Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Sakagura - a brief trip to Japan

Being that this is my last week in the city this summer, I met up with my friend and his girlfriend as he heads of to NYU SoM. I've wanted to try Sakagura for a while so we decided to come here pretty last minute. 

Kamo roast - duck wrapped in scallion with basil sauce

Fluke carpaccio - thin slices of fluke sashimi drizzled in olive oil with plum paste, salmon roe, and shiso leaf

maguro tartar - chopped tuna with with flying fish roe steeped in Yuzu and caviar

tatami iwashi - sardin crackers with a spicy mayo dip

chawanmushi - egg custard with thickened Ponzu sauce

some cute spoons

saikoro steak with grated onion and soy sauce

buta kakuni - stewed diced pork belly

chocolate souffle with raspberry sauce
I liked most of the dishes we ordered. The portions were really small though. I would definitely recommend this place if you are a fan of Japanese food or just want to try something new.

Saturday, July 20, 2013

The Craze - Dominique Ansel Bakery

So this morning, at the ungodly hour of 5:30AM, two of my friends and I gathered in front of Dominique Ansel Bakery to catch the cronut craze (and the soon to be frozen s'mores craze). There really wasn't much to do on line other than chat, nap a couple of minutes here and there, and get randomly interviewed.

so many cronuts!

Blackberry cronut

The frozen s'more

The inside of the frozen s'more

Now, was the cronut and frozen s'more worth the two and a half hour wait? Guess you'll have to find out for yourself.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

How Broken We Are

Over the past month or so, one of my colleagues and I have been accused of murdering mice for our neuroscience research. According to Merriam-Webster dictionary, murder is defined as the crime of unlawfully killing, especially with malice. What my colleague and I do is not maliciously sacrifice mice; we sacrifice them in the pursuit of scientific knowledge so that humanity may benefit from it. While others don't want to get their hands dirty, we have taken it upon ourselves to pursue that knowledge. And as a result, we have received unwarranted accusations.

Taking to Facebook to try to convey my disappointment and hurt at receiving these accusations, I encountered insincerity and mockery from others. One person explicitly downplayed the accusations as something done in a "joking manner." When did accusations of murder become a joke? Not only that but other people didn't seem to understand the severity of the situation. Downplaying this incident is not only an insult to us but also to the mice who are sacrificed for humanity's benefit. This moment is one of the most disappointing instances for me as not only a researcher but also as a human being.


I'm still in shock of how somebody can downplay murder as a joke. It just points to how broken we all are.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

At What Point...

At what point do you sit down, look at yourself in the mirror and ask, "What are you doing?" At what point do you beg yourself to come back to reality and stop daydreaming in fantasies? At what point...


A year has gone by...far too quickly for my liking. It's strange how vastly different two summers can be - one in which you were my closest companion and one in which you are nothing more than an acquaintance, if even that.


It's funny how you managed to make me experience a roller coaster of emotions, ranging from disappointment and frustration to joy and excitement.But then again, maybe I only have myself to blame. Maybe I never should have let my feelings get the better of me. Maybe I never should have fallen for you.


However, I don't regret confessing my feelings. Because in that moment, what I felt was real. And even if you didn't feel the same way, I know that my feelings were genuine. I guess even today I think about it from time to time, wondering if I did something differently or said something else that perhaps our relationship would have taken a different course, that maybe the promises we made wouldn't have turned into hollow words. 


And I admit that there are a few things I would like to say but I'm choosing not to because I don't know if it's appropriate to anymore. They wouldn't really make a difference, right? 


I don't know if you'll ever read this but there is one thing that I do want to say. And that's...thank you. 


Thank you for taking the time to get to know me. Thank you for asking me about my relationship with God. Thank you for letting me into your life and sharing with me your aspirations, hopes, disappointments, and fears. And lastly, thank you for praying for me.


Would you think I'm crazy or hopeless if I told you I miss you? I wonder if you feel the same or if I'm just stuck in reverse.


I'm not really sure what our relationship will be tomorrow, a month from today, or even twenty years from now. But there's one thing that I do know - I'll be praying.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Molly's Cupcakes

So people have been telling me that Molly's Cupcakes, located on Bleecker Street in the West Village, have these amazing cupcakes. And well, yeah they were pretty amazing. My mom had been asking me to bring her cupcakes to Jersey for the longest time. I think she was jealous that all her friend's daughters always brought sweets back and I never did. I'm not really the type to make the effort to go hunt down sweets and desserts. But I figured I should bring them back for once. And my goodness my entire family loved them. I can't wait to go back
again!

Ron Bennington, Blueberry Cheescake, Peach Cobbler, Crème brûlée

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Finance and Christianity

Talking with my roommate, I mentioned how a lot of the Christians I know are in finance. He replied, "I don't understand how as a Christian you would ever go into finance or banking or anything of that sort. How is that supposed to be glorifying to God?"


And honestly I agree with him. A lot of the Sternies I know have said that they are simply interested in markets or find the job itself appealing but I always gave them the same response: "In the end, your entire career will still revolve around only one thing and that's maximizing profit."


How is a career that's based on making the most money you possibly can supposed to be glorifying to God? Are you actually doing anything that God calls upon you to do? I see people at Wall Street slaving away their lives, working for big shot MD's and CEO's. And for what purpose? Let's say it's not about the money. What else is there then? You get promoted and feel good about yourself? You get published in an article and earn fame and recognition? Everything is still about YOU. Sure you can say you're helping other people and companies by providing a service but the main goal is still to maximize profit. And no matter how you view it, the focal point will always be money.


If you ever come to a point where you have to lay someone off, are you going to just because somebody told you to? You might as well throw the poor soul off the Empire State Building. I'm quite disappointed and disgusted at how my fellow brothers and sisters in Christ can enter such a profession.


The reason I chose to go into medicine may seem cliché but I truly want to help others because I believe I can empathize with them. Ever since my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer, I've wanted nothing more than to be able to help others who experience similar situations. 

I guess I don't understand how two different professions can be so vastly different.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

One Sweet Day

The good times that made us laugh outweigh the bad
And I thought we'd get to see forever
But forever's gone away
It's so hard to say
goodbye to yesterday~


할아버지, 잘지내고 있지?

I can't believe it's been nine years already. Never had I imagined I'd be graduating from college in one semester and heading to medical school. Seems like time just flew by. But it's still so vivid...hiking with you on your favorite trail, sitting at the mountaintop eating the 김밥 you rolled early in the morning, and watching the sunrise.

At the time, my world ended when mom told me you were diagnosed with lung cancer. Even today all I ask is why? I'm still waiting for God to give me an answer. And even though you never proclaimed to accept Jesus as your savior, I choose to believe you're watching down on me from Heaven next to Jesus because he's performed miracles before. I choose to believe that you're still smiling so hard it's hard to distinguish your eyes.



