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Monday, February 15, 2021

Remembering My Father On the 20th Anniversary of His Passing

February 27, 2021 marks twenty years since my father passed away. Twenty years since that horrible night in the hospice room in Findlay Ohio, where my mother and I, holding each other for dear life, sobbing uncontrollably, telling my father that he can go in peace now, that we would take care of each other in his absence. Twenty years since I had to watch my father gasping for air, and then taking his last breaths on this earth. Twenty years.

We humans are sentimental animals, we feel that we must commemorate anniversaries, marking times is important to keep memories alive, those memories that matter the most to us.

Twenty years. So it is that I am writing this essay. I truly don’t want to open twenty-year-old scars, exposing twenty-year-old wounds. Except that I feel like I must. Not so much for the sake of posterity but for my own memories and pent-up feelings.

So much has happened in those twenty years, and yet so much has remained the same, at least in my mind. I still remember sleeping on the couch of my father’s hospice room, dreading the day that would come inevitably, listening to his labored breathing and talking to my father in his few lucid moments. Except this wasn’t my father, it was the shell of the man that I loved and admired, the aggressive cancer treatment had robbed him of the logic that he so prized in himself, the humor that kept our family together, and the love that bonded me forever to him. 

I remember leaving the hospice after he had passed and getting something to eat with my mother and my parent’s dearest friends in Findlay. Of course, the dinner conversation was forced, and the mood subdued. I remember going to my father’s little office in my parent’s condo and sitting up all night, typing on his desktop, trying to come up with the words for his eulogy. I remember trying to describe the many things he had done, the many adventures that he had in China, in Taiwan, in Vietnam, in Honduras, in Bangladesh, in Colorado, in Boston, and in Findlay. I don’t think I did much exaggerating about his many escapades while working in war zones;  I am pretty sure that I wrote that piece of writing with pride. The actual text is lost to the world, as I am unable to find it. It was not my finest piece of writing to be sure, but it was my most heartfelt piece. It was also the hardest thing I had to write. Ever.

I remember going through the days in a daze as we awaited the funeral service. I remember my mother insisting on an open casket at the viewing, which upset me greatly, and then I remember her telling me to make sure I took lots of pictures: that was the last thing I wanted. I remember standing at the viewing and the funeral, numb, emotionally spent, and physically ill. I had gone out and bought a CD of Satie’s Gymnopedies to be played at the funeral, I still have that CD, twenty years later. I remember seeing my friends Wendy and Warren walk in the door, they had driven to Findlay from their home in Chicago, just to be there for my mom and I. I pretty much lost it right there.

I remember reading my quickly written eulogy, hoping that I had put all of my feelings into the piece of writing, trying very hard not to lose my composure emotionally. I think I did break down a couple of times; but mostly, I was numb.

We went to a local restaurant afterwards as people who were at the funeral came to pay their respects. I remember seeing my father’s business partners and customers coming from through out Ohio, Kentucky, and other parts of the country. I remember talking to them and the awkwardness of them needing to say something and not knowing what to say. I remember thinking that I should probably tell them that there was no need, but was afraid that I would hurt their feelings, because they made time to be there for us. I remember my father’s barber coming up afterwards and telling me that he never knew dad did all those things that I talked about. So at least one mission accomplished. I also wanted to tell them all the things that he was to me, all the sacrifices that he had made for me and for my mother, I wanted to share with them all the wisdom that he had imparted to me, and all the lessons he had taught me. There were too many to mention; but I didn’t have the time, nor did they.

In the days, weeks, and months that ensued, mom managed to sell off much of the things that they had accrued, we sold the condo in Findlay, bought the condo in St. Louis; for that was the deal, the one who lives will move to be with me. She had gotten a taste of living in my little house in St. Louis after the funeral, it was a Chinese ritual that she had to be away from the house for seven weeks, forty-nine days. She ended up spending a lot of time with Heidi, my friend Santiago’s wife, she was living in my house as she was in law school and Santiago had moved to Mississippi as a volleyball coach at Southern Miss. The two women teamed up against me, they shake their heads dramatically at my bachelor’s lifestyle and commiserate. Good times.

One thing I had not made it abundantly clear is the close relationship I had with my father. I came late in his life, he had always wanted a child, but my mother went through numerous miscarriages before I came along; it wasn’t an easy pregnancy, she had to be bedridden for most of the nine months in order to not trigger another miscarriage. My father was overjoyed when I was born, he was going to dote and spoil me, and yet he knew that he did not want to spoil me so much so that I become the stereotypical only child: anti-social, arrogant, self-absorbed, and temperamental. My father became my best friend as I grew up. To lessen the sting of leaving friends and re-establishing friendships after our never-ending moves  from place to place, my father consciously ignored our formal Chinese cultural relationship between father and son and deliberately became my friend. As I came of age in Colorado, my weekend nights were spent, by and large, in the basement of our ranch house on Steele street conversing with my father. This was where the foundation of who I am was laid and set, brick by brick. The internal moral coding that is intrinsic to my nature came from those conversations from long ago. This is why experiencing my father ebbing away from the cancer and taking his last breath was so painful, so devastating, so emotionally destructive.

