Hurricane Irene brings Reality TV to a Long Day

How do you take a crazy day and make it somewhat amusing?  You take the worst storm to hit the Northern East Coast in years, you add 20+ hours of travel, you visit the site of where you met your spouse, and then you bring the hit Reality TV Show, “Desperate Housewives of New Jersey” to the mix.

For all those caught in the panic in the NY tri-state area over Hurricane Irene I do apologize for my making light of this storm as I do realize there was some damage.  Anyone trying to legitimately escape from New Jersey today (actually yesterday) found their flights cancelled with no other options (my customer service agent from India suggested I drive to Harrisburg in the middle of the night to catch a flight backwards to Dulles).  What?  Note to United and Continental Airlines, give your foreign customer service agents a lesson in American geography!

Fortunately we got the brave idea to rent a car and drive 6 hours to Pittsburgh, fly to Houston and then on San Francisco.  Well, it turns out a lot of people had that idea.  We lined up at 8am at the Hertz counter and found people driving to all parts of the country.  Then, on the Pennsylvania Turnpike we saw cars stacked with supplies getting out of town (sure some were heading off to college).  We took a quick pit stop to Pittsburgh and visited Carnegie Mellon where my wife and I met as undergrads and hadn’t been back since.

When we arrived in Pittsburgh we found people who had even gone to catch 6am flights in Newark, NJ and were turned away and headed straight to Western Pennsylvania.  Incidentally I ran into a business colleague who appears on the Reality TV show, ” Real Housewives of New Jersey”.  I guess even reality TV was escaping Hurricane Irene.

Real Housewives of NJ cast running from Hurricane Irene

As it turns out, the whole cast (sans kids) was on the same flights with me and my family.  For you Real Housewives fans on the trip were Joe and Teresa, Rich & Kathy, Joe & Melissa, Caroline & Albert & Family ( Albie, Chris & Lauren) along with Lauren’s boyfriend and Chris and Albie’s roommate, & Chris and Jacqueline.  There were a couple young women along who I think were the travel secretaries for the show.  Additionally a couple of the brothers ( I think they are Joe Giudice’s brothers) were along.

Now those who follow know I’m a big fan of reality TV, but it was fun to see what people in general thought.  Young girls from California were going nuts.  One girl who sat next to me asked who I knew on the show as she was talking to them (I actually wouldn’t have if I hadn’t needed to exchange seats with Caroline’s children so that I could sit with my own kids).  Otherwise this group wasn’t really bothered at all.  I saw maybe one or two people bother them for a photo and as a group they all seemed cordial.  What I did find interesting was that a couple of “Jersey Shore” type guys said they didn’t watch the show because it made them look bad although they admitted that they were representative of a pretty funny stereotype, but just perpetuated things.  So basically more people outside New Jersey found it more interesting than those within New Jersey.  I knew I’m probably part of the male minority that watches the show anyway although I would say that for the most part the women looked thinner, the Joes looked shorter, and the cast seemed more subdued than you see on television.  Of course that could all be part of the fact that they had been traveling for 24 hours as well.

It looks like Northern California will be a featured road trip in Season 4 as they will be spending a week here.  Definitely some wine tasting is my guess given that no kids were along.  Perhaps Jacqueline and Chris might be visiting Ashley (if she did move out to California).

Some observations:

  1. Everyone seemed to get along nicely
  2. They all tried to stay very low key
  3. People were most interested in saying hi to Joe & Teresa
  4. Joe Gorga.. yeah he’s short, but man can that guy strut….my 11 year old now can copy him saying “how ya doin'”
  5. Joe Giudice pulling around Teresa’s leopard spotted rollie!  Too funny!  and then taking a couple tries to get it in the overhead!
  6. Vito and the chatting up these two girls from Price Waterhouse fresh out of college…everyone was in stitches listening to the convo for 4 hours!
  7. When offered Albie my exit row seats, Albie picked his sister to sit with him and not his brother.
  8. Al & Caroline and Chris & Jacqueline sat in 1st class on the second leg of the trip.

Let’s hope no tables get flipped or wine racks thrown while they are here in San Francisco this week!  In the end, it turns out a hurricane which created rough travel conditions for all turned into a somewhat amusing and entertaining day!