I hope that everything I've done up to this point has been enough. I know how much you have sacrificed so that I have all the opportunities you never did growing up. And before I go, there's just one last thing I want to say:

I won't be afraid

I'll be alright if you help me
I know you're looking down from Heaven
And I won't let you down
I'll be everything you taught me
And all that I know is I'll wait
Patiently to see you in Heaven

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

To Love the Unlovely

"If you do not give up, but proceed to love the unlovely in a sustained way, they will eventually become lovely to you." - The Meaning of Marriage by Tim Keller

The Bible and Christians talk a lot about love. And I mean A LOT. Jesus once said, "Love thy neighbor as thyself." (Mark 12:31) But I feel like I don't have the desire to love everyone like Jesus calls upon me to. Some people are really annoying, some people I feel like are not worth my time, some people I just dislike for no apparent reason, and some people I just don't envision myself ever getting along with. I can't tell what's worse - the idea that I can't ever come to love someone or that it doesn't bother me that I can't ever come to love someone. 


One of my friends once told me that apathy is worse than hatred or anger. I asked her why.

"If you feel annoyed or angry towards someone it means deep down you still care to some extent, but if you're just apathetic or indifferent it means you don't even care. And that's why I think apathy is worse."

I never thought of it that way. I'm pretty indifferent to a lot of things. If something bothers me I'll force myself to ignore it so that eventually I won't care. I guess that's like the opposite of what Tim Keller was trying to say in a way.


And not to whine or complain but that's a lot of effort to love everyone. I think I'd go crazy having to talk to certain people. But why does Jesus say to love our neighbors as much as we love ourselves, if not more? 


My first thought was that it relieves you of the burden of hatred and bitterness. I can say from personal experience that it becomes very tiresome very quickly to be bitter towards someone. It's like a virus that proliferates and doesn't stop. You actually spend more effort and energy consistently hating other people than loving them. Think about it. When you hate somebody, you make the effort to either avoid said person or to make said person feel miserable. That's a lot of work! Not only that but whenever you see said person you usually feel down yourself. Low serotonin! It's a self-perpetuating downward spiral.


A virus has to be stopped by some external force or it will eventually just destroy its host. Our desire to love must be catalyzed by an external force as well - that catalyst is Jesus himself. 


Through his grace, sacrifice, and unconditional love, we need to find the desire to love others as Jesus loved us. Despite all our sins and unworthiness, Jesus paid the ultimate price by dying on the cross so we that we may be reborn.


So as I write this, I ask myself, what keeps me from feeling that desire to love?

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Home Sweet Home

Before I left for NYU in the fall of 2010, I wanted nothing more than to be able to live in NYC by myself, away from my parents, away from everything. I wanted a new start in college, to find a new identity, to redefine myself as a person. I never liked myself as a person that much in high school. I wanted a change but never felt like I could achieve that in my little town in Jersey. I already had a certain image/reputation and it kind of stuck with me. But New York gave me the perfect opportunity to make myself the person I wanted to be.

But freshman year of college was more than I could have ever anticipated, filled with stress from academics, drama from girls and friends, and personal disappointment. Despite meeting what eventually became my closest group of friends at NYU, I felt a sense of emptiness. And unlike my friends who all wanted desperately to go back home, I chose to stay in the city over the summer by working as a RA for one of NYU's dorms. I landed a position at Smilow Neuroscience Center at NYU Langone Medical Center as an undergraduate research assistant that summer. I managed to keep myself preoccupied most of the summer with research and studying in advance for organic chemistry. Not once did I want to go back home to Jersey to see my family. I don't know if it was because I kept myself busy all the time, because I just didn't miss my family actually, or because I just hated home that much.


Same thing happened the following year, I stayed by myself all summer in the city and continued my research at Smilow. I still didn't miss home all that much. For me, it was more of a hassle to have to travel back to Jersey (which is only a 50 minute trip in total). But I still went on holidays out of obligation. My parents would frequently ask when I would visit so I figured I should.


But for some reason, I began to miss being in Jersey more my junior year. Fall semester I just wanted to go home. I don't think I've ever looked forward to Thanksgiving so much. I probably made about five trips back home throughout the semester, which is equivalent to how many I had made probably the last two years combined. There was a sense of peace rather than boredom, just being able to talk to my family, cooking recipes with my mom, playing golf with my dad, and such.


I guess one way college has changed me is that I've began to appreciate home more. Maybe it's just a sign I'm actually maturing. Or maybe it's finally a sense of belonging? I'm not really sure what the reason is but I just want to go home, sit on my couch, watch tv all day, and eat popcorn.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Congratulations AACF Class of 2013

Congratulations to the class of 2013. I know that all of you will go on to do great things in your respective careers. Thank you all so much for your guidance and compassion over the last two years since I've joined AACF. Keep in touch!


May the best of your today's be the worst of your tomorrow's

Finally they got it right!

Thank you Venus for your compassion and steadfast guidance over the last two years. I still have so much to learn and hope that I can faithfully guide others the way you have.

Thank you Janelle for the fun, engaging conversations on Kimmel 7. I know that you will go on to be a great nurse because there is no one I can think of who is more compassionate and empathetic and caring as you.

Thank you Cathy for your enthusiasm and energy. The words outreach still resonate in my mind. I hope to see your photos on TIME or something one day! 

Thank you Carrie so much for all the long talks that I know must have frustrated you beyond belief. Thank you for always being the best jiejie anyone could ever ask for.

Thank you Lin for being the best bro over the last two years. We've talked about everything from girls to cars to photography. I hope there's more bro conversations to come.

To Smorgasburg in the Midst of Finals

Tiffany you look beautiful here :)
Lumpia Shack! Pork, truffle adobo mushroom, and duck
In the midst of finals, it was nice to just escape from studying and Manhattan for a few hours. My friend Tiffany and I went to Smorgasburg at Williamsburg, Brooklyn to eat some good food. Yay for foodies! As usual, Smorgasburg did not disappoint, although it would have been nicer if the weather cooperated. All in all, I had a great time, eating delicious food, going to random hipster clothing and jewelry stores, and such. Hope you had fun also Tiffany! :D
Brooklyn Oyster Party! ME, CT, RI


The famous Mighty Quinn's Brikset! Waited forever in line...
Cake Bites! salted caramel and chocolate mint

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Find Me Here...

Find me here
and speak to me.
I want to feel You
I need to hear You.

It's a song I listen and sing to everyday. But sometimes I don't feel like that last line is how I truly feel...


Sometimes, I don't feel like "I need to hear you" because for the longest time I feel like I've been on my own - on my own with school, on my own dealing with my insecurities, on my own dealing with family problems, just on my own.


I think a lot of it has to do with pride. I'm proud of the fact that I can, for the most part, deal with school and academics on my own. I'm proud of the fact that I stayed strong through all the hardships my family experienced. I'm proud of a lot of things. And I want to feel You but for the longest time I've never felt like "I need to."


