Goodbye, Shawn

I was going to write about the results of yesterday’s Korean national election, but this news is far too tragic to postpone until tomorrow.  Shawn Matthews, one of Korea’s top bloggers, committed suicide on May 23rd in Beijing.  His blog was read by thousands, and he was loved by many readers from around the world.  My wife introduced his blog to me last year, and I read it occasionally.  Last year I blogged about Shawn on two occasions, on June 25 and November 27.  His current blog, China Life Blog, has been virtually shut down, but his previous, award-winning blog, Korea Life Blog, is still active.  Read it soon because it too may be shut down in the future.  All traces of his life in China except for Jake’s post have vanished from the Internet.  I hope that Shawn’s Korea blog remains online so that people can read his fine work.  He was a very talented blogger.
 
His friend Jake posted an entry discussing what happened.  His ex-girlfriend, Ling Ling, recently started a blog of her own, most likely inspired by Shawn.  I won’t speculate on the specifics of Shawn’s death–read Jake’s narrative to learn more about what happened.  Shawn’s story reminds me of another tragedy that jarred me when I was younger–the suicide of one of my high school classmates.  He was a star basketball player with a full-ride scholarship to play basketball at a state university.  He was an excellent student and had what many thought was a rock-solid relationship with his wonderful girlfriend.  He was popular and beloved by our hometown.  Yet he committed suicide not more than two months after we graduated from high school.  The entire community was shocked by his untimely death.  Many suspected that breaking up with his girlfriend triggered his death, something I later confirmed with his ex-girlfriend.  At the time I felt so mortal, especially after another classmate died a month earlier in a car accident, and a third one nearly drowned.  We were high school graduates with a very bright future, but we were scared to death of dying and cognizant of our own mortality.  It was a very somber summer.
 
In case you are wondering why I’ve posted two tragic posts this week–Shawn’s death and the fall of Barbaro–no worries.  Life is good here.  I’m busy and a bit tired perhaps, but none the worse for wear.  Unlike Shawn, I will never live my life online through this blog.  Shawn’s blog was appealing to readers partly because he often blogged about his personal life.  This may have made him more vulnerable to suicide.  When you are popular in any way, even as a blogger, you find yourself under increasing pressure to perform.  When you write about the drama in your life, blogging magnifies those feelings.  The audience eggs you on and asks for more, more, more.  I wish Shawn could have sought comfort and praise through another means.  He might still be alive today.  Now one of my colleagues is working on helping Shawn’s family return his remains to the U.S.  What a sad ending to someone will immense promise.

Good to be home

Dear Reader, we just returned to our home in Korea after spending the past month in China and the United States.  We are exhausted and will no doubt experience lingering jetlag throughout the week.  It’s Sunday night.  Thank goodness Memorial Day weekend is next week.  I have a feeling we’ll need the extra day to catch up from our vacation.
 
Although I did not blog at all last week–the longest I’ve been away since I started writing this in December 2004–you still stopped by to read World Adventurers.  As always, thank you.  I wanted to write, but vacation and a dial-up modem at my parents’ home kept me away from the computer.  We had a fabulous time nonetheless.  I will drive into writing again tomorrow.  Today’s post is just a short note to let you know that I am still alive and made it home safely.  I plan to spend the next couple weeks recapping some of the highlights of our trips to China and the states.  Good night, and thanks for all the hits.

Back home…but not for long

Last night my son and I returned to Korea, our adopted home.  My wife had returned two days earlier than we did because she had to work on Thursday and Friday.  We will be home until next Thursday, when we head back to the United States for two-and-a-half weeks of rest and relaxation (R&R).  We plan to visit family and friends in Montana, Idaho, and Washington.  Our R&R trip will be the first real vacation I’ve taken since Christmas 2001, when my wife and I went to Egypt and Jordan for three weeks (I went to China last week on an official exchange).  Until now, I’ve been too preoccupied with my first child, school, and work.  Of course, visiting family isn’t truly a vacation–we chose to go home to visit family over Sydney, Australia, our official R&R point.  No doubt Australia would have been more of a vacation.  One of my colleagues opted for R&R in Oceania and spent two glorious weeks in Australia and New Zealand.  Visiting Down Under would have been brilliant, but I have no qualms about going home to the Pacific Northwest to visit family we haven’t seen in over a year.
 
We had a fabulous time in China.  I wish I had more time tonight to write a long narrative about the trip, but as you can probably tell, Dear Reader, I haven’t had much time to blog lately.  I’m home now and will recap our trip nightly until we leave on Thursday evening.  Tonight’s entry will again be short so I can focus on posting photos from our trip.  I’m sure you would much prefer seeing photos of our trip over reading about it.
 
For the Shutterbugs:  I posted four sets of photos from our China trip, including Thames Town, Shanghai, Xi’an, and the tomb of Emperor Qin Shi Huang, a renown World Heritage Site famous for its terra cotta warriors.  The number of Shanghai photos posted is conspicuously small, namely because it was my fourth trip to that remarkable city, and I had already visited many of the city’s most famous sites.  Maybe next time.  I posted many more photos of Xi’an, ancient capital of the Tang Dynasty.  Enjoy!