35 Months Later – Living with Cancer

Breast Cancer Logo
Raise breast sawareness

35 months ago my wife was diagnosed with breast cancer. It seemes so long ago but time really flew The care we received from the UCSF Breast Cancer Clinic was unparallelled. This week I came across an article covering the head of the clinic and thought I’d share it with all of you:

by Julian Guthrie for the San Francisco Chronicle:
Surgeon Laura Esserman, head of breast cancer research and treatment at UCSF, has favorite songs she sings to patients as they’re about to go under a general anesthetic. There’s “Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing,” and her all-time favorite, “For Good.”

One of her greatest areas of impact may come through a statewide research project called Athena, which she has spearheaded and will involve the early screening and follow-up for breast cancer of 150,000 women statewide at five UC cancer centers. The University of California initiative has just begun to enroll patients at UCSF.

Q: What are you excited about right now in the cancer field?

A: We started enrolling patients at two of our five centers, with others starting to enroll in July. We have also started doing a comprehensive risk assessment for every woman who comes in for screenings. We are looking at prevention as part of primary care. We are at the beginning of the road in making breast cancer prevention like heart disease prevention. We want to build a new model.

Q: What is the latest recommendation in terms of mammography?

A: If you are under 50, you need to sit down with your provider and ask for your level of risk. What is my breast density? Should I get screened or not screened? If your risk is high, yes, get screened. But again, I think screening has the most significant benefit for women between the ages of 50 and 70.

Q: What are the most important lifestyle changes people can make for breast cancer prevention?

A: If you are postmenopausal and you are overweight, you will have higher levels of estrogen. Through diet and exercise, you can bring that down, which is good for everything, including a sense of well-being. We try to get women to stick to no more than three to four glasses of wine a week, as alcohol is an associated risk factor for breast cancer.

Q: Have you developed a thick skin in delivering the news to women and men that they have breast cancer?

A: I don’t have a thick skin. You can’t. The good news is that there are some people for whom cancer is not that significant, where you can really reassure the person. Of course, it’s very hard if you know someone is in a really bad situation. I face it with them. You can’t just sit back and say this is an academic exercise. This is something that affects their lives – that determines whether their children will grow up and know them.

Q: Where did you grow up, and what did you want to be?

A: I was born in Chicago, and when I was 9 my family moved to Miami. I always wanted either to be a cancer researcher or cancer doctor.

Q: What was your awakening to cancer?

A: Hmm. I read a biography of Madame Curie. I thought what she did was cool.

Q: Where do you live in the city and where are your favorite hangouts?

A: Ashbury Heights. I love to work my way through the Top 100 restaurant list. My son and I were working our way through the cheap eats list.

Q: Secret talents?

A: I love to barbecue anything.

Q: How does working in the midst of cancer, when life becomes more precious, affect you?

A: You never know what’s in store for you. You have to live life to the fullest. I have a great sense of urgency. We need more answers and solutions.

Q: If you weren’t working as a pioneer in the breast cancer field, what would you be doing?

A: Trying to improve the education system. When I cure cancer, I’ll start working on that.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2011/06/22/DDS81JRVIS.DTL#ixzz1QpkKfK4H

No Ties or Cards Please

Happy Father's Day
Father’s Day.

I say this every year and not to be unappreciative of my greatest gift – being a dad, but for me Father’s Day is not about me, but for my Father who left my life 7 years ago. To those of us who had a supportive and close relationship with their Father, you know what I mean.

“Just be a good kid”
“Just clean your room”
“Save your money”

That is what my dad always used to say on Father’s Day when I would ask if there is anything he needed. He said this whether I was 10, 15, 20, or 30 years old. It didn’t matter to him and now I realize that as much as he enjoyed his day, he was honoring his own father and not himself.

Well I should say, he did honor himself. He rewarded himself on Fathers Day with a game of golf with his friends. Fathers Day then rewarded my dad with his own Fathers Day memories and to this day they are memories for me. Fathers Day will always be his day. In 1987, my dad let me caddy for him at our local golf course on Father’s Day. Getting up at 7am on a cold foggy morning was my gift to my dad. on hole #17 with the worlds top players just across the street playing the US Open at San Francisco’s Olympic Club, there were no roars, no fist pumps, no new cars awarded as my dad hit his 3rd and last hole-in-one of his life.