But lately, for some reason, that "I want to" has become an "I need to." And I know I need to but I just can't. I'm still afraid of letting go of the reins, letting go of everything and turning to You because for so long I've been in control, guiding my own fate. I don't know where you'll lead me to and to be honest it scares the shit out of me.


I think one of the scariest things I'm still trying to learn is that no matter how much effort and time I invest into something, such as school or even friends and family, I may still fall short and be disappointed. I've been taught by my parents since preschool that my success is directly correlated to the amount of effort and time I invest. And for the most part, my parents have been correct. When I practiced cello or guitar for hours on end, eventually I was able to master thumb position and artificial harmonics. When I shot hundreds of free throws, eventually I was able to make free throws at roughly a 84% clip. When I studied my ass off for organic chemistry, eventually I was able to earn one of the highest grade averages in the course.


But every so often I find situations where that correlation does not hold true. It depresses me when I realize that sometimes my effort and time were for nothing. And when I don't see the success and results that I expect, I feel confused, I feel lost, I feel broken. I'm tired of constantly trying to live up to society's expectations and standards. I'm tired of trying to prove to myself that I can do it. I'm tired of feeling like I'm not good enough. I'm just tired.


Other Christians tell me that Your love is more than anything I can ever ask for in this life. If that's so, why do I still want recognition and respect from others? Why do I want to hear from a girl those eight letters, three words? Why do I want things that are nearly unattainable? Is it just human nature to want something I can't have or is there an emptiness I'm trying to fill? Why do I still feel so broken? Why do I never feel satisfied? Why do I feel like I'm just not good enough?


I want to be able to scream:

You're all I want
You're all I need
You're everything

And really mean it. I don't want them to be empty lyrics to a song I just sing because I like the melody. I want those words to be a true representation of my desire for You to be my everything. Because...

How can I stand here with You
and not be moved by You?
Would You tell me 
how could it be
any better than this?

Thursday, May 2, 2013

I Wish I Could Keep my Promise

So due to some unforeseen circumstances, I confessed to you slightly reluctantly. I didn't really think it would ever have to get to that point but I felt like you deserved an explanation as to why all your best friends were hiding something from you.

And I know we said that we would stay friends and stay close and that we'd be okay. We're going to be okay...right?

I want to tell you we're going to be okay and stay close. I really do. But I can't...because it wouldn't be the the truth.

I don't know if we will be. I don't know if I will be (at least for now).

I know it'll be hard for me but I think I need to step back for a moment and deal with my emotions on my own. I don't want to lose you as a friend and the way I see it is that I need to sort out my own feelings first before I can return to being the "best friend."

So if you ever get a chance to read this...
If I seem like I'm being distant...
If I seem like I'm being cold...
If I seem like I'm not making the effort to meet up...

It really isn't you...
It's just me...

Monday, April 29, 2013

Carrying my Heart on my Sleeve Isn't Really my Thing

It's a pretty common expression - "carrying your heart on your sleeve."

I've always admired people who are able to do just that. They appear so confident and free. I want to be able to say "I honestly don't give a fuck what you think about me and I'm going to say and show what I feel because I can."

Now I'm not saying that it's okay to say whatever I want to. For example, it'd be flat out rude and disrespectful of me to call someone an idiot because I believed they were an idiot.

If I can think of a good example to illustrate the idea I'm trying to convey, then I'd pick Kobe Bryant. Kobe has always been an outspoken, self-confident baller. He demands perfection out of everyone, including himself, and isn't afraid to say it. He doesn't care what critics have to say about him. He says what he wants and leaves it at that, never once turning his head to look back. He gives everything 110% effort to prove his doubters wrong.

I look at Kobe and how he carries his heart on his sleeve. He lays everything out there for the world to dissect and criticize. But in the end, he still knows that he is who he is, no matter what anyone has to say. Then I look at myself. Why can't I just carry my heart on my sleeve? Why can't I just say what I honestly want to? Why do I worry so much about the after effects?

I think most of it stems from the fact that whenever I truly opened up to someone who I believed cared, they left me. They left me hanging onto the idea that they cared. They left me to wonder why they chose to walk away from everything. They left me with my trust in relationships shattered. I try to not expect anything from others anymore because I don't want to be disappointed more than anything else. Maybe I just hope for the best out of people too often. If anything, my past relationships have taught me that people will always constantly disappoint me.

Another part of it might be more subconscious than anything else. I've grown up with the societal idea that men don't really show their emotions because it's considered to be "sensitive" and "unmasculine." I guess that idea that has perpetuated upon itself. Generally I feel like talking about my own "feelings" and problems and worries would make me appear weak and incapable of solving something on my own. I don't want to portray the image that I need somebody else's help. I'm a person who takes great pride in being able to reason things out and then come up with a rational way to solve those problems.

There are still so many things I want to say to certain people. I want to tell the girl who led me on: "You really hurt me." It's such a simple statement to say but I still can't bring myself to say it. Part of me wants an apology still because I feel like I deserve one. Part of me believes that it's not worth the effort anymore because she seems like she's moved on so I should to. Part of me thinks that she's just one of those people that'll never admit to what she did. Whatever the reason, that simple statement is still something I want to say. 

I don't really know what it is that prevents me from sharing how I feel, even to my own friends and family. Out of all people, I feel like I should be able to tell them at least. But I don't. I don't want them to worry because all of them already have their own problems to deal with. In a way to block out others and hide myself, I usually just end up saying unnecessary insults to push others away from me. Stripping others of the opportunity to connect to me is just me trying to save myself from that disappointment I was talking about earlier.

But as I write this, I ask myself: "Can I really keep on living like this?" Can I maintain this "distance" from others forever? Can I really make it through life on my own? Can I bring myself to trust people again? Can I get over my own insecurities to carry my heart on my sleeve?

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

One Insecurity, Many Doubts

Throughout grade school and college, I've been labeled as "the smart student" or "the smart Asian." And ever  since I feel like everything I've done regarding school has further solidified that image/reputation.

Everybody wants to be able to tell themselves that they are good at something; everybody wants to be proud of being able to showcase a certain skill or talent - for some people that might be singing, for others dance, for some sports, for others grades.

That last category is me. Grades. Academics. Straight A's. More AP courses than I can count with my fingers. Graduated top 5 out of high school. Near 4.0 science GPA as a biology major.

I grew up believing that the only thing I had to be proud of was my grades and my academic achievements. I was almost always the last kid picked to be on somebody's team for dodgeball or kickball. I was too short to ball with kids for a pickup game. I never liked the sound of my voice when I sang. I was too shy to ever perform cello as a soloist. No girl has ever honestly once told me she just likes me as a person. I was the short, chubby Asian kid who everybody knew as the stereotypical "Asian nerd." Even within my close group of friends, I was always called "the smart one," "the nerd," or any other synonym you want to throw in.

