Month: August 2014

It’s always hard to say goodbye

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To be honest, growing up I never thought of my dad’s mother as a sweet old grandma… because she wasn’t. She was strict, frugal, and young—only sixteen years old when she had my dad—and later on she wore pink Chanel glasses.

During summer holidays, while all the white kids went to camp or cottages, my family and I would journey the 24 hours of flying from Pearson to O’Hare, O’Hare to Narita, Narita to Kai Tak. It was our yearly pilgrimage to the motherland to see our extended family. And I guess it was worth it for my mom to wrangle her three kids—alone—across oceans because as soon as we’d arrive we’d get dumped at grandma’s for two months (and once, I stayed for nine).

Grandma’s flat was enormous. I didn’t know it at the time, but my grandparents lived in a mansion on the mountainside. Back when I was like, eight, the steep hills were the worst. It was always hot and sticky because Grandma never turned on AC except for at night to sleep. We’d have to climb dozens of flights of stone-lined stairs just to get to the closest convenience store (sidenote: I distinctly remember that the Park N Shop only sold milk in tins or boxes. Grandma hated dairy anyway. She loathed cheese). The only fun about living on a big hill was taking the bus (again, no AC, but not because buses didn’t have AC, but because grandma preferred the AC-less buses because they were cheaper). My cousins and I would sit at the very front seats on the upper deck of a double-decker bus, roll open the sliding windows, and hold on for our lives as the psychotic bus driver would speed downhill, blasting hot, steamy Hong Kong air against our faces. It would be hard to breathe.

Grandma’s place was always spotless (thanks in part to the maid, Marjorie, whom my grandma called a broken version of “margarine” for years), despite it being crammed with people: me, my sister, my two cousins and sometimes a third or fourth, my suk suk and sum sum, and my grandparents. All the kids slept on the hard wood floor. I slept at the foot of my grandparents’ bed. Grandpa snored horrendously. Grandma put up with a lot. She was born during the great depression. She’d fled the Japanese invasion of Shanghai. She and her older sister were orphaned before they were in their teens. She’d had four kids by the time she was in her early twenties with my grandfather, with whom her marriage was arranged. I had never had long talks with my grandma. Being frigid Asians, we were never really that close. But I always liked that she was tenacious as fuck and I was proud of her. She never complained about hardships. Even when she broke her hip during a fall three months before my wedding, she was back on her feet again and made it all the way to Toronto to see me and Dave get married. She was even in good spirits when we went to visit her last Christmas after the doctor diagnosed her with inoperable cancer in October. My grandma was a tough old lady, and she even had a hell of a grip on me when I tried to pay for dim sum one of the last days we were there.

Which is why I was a little surprised when my mom told me grandma had passed away last Friday. We knew it was coming: the cancer had spread months ago. The original prognosis had been two months but she was still around almost a year later. Then she got admitted to the hospital last week and was there for several days and the doctors said there was nothing left to do, but still part of me was hoping she’d get better. I told her we’d come visit again soon but we didn’t make it back in time. I’m glad we got to see her and say goodbye, but it’s still difficult. She was my last grandparent alive, and I miss them all.

Being better

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I like that this blog reminds me of things I want to improve about my self and my life.

  1. Last weekend Janice invited us to her friend’s cottage and I ate literally two full bags of Kettle chips over two days (plus regular meals). Yesterday I didn’t eat a single fruit or vegetable. So I started a food journal.
  2. A friend sent me this link yesterday about going seven days without complaining. So I’m trying to complain and shit-talk less (and maybe not at all!). Today is the first day, and so far, NO COMPLAINTS! Will report back on whether or not I last the full week.
  3. I need to get back to exercising. I stopped going to yoga and basically haven’t exercised since. Dave and I went running once, more than two weeks ago, and it was so painful to even do 2k. Then I had a dessert to reward myself. Soooo… back to planks and pushups and cardio. At least five times a week.

(The illustration above is a spot I did for work, for one of our magazine clients. It’s kind of ironic because the dude is so happy and he looks like Dave, but IRL Dave fell off his bike and broke his arm in two places and is currently in a sling and wrist cast)

Back to the drawing board

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Last week I bought How to be an illustrator by Darrel Rees. I also spoke to my boss about my plan to move to Hong Kong in the fall. It’s a loose plan, but it’s something that Dave and I have been wanting to do for over a year now. It’s scary but I’m not that young anymore, so there’s no time to waste. If I want to do something like move to the other side of the planet and try to make be a freelance illustrator, it is now or never!

I haven’t read the whole thing yet, but just from the first few chapters a few things have already dawn on me:

My own style
I kinda  already knew this but I think I need a more distinct style. My illustrations could also do with a little more depth, more layers, more textures. I want to experiment a bit. Another thing is that if I want to do editorial style illustration eventually, I’m gonna have to be more clever. Humph.

Other things I want to work on
Since we’re on the topic, I think I need to work more on ideation and lateral thinking. I don’t think I’m good enough at taking different sources of inspiration and combining them. I’m actually best at the opposite: taking a big ol’ mess and straightening it out into orderly little piles.

The biggest dealbreaker might be my lack of self motivation, will-power and self discipline. I’m not sure how I’ll be able to wake up each morning at a decent time and just WORK. The ritual of commuting, even if it is a short walk or bike ride makes me feel purposeful. If I’m working from home, I might just spend the whole day watching TV and eating chips.

OR! The other thing I’m worried about is the loneliness of working by myself. I get so lonely! I like talking to people! I need other people! I don’t know what to do about this one.

Disadvantages
Besides being lonely, I am also disadvantaged because I don’t know any illustrators, I didn’t go to an illustration program, and I don’t have any friends in the illustration industry. I have no illustration network.

Advantages(?)
But I do have some design friends, so hopefully that will be something. Also I am an art director, so I know what it’s like to hire and commission illustration. I know what it’s like to work with illustrators and I know what I enjoy when I work with them. I also know how annoying it is dealing with difficult illustrators and how I like working again with the pleasant ones.I know what good sketches look like.  I can tell the difference between the pros and sloppier artists.

Anyhoo, I guess I still have time to figure these things out. I just have to keep on drawing and make the time to work on my portfolio. Tomorrow we’re going to a cottage to spend the rest of the long weekend with our friend Janice, because it’s her birthday! Huzzah!