As I picked the ball out of the hole and gave my dad a big hug and his friends celebrated what would eventually be free drinks back at the clubhouse. All I could say was, “Happy Fathers Day, Dad”. I still remember the smile on his face to this day when he gave me a wink and a simple “Thank You”. I didn’t give him a present, but he gave one to himself. They say golf is a game of generations. For me, Fathers Day will forever be about that day for my dad. I am only glad I was able to share that day with him so that I could relive it every year.

Giants World Champions Baseball Songs

Haven’t blogged in a bit, mostly because of time.  It has been busy at my new job .  Strike that.  Not busy, but crazy. 

Anyway, about to start posting regularly again.  Have been attending many Giants games lately and following a championship season, the marketing arm of the Giants is in full swing.  The in-stadium multi-media show is amazing.  What I thought I’d do here today just to ease back into things is post some of the cool songs related to the Giants that are often played in the stadium to pump up the crowd.  Which one do you like best?:

I know purists might just prefer to hear I Left My Heart in San Francisco or Talking Baseball, but humor me.

Finding Inspiration

Mountains are the means, the man is the end.  The goal is not to reach the tops of the mountains, but to improve the man.

– Walter Bonatti, Italian mounaineer

I’m one of those people who is always taken by inspirational movies, especially if they are true.  They really help me dream and look for solutions in life.  Having been in the online retail business though, I am not tainted by the fact that I know many movies take their liberties  with the truth, whether they are “The Blind Side” or “Rudy” or “61”.  Like most, I am one of those people who usually tells you to read the book first.  The books are always better, right?  Movies always leave out the details and don’t capture the true emotion.  Not the emotion of the writer, but the emotion you feel from interpreting the words as your eyes meet them.

In this modern day where social media allows us access to more of these stories, I find myself these days inspired by the stories of two fellow alums of Carnegie Mellon.  I was lucky enough as an undergraduate to have met Randy Pausch when he was a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon and shared a carpool over Thanksgiving from Pittsburgh to Baltimore.  His well documented You Tube video, called the Last Lecture: Achieving Your Childhood Dreams became a hit and inspired many who faced death with a sense of calm, respect and fortitude to keep on teaching and giving back.  He also gave inspiration to living life to the fullest.  In fact there was no need for a movie as the video captured the leacture and was all that was needed.

More recently, I picked up the book, 127 Hours: Between A Rock and A Hard Place.  It is actually a little hard to imagine this scenario if you’ve never been there.  I saw the original documentary many years ago on Dateline with Tom Brokaw which I recommend you all watch before seeing the movie or reading the book.  It will help you with the perspective.  I’ve inserted Part 1 here.

The amazing parts are the actual video re-count that he captures where he makes comments and last testaments in expectation that he will not be able to live to tell us family and friends that he loves them. 

I’m about one third of the way through the book and I thought I’d review the Dateline interview again this morning.  I’m always looking to inspire my son who at age 11 still is learning to dream and think big.  For the first time I saw him riveted and inspired not by the crazy outrageous voyage that led the main character to his predicament, but by his will to succeed, to remain calm and cool under extreme pressure and to show a strong will to find one’s passion. 

I’m ready to go out today and succeed.  In the book, Aron Ralston talks about his richness in life that he appreciates.  I intend to go out there and do that today and look forward to finding tomorrow’s inspiration

Letter from a Real Asian Tiger Dad – Letter #3

 “One of the things that my parents have taught me is never listen to other people’s expectations. You should live your own life and live up to your own expectations, and those are the only things I really care about.”
—Tiger Woods

Speaking of Tiger parents, I found the quote above and thought it most appropriate for this post given that Tiger Woods was trained by one of the ultimate Tiger parents.  Tiger was trained by his own dad and held to high expectations by him.  As we all know, he became arguably the best golfer of all time.  His father (African American) dominated his life while his quiest Asian mother watched idly from behind the ropes.  Now his off the course issues can’t be overlooked.  Were his failures the result of being raised by a Tiger parent?  As a Tiger parent, you can’t be expected or expect to be able to manage your child forever.

