School & Textbooks

This is the last semester. I’m graduating in May and as much as I love my school, it’s time to move on.

I’m taking five courses this semester:

  • playwriting
  • math
  • physical science
  • mass media effects
  • writing capstone and portfolio (adv. special topics course made for me)

Anytime I have to take a math or science course, I know the textbooks are going to cost an arm and a leg. School starts on Monday, but I’ve already gone ahead and purchased/rented three out of four the books I needed via Amazon. A lot of students wait until the first week or even the second week of classes to get their books, but that’s when the bookstore experiences bumrushing and Amazon goes out of stock. I don’t have time for that!

I’m excited about my mass media effects textbook. It looks really nice. Here are my books:

I’m actually writing the syllabus for the writing capstone course. The power I wield in my hands! I have a put together a portfolio but I’m going to add a modern spin.

Can We Be Americans? (Random Thoughts of the Day)

Being born in America by Chinese parents who grew up in Vietnam, I never knew who to pledge my allegiance to. My last name is a former Chinese name translated into Vietnamese. I speak Cantonese but grew up on pho noodles, dim sum, and Jersey subs. My favorite food is actually Mediterranean by the way and I like that being an American allowed me to be whoever I wanted to be.

But Americans generally dislike the Chinese because of Communism and the media, and they hated Vietnam for winning the war.

For a while, I disassociated myself from being Chinese because I was different from “them”. I did not want to be someone people hated. But recently, I’ve realized you cannot be an American without first having been something else. Without China, I would not be here to call myself an American. I cannot bring myself to hate my blood and try to make myself seem better because I love Big Macs or can read with a CNN America accent.

I see so many people out there who try to mentally wipe out their ancestral heritage and it pained me the day I saw a man tell another that he was not like him–that they were different, because he was Black and the other man was African. This man’s words signify he failed to see the blackness of his skin, the history of racism and slavery, and the African to his American. We cannot hate ourselves because colonization has taught us to do so. We cannot be Americans if we do not embrace our diversities and tend to the cultural roots we are given at birth.