And the "smarts" or intelligence that I supposedly have according to my peers has only been exploited. In junior year of high school, there was this girl I liked for over a year. We were in a lot of classes together but I'm pretty sure she didn't know I existed. To my surprise, we were put on a group project together for AP English and I finally got the chance to talk to her. And for those of you who may be thinking that this is sounding like the typical story of "boy liking a girl out of his league" and so on...well, you can't be more mistaken. She was just an average girl. Cute smile. Long, wavy brown hair. Big, black opaque eyes. Friendly.

The project went really well. We ended up getting the highest mark in the class. And we quickly hit it off (or so I thought). We began studying after school together, hanging out a lot, texting throughout the night, etc. I felt like that maybe this time...

But when I finally confessed, she replied with an answer that I never saw coming: "Oh, you really didn't think I liked you, did you? I thought it was pretty obvious that we were only friends. I mean it's great that you're helping me out so much with classes and stuff though."

I still can't tell if she actually wanted to be friends or just used me to help her with classes. It's somewhat pathetic that I still haven't let go of this from the past. I mean it's been almost five years. Like, seriously, get over it, right?

But I can't help but think from time to time that the people I consider my closest friends today maybe actually don't even really like me all that much as a friend. I notice that I'm usually the one who has to make the effort for us to meet up and hang out and do something together. I'm usually the one who initiates conversation. I'm usually the one waiting...

I don't really consider myself all that great of a person either. Maybe I'm just bitter from this idea that I don't really have anything to offer except my grades/academics. And that makes me think even more: "Why do the people who I consider my friends even bother talking to me sometimes?" Sometimes I actually believe they probably would live less stressful lives and wouldn't have to deal with an asshole, douchebag, self-conceited jerk like me. Occasionally I want to ask, "Would you still be friends with me if I was just an average student?"

And for everyone throughout the years who has commented on how I go overboard with bragging about my grades and such.

Say I told you that my grades/academics are the only things I feel like I have to be proud of and the only things I have to offer. Say I told you that I brag about my grades to hide the fact that I'm so insecure about myself from everyone. Say I told you I do all this because I'm so pathetic and insecure that I have to be able to see that I am better than somebody else at something through other people's shortcomings.

As pathetic and borderline malicious as that may seem, I have this necessity to know that I'm better than other people at something. Because growing up, my grades were the only thing that kept me going. If I lose that now, what do I become but just another grain of sand...

And I know I'm a douchebag. Everybody says it all the time. But what's the point of trying to change that image once it has been drilled into everybody's mind? No matter how much I want to change that now I can't. It's not possible because that image has stuck with me for too long. And say I do change for the better, become more empathetic towards others...if I'm ever stressed or upset and just act "like a douchebag," people will just say, "Oh you're being a douchebag again." Well I'm sorry everyone, but no matter how much I want to change that image, it won't change because y'all believe that's what I am.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Words I Never Said (and Probably Will Never Say)

I still find it really funny that we never met until freshman year orientation despite the fact we live only roughly a fifteen-minute car drive from each other. I don't really know what it was that drew us closer at first as friends - perhaps because we were in the same orientation group with aspirations to become doctors, or maybe it's because you were just a fun, outgoing girl who liked to meet new people, or maybe it's because we discovered we actually live really close to each other in Jersey and had something in common to talk about.

Whatever the reason, I can honestly say that meeting you at orientation and staying friends with you was the single greatest blessing God has granted me here at my undergraduate career at NYU. Through the highs and lows, the best and the worst, through all the pointless all nighters for general chemistry with Halpin, through the anger and frustration that was organic chemistry with Jones, and through the failure of physics professors (MacFailden), I find it both unbelievable and deeply moving that we stayed close friends.

Don't you think it's funny that after orientation we didn't really keep in contact the rest of the summer but then somehow through mutual friends we met again? And from that point on our friendship only grew stronger - countless all nighters spent on gen chem and calc 1, the French fries sprinkled with so much salt that made my face cringe at Third North dining hall, doing a bunch of stupid dances at Third North dance room and watching me fail at body rolls, and actually discovering that there was a drink known as bubble tea together (Northern Jersey problems). I look back at everything and find that we shared so many experiences together, the simple memories that I'll cherish for a lifetime, no matter where life may take me.

Our friendship is an interesting one to say the least; we constantly tease and insult each other but we both know that it's all in good fun. Hey, at one point, according to Facebook, we were technically husband and wife. Forever the cow! (but not really forever).

I still remember how excited yet embarrassed you were to tell me about your first kiss. It's strange to think how that was more than two years ago but only feels like yesterday. I think for me at least, the most fun I had was just being able to watch football and basketball with you. Not going to lie, it's pretty awesome when a girl knows her sports, not to mention be that passionate as you are (Nets are still going to beat the Bulls though).

And when I look back at our friendship, I can't help but also feel like I've wronged you in so many ways that it would probably take at least as long as medical school to make up for everything. I honestly wished you had told me how much of a jerk, asshole, whatever you want to say, I was. Why didn't you tell me how much of a stress I was to be around? But despite all the stress and negativity I put on you, you were the one who still managed to see the little good in me at the time, the one who gave me numerous second chances. And when Christians talk about forgiveness and unconditional love and how it is something we should all keep in mind and work towards, I know that God is here with me because I have a friend like you, one who always refused to give up on me.

I'll be frank. The lines and boundaries of our friendship started blurring for me a couple of months ago. I was in denial about it, constantly telling myself that it can't be, it shouldn't be, it won't be. But when I sat down and thought about it, I knew. The one girl who has always been there. The one girl who might love football and basketball more than I do. The one girl who can both sing and dance (really well might I add). The one girl with a heart bigger than I could have ever imagined.

I'm fairly positive that the thought has never crossed your mind and why should it have? At times I still ask myself if I even have the right to, especially after all that I've wronged you. But a little part of me holds onto a thin line of hope that maybe, just maybe.

I've always been the friend. The perfect platonic friend. And our friendship has built upon this idea of us always being the perfect platonic friendship. But I don't want it to be any longer. Everyday, for the past two months, I want to see you, I want to text you, I want to hear your voice, I want to share my worries and fears and hear yours, I want to grab food with you, I want to watch basketball together, I want to walk through the streets at night with you...

But I'm so afraid. Afraid that these words, the words I never said and probably will never say, might ruin our friendship. Would it be a betrayal of the trust you have for me as a friend? Would it be nothing but an act of selfishness to honestly confess how I feel? If you ever found out, can we still be as close as before?

Normally I would tell myself I would confess because I don't want to think about the 'what ifs' and such. I don't want to regret not saying anything. But this time, just this once, I think holding onto the words I never said may be the right thing.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Only Three Weeks Left

21 Days
1260 Hours
30240 Minutes

Three different ways to count down the time.
Only three weeks left.

I didn't really worry about this that much throughout most of the year but now that the MCAT is so close I can't help but feel a bit rattled and unprepared. Despite averaging a score of 34 on four separate practice exams, I'm worried that there's too many variables I can't control.