This past week I was speaking with a work colleague about our 11 year old sons.  He told me how he got upset with his son for speaking on his cell phone, chasing girls and forgetting his studies.  How did he handle it?  With a belt.  He said he teared up that he did it and was shaking afterwards.  The joke (myth) I always hear is that Asian people never hit their children and that other cutlures are more apt to physically discipline their child.  Whether stereotype or truth, there really is no right way.  It depends upon the child.

The following is the last of 3 letters that my grandfather gave to me when I told him as a young teen that I wasn’t going to work in his meat company.  They were letters that his friend had given to his son who had just graduated from college.  Together they reflect what was believed at the time by elderly Asian  men to be the proper use of old Far Eastern culture family values and Western culture.  These elderly Asian men had nothing and believed that family came first and that sacrifice in the name of family was much more honorable.  Please remember this letter is over 30 years old.

==============

June 22, 1978

Dear XXXX,

As your father I welcome you home, and as the President of YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY.   I welcome you to enter YYYYYYY .  I know you have given up your $14,500 job with a very well thought of consulting company and are willing to work with YYYYYY in order to receive the knowledge and experience in management from me.  As you know, I started my business when I was only sixteen.  I had no friends to help me and no capital to operate the business, but I have built my business in a way as it is today.  Furthermore, I have been formally educated for only six years.  But I have been learning very hard by myself, and I believe that today, my knowledge in the economy and in politics could be better than what the avearge people possess.

As regards to your job, in general parents want to send their children to other companies for receiving the initial training in order for them not t be spoiled.  I cannot agree with them in their views.  When you work in the big instititutions your job is only  limited in the very small area.  Your work experience an d knowledge when then be suitable for a limited small area in a big organization like YYYYYYY. I have some experience with some employees of Nihon Schering, who worked with Takedi and Shionogi.  These employees had obtained a very little working experience from those big companies, but they had learnd how to criticize the work instead of how to improve the work.  As Mr. Takeda  told me, in his experience the best employees he had acquired were those who came from Nihon, even they were not the best situation for Nihon.

Naturally it was difficult for the father to employ his children in his own company.  If the father expects his children to perform a good job, he should make himself a model to show his children.  This is not easy.  For most fathers in my age want to be relaxed and enjoy their late life, especially when they have enough money to support themselves.  But I am still willing to work hard to set an example to show you until you have learned the business.

In your case, you are very lucky because you are well-educated, you have the capital from your father, and you have many friends from your own and from your father.  I believe you can do hundred times better and be more successful than your father , if you try hard.

You work with YYYYY and you certainly hope one day you will be promoted to the management level.  To be a member of the management, it means you are in a high position and receive more money, but it also requires you to perform a more important job with more responsibilities.  To be a member of the management in YYYYYYY, as the policy adopted in Nihon Schering,

1. You need to work more than other employees,

2. You need to perform more important work,

3. You need to perform more difficult work, and

4. You should be a model to show to the other employees.

I know the above requirements are not easy to perform.  But, for your future success, you should try your best to achieve it.

Love from

Your dear father

===================

I’ve kept these letters for over 32 years.  I still find the nuggets in them, but am reminded of the stern nature by which the patriarchs of Asian families ruled their families.  You take this back to modern times and there is no way I can parent like this with my own children.  While I try to teach my kids the value of the nuclear family and that working hard and striving to be the best that you can be is important, it is no guarantee for success.

What everyone keeps asking me though is if this individual and his father ended up okay.  Well the truth is that the person these letters were written to eventually became the CEO of his dad’s company and took over as CEO 10 years ago.  He is a mulit-millionaire public figure and I would venture to guess that he is more successful than his own father.  His two younger brothers are okay financially although they both left their father’s business and received only the value of their trusts. It must be mentioned that  the father’s philosophy did have it’s toll on the family.  He divorced his wife, and she went back to Asia with their daughter.  His old-school treatment of the women in his life could not withstand the pressures of Western culture .

This is the last of the 3-letter series of the Asian Tiger dad.

Letters from a Real Asian Tiger Dad – Letter #2

A son can bear with equanimity the loss of his father, but the loss of his inheritance may drive him to despair.
Niccolo Machiavelli
Tiger Dad

I read today the Tiger mom’s husband was backing his wife.  Of course he would.  As the article suggests, these two sure know how to utilize the media to promote their book.  As I read more and more, I think that we are missing the point.  These parents are just guiding their children with a firm hand.  To many of us out there who never had a parent who pushed hard, this may seem like a foreign concept.  It is a fine art.  A balancing act of cultivating, nurturing, and motivating without a rebellion.