In the intervening twenty years, I had accrued a list of  observations regarding the process of  losing a parent. I share those lessons with my friends who are undergoing the same tragic experience so that I can give them the benefit of my painfully learned observations and to maybe help them realize these lessons without having to go through the tempering of time. One of the things that became obvious to me was that I was in depression for a good number of months, if not years, after his passing. I may not be able to diagnose depression, but I know how I felt, I also know that one day I woke up from my fog and realized that no matter how much I mourn the loss of my best friend, life marches forward. While in my fog, I processed life as it came at me in a catatonic state, I was able to maintain life but not able to drink in life or thrive in my life because of my deep-seated sadness. No one was able to discern my disconnection with the real world, I was good at faking connectedness. To this day, there is a sadness in my mind all the time. It doesn’t rule my life as much as it used to, but it will always be there.

Everything reminded me of my father, I could not bring myself to erase the last voicemail message he left me, I broke down crying for no reasons, and I collected notes, photos, and letters my father sent me. I had a hard time parting with his things. I kept a lot of his library, his pens, his shortwave radio, his technical reports to customers, and I worked very hard to recall things that he had said to me. Over time, I realized that his wisdom had stayed with me, I had internalized it and it is a part of my System 1 reaction, I had proceduralized his wisdom. I am no longer seeking to recover my memories of my Father and his wisdom, because I knew that those memories are hard wired in me. I am able to deal with that part of what I cannot control.

Even though I have come to a resolution with what I cannot control, there is a part of me that goes into deep mourning whenever February 27, my father’s birthday, and Father’s Day comes along. The same gut ripping sadness overwhelms me one each of those days. I relive the scene in that hospice room once again, and I experience the hole in my psyche once again. The twentieth anniversary of my father’s passing is significant only in that it marks another excruciating day in my life, even as I have become older. I will not descend into the depression hell that I once experienced, I would not say that I have become accustomed to the negative emotions, I would say that I have learned to respond to it in a different way and I have matured.

Wednesday, February 10, 2021

Living-Learning and Teaching

This is a deeper dig into the list that I had created for my article titled: Do Something Every Day. https://polymathtobe.blogspot.com/2020/11/living-do-something-everyday.html

Ever since I was young, my parents and my culture had instilled a sense of respect for learning. Even though the dominant pedagogical philosophy in Taiwan was of the cram and memorize in school, I learned more by asking Why? What if? And How? questions. In fact, when my family moved to Honduras, one of the new family friends there would shake his head at how often Why? came out of my mouth.

It was a natural habit that follows me today, although the persistent question asking has been tempered by circumspection and patience.

The joy of learning and the pride in knowing is a part of my genetics, it is my raison d’etre. I realized this fact about myself late in life, much after I had set my life on a path which was expected of me: to chase after the brass ring.  Our society does not hold the idea of knowledge for the sake of knowledge in high regard. My pursuit of broad knowledge is considered by society as living as a jack of all trades but master of none, which is considered a pejorative in our society because  of society’s need for its workers to specialize and concentrate on narrow bailiwicks and serve as replaceable cogs in the production machine supersedes society’s desire to have people who knew knowledge for the sake of knowledge.   

I have instead started telling people that I am a polymath in training because I felt I needed to disguise my joy in pursuing my catholic span of interests. Saying that you are training to become a polymath is slightly more respectable than being a jack of all trades; at the least the term polymath will send people off to Google before they can denigrate the idea. As I became fascinated with the idea of the polymath, I have come to appreciate the implications of being a polymath. There is even a book espousing the many merits of a polymath (Ahmed 2019), or in David Epstein’s book on generalist.  (Epstein 2019)

It may have started out as a snarky retort, but this has become my purpose in life and my destiny: to know something about everything and everything about something.

In the ever-pragmatic reality in which we exist, the societal norm is to treat knowledge as salable commodities. This attitude narrowly define knowledge as either being  immediately applicable or as the basis for creating new knowledge from the foundation of the old knowledge. All to advance human progress. This was especially true in my chosen profession of engineering. We were judged as either as applied, real-world engineers; or as theoretical and impractical researchers.

Teaching is an obvious third option, but it is held as a very non-glamourous, non-celebrated third option. Society views teaching as necessary but non-value-added proposition for passing on the knowledge to the future workforce. Even though many researchers inhabit the hallowed hall of academia, their worth is determined narrowly by their originality and ability to break new grounds in their niche subjects.  The teaching part of their profession has rarely been celebrated as a standalone achievement, only as a companion, a complementary function that is secondary to the innovation and creative endeavors of the researcher. There have been good, if not great teachers amongst the great innovators, but the brilliance of their pedagogical prowess are seen merely as a bonus rather than as a primary endeavor.

As I worked my way through the usual career of an engineer with a doctorate, I found myself drawn to the teaching function as I got older. My gift, I realized, was not in applying the knowledge, or creating new knowledge; instead, my gift was in my ability to communicate knowledge to others. As I look back at my career as an engineer, I was never happier than when I was doing research, to learn, and then to teach.  I did get a thrill while applying my knowledge, at witnessing a design evolve into a product, or investigating the unexplored territories of engineering, creating something new and heretofore unknown; it is just that the thrill of connecting with another human while sparking their minds gave me bigger and more thrilling thrills.

I decided to make the learning something new every day and teaching someone something every day the central tenets in my daily list of habits. Habits that I hope to internalize. Habits that will  be my wu-wei behavior: doing without knowing, action without thought, impulse rather than intent. Make learning and teaching a deeply integrated part of my being. So it is that I train myself to do it everyday.

Works Cited

Ahmed, Waqas. The Polymath: Unlocking the Power of Human Versatility. New York City: John Wiley, 2019.

Epstein, David. Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World. New York: Riverhead Books, 2019.