What if there's one verbal passage that I just can't get and it kills my score? What if I start zoning out during the 4+ hour test? What if I fall ill the night before? What if the MTA shuts down and I can't make it to my test site?

In a way, this test is the culmination of my college career. No pressure right?

Sunday, March 10, 2013

Stuck on Replay

I can't believe it's been over a month since the last time I blogged about...well anything for that matter.

I made a New Year's resolution that I would try to blog at least once a week but obviously I've already failed at that. I guess I didn't anticipate this semester being so hectic and time-consuming. Each day I always have something to do, whether that be reading papers for classes, writing lab reports, tutoring students, taking practice MCAT exams, etc.

I've also made a commitment to try to regularly attend small groups and Sunday service, which for the most part I have. And I'm really glad I have because each week I learn something new about God, whether that be about Jesus in The Bible or about how to live out my own faith.

But something about this semester seems so repetitive, as if I know exactly how my whole week is going to go. I always follow the exact schedule I set for the week and frankly I feel like I should stop. Time management is good and all but I feel like I don't give myself any flexibility to do anything spontaneous. I miss making last-minute decisions to go get coffee with friends. I miss being able to just take my Nikon and go somewhere obscure and take hundreds of photos. I miss walking onto a basketball court and playing a pick-up game with strangers.

Where did the excitement of spontaneity go? Everything seems jaded.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Impossible - A Beautiful Mystery

Last night some of my friends and I were at AMC Kips Bay and decided to watch The Impossible last minute. I'm really glad that we did because it was one of the most emotionally powerful movies I had the privilege of seeing in a long time. I love watching films that don't require ridiculous action scenes to be entertaining but rather utilizes human emotions in a way that leaves you amazed at how powerful the human spirit and soul can be. When I first stumbled upon a trailer of The Impossible, I was immediately captivated by the scene in which the tsunami comes in, destroying everything in its path, sweeping away the family we are about to follow on this amazing journey.

Based upon the true story of a Spanish family on a Christmas vacation in Khao Lak, Thailand, The Impossible relives the most devastating tsunami on record that struck Southeast Asia on December 26, 2004. In the opening scene, we see Lucas, the oldest son, annoyed by his younger brother, who is afraid of flying. There seems to be a disconnect between the brothers, something that I can personally relate to as my brother and I for a while grew apart growing up. The family arrives at a beautiful resort in Khao Lak right by the beach. And for the first 20 or so minutes of the film, we see the family enjoying the beautiful weather and beach, seemingly escaping to paradise.

While playing in the pool, Lucas and his mother, Maria, are separated from Henry, the father, and the two younger sons, Thomas and Simon. The tsunami then rushes in and the scene is abruptly blacked out, perhaps trying to convey the sense of losing consciousness. We soon find Maria clinging on to a palm tree for dear life, obviously distraught and still in shock from what just transpired. She sees her son Lucas taken by the current and desperately tries to catch up to him, only to be stabbed in her chest by a tree branch. By the time the water subsides, Maria is badly injured, her leg with a large, open wound, and her chest still bleeding profusely. On their way to climb a large tree in case another wave rushes in, they both hear the cries of a young boy. Lucas wants to go for the tree and leave the boy, screaming at his mother that she is injured and there may not be time before another wave comes. His mother asks him, "Listen, what if that boy was Simon or Thomas? What if they needed help? You'd want someone to help them, wouldn't you?" Lucas replies, "Simon and Thomas are dead!" As the audience, we are not sure if Lucas said this as a last resort to persuade his mother to climb the tree or because he actually meant it. His mother answers, "Even if it's the last thing we do..." I was glad to see that Maria chose to help the boy despite knowing the dangers lurking. I feel like too often people today compromise their morals for selfish and petty reasons. In the end, they find the little boy, Daniel, and they all climb the tree. After what seems like an eternity, some natives walk by looking for survivors and they help carry Maria to a local village. From there, the natives take Maria and Lucas to a hospital where Maria can receive proper treatment.

Watching this scene, I was deeply moved at the fact that the natives, complete strangers, went out of there way to help Maria and Lucas, safely transporting them to a hospital for further treatment. In times of need, I find it compelling that humans are able to come together, transcending all racial and cultural barriers, to assist one another, showing empathy and compassion (i.e. Hurricane Katrina, 9/11, etc). But I ask myself: "If humans are capable of such actions, why is it that we hear about it most often when some natural disaster or horrific incident occurs? Why can't we see this same empathy and compassion daily?" I think the reason why is because God is absent from our daily lives. We don't look to Christ first but more often as the last option.

Maria's condition worsens and after her first surgery she is left too weak to go receive the second. She asks Lucas to help others in any way he can. A Swedish traveler arrives at the hospital, asking Lucas if he has seen the traveler's son. Lucas searches around the entire hospital and eventually reunites the father with his son. When Lucas returns to his where his mother was, she is no longer there. We learn later that due to a mix -up of the records, she was listed under a different name. Although a very minor detail, I thought it depicted the confusion and chaos that must have taken place at the time.

The movie shifts to Henry regaining consciousness on the beach, desperately crying out for Maria and Lucas. The younger two sons miraculously are safe with very little injuries. Henry chooses to send his two sons off with another group to the mountains where they can receive food and shelter as he embarks on a journey throughout Thailand to search for Maria and Lucas. I couldn't help but get emotional when his two younger sons beg Henry to stay with them but Henry makes the tough decision to send them off. Thomas, the older of the two, graciously accepts the responsibility of looking after Simon. I loved how the movie also showed the resilience and perseverance of these minor characters.

Henry ends up injuring himself when he falls and is brought to a local shelter in which he meets a French traveler who happened to be at the same resort in Khao Lak. The French traveler tells Henry of how he injured his leg before his family was set to travel to Khao Lak and how his wife tried to convince him that they should all just stay home. But the traveler insisted that they go because they had been planning the trip for a long time. He recalls how he woke up to the noise of the tsunami rushing in and finding a note his wife left him on the table - "At the beach." Henry begins to share his story of how he was separated from Maria and Lucas and how he's searching for them. The traveler lets him borrow his phone, which is low on battery, so Henry can call Brian, Maria's father. As Henry begins to tell Brian of how he doesn't know where Maria and Lucas are, he begins hysterically crying, his words barely decipherable. He abruptly hangs up the phone because he knows other people need to make calls as well. The traveler insists that he call again, telling Henry, "You can't leave it like that." So Henry calls Brian again, promising him that he will find Maria and Lucas. This scene in my opinion was one of the best in the movie - a father and husband's determination and will to find his wife and son, the empathy and compassion of complete strangers, and the mutual understanding between humans.