When I was young, we were all taught to treat my grandfather with respect.   When you visited my grandfather you had to listen to him speak his philosophies even if you thought they were outdated.  This was a very successful man and he didn’t get to where he was without strong conviction.  He had no education and he somehow raised 6 boys and my mother from the streets of Chinatown to the posh estates of Atherton, CA. All of his sons except his first worked for him in his meat company.  Even his nephews worked for him.  It was a family business.  If you were a male, you were expected to work in my grandfather’s meat packing company.  I remember spending one summer when I was 12 (a year older than my son) that as an 80 pound kid while my friends were on vacation, I pushed around slabs of beef twice my size in a 20 degree refrigerated meet locker slipping and sliding on the discarded fat on the the floor.  My parents knew I’d hate it, but they wanted me to understand what it meant to work hard and to understand what made my grandfather successful.  This was before the movie Rocky ever came out, so there was no Asian glory in pushing around bloody carcasses of beef.  I didn’t earn minimum wage of $3/hr. My grandfather would yell my name at lunch over the speaker to come in and eat a lunch that he made.  That was my pay.  Family worked for my grandfather gratis.  It was a privilege, not a job.   Hard work, family values, and a tight fist with money is what I learned and all I needed to know about my grandfather’s money.  This is something shared amongst many Asian cultures around the world.  It is also shared by the cultures of many of my Caucasian friends who are closer to their heritage and have tight family bonds.

As the first son of the first daughter in a traditional Chinese family, not as much was expected of me, but these letters which I am re-publishing are because of this incident.  When I told my grandfather that I was going to camp the next summer instead of working for him in his freezer, he asked his friend, a successful Asian businessman, for copies of letters he had just written for his own son who had just graduated from Harvard.   My grandfather gave these copies of the letters to my dad in hope that they would inspire me to join the family business.  I never worked at the meat company again, but mostly because I understood that I wasn’t in the direct male lineage of the family.  I spent the next summer helping out for $3/hr at my mother’s gift shop selling jelly beans and gift cards.

My grandfather and his  good friend would always go for long walks or sit down over tea for hours discussing business and the issues of raising young children in the Western world.  They were raising Asian children in a 98% white upper class neighborhood where kids drove Porsches to school and tied tennis sweaters around their necks despite the 75 degree weather.  Another planet to 2 Asian men in their 60s who fought for everything they had.  Both men had multiple sons and a daughter.  The following is a second letter in a series of the three letters written by my grandfather’s friend to his eldest son.  My guess is that these letters were inspired by those long conversations with my grandfather:

===================

Dear XXXX:

The following statement tells you my concept and philosophy in the disposition of property and money.

Before I came to the United States I had established five trustees, four for each of the children and one for us.  The value of of each child’s trustee is about $250,000.00 and ours is about $1,000,000.00.  The children’s trustees get their income from the investment, such like dividend and interest.  The income of ours will be evenly distributed to you children when it is matured  All the trustees are under the fidelity and management of  XXXXX Bank and will be matured in February 1984.  When mature, the value of each child’s trustee will be about $350,000.00 to $500,000.00.

The above-mentioned property and money which is to be given to the children has been decided, but the remaining of our other property and money has not been decided.  It depends on the followings:

1) Your behavior and attitude with which you treat your parents and your contribution to the family.

2) Your concept and philosophy in utilizing money.  If you expect, after receiving the property and money from us, to enjoy an easy life for yourself, then the chance of receiving the inherited property and money from us is zero.  You may have your enjoyment with the money you earn from your work.

3) If you expect to improve yourself, your skill and knowledge, and to develop some kind of business, then the chance is big.  But it still depends on some other factors.

4) If you expect to utilize our property and money to commit certain contribution to the society and to the country, then the chance will even be bigger.

Anyhow, the distribution of our property and money to you is under certain conditions: 1) to improve yourself, 2) to contribute to the family, and 3) to contribute to society and to the country. Otherwise, you will be very disappointed and it is better not to expect it.

