July 26, 2003

Chronology: Another Way to Slice the Pie

Two days ago, in hope of ultimately connecting the disparate ramblings of my blog, I presented a list of my "life roles" that I use to conceptualize my life. I set the expectation that I would come back to this list often, unpacking the elements of the list. Before I jump into that task, however, I will offer a chronological presentation of my life. Just like the list of life roles, this chronological list will be sketchy. However, I hope that it provides a simple framework to contextualize the things I write about on this blog.

(As I write this list, I have a nagging doubt that I feel the need to acknowledge, if not fully address. I keep thinking, "Who cares about the chronology of my life? In fact, who cares about the life roles?" It's interesting that I should be nagged by this issue now since the "who cares?" question should have come up long ago when I started blogging. Who cares that I love Bach and computers?

But the "who cares" question wasn't an issue then because, maybe, I wasn't trying to be more systematic and had presented no grand pretensions about my blog. But now, making formal lists somehow raises the level of seriousness of my humble blog. Am I now writing my memoirs? Why would anyone care to read that? Again, I come back to the thought that my blog is first and foremost for me, to help focus my life -- and if the product of the process is "useful" to others, all the better. In the meantime, I shouldn't let these nags keep me from continuing....[This tangent reminds me of what Chris wrote a while back and the article by Tom Coates ("My obligation to you") to which I referred Chris.])

I was born on March 10, 1967, making me 36 years of age at this very moment. Major phases in my life so far map (not surprisingly) to the three cities in which I have lived:

  1. Timmins, Canada (1967-1986)
    I was born in Timmins, a small city of 45,000 residents located 400 miles northeast of Toronto. My parents, Wayne and Joanne, came from China and arrived in Timmins in the mid-fifties and mid-sixties, respectively. My younger sisters, Janice and Shirley, were also born in Timmins. I grew up in Timmins and left when I was nineteen to attend university in Toronto.
  2. Toronto, Canada (1986-1990)
    I studied Engineering Science (physics option) at the University of Toronto, where I lived at New College. The single most significant event of those years -- and there were many -- was my conversion to Christianity during the late summer of 1988 (a story both complex and simple).
  3. Berkeley, USA (1990- present)
    I moved to Berkeley to start a Ph.D. program in Biophysics, which I completed in1997. (I studied electron transfer in photosynthetic reaction complexes under the guidance of the theoretical chemist David Chandler.) I spent four years living at the International House, which I thoroughly enjoyed. I was booted from the House in 1994 so that I could get a life. Fortunately, I then moved into the Regent/Lorina House community of which I have been a part for the last nine years. After finishing my graduate work, I decide that instead of pursuing a career in biophysics, I would worked as staff at UC Berkeley, first in the Statistics Computing Facility and then at the Interactive University Project (where I am still happily ensconced).

    Since the last thirteen years of my life -- basically all of my "adult" life -- has been spent in Berkeley, this period has been profoundly formative.
Posted by rdhyee at July 26, 2003 04:36 PM
Comments

Raymond,
It seems pretty mundane, but I remember a line from a CSI episode that might encourage you. The exact quote I can't remember, but the jist is that "anyone great works for nobody's approval but his own."

I don't fully agree with the quote from my Christian worldview, but I meant to apply it to your blogging adventures...we blog for ourselves first and foremost, and benefit to others is an added bonus.

peace, mark

Posted by: Mark Sentell at July 27, 2003 10:54 AM

I think a lot about J. S. Bach's attitude towards his own work: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/standard/Mar96/news/bach.html

Posted by: Raymond Yee at August 1, 2003 11:28 PM