After searching almost every shelter and hospital throughout the region, Henry ends up at the same hospital where Maria and Lucas are. Thomas and Simon coincidentally end up there as well. Lucas, while looking for water for his mother to drink, sees his father and desperately chases after him, only to lose him in the crowd. Screaming "Dad!" at the top of his lungs, Henry as well as Thomas and Simon, hear Lucas' plea and the four embrace each other. I could not help but tear up as I watched the father hug his three sons. The raw emotion that the actors conveyed on screen really hit home. In light of all the events in the past couple of months, I think that the film really reminds us of how important family and love truly is - cherish and appreciate it while you can because tomorrow it may be gone.

The family greets Maria as she is about to head to surgery. Lucas regrets not telling his mother of how he saw Daniel at the hospital with his father and prays that he will get the chance to. The family's travel insurance allows them to take an ambulance jet to Singapore the next day and Lucas shares his joy with his mother of how he saw Daniel with his father. I personally know the fear of not knowing whether or not the next day the woman who I call mom will be there or not. Remind your loved ones how much you love and share your joy because the world can definitely use more.

-

"How do you know which stars are dead and which aren't?"
"You don't know. It's impossible - a beautiful mystery"

Monday, January 21, 2013

Sunday Sermons

I've attended City Grace Church enough times by now to know the worship team and to recognize specific faces. I thought that by attending a church where I knew a lot of people would be beneficial for me to try to build a sense of community. For a while I looked forward to going to church on Sunday. But with each passing week I began to feel more isolated as everyone at church already seemed to have their own friends and cliques. Even the people I knew seemed to enjoy each other's company while I stood by silently, often wanting to leave as soon as the sermon was over.

I guess I only have myself to blame in that I never really made an effort to get to know people but I've always been pretty reserved when it comes to introducing myself. I feel like I should attend church but I've always hated how the feeling of isolation and loneliness seems to follow me. As for the sermons themselves, I feel like I'm not getting much out of them either. I do pay attention and listen attentively but nothing ever really resonates with me. Is there a bigger problem I'm not seeing?

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

How Much Can Words Truly Convey?

Sitting on the family room couch, I stare blankly at the flickering cursor, waiting for my fingers to begin typing words to appear on the white word document. Such a simple question: "Why do you want to be a doctor?" I type up an answer roughly a page long, single-spaced. I step away, grab a Dr. Pepper, and come back to read my answer again. I shake my head in disapproval. I highlight the page, click the delete button, and write up another answer. My answer looks okay but another word that my friend has been throwing around a lot seems to be a better adjective - inadequate.

One of my friends talked to me yesterday about how she doesn't know how to approach writing her personal statement for medical school applications. She listed all of her concerns - what if her words aren't enough to convey to the admissions committee how much she truly wants to be a doctor or what if her words make her seem "inadequate" as an applicant. And it's a valid question - how much can a one-page answer convey to an admissions committee about an individual's desire and qualifications in becoming a doctor? And I know there's many factors that the committee takes into account, such as GPA, MCAT score, volunteer work, research experience, etc. But the personal statement is thought to be the one chance we have as an applicant to show who we are as an individual, as a human being before the interview, if granted one.

How much can words truly convey? Can the committee see the difference between an applicant who genuinely wants to help others and an applicant who just wants money and fame? What specific words or phrases reveal that difference? What do we as applicants have to write to leave a memorable impression?

I truly believe that God wants me to be a doctor and I'm praying that whatever I write will work to convey the same love and grace that God has shown me but I can't help but be skeptical and have the same doubts and concerns as my friend. Can mere words be enough?

Monday, January 7, 2013

They Say the Third Time is a Charm...

"If only time flew like a dove / Well God, make it fly faster than I'm falling in love"

I've never considered Paramore to be a band that wrote great lyrics but for some reason recently, I wish God could actually make this line come true. Pathetic loser, hopeless romantic - I'm not quite sure what to call myself these days but I just want these feelings to stop.

My friends tell me to be careful; I tell them I won't fall for her again. And yet here I am, typing away on this post despite knowing she'll probably read this at some point. How is it that every single time I feel like I can get through a day without thinking about her, she somehow knows to contact me so that I can't? Does she just intuitively know that she should text me so I'll continue to think about her each day forward?

I guess as humans we will always have a soft spot in our hearts for the people we care about. And it's one of the most comforting, reassuring feelings we can experience to know that the ones we hold dear, care about us in return. The moment we hear it from them is when we know we mean something to them, when we're actually worth it.

But what if their actions say otherwise? If you care about someone, would you hurt them? At what point do you realize you should stop, putting your selfish desires aside to protect the person you said you care about? I guess it would be a lie to say that I didn't feel like she owed me an apology and explanation. "An honest mistake" - a simple phrase, shot straight to the heart. She told me she can't trust God to bring her the right guy at the right time. Do you really ever know? I guess I was the only one who felt that way...

There's so many things I still want to say:

You say we can be friends, but how can you play with my emotions like that and act like everything is okay? I don't understand how you can tell yourself it's okay because it's not. I'm not okay.
What was really the point of getting me to fall for you again? Was I just an ego-boost, a way for you to prove to yourself that you could get a guy to fall for you? Did you pick me because I was convenient and easy? For some reason, it feels like you knew the whole time you had me in the palm of your hand.
How far were you going to go find out if I liked you? And once you knew, how did you feel? Satisfied, happy, content?
And lastly, the one thing I want to ask but don't because I'm afraid to hear your answer - was there ever one moment you truly felt like you wanted to be with me?

Now it's come to the point where we're starting to talk again. I fear I may be falling for you a third time. They say the third time is a charm but...I don't think it will be.

Friday, January 4, 2013

My rendition of Go-Go Curry


I'm slightly upset that the katsu is not really visible but a success nonetheless!

Thursday, January 3, 2013

How I See God in My Friends

Roughly fifteen weeks remain until I take the Medical College Admission Test, better known as the MCAT. Pre-med students talk about the MCAT with their fellow classmates even before they begin their undergraduate careers, exemplifying how much of an emphasis the medical field places on this one standardized test. I have heard many horror stories since I was a freshman in high school about the MCAT and I still don't know what to expect.

When I first began my undergraduate career in the fall of 2010, I felt confident that I would be accepted into a top-tier medical school, whether that be NYU, Columbia, UCSF, etc. I quickly became friends with other pre-med students who all shared the same dream as me - to one day be able to help others as a doctor. Through this one common dream, my friends and I learned to study together and to support each other through many highs and lows.

I wish I could say that our friendships remained so strong that we never had any arguments or problems but unfortunately that is not the case. I personally felt that I was always good at dealing with the stress of academics but this was far from the truth. In my sophomore year, my friends and I all took the infamous organic chemistry. It is infamous for many reasons, the first being that it is considered to be one of the most difficult undergraduate science courses offered in any college curriculum. Second, specifically at NYU, our professor was known to give exams that had horribly low averages, often in the 40s or 50s. I took the advice of a friend who had just finished the course and studied in advance over the summer prior to the start of the course. By the time the first exam came around, I felt like I knew everything there was to know about organic chemistry - resonance, synthesis, mechanisms, etc.