For the time being, I still have not made any will, until I am able to have a full observation of you.

If you want to work the family business, in order to maintain our relationship better than today, you should treat our business as an ordinary outside working institute, i.e. you are only allowed to spend every single penny which is connected with the business.  If you make any expenditure not connected with the business, or you want to get advantage from the company, it will hurt our relationship and I strongly suggest you not do it, even sometimes if sometimes it can get some advantage from income tax.  If you want to get some merchandise and/or facility from the company, you should pay a fair market price.  You may make some special arrangement with me with regards to expenditures which are connected to your personal purpose.  But I still hope this should not happen very often.

In family, I hope you will pay all minor expenses by yourself, such as laundry, clothes, and cosmetic, etc., etc..

PRIVACY.  In order to maintain our happy life, all of us should from the bottom of our hearts fully respect each other’s privacy.  We should pay attention to the following points.  1) We should all treat our friends as mutual friends, and not to interfere with their personal relationships. 2) Ordinary daily life, such as meal time and others, should be complied with family customs, without creating extra work or burden to the family. 3) In order not to let the family worry, we should let the family know our rough schedule, especially our whereabouts when we leave home.

This is my second letter to you, discussing the concept and philosophy in property and money.  This letter will also be distributed to your brothers.  I welcome your  comments, and theirs, on my letters No. 1 and on this letter No. 2 .

Love from,

Your father

==========================

Granted these letters are over 30 years old, but they reflect the culture by which many in my generation were subjected to.  The firm but loving hand.  The family unit is a microcosm of what children are exposed to compared to what they see day to day.  And the gap between the 2 cultures and philosophies grows every day.  It would be only natural for us to be shocked by such dialogue to a young adult today.   Do not get lost in the financial figures (remember those numbers are circa 1978), but consider Paris Hilton’s father sending this letter to his daughter.  Notice how my grandfather’s friend doesn’t even address the fact that his daughter would get a chance to see the letter.  She is treated equally financially, but what is expected of her is not mentioned.  Perhaps that is why Amy Chua became the Tiger Mom.   She had to guess the expectations of achievement to uphold the family values.

I can divulge that while the two younger sons and daughter did not go on to work for their father long term, they are all relatively successful in their own ways.  Unfortunately their parents split up as the mother and father eventually disagreed with the father’s evaluation and expectations of their children.

(To be continued – Letter #3)

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Note: These letters I am publishing are typed with the misspellings and grammatical errors as they were written.  The first letter written in my previous posting was written on April 14, 1978.  The letter in this blog posting was written a week later on April 20, 1978.

The Letter from an Asian Tiger Dad – Letter #1

 “Parents are not interested in justice, they’re interested in peace and quiet.”
Bill Cosby

The first big controversial pop culture topic of  2011 was penned by Amy Chua, the Yale Professor who wrote the column in the Wall Street Journal titled “Why Chinese Mothers are Superior”.  It was all done to promote her new book, “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother”.  The key word is promote.  As a marketer, you saw right through it when you read the article and you see that she refers to both men and women parents and then notes that this isn’t just about Chinese mothers.  I was miffed at  two points:…who says this is about Asian women only and why was she giving all the credit to Asian moms?  What about the dads?  Every parent out there was either saying what about me or what a B*&^% that lady is.

The whole point was to raise discussion on parenting and on that she was successful.  In fact, as a Chinese person I was indifferent to the stereotype.  I nodded my head in agreement about some parts of the article and in other parts shook my head and said that this was just a crazy mother who happens to be Chinese.  I also felt it was a generational thing.  My old grandmothers never were like that.  They were strong but passive women.  In a traditional Asian family of my  grandparent’s generation, the mom was the cleaning maid and cook as it appeared to me.  The father was the driver. My two Chinese grandmothers raised 15 children between the two of them without husbands around who were absent trying to make ends meet during the Depression era.  Maybe that is where Amy Chua gets her intensity.  Trying to be like her own mother but in today’s modern society.

One of the controversial moments in the article was what people who read the article refer to as “the piano lesson”.  It was an unbelievable example of tough parenting.  Then I heard my wife and son arguing the other night over his lack of practice on the piano.  It got loud and I stayed out.  And yes there were tears.  For those who don’t know me….my wife is not Asian.  She’s apparently the Italian Tiger Mom.  Myth #1 broken.

