Happy New Year!

Happy New Year!  Dear Reader, I hope you had a good year this year and wish you all the best in 2007.  From what I’ve heard from people in general, 2006 was a somewhat difficult year.  Here’s to a better year next year.  Of course, nothing ever turns out the way you thought it would.  I thought about the movie "2001:  A Space Odyssey," the 1968 science fiction classic written by Arthur C. Clarke and turned into a film by Director Stanley Kubrick.  2001 was five years ago, soon to be six years ago.  The imagery in the 39-year-old film depicted a futuristic world far different from the reality of the 21st century.  NASA and other space agencies are still pondering how to put a man on Mars, let alone sending astronauts out into the far flung galaxy.  Astronauts now live long term on the International Space Station orbiting Earth, although it has been over 34 years since the last astronaut visited the Moon.  Only two of four Space Shuttles are still operational, and new spacecraft are a distant dream.  "2001:  A Space Odyssey" hardly reflects real life, let alone what actual space travel looks like in 2006.  I believe in the 10% Hollywood rule–reality reflects only about 10% of what Hollywood portrays.
 
Ah, life never quite turns out how we think it will.  What will happen in the next 50 years?  100 years?  Next year?  We don’t really know.  We don’t really know what the new year has in store for us.  But we can plan ahead and do our best to make our dreams happen.  What do you plan to do next year?  Have you made some resolutions for the next year? 
 
Here are my resolutions for 2006.  How did I/we do?
 
  • Lose 10 pounds.  I failed on this one.  I’m lucky that I held my weight this year.  This lifestyle is not conducive to weight loss.  Three years ago, I was about 10 pounds lighter than I am now.  Failed.
  • Increase our net worth by 15%.  Our net worth increased by 23%.  Goal exceeded.
  • Spending more time reading for pleasure and reading what I need to read.  I read just one book this year, unless you count the Bible and Jon Stewart’s "America."  Failed. 
  • Improve my Korean.  Although my vocabulary digressed, I am more fluent in Korean than I was when I arrived in Korea.  Goal met. 
  • Take a real vacation.  We went on a two-week trip to China and spent two weeks on vacation in the U.S. visiting family.  Although I ran my parents ragged cramming as much as I could into two weeks, it was still a vacation.  Goal met.

Well, three out of five ain’t bad.  What are my goals for 2007?  I’ll carry over the goals I did not achieve in 2006.
 
  • Lose 10 pounds.  I plan to focus more on weight loss in 2007.  I will ride my bicycle to work in the U.S. from March through June, and I plan to be physically active in Paraguay.  Time to stop dawdling and get serious about losing weight.  The slower pace of life in Paraguay will increase the probability that I will lose weight.
  • Spending more time doing things away from the computer.  This goes in tandem with the first goal.  I broadened this goal from merely reading more literature.  In Paraguay, I plan to do more volunteer work, participate in soccer and other activities such as golfing or tae kwondo.
  • Achieve fluency in Spanish.  This is not a wish–this is a requirement.  I cannot work in Paraguay if I don’t speak Spanish fluently before I head to Paraguay.
  • Increase our net worth by 10%.  The percentage growth in our net worth will slow because the base net worth is higher in 2007, and we will become a one-income family again.  10% ain’t bad, though.
  • Take two trips to other countries in South America.  We’ve already planned to take trips to destinations such as Buenos Aires next year.  We have six months to do it.

Happy New Year, Dear Reader!  I hope you have a wonderful and prosperous 2007.  If you make any resolutions, I wish you all the best in fulfilling them.

Five things you don’t know about me

As previously mentioned, "Girl in the Rain" challenged me and four other bloggers to come up with five bits of information about ourselves that no one knows (at least in the blogging world).  I also have to tag five other bloggers and challenge them to do the same without tagging me back.  Tagged victims are listed at the bottom of this entry.  It smacks of spamming, but oh well.  Here are five innocuous tidbits about me that you may or may not care to know:
 
