to have grown up there.


- Some work milestones: Live translation and live captions launched on the glasses — cool to see it out in the world after the whole team worked so hard on it. I also started interviewing research job candidates for work. At first it felt odd to be partly responsible for whether someone gets hired or not (especially in today’s competitive market), but I do enjoy all the stories I get to hear. There’s so many people doing amazing work.
- Meeting more literary heroes in person, and watching friends start their own journeys in becoming literary heroes. Viet Thanh Nguyen on the right, Hua Hsu on the left.
– Seeing Viet Thanh Nguyen at the Center for Fiction was really cool, especially after he published a new essay collection “To Save and to Destroy: Writing as an Other”. Apparently while he was writing his book a friend challenged him to write about joy since all his other chapters were serious, and that became the essay / chapter the “Joy of Otherness”.
– Hua Hsu was interviewing him, also from the Bay. And during the Q&A, half the question askers were from the Bay Area. We really do stick together. (It’s also especially rare to see suburban San Jose in mentioned in great works of literature).
– Then there was Ed Park with his short story collection, “An Oral History of Atlantis” — a compilaton of work over decades! During his talk he shared a story about how when he first found out he got nominated for the Pulitzer, he was preparing for an upcoming class lecture, and he had to keep going as if everything was normal.
– Jeremy Tiang who translated my favorite Chinese novels like Zhang Yueran’s “Cocoon” & “Women, Seated”, and Shang Xuetao’s “Rouge Street”. I did not realize Jeremy Tiang had such a spectacular British accent before meeting him. I remember him talking about how while it’s great to be known as an excellent translator, he also aspires to be known for his original works, too.
– And then Jessie wrote their debut history + cookbook on mayonnaise together with Elyse Inamine (“For the Love of Kewpie: A Cookbook & Celebration”)! Granada, Spain — walking back from the AlhambraMalaga, Spain — for Lea & Tadhg’s wedding
- Celebrating milestones with family, reunions with faraway friends:
– Mom officially retired, and so my brother and I flew back to California to celebrate together with her and Dad in June. Now they both get to travel around the world and do retirement hobby things. I wonder what they’ll get up to this year.
– Aunt Alice & Uncle Ming themselves made a big USA trip all the way from Hong Kong; got the chance to show them the NYC spots (Central Park, DUMBO, the NYC ferry and Staten Island ferry, fancy steakhouse, the whole works). They really wanted to see the Wall Street bull, and so we all got pictures with its metal balls.
– Traveled to Spain for Lea & Tadhg’s wedding, and then to deeper Jersey for Jina & SangHyun’s. Both weddings doubled as reunions; the first with exchange year friends and Bay Area life (two worlds colliding), and the second with friends from the Clubhouse app where we all spent hours of the day yapping with each other because we were bored out of our minds during the pandemic.
– I spent my 31st birthday in the Netherlands (rode bicycles around the Amsterdam forest and even visited a goat farm). I was there to see a lovely woman in the Hague, and the entire week was spent with more special people in my life: my Dutch teacher Marc, Ben & Domhnall from the Erasmus days, Sake & Lazlo & Victor from the speedskating team.
– It had been a few years since I saw Marc in person, and over a decade since I last saw my skeedskating friends. In the moments before the reunion, there’s that thought in the back of your head (and he tells me he had the same thought too): will you still have that connection all those years later? But as long as you are all asking the same kinds of curious & warm questions about life, you’re very likely to find that same wavelength once again.