I should caveat and say that my own mother had me in Chinese school, basketball, soccer, baseball, dance, karate and swimming.  Not to mention that I worked in our family business.   My mother might have been a Tiger, but she wasn’t a tyrant.  She ruled with a stern prodding, but never a harsh tongue.  Expectations awere always high and friends (even other Chinese friends) said they noticed it.  People often say that some parents rule with an iron fist, well I think Asian parents amonst some other cultures are probably known for parenting via heavy guilt! 

When I first read the article I went digging for a note that my dad once showed to me.  It  was actually a series of letters. They were written by a wealthy multimillionaire businessman from Taiwan who was good friends with my grandfather on my mother’s side.  These two old Asian patriarchs would often go for walks on their large properties in Menlo Park, CA (a wealthy suburb of San Francisco) and discuss Asian philosophies and how they related to the Western business world and western parenting.  These two men were the first two minorities to move into what had been an all-white stuffed collar community.  When going to visit this my grandfather and his friend my parents told me to always listen to their stories before running off to play in the swimming pool.  It was boring for a 10 year old, but my dad must have kept the letters knowing that I’d find them again some day.  My grandfather’s friend gladly shared these letters with my dad and grandfather and must have been quite proud.  The letters were written to his eldest son who had just graduated from Harvard and was about to take a job with the McKinsey Consulting Group.  I have changed the names and not mentioned the business to protect the family which is a very high profile Asian family  (otherwise, all improper English is because I have kept all the imperfect grammar intact on purpose):

———————————-

LETTER #1

Dear XXXXX,

This is the first letter I write to you and I will give copies of it to your brothers.  It tells how your parents think about their children.

You and your  other brothers and sisters are always occupying the largest part of our heart.  This is the same as any other parents do.  First we worry about your health, your education, and then, your work, your marriage, and your family.  We do not know how our children think about their parents.  Sometimes, I heard complaints from your brothers.  They said, “Dad didn’t play with us.  Dad didn’t travel with us as other parents did.  They play with their children and travel together with their children.”  After I heard these complaints I used to wonder why they did not compare themselves with another group of children who work hard to earn more money to support their family.  I mean I don’t need more money from your working to support  the family, but I mean sometimes working is a kind of education and the experience from working can never be got in school.

Today I write this letter to you is for the purpose of answering your question whether you should work for the family business or in other company after you graduate from Harvard.

Before I answer your question, I want to tell you of my concept of managing a company.  If you become a member in the management of the company, you must understand the following concepts and principles.

  1. You should work much more and much harder than the ordinary employees,
  2. You should work for the much more difficult task than the ordinary employees, and
  3. You should work for the task with much more important responsibility than the ordinary employees.

If you want to work the family business, before you have made yor decision, you should convince yourself that you can surely comply with the above-mentioned principles.  It means you need to work more and harder and sometimes you may make some sacrifice in your private life.  But it will reward you in a later date.  Otherwise, you could work outside and you might enjoy an easy life for some short periods.

As regarding to the work experience from working in other companies, according to my past experience, it seems to not be very much useful.  Especially when working in a big company or institution, you re just like a a little piece of screw in a big machine.  Therefore the experience you acquired is very limited and sometimes useless.  Sometimes, you may even bring back some bad habits which will also influence you when you come back to work in my company.  Therefore, I do not one hundred percent agree that your experience from working outside will help your work with my company at a  later date.

With respect to the future business of our company, if our Chinese venture into apparel cannot succeed, there are lots of other business that you can start and/or develop.  The important thing is whether you can convince yourself if you can follow the above-mentioned Chinese principles when you come to work in my company.

This letter is an educational letter.  I hope you will keep it.Sometimes it will answer your problem, if you want to know how to manage it.

Love from

your father

——————————–

I read this many times over the years and couldn’t believe the audacity of a dad to move his children to the Western world and not support them in pursuit of their own  American or Western dream.  Was my grandfather’s friend right?  I’m not saying he was or wasn’t but his son has gone on to be quite successful owning some high profile businesses and having become a lead investor in many well-known technology companies.  Oh, and his father got his wish.  His son never went to McKinsey and I remember him being very frustrated at first.   