  • I’ve been an aspiring author since I was eight years old.  When I was eight, I started writing my first book, a mystery.  I scanned the first page and uploaded it for you to peruse (pre-edited and with plenty of errors).  Before I graduated from high school, I wrote several books, none of which I published.  Most were either in the science fiction/fantasy or action/adventure genres.  When I was 15 years old, I entered one of my novels in a contest sponsored by Bantam Books.  The winner’s submission was published as a Choose Your Own Adventure.  Although my submission, "The Two Sides of Africa," was not published, it was a finalist, and the editors at Bantam wrote me a personal commendation.  My early years of prolific novel writing have ceased, but blogging helps me keep up my writing skills.  In the future, I plan to return to writing fictional novels.  When I have time.
  • I am an amateur cartographer, cartoonist, and illustrator.  When I was young, I drew maps, lots of them.  Just ask my brother and sister, who thought I was really strange for spending many hours by myself in my room alone working on fictional maps and companion stories.  I myself wonder how I ever managed to have a social life while I was a secondary school student.  I drew detailed maps of over two dozen fictional cities, states, countries, and worlds.  Some of these maps are complements to some of my stories, including the map of Northmark, a fictional land where one of my novels is set.  I uploaded samples of the different types of maps I used to draw.  I’m still working on one map, but I haven’t touched it for a couple of years.  I used to drew maps freehand, but in recently I’ve used Microsoft’s Paint program to draw them.  I have little time nowadays for cartography.  I also enjoy drawing cartoons and illustrations, particularly for my books.  In fourth and fifth grades, I won school awards for two of my illustrations.  I also developed many cartoon characters, and I drew comic strips such as "Kelvin" for my college newspaper and "Jersey," a cartoon world I created in high school.  "Jersey" was especially fun with characters such as "Greyfoot the Rabbit," a drunken rabbit who resembled Garfield the Cat, Walter W. Walterson, a geeky fellow with a receding hairline, and the "Vegging Fruitcakes," a music group with a celery stalk on guitar, a carrot bassist, and a potato drummer.  I don’t have any cartoon samples, but I’ll upload one if I find it.
  • I was active i school programs, and I starred in four productions before I graduated.  In fourth grade, I played Ichibod Crane in our school’s rendition of the Legend of Sleepy Hollow.  In fourth grade, I wrote and starred in a short play called "How Little Big Chief Tamed the Mountain" written for a friend of mine named Matt who has severe a speech impediment.  Matt played Big Chief, and Tracy, a girl who was my first school crush, played his daughter.  In sixth grade, I portrayed Thomas Edison in our school musical, "The Electric Sunshine Man," singing two solos.  In tenth grade, I went on to star in "Teen II," our high school musical.  I left choir after tenth grade and never performed again except for singing in church choirs.  I’ve thought about trying my hand at community theater, but this urge somewhere deep down in my lengthy to-do list.
  • I think mean people suck.  I’m a pretty positive and cordial person, as you can probably tell from my blogging.  I am relatively intolerant of people who have an overly negative outlook on life and are obnoxiously rude, including screamers and condescenders.  We’re like oil and water.  We don’t mix well.  I turn them off, and I do my best to avoid them.  You can be a shameless self-promoter, a egotistic showboat, a gossip, a slacker, a know-it-all, a prankster, a whiner, quirky, dogmatic, or any variation thereof, but please, just be civil.  Leave behind your bad attitude and check your rudeness at the door when you come talk to me–I don’t want to hear it.  I will be civil to you and expect you to be civil to me.  If you must be negative, so be it, but for heaven’s sake, don’t be rude and/or condescending.  You might get away with it for a time, but the odds are you will reap what you sow.  Nice people won’t give you the time of day when you need it.  So just give in and try being nice before we turn out to be just like you and treat you rudely or look down on you.
  • I have a weakness for baked goods, and I want Girl in the Rain to send me baked goods for Christmas every year from now on.  "Girl in the Rain," put me up to writing this blog entry, so she must indulge my craving by baking delicious treats and mailing them to me annually wherever I am in the world.  Girl, please send a care package to Paraguay next year!  I enjoy snickerdoodles, peanut brittle, and haystacks!

Now I have to tag five bloggers who need to tell you on their blogs about themselves.  So, take it away Doodlespace, Tortmaster, Quemino’s WorldMuna, and Editfish!

Featured Blog: Muna’s Blog

I searched the Web last month to see whether I could find any Paraguay-focused blogs written in English.  There aren’t many Paraguay blogs in the blogosphere written any language, even in Spanish, German, or Guarani (an indigenous Paraguayan language), Paraguay’s primary languages.  That’s why I was fortunate to stumble upon Muna’s Blog (http://www.emeraldpass.com/blog/), one of the few English-language blogs focusing on Paraguay (World Adventurers will also focus on Paraguay next year after we move to Asuncion). 
 
A native Paraguayan, Muna now lives with her family in suburban Seattle.  We’re happy that Muna is not only Paraguayan but also has a Seattle connection.  She now lives not far from where we lived before we moved overseas.   We’ve already been in contact with Muna and plan to meet her when we visit Seattle next February.  Next summer, she will return to Paraguay for a visit (which is actually wintertime in Paraguay because the seasons are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere).  We’re looking forward to meeting Muna again when she visits our new, adopted home.  In addition, we hope that Muna will introduce us to Paraguayan culture, especially Paraguayan locals.  We’ve been told by many people who have spent time in Paraguay that meeting and making Paraguayan friends can be an immense challenge for expatriates.  I’m looking forward to experiencing Paraguayan culture at the local level and hope that Muna can help us get started.
 
Muna’s blog features a treasure trove of information about Paraguay.  It is quite interactive, with videos, music, and photos of Paraguay that help the country come alive on the Internet.  Muna’s blog heightens our anticipation of what lays in store for us in this interesting land, and it piques our interest in getting to know Muna and her family.  Check out her blog!