Sunday, January 4, 2015

Happy 2015

(post) New Year Update

       New-Year’s day 2014 began with an early-morning surf session with Kate (my sister), Sara (my mom), and Uncle Dan. A good way to start off a good year. January saw the beginning of my second quarter at UC San Diego’s International Relations and Pacific Studies master’s program, where I study international economics and political science. The end of 2013 and most of 2014 were devoted to study, though I managed to have some fun along the way. In January, February and March I took classes on data analysis, game theory, finance and accounting, Chinese, and Chinese politics. I returned to Colorado for spring break and found some deep powder at Eisman Hut near Vail, and then at Silverton—all with great friends from Lakewood HS and Whitman College.
       During my spring quarter I took classes in international economics, advanced data analysis, policymaking processes, international law, Chinese, and a seminar on PhD research projects. I also worked as a teaching assistant for a sociology class, and while grading papers about sociology isn’t my favorite pastime, it paid my tuition. In the spring I found out that I had received a Boren Fellowship to study Chinese and research environmental issues in China from September 2014 to September 2015. I also was the recipient of a summer research fellowship that paid me to work with a professor on research about pollution from rural cookstoves—an interesting combination of chemistry, data analysis, environmental science, and international law. Hopefully I’ll get a paper about this topic accepted into a journal in 2015.
       Aside from a river trip in CO with my mom and a few other short trips outside CA I spent most of the summer in San Diego doing research, surfing (nearly every morning) teaching an intro class about economics to new masters students, and playing tennis. I also decided towards the end of the summer that I would be applying for PhDs in political science this fall, with the fallback option of returning to UCSD to finish my masters after the end of my fellowship. At the end of September I moved back to Chengdu (the big city that I lived nearby from 2011-2013 when I was an English teacher) and started taking Chinese classes at Sichuan University and helping with language editing at the Journal of Mountain Science—part of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. My Chinese has improved a lot since I got here. I’ve learned to read and write over 1000 new characters, and just started a novel in Chinese at the end of December. I submitted 9 PhD applications in December, but I won’t hear back until mid-February at the earliest. Among the potential places to get a PhD, UCSD looks like a great choice with great weather, the ocean, friends and family, and a short and often cheap flight back to CO.
       In December 2014 XiaoMin and I celebrated out 3-year anniversary, and I’ll be going back to her parents’ house for the Chinese New Year in February. We have a solid relationship, and we enjoy playing sports, cooking, and practicing language together. We’ll be traveling to Cambodia and Thailand in 2015 during our winter holiday—this will be XiaoMin’s second trip outside of China and my 31st country. I she will be able to come with me back to the US this September, but we are still trying to figure out the best way to make that happen.
       Where I will be at the end of 2015 remains a mystery for now, but most likely I’ll be heading back to the US once in the late spring, and then permanently in September 2015. 2015 looks like it will be an important year with a lot of big decisions, so wish me luck…

       If you find yourself with spare time and money during the summer of 2015, think about visiting China. Chengdu has great food, pandas, and easy access to the mountains that mark the edge of the Himalayan Plateau. I’d love to show you around.

Best wishes to you in the New Year,

Luke

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