I had been an activist since age 15, after joining an Asian American youth leadership group, and continued in the non-profit sector for the next 10 years. I’ve led trainings and workshops on youth ...mehr sehenI had been an activist since age 15, after joining an Asian American youth leadership group, and continued in the non-profit sector for the next 10 years. I’ve led trainings and workshops on youth empowerment and Asian American history and identity. I studied Re-Evaluation Counseling and am trained in human nature, relationships, and human behavioral patterns.
By age 26, I was burnt out leading the hectic activist life and fled to Hawai`i to write, act, and surf. I fell in love with my new life. Unfortunately I also fell into an abusive relationship, which led me to feminism. I have been fortunate to be in the center of the feminist arena in NYC for the last four years, carving out my unique path of feminism as a woman of color and an Asian American. In 2010, I published my first e-book, Manifesto for Young Asian Women.
2012 was a brand new year of new beginnings. I finally took the leap and left my day job and embraced my tech company full-time and dived into my feminist blog (on sexism, racism, and dating) as well.
Other Interests:
Surfing, swimming in the ocean and lap swimming, cooking, baking, painting oil portraits, interior design, fashion (especially on a budget), nature, human nature, skinny dipping, satsuma body butter, the warm Pacific Ocean, Talenti toasted almond gelato with banana and milk, spicy Bloody Marys.
Random facts:
1. I still have the teddy bear I had since I was 4.
2. I am a terrible ice-skater.
3. I believe wholeheartedly in the power of The Wellness Formula.
4. I decided to move to Hawai`i by my third day of vacation in Honolulu.
5. One New Year’s Eve I went over to a girlfriend’s with a bottle of port (or was it sherry?), ended up leaving her place for a bunch of her friends, then ended up spending the night with someone (I still cannot recall his name or face). Probably not the best way to start the New Year…
Turn-ons:
Sunsets, openness, honesty, vulnerability, loyalty, long sailing trips, surfing under a full moon, Taiwanese breakