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Overview

  • 0 references
  • Fluent in Chinese, English; learning Spanish
  • 32, Male
  • Member since 2012
  • Statistician
  • BA in Statistics
  • No hometown listed
  • Profile 65% complete

About Me

I'm a young tech professional who's worked in San Francisco, Chicago and New York.

Why I’m on Couchsurfing

I want to expand my imagination about how people live their lives, practice their faiths, love their families and overcome hardships. I travel to remind myself that there are many possible realities, and that I've only experienced a small slice of them.

The English writer and philosopher Alain de Botton has a fantastic perspective on this. From his book, A Week At The Airport:

"There used to be time to arrive. Incremental geographic changes would ease the inner transitions: desert would gradually give way to shrub, savannah to grassland. At the harbor, the cam- els would be unloaded, a room would be found overlooking the customs house, passage would be negotiated on a steamer. Flying fish would skim past the ship’s hull. The crew would play cards. The air would cool.

Now a traveler may be in Abuja on Tuesday and at the end of a satellite in the new terminal at Heathrow on Wednesday. Yesterday lunch time, one had fried plantain in the Wuse Dis- trict to the sound of an African cuckoo, whereas at eight this morning the captain is closing down the 777’s twin engines at a gate next to a branch of Costa Coffee.

Despite one’s exhaustion, one’s senses are fully awake, registering everything—the light, the signage, the floor polish, the skin tones, the me- tallic sounds, the advertisements—as sharply as if one were on drugs, or a newborn baby, or Tolstoy. Home all at once seems the strangest of destinations, its every detail relativized by the other lands one has visited. How peculiar this morning light looks against the memory of dawn in the Obudu hills, how unusual the recorded announcements sound after the wind in the High Atlas, and how inexplicably English (in a way they will never know) the chat of the two female ground staff seems when one has the din of a street market in Lusaka still in one’s ears.

One wants never to give up this crystalline perspective. One wants to keep counterpoising home with what one knows of alternative realities, as they exist in Tunis or Hyderabad. One wants never to forget that nothing here is normal, that the streets are different in Wiesbaden and Luoyang, that this is just one of many possible worlds."

Interests

Statistics, mathematics, computer science and reinventing educational systems in the 21st Century.

  • fish
  • writing
  • books
  • coffee
  • flying
  • technology
  • traveling
  • fishing
  • computer science
  • mathematics
  • philosophy
  • science
  • statistics
  • mountains

Music, Movies, and Books

Music: Sam Smith, John Legend, Sam Cooke

Books: Life of Pi by Yann Martel, The World's Religions by Huston Smith, Consider the Lobster by David Foster Wallace.

Movies: Before Sunset, Before Sunrise, Before Midnight, Boyhood (you might be able to tell that I'm a big fan of anything Richard Linklater directs)

One Amazing Thing I’ve Done

Published 2 books before the age of 23.

Countries I’ve Visited

Cambodia, China, Russian Federation

Countries I’ve Lived In

United States

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