My dad was a kinder and gentler dad, but in passing this letter on to me, he didn’t have to tell me anything more.  Blood and my ancestry enough for going to be enough to help me by providing me with the right principles.  My grandfather on the other hand was no picnic.  He would insult his adult sons.  When one of his six sons got divorced, I remember my granfather shaking his head and telling me that my uncle (his son) was now only half a man (in reference that he had to give half of everything to his ex-wife).  My grandfather was perhaps the original Tiger Dad. 

So I guess in reading Amy Chua’s document I needed to self-reflect and ask if I am that kind of a dad.  This morning when my daughter said she was too sick to go to school, I told her to suck it up and go.  She’d already missed several days of school and misses school for the slightest  problems.  I  remember that missing school was only if you couldn’t get out of bed.  My wife said I was being tough, but I guess I’d rather be tough and involved rather than not involved.

My father always told me his father him he wanted a life better for his children  than he had.  He then told me he wanted the same for me and my siblings.  I think the current generation is different. We want a better way of life for our children.  My father gave me a lot, but he wasn’t able to share in it with me just like his father couldn’t with him.  I think it is any parent’s wish (Asian, black, white, Jewish, Latino, etc.) to see their kid succeed and to share that fulfillment with them, but hopefully it is not at the expense of too much angst.

If you’re curious, neither of my children is a concert violinist or pianist (in fact, far from it).  My children do have and go on sleepovers and playdates although I think too many. We do NOT have an xBox, Playstatio or Wii.  Both my children take piano (my son teaches himself guitar) and both play soccer and basketball.  My son also plays golf and baseball while my daughter takes gymnastics.   I do take pride as well in the academics of my children who I believe get above average grades.  My son (11)  has indicated that he feels the pressure to succeed and sometimes puts pressure on himself, but on several occasions when asked, he said he was alright. It is a tight balance we run with our children, but as I tell my son, I am happy that he understands that we want him to succeed as does every parent.

The Graston Technique – Breast Cancer Rehabilitation

Graston Instruments

We often think about the recovery from breast cancer and most often hear about surgery, chemotherapy and radiation.  My wife is now 2 years past her surgery.  It is easy to look at the rehabilitation and the treatment as trivial but it is a battle.  The scars still exist and are a reminder of the trying time we went through.  The piles of pills and the monthly shots will continue.  The pills will continue for another 3 years and the black and blue bruising elephant shot will go for one more year.

Part of the surgical process most breast cancer victims have involves the use of alloderm which helps regenerate tissue in the recovery process.  The result is an intact acellular matrix of natural biological components that promotes rapid revascularization, white cell migration and cell repopulation.  The problem with most women is that this results in what is known as rippling caused by the scar tissue.  Many women are taught to massage their breasts after the surgery, but this has met with mixed results.  Recently the Graston Technique has been introduced.  It uses medieval looking tools which vibrate against the skin as it runs over the rippling area. 

Please see the attached story and video:

http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/health&id=7879903

The story features both my wife’s therapist, Julie Wong, and my wife’s cancer surgeon Dr. Shelley Hwang.

Giants 12 Days of Christmas

“No, instead, there’s a pole. It requires no decoration. I find tinsel  distracting.”  – Frank Costanza

AT&T Park

Giants Twelve Days of Christmas

On the first day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
A catcher named Buster Posey.

On the second day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the third day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the fourth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the fifth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the sixth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the seventh day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the eighth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Eight Braves a-bumbling,
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the ninth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Nine Phillies flailing,
Eight Braves a-bumbling,
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the tenth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Ten Fists a-pumpin,
Nine Phillies flailing,
Eight Braves a-bumbling,
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the eleventh day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Eleven pitchers dealin’,
Ten Fists a-pumpin,
Nine Phillies flailing,
Eight Braves a-bumbling,
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey.

On the twelfth day of Christmas,
my Giants gave to me
Twelve Machines a-struttin,
Eleven pitchers dealin’,
Ten Fists a-pumpin,
Nine Phillies flailing,
Eight Braves a-bumbling,
Seven fans a-tortured,
Six fearsome beards,
Five splash hits,
Four Giants starters,
Three Garlic fries,
Two rally thongs,
And a catcher named Buster Posey!