Sunday, July 18, 2010

Journey vs. Adventure







"What is a journey. 
A journey is not a trip. It’s not a vacation. 
It’s a process. A discovery. It’s a process of self-discovery. 
A journey brings us face to face with ourselves. 
A journey shows us not only the world, but how we fit in it. 
Does the person create the journey? 
Or does the journey create the person? 
The journey is life itself. Where will life take you?" 
- Louis Vuitton

Huh! (sound made similar to the post-pump up speech after any halftime in a football movie). I’m a marketing sucker despite my finance path currently, and this ad makes me respect Louis Vuitton enough to strut around in their best pair of size 42 peep toe pumps. Even if that will never happen. Yes, I'm admitting it everyone - I've got boats. Quite frankly, in Asia my shoe size is more of a spectacle than Chinese New Year.  Adorable fun-sized sales ladies in 9 countries have laughed at me once I asked for my size, pointed, giggled, took pictures and a video, yes, a video.  But I’ve learned that this is one of those aspects that defines who I’ve become, and I’m learning to accept it.  Isn't that part of the journey, Louis? Showing us not only the world, but also how we fit in it?

Honestly, the world shows you even more so of how you don't fit in it.  But what are you going to do?  You’re already in the world!  Solution: As Project Runway’s Tim Gun says, “Make it work!”

Fact: I will never be able to buy a pair of (women’s) shoes in Asia.

After 7 months of searching for shoes, 100% failure, yet if my luck in the shoe department defined how I fit in the world, the rest of my days would be full of rejection, humiliation, hopelessness, and failure.  The key is harnessing the creativity that you have to wake up with and say, Hey, I don’t fit in - what now?  How do I make this work?  Do you think that my mammoth shoe size stopped me from navigating a continent where I'm essentially illiterate?  No.  I just have bigger footsteps.  The fact that Asia has more or less proven that I do not fit in makes me search for what really makes me me, since the sales ladies kindly point out who I am not.  

The differences are clear – and clearer than trying to figure out who you are in a world where everything is easy: reading, writing, talking, eating, driving, working out, socializing, wearing gym clothes in public, finding shoes at any price in any size.  If shoes make a girl happy, then you have to be a lot more creative when you are in Asia with a size 42! And that's the splendid thing.  The joys that you attain in circumstances where you are sometimes not welcome, not approached, not answered, not considered a customer are insanely more telling and less superficial than happiness in an easy life.

Immersing yourself in a world of who you are not really kills the typical self-discovery path by process of elimination.  If I eliminated everything I am not from what is in Asia, I’d be nothing.  Okay, so I like spicy food and contemporary architecture.  But you have to learn who you ARE not just who you are not.  In Asia, I don't have to struggle with figuring out who I am by how I fit in but how the world fits into who I am. 

Unlike in America or in any more similar culture, I cannot follow the common trend, which a culture’s homogeneity absentmindedly encourages people to follow.  For instance, learning the fashion styles in America - you look for the cutest girl, you copy her style maybe add your flair if you have any (most don't).  In Asia, I copy their style and I end up leaving the store with a nice crop top instead of a floor length dress, completely missing the fad an ending up on the worst dressed list.  If I followed a culturally sensitive lifestyle (don’t work out, eat rice, slurp noodles, and nosh on bakery desserts 24/7 while wearing heels and whitening cream) I don’t become one with Asia, I  get fat! (A quality both Asia and America fear, single out, and negatively look upon; No wonder the Renaissance was the life, no judgments against curves as long as you indulged in everything, you were hip). What this has taught me is that I know now when to be the coffee, when to be a potato, and when to an egg. (the fantastic tale of egg hardens in boiling water, potato softens, but coffee flavors!) Instead of being in a world of copies or redundancy, it’s not a matter of eliminating the noise in order to find yourself.  It’s the fact that you have to make the beat to your own drum and make noise to be yourself. Philosophical stuff here on a Sunday, eh? Why not!

So you're 21 and you are having a real chat with yourself evaluating who you are, who you’ve become, how you’ve gotten here, and what’s ahead.  Seriously thinking I’m the minority on this one… add that to the list of quirks.

But this Louis Vuitton commercial really hit me and this is the sign that that I'm beginning to question myself even further (despite the shallowness that this is a luxury brand’s attempt at forcing people to buy more leather goods simply because it hits to the core.) Essentially, my motto for a while has been in line with “Can’t stop, won’t stop.” A pinball in life’s arcade. A go-getter. An up-for-anything, you say “Adventure” I say “I’m there!”  Having placed Albus Dumbledore's quote on my Facebook page last August, I'm starting to rethink its value in my life.  

The quote reads: "And now, Harry, let us step out into the night and pursue that flighty temptress, adventure." Fantastic words here - flighty temptress – yes, indeed, that is the essence of adventure. The elusive person I’ve been known to be. Changing my plan of action based on evaluating the adventure value in the options.  (So, if I bailed on you previously, it’s because you weren’t adventure enough… sorry).  Yet what I’ve realized, is that adventure is more about selfish risk taking than it is profiting from the journey.  Adventure means expectations have not been set and that is why adventures are thrilling – you usually surprise yourself with how much of a rush you get jumping off a suspending rope bridge into the rushing River Kwai in Thailand, three times.  But can you really grow from adrenaline?  Does it cumulate to produce something that makes you better for taking on that flighty temptress?  Spontaneity fuels adventure, whereas self-discovery accumulates through the journey.  A journey being an adventure with expected growth once you reach the finish (but what journey really has an end?) Am I outgrowing cheap thrills and expecting more out of the final product? My Goodness, am I growing up!?!?!