But one by one, my friends succumbed under the stress and pressure of the course as the year progressed. I still feel terrible that at the time I failed to realize how stressed out each one of them were; I continued to be the same arrogant, cocky student I was from freshman year, joking out loud about how easy the exams were in front of the entire class. And slowly, all of my friends, one by one, began to avoid me throughout the school year. At first I figured they were all just busy with their own schedules and studying so I didn't think much of it. And for the entire school year, my friends and I slowly drifted apart.

Finished with organic chemistry forever, my friends and I began to hang out again in junior year like we had freshman year. I made a half-joking comment over dinner one day to one of them about how I found it funny we all never spent much time together sophomore year. "Do you want to know why we didn't hang out with you? It's because you stressed us the fuck out. I've cried on multiple occasions just because of you alone." My friend's words were one of the biggest wake-up calls of my life. The thought never occurred to me that my friends avoided me because my attitude towards my academics directly affected them as well. How could I call myself their friend when I was one of the reasons that brought them to the point of falling apart completely? To this day, I'm still grateful that they chose to remain my friends because I don't know what I would do without them - all throughout college they have always been there to listen to me when I needed someone to talk to, when I wanted a partner to grab lunch or dinner with, or when I just wanted to hang out with someone and talk about the most pointless things in the world. I truly believe that my group of friends have made me become a better person from the apathetic, arrogant, cocky, self-centered boy I was when I first entered college. It is in their unconditional love that I see God.

And it has been upsetting that many of the pre-med students who I became friends with have dropped the program for various reasons, the number one reason being mediocre grades. I can only imagine what it must feel like to give up on your dream of becoming a doctor only because you did not receive a high grade in a course that probably has nothing to do with medicine anyways. But God has a different plan for all of us as much as it still upsets me that many of my friends will not be joining me as a doctor. But I'm still happy that many of them will join me as nurses, physician assistants, etc. I believe that God is calling each one of them to be involved in healthcare in some way and I'm excited for the opportunity to be working with them in the future.

And although I have many doubts and worries with regards to the quickly approaching MCAT and applications I must fill out over the summer, I believe that if I submit my career and my life to God, He will ultimately lead me down the road meant for me, whether that be as a doctor or something completely different. But for now, I am going to return to reading up on neuromuscular junctions!

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Second dinner of 2013!



Butternut squash risotto, cheddar broccoli soup, and porterhouse steak!

First dinner of 2013!


Limited by the number of ingredients available in my home I decided to make lobster tail coated in lemon butter, shrimp fried rice, and hash browns - it was an interesting combination to say the least but that's all I had to work with!

(for photographers I apologize for overdoing the bokeh)

2012 - The Year I Found God Again

I can still vividly remember what everyone in my family was doing a few minutes prior to January 1, 2012 - my brother was over at his computer skyping one of his friends talking about graphics cards, my mother was calling my grandmother to wish her a happy new year, and my father was dozing off while watching TV, waiting to see the ball in Times Square drop when the clock struck midnight. As for me, I was sitting on the family room couch with Maitland Jones' organic chemistry textbook opened across my lap, reading up on the Diels-Alder reaction.

I wasn't one of those children that stated at an early age that I want to be a doctor when I grow up. It's really funny, in my honest opinion, that adults always ask young children, "What do you want to be when you grow up?" They can't seriously expect a child to know what he or she wants to do for the rest of their life, right? That's blasphemous! You often hear a variety of answers too - astronaut, singer, fashion designer, doctor, lawyer, football player, teacher, etc. But why is it that children repeat these answers specifically? I think it's because parents reinforce the idea that these occupations are what defines "success" in our modern society. Children don't really know what they want to do for the rest of their life, they merely say answers that are acceptable to parents. The way I came to realize that what I truly wanted to do was practice medicine also just happened to be the greatest challenge God presented to me in my life.

As a young Korean immigrant, I was not born into a Christian family. Both my parents considered themselves to be agnostic. Maybe there was some higher power, maybe not. So how did I end up finding God in my childhood? My parents quickly realized that my brother and I needed some form of a community in the States because my family did not know anybody in New Jersey. They figured joining a Korean church would be the easiest way to introduce my brother and me to kids around our age. Making friends did not come easily because I still could not speak English very well despite attending ESL classes at school. Other kids didn't bother to talk to me. And for my first year in America  I felt truly alone. Now I know what you're thinking, what does a five year-old kid know about loneliness, right? But let me tell you that kid did know loneliness, very well in fact. Loneliness was a kinder friend to him than other kids.

One summer day, my pastor at church came over to talk to me. He was quite young himself, 27 if I remember correctly. And he asked me, "Do you know about Jesus Christ?" I had been attending church for over a year and still did not know the gospel so I answered, "No." After the sermon, he asked me to grab lunch with him and he shared the gospel with me of how a man named Jesus Christ, the son of God, was sent to Earth to die for our sins and was resurrected to return to Heaven. I guess as a child I found the story fascinating, believing every minute detail, believing that this man, Jesus Christ, was my savior. And so for the next seven years I went to church, strengthening my faith in God.

But one phone call in my final year of middle school sparked my fall away from God. My grandfather in South Korea had been diagnosed with lung cancer for over a year. I remember, every night before I went to bed, praying to God to look over my grandfather. Just two summers prior, my grandfather and I had gotten closer - almost every morning he would take me to go hiking to see the sunrise. I always complained and asked him to let me sleep those extra five minutes that we all know don't really make us feel any better. "Every day is a new day and you want to start it off right, don't you?" I guess that's why to this day I still like to wake up early.

The look on my father's face as he answered the phone said it all...my grandfather had passed away.

Being only thirteen at the time, I didn't handle the news very well. As each day passed, all I could ask God was one thing: "Why?" Why did you not protect my grandfather? Why did you not answer my prayers? These were the questions that I still do not have answers to. No matter how hard I tried to make sense of the situation, I just grew more bitter and angrier. And as Christians we hold the believe that if we accept Jesus Christ as our savior we will join him in Heaven after we die. But what about my grandfather who I knew never accepted Jesus as his savior? Where was he? I grew up believing that God could perform wondrous miracles. I needed it more than ever at that moment.

I made a promise to myself. I would give God a second chance because I'm a firm believer in second chances. If he disappointed me again, I would give up on him completely. For some reason, my mother became diagnosed with breast cancer roughly a year after my grandfather's death. The news shattered all hope I had in God instantaneously. That was it. I'm done with God forever, I told myself.

All throughout high school, I lived with the constant fear of not knowing whether or not my mother would be alive the next day. My family at the time did not have the money to pay for chemotherapy in the States so my mother flew back to South Korea to receive chemotherapy there. I was so angry that my family didn't have the finances to pay for chemotherapy here. And it certainly didn't help that everyone at church repeated things like: "God has a plan for everything" or "God is testing you." What kind of sick, perverted test was this? I felt like nobody could understand what I was going through. And it didn't help that my relationship with my brother completely broke down. He began to resent me for trying to act like my mother around him.