Questions and themes on my mind for 2026:
- Handling societal shifts without going insane, going numb, or losing spirit: Every generation in history encounters its own challenges, although the modern ones feel more absurd: one minute I’m following tech trends and cartoon clips, and the next minute I see clips of ICE agents killing someone innocent & the government trying to lie about it. And then I am back to work in the office one hour later, watching someone panic about a figure on Google Slides. I can’t let this make me cynical, although it’s taking more conscious effort.
- More innocent societal shifts — is it the end of snail mail? (no way) A few weeks ago I saw that even the Danish post office closed down their doors after 400 years. The U.S. still has theirs for now. I’ll rebel for as long as I can, but the world is indeed moving away from handwritten anything (it’s harder and harder to find postage stamps while traveling for example). All the more reason to keep it alive.
AI stuff: I use Claude nearly every day for research work and for personal use, something I wouldn’t have said in the beginning of last year. These models are growing so quickly. Even more fascinating is watching people who usually aren’t early adopters for tech start to integrate it everywhere. I feel like I need to pump up the pace of learning the tools if I don’t want to get automated myself in this new world.
– Out of the entire family, I still think mom is the biggest power user of AI tools, especially for ChatGPT. She’ll take photos of home, ask it for decluttering suggestions, and send photos of its recommendations to the family group chat — a not-so-subtle hint for me to also organize and declutter. (I came to NYC with just two suitcases, and now after 6 years I’ve amassed all sorts of books, papers, clothes, sentimental knick knacks, etc).

Love & relationships: The other day, Boris Cherny the creator of Claude Code came to give a Q&A talk at the company. The pro tips for Claude Code and discussions on where the field is going were cool, but then I also found out he moved to Naru, Japan after his partner (now wife) got a dream job there just a few months into the relationship. He moved for love!! And I didn’t. Aaa!!
– To be fair to both of us, starting a long distance relationship from the beginning is really rough. A relationship that’s 90% FaceTime calls and WhatsApp messages day-to-day is my nightmare (even though I have other dear friends who make it work). I still think it’s the right call for me, sad and unromantic as it is.
– Steven & Rachel like to ask me if I’ve ever been in love before. If being in love means changing (for the better) after meeting someone, then yes that has definitely happened. For more details, ask me out to beer or tea time together. 😉
– Anyways, all this is making me think more about what compatibility means in relationships, and what I’d be willing to give up (or not) for a shot at building something together with someone special.
What are the active tradeoffs I am making if I keep doing what I am doing? Earlier I wrote about all the different 3-6 year anniversaries I am celebrating. That is: staying at my current research role, staying at the bookstore, staying in New York City, living the bachelor pad life. (I actually really like my life, which is why I keep doing these things). But if I was still doing the exact same routines five years from now, a large part of me would be kind of wondering if I squandered other chances to explore new ways to grow. I have no big decisions made yet, but this is how I’m feeling today.
Closing the loop & tightening the time between thinking about doing something and then actually doing it (especially for communication). Mostly, I want to reduce the number of “sorry for leaving you hanging there” kinds of apology texts to friends who write “how are you” messages that deserve a thoughtful response beyond “good, you?”. While we’re not meant to respond to messages and notifications 24/7, many of my busiest friends and colleagues are also the most responsive. Responsiveness is another way of being reliable in the modern age.
– Separately, I’ve been told in the past by people I’ve dated that I don’t text or check in on them often enough (e.g., multiple times per day), to the point that they think I am no longer interested in them, when I actually am. My takeaway is that everyone has a different way of feeling seen, and it doesn’t kill me to send in a check-in text now and then.
– I’d like to get better at “pebbling” throughout the week — not to everyone, but for the homies whenever I think of them. Some penguin species will do this for their partners and friends. Most of the human pebbles I receive are usually news articles, memes, and IG reels from Samson, Szeyin, my brother, and mom — they are actually really good at doing that in my life. They are my top pebblers, and they inspire me to do the same.

- Curating personal spaces and environments. Research fieldwork made me good at being a guest in people’s homes (though I like to think I was pretty good at that before).And I can play host in places that have already been furnished and decorated (e.g., late nights at the bookstore). But what about a space that I am completely responsible for decorating or arranging? Then I haven’t really put much thought into that. I’m talking about my 300 square foot / 28 square meter studio here. There’s artwork and gifts from friends I haven’t hung up yet, so my walls are blank other than the giant IKEA Billy bookshelf.And Samson, Rachel, Steven, Jeff, and my brother have all told me a sofa would be good. Jeff says decorating your place is like offering a window into your soul, and has been checking in on me nearly every single week since the new year started.

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That’s all for now! Enough talking, time to do stuff. 11.5% of the year has already passed!! I’ll wrap up with my favorite work from M.C. Escher that I got to see in person at the “Escher in the Palace”. I did not realize these pieces of work were all woodblock or limestone etchings before Escher turned them into prints.
