Has this journey I’ve been on since August forced me to grow up to fast? Maybe or is it  just about time that the little four-year-old took the brick off her head and straightened up her posture.

I may be ready to accept growing up, but not ready to return to an easy world with Barbie dolls in the flesh, where the Walmart people in my emails actually come to life, where the value of a person is rarely weighted corrected, and the time people take to listen is far less than the time people take to judge.  I'm sitting in Kowloon Park right now, as the only person in the sun.  I don't have my umbrella out because it's beautiful today and I need the vitamin D.  I'm soaking up the sun as Sheryl Crow once wrote. I've got my 45 on (assuming she's talking SPF) and I'm gonna rock on.  

Contemplating is the new black, Catherine

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Spirit of the Doppelganger

Many of us have spotted that crazy haired tall girl walking around and been like, Noo way. She's in Asia! but the spririt of the doppelganger is a great one, you see something you wish to see simply because well that person has such an impression on you that you make it up in your head that they look identical to someone you know. In Asia, I see lots of doppelgangers... okay, bad joke, but How I Met Your Mother had a show on doppelgangers and they mentioned on thing: 5 years ago, we were all ourselves, but now we are just doppelgangers of that. 

True I might look like myself 5 years ago but we have all changed over those years that it's almost not the same person.  Although I wish that was so, I think I look more different 5 years ago than I personally am. But when you think about it 2010 - 5 years = 2005, wow! I was 115lbs. in Paris, living with a family, studying abroad. I was what I would consider wildly amazed by blending cultures and techno music. Well, see not much has changed. I'm now, 1__ lbs and 4.5 inches taller (when wearing 3 inch heels to work), living by myself in Hong Kong, working in FX Sales and Trading, working on average 14 hours a day, fascinated by different cultures and techno music. See not much is different. Okay, actually a lot is different and the only thing that holds the same is the international curiosity and the necessity for a beat to dance wherever I might be.  

I guess the doppelganger idea does play out, but consider what were you 5 years ago and where do you see yourself 5 years from now? Is life just a continuation of new doppelgangers, or is there something that glues the doppelgangers together to combine them as Catherine. I call it character, but some people lose that in all their changes and make such drastic life differences that they are not the same individual they were at 4, which is still my perfect age. Others, barely change so that there is no personal growth and though they might be the same person you know them as there is nothing pushing them to keep up with the rapidly changing doppelgangers of the world. 

So the important thing to get out it is that regardless of how you change whatever pace it may be, keep sight of your core - be it your quirks, your drive, your integrity, your sense of humor, (my dad would say your fitness level, but we all know that gravity and greasy chinese food are pretty insistent on destroying that), your essence that at the end of the day people can note your intellectual evolution or your "maturity" whatever that might be but they still hold the same amount of respect for you and trust for you that they did when you were just Catherine to them. 


Catherine Coley ▪ GLOBE IV ▪ BSBA Class of 2011 ▪ UNC's Kenan-Flagler Business School
▪ Hong Kong cell +852.6974.4874 ▪ catherinegcoley@gmail.com

Saturday, July 10, 2010

It's A BEAUTIFUL DAY!

Never looked into the lyrics but U2 speaks the truth: 

You're on the road 
But you've got no destination 
You're in the mud 
In the maze of [your] imagination 

You love this town 
Even if that doesn't ring true 
You've been all over 
And it's been all over you 

It's a beautiful day 
Don't let it get away 
It's a beautiful day 

See the world in green and blue
See China right in front of you
See the canyons broken by cloud
See the tuna fleets clearing the sea out
See the Bedouin fires at night
See the oil fields at first light and 
see the bird with a leaf in her mouth
After the flood all the colors came out (oooaoout)

 It was a beautiful day (aaaaay) Don't let it get away !!!



Sunday, July 4, 2010

My Analysis of Twilight: Eclipse

First of all, I'd like to thank the academy. No, really! The entertainment industry I take for granted. Watching a movie on the big screen is actually a treat and quite rejuvenating. This fourth of July instead of gathering with patriots around a grill, I went on an expat solo trip to the movies approximately 40 feet from where I live at about 4 minutes after I woke up. My gym gave out free Twilight tickets so I jumped on the offer as hey, it's a break from Asia life for a bit. So I've decided to channel my thoughts about the movie - feel free to comment if you agree, disagree.

1. There is more fake hair dye in the cast of Twilight than the Anime Annual Convention
2. The new vampire enemy gets a gold star for attractiveness but I wish it was Hunter Parrish
3. Dakota Fanning remains the worst actress to become famous, obviously because out of the whole cast of perfectly tweezed eyebrows, Dakota's are still grizzly and unkept
4. They gave Taylor Lautner the better script - great lines there or involving him
5. The wolves are almost as beautiful as Aslyn from Narnia
6. Does anyone know what qualifies where fake contacts in vampire world? When they don't have them in is that a preference or why don't they were glasses then? or is it like Mood Ring?
7. The dramatic effects by Dakota Fanning's crew further validate my theory that she is the worst actress in the world. Dako I'm sorry, but really you are not a cross over start from awkward childhood to teen queen.
8. Why was I the only one in the theater to gasp with every shirtless scene and giggle at the jokes. Perhaps the subtitles left out all the subtle humor. Haha!

Well, off to bed, must wake up for my now routine 3am work start! Wahooooo great sunday!

- Catherine