"Hey, go finish your homework and play your games later."
"Stop fucking act like your mom because you're not!"
"What did you just say?"
"I said stop acting like your mom because you're not. Got it?!"

My father wasn't around much because he was busy with work. At the time I didn't really think about how it affected him but looking back on the whole situation, he always tried so hard to look strong for our sake. I can only imagine how hard it was for him, to think that the only woman he has ever loved in his life was riding on the fence between life and death.

By some miracle my mother is still with us today. But I didn't give credit to God. I was convinced that it was due to the hard work of the doctors who cared for my mother that she is still with us today. And for the rest of high school I stopped going to church and rejected God from my life entirely. The way I saw it, God didn't deserve to be in my life.

Like most high school graduates, the next big chapter of my life was college. Stuck choosing between Columbia's Fu Found School of Engineering and NYU's College of Arts and Sciences, I ultimately chose to attend NYU. Why would I give up going to an Ivy League school? 1) I really didn't want to do engineering. I only applied because my parents told me to. 2) I wanted to become a doctor. Why do I want to be a doctor? You might think it's because I want the recognition of being a doctor or perhaps for the money or whatever. But I truly want to become a doctor because I personally know what it's like to be in a family where disease is a real thing, not just some words in a textbook or actors on a movie screen. And with that mindset, I promised that I would become a doctor whatever it took because I wanted to be the doctor that could change people's and families' lives.

My freshman year at NYU was one for the ages. Thanks to one of my high school friends who was in NYU's 7-year dental program, I quickly made many friends. I also managed to make friends with some of my floormates who actually still remain some of my closest friends at NYU. But all in all, my freshman year consisted of doing a lot of stupid things like most college freshman - drinking, staying up all night for no reason, etc. And the bitterness that I built up in high school followed me to college. I found myself lashing out at my friends as I stressed over my academics. I considered my grades to be the most important thing in the world and I was willing to make any sacrifices to keep my GPA as close as possible to the elusive 4.0

Freshman year flew by and although I didn't do as well academically as I had hoped, I was feeling good about myself in general - I just found a research position in a behavioral neuroscience lab for the summer and my science GPA was still a 4.0.

Sophomore year came and it was supposed to be the hardest academically - I had both the infamous organic chemistry and molecular and cellular biology. I told myself that I just needed to get A's in these courses and I should be a shoe-in for medical school. I almost did, just one A- and three A's. Pretty good all in all. But sophomore year was more than just grades.

I was introduced to another Korean who attended a Christian fellowship at NYU - Intervarsity Asian-American Christian Fellowship - through a mutual friend. He invited me to come to one of their large groups so I figured why not. Actually I only went because I thought it was rude to say no so I ended up going. I didn't get much out of the speaker. For me it was just one of those talks about God and how Christians should strive to live our lives with God's love and grace in mind blah-blah-blah. But for some reason, I found the fellowship members to be really comfortable to talk to about, well, anything actually. For the first time in my life, I felt like I wasn't judged by a Christian for not being "Christian." It was really strange. I was so sure that these people would stop talking to me once I told them I wasn't Christian but they talked to me even more, asking me why I didn't believe in God. And for the longest time I used my scientific knowledge to present counterarguments to anything they had to say to me. I guess it was just a way for me to try and find the answer I wanted deep down. It was crazy how involved in the fellowship I was getting - I even attended a weekly small group and I never missed one of them the whole year. My small group leader asked me at the end of the year, "Why did you come out to every small group?" I didn't really have an answer. Looking back, I was seeking out God but just didn't know at the time.

Sophomore year came to a close and I was back working at the same research lab over the summer. But the summer brought me much unexpected drama. And it all begins with a girl from the fellowship. We were in the same grade but I didn't really get to know her during the school year. She was working in the city over the summer as well so naturally we began to hang out - a lot. We were texting every single day, skyping at night, and met up on weekends. My friend who worked with me at the research lab asked me if there was anything between her and me. I told him no but I didn't even know. She asked me why I gave up on Christianity and in God. I told her everything. She was the first person at NYU to ask me and the first person I told why. I found it surprising how much I found myself opening up to this girl who I only got to know for roughly one month.

Later I finally mustered up the courage and asked her, "What do you consider us to be?" She didn't know either. A week later we admitted we had feelings for each other but her next sentence cut me like a dagger: "I can't date you because you're not Christian." I always knew there were Christians who wouldn't date non-Christians; I never figured I'd be on the losing end of one of those situations though. I felt completely shut down but I knew she had the right to say no for whatever reason so I dropped the whole thing altogether. She however didn't. Although she rejected me already, she kept on complaining about why she felt like she was the only one putting any effort into the relationship (excuse me but what relationship?) and she constantly compared me to her ex-boyfriend. I let it go most of the time because I knew she was just being emotional but little by little I felt my self-esteem as a man being crushed piece by piece. I found myself pathetic that I could let one girl who already rejected me feel so small and worthless. And by the end of the summer we stopped talking to each other. How could someone who I felt so comfortable talking to become a total stranger?

I didn't know what to do. I talked to other fellowship members about the situation and they didn't know either. But all of them gave me one common advice - pray. I scoffed at them secretly. Prayer had never done anything for me but I figured I'd give it a try because nothing I was doing was making me feel better. So before I went to bed I prayed, just like how I prayed for my grandfather seven years ago. At first it was strange and uncomfortable. It's sort of like the feeling you get when you just feel so out of place in a room with strangers you have no idea what to do. My words seemed to vanish into thin air the first night. But I kept on praying every night for a month. I don't even know why.

And then slowly but surely I felt all the bitterness and resentment I had toward this girl disappear. I don't know how it happened at first. Then I asked myself what I wanted to do and I knew. I realized God put her in my life for a reason - it was to bring me back to Him. As corny as it may sound, she is the one who brought me back to God. How can I shun somebody so precious like that out of my life? I knew I wanted her to be a part of my life, whether that be just as a friend or maybe something more further down the road. We've had problems again recently defining our relationship, letting our emotions get the better of us, but we still remain friends somehow. I thought for sure after she rejected me twice after leading me on I would never want to talk to her again but with God's grace I found the grace and mercy in myself to forgive her and forgive myself as well. I was so mad at myself for letting myself fall for her twice but we are all sinners who give into temptations. I must constantly remind myself that if it's not happening now then God has a reason for that too. Maybe it never will or maybe one day we can be more than friends - either way I'm leaving it in God's hands now.

As crazy as it was, I shared this testimony at large group in front of the fellowship. I never imagined myself sharing a story like this with anyone. But I think through everything that 2012 has put me through I've learned to trust in others and most importantly in God again, that it is okay to open up and share ourselves because no matter how much others disappoint us God will never disappoint us.

So now I close the pages on 2012 eagerly waiting to see what God has in store for me in 2013. Whatever it may be, I know that in the end it is all God's will and that He knows what is best for me.