Blog anniversary!

Today is my 7th anniversary of starting this blog. When I started, I didn’t really think that I would still be doing almost daily updates 7 years later. Sometimes I feel like blogging is a lonely sport because even though I know I have a number of dedicated fans, it sometimes feels like I’m talking to no one. But also, sometimes I feel like I’m talking to everyone in the sense that I do censor myself, I don’t talk a lot about my true fears and frustrations, of which there are many. Also, as we’ve become busier, I feel like the blog represents something like 0.1% of what I’m dealing with and thinking of each day. Also, with the advent of Facebook, sometimes I feel like personal blogging has become irrelevant, that the blogs of note are all big, commercial or sponsored blogs.

Many times in the past year, I’ve thought about stopping simply because I have nothing to say, I usually stop for a few days, and then I start up again. I didn’t know 7 years ago that I’d be here today, I wonder where I’ll be in 7 more years? Will I still be at Just Regular Folks? I don’t know. I’ll just have to wait and find out.

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Funny Excerpt.

Laff. Okay, so I went to a friend’s wedding over July 4th weekend, and I ran into Mom and Dad’s family friends, Ching-Mao and Li-Pei Zin at the wedding. Apparently they knew the parents of the bride, with whom I am friends with. Here’s a funny post from Yi-Ling’s blog:

My mom kept wanting me to setup my cousin with Don – and I told her in response that I thought I may be just a tad busy on my wedding day. She continued on this train of thought the day after the wedding tho after she found out that D’s parents are friends with our family friends as well. So now he is a properly approved taiwanese boy. Don’t worry D, I keep telling her that I don’t think you guys are a match but maybe she’ll find some other girls to throw at you.

Hahhahah.

Fannie Farmer.

I was suppose to present a lesson on Fannie Farmer today at Sunday school to the 5-6 year olds. I signed up to teach this lesson because I figured that I could just get the kids together in the church kitchen and bake something. Yesterday (as a trial run), I made 2 batches of “Fannie Farmer’s Famous Fudge”. It never turned into fudge. It ended up more like chocolate frosting. Apparently, fudge is candy and candy is hard to make without a candy thermometer. Vince decided that before I threw out the fudge, he wanted to play with it a little, I didn’t realize that he meant he was really going to play with it. Sigh. The things I let my children do…

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Plumbing.

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My parents are in town. My parents are professional plumbers in a way – they design piping systems for nuclear power plants, so they know all about stresses and damages on piping systems. My dad spent a good part of today looking at our own (non-radioactive) piping problem and going to Home Depot for supplies. It is still not fixed. Tomorrow – phase 2 of the repair involves my mother, the other piping professional (who was busy today playing Mah-johnn with her pals to deal with a leaky tub).

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Mom, Chong Ming Island, & “Tu Long (Muddy Dragon)” – Chinese Alligator

Mom, as a native of Chong Ming Island, must pretty excite about the story below. She probably can tell us a story or two about “Tu Long” and her childhood there 🙂 See article below:

Reintroduced Chinese Alligators Now Multiplying In The Wild In China

ScienceDaily (July 18, 2009) — The Wildlife Conservation Society announced today that critically endangered alligators in China have a new chance for survival. The WCS’s Bronx Zoo, in partnership with two other North American parks and the Department of Wildlife Conservation and Management of the State Forestry Administration of China, has successfully reintroduced alligators into the wild that are now multiplying on their own.

The alligator hatchlings—15 in number—are the offspring of a group of alligators that includes animals from the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Bronx Zoo. The baby alligators represent a milestone for the 10-year effort to reintroduce the Chinese alligator on Chongming Island, located at the mouth of China’s Yangtze River.

The announcement was made at the International Congress for Conservation Biology, convened by the Society for Conservation Biology in Beijing, China (July 11-16).

“We are grateful to our Chinese partners for their commitment to reintroduce Chinese alligators back into the wild,” said Dr. Steven E. Sanderson, President and CEO of the Wildlife Conservation Society. “WCS has championed careful wildlife reintroductions for more than a century. The reintroduction of Chinese alligators is a great example of how WCS partners with governments and local communities around the world to save wildlife and wild places.”
“This is fantastic news,” said WCS researcher Dr. John Thorbjarnarson, one of the world’s foremost experts on crocodilians and a participant in the project. “The success of this small population suggests that there’s hope for bringing the Chinese alligator back to some parts of its former distribution.”

Plans to reintroduce Chinese alligators started in 1999 with a survey conducted by WCS, the Anhui Forestry Bureau, and the East China Normal University in Anhui Province, the only remaining location where the reptiles are still found in the wild in what is a small fraction of the alligator’s former range. The results of the survey were dire, with an estimate of fewer than 130 animals in a declining population.

An international workshop on the species was held in 2001, followed by recommendations for the reintroduction of captive bred alligators. The first three animals released in Hongxing Reserve of Xuancheng County in Anhui in 2003 were from the Anhui Research Center of Chinese Alligator Reproduction (ARCCAR).

To ensure the maximum genetic diversity for the effort, project participants imported 12 more animals to Changxing Yinjiabian Chinese Alligator Nature Reserve from North America, including four from the Bronx Zoo. From this group, three animals from the U.S. were released in 2007 along with three more alligators from Changxing. The alligators were given health examinations by veterinary professionals from WCS’s Global Health Program and the Shanghai Wildlife Zoo and fitted with radio transmitters for remote monitoring before being released.

Experts reported that the reintroduced alligators successfully hibernated, and then in 2008, bred in the wild.

With a former range that covered a wide watershed area of East China, the Chinese alligator—or “tu long,” which means “muddy dragon”—is now listed as “Critically Endangered” on IUCN’s Red List of Threatened Species and is the most threatened of the 23 species of crocodilians in the world today. It is one of only two alligator species in existence (the other is the better known, and much better off, American alligator).

Speeding ticket!

I got my first speeding ticket this week. Surprise, surprise! I am not a speeder. I am a grandmother-type driver. A little awkward and certainly a little slow. I’m often on the highway being passed on both the left and the right while I enjoy cruisin’ at the posted 65 MPH.

I got caught in a camera trap going 45 in a 35 MPH zone. I totally defend myself (while it is certainly true I was going faster than the posted speed limit) – look at the photo, it’s a four lane road divided by a grass median and there are no other cars around me. I think that 45 was a perfectly reasonable speed in this type of situation. Sigh. Forty bucks down the toilet.

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A 9 Dollar Lunch Box

Today, we flew back to Washington DC from San Luis Obispo, CA. We had only 30 minutes of connection time in Los Angeles airport. The plane was 10 minutes late already. Therefore, there was no time for McDonald’s or brought some food up and “into the thin air”. Mom prepared 2 bags of peanuts (no salt), 1 bag of cranberries and 2 nectarines. But, she didn’t tell me in which bag, mine or hers. Also, we happened to sit in the center seat on different rows. This time, rows were super close to each other and I even couldn’t reach my space underneath the seat in front of me when the front seat was in inclined position. Besides, one of two toilets was out of order. People lined up in a long line on the aisle just for that. It was jam pack!

Lunch time came, and I thought 9 dollar a lunch box was just too much. If it is too much for me, then it must be super expensive for Mom. But, anyway, I struggled getting up and squeezed myself toward the back where the service kitchen and toilets were. I bought one for her. Then, I struggled backward toward the front and gave it to her. Sure enough, Mom didn’t bend her trend and just sat there without a lunch box but enjoyed some candies instead.

After deplaned, she asked me about the lunch box. She thought it was expensive too but was happy nevertheless. Yes, someone was thinking about her all the time 🙂

I told her “This is what a husband for” and, then, joked “If some one else, not me, pampers her, then I am in real trouble.” She laughed with a hearty smile. I liked that.

Moving on up in the world.

I’m happy to report that since I’ve been doing well at work and slowly moving up the seniority levels, I’m going to move into my very own private office, hopefully next week. It still won’t have a window, but at least it will be MINE, all MINE! Muhahaha!! I do enjoy having a roomie, especially my present office mate who is a true sweetheart, but when we heard we both had the chance to get our own space, it took us only 30 seconds to decide to ditch each other.

Sadly, the fish are not going to be moving with me. Two days ago, I changed the water in exactly the same way I’ve been doing for weeks and then yesterday, I came into the office and they were both belly-up. Whatever happened, it was totally my fault. I buried them at sea and hummed Taps while I flushed the toilet. I’m sorry, they were good fish.

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Best Obama’s Speech Ever

President Obama said [No one has written your destiny for you,” he said, directing his remarks to “all the other Barack Obamas out there” who might one day grow up to be president. “Your destiny is in your hands and don’t you forget that. That’s what we have to teach all of our children! No excuses! No excuses!”] during a NAACP Convention.

It is about time that one takes one’s responsibilities seriously and doesn’t blame other for anything and everything. One can see, in upscale places or gathering, there are fewer and fewer of them. Why? Most likely, it is due to economical reasons than race. I hope they are going to do better and better. I hope they are compatitive enough in our multi-racial society and can leap forward further and further. But, this has to come from inside of oneself. No laws, no quotas, especially no excuses can help them to achieve their dreams, which is my dreams and every one else’ dreams too. Hard working will do the trick! Furthermore, cover-all excuses of racism is going no where, except holding them back, and therefore is no good to them.

Fish Head Stew

Yesterday, as usual, we walked along the beach after dinner. There were three persons there fishing. Nearby, several fresh fish, caught by other people, was laying on the beach. Their fish fillet parts were cut off and gone. But, the remaining parts were still there, including the HEAD.

Mom picked them up with the dog poop bags provided by the city along the beach. Those three knew what Mom was doing. “To prepare fish head stew” they said.

Today, a day before heading back to Washington DC for our monthly trip home, we suppose to eat out. But, Mom would rather stay home and prepare her “Fish Head Stew” tonight.

I saw she was so excited to pick up fresh fish heads on the beach. I joked to her “You look more excited to pick up fresh fish heads on the beach than to pick up your husband in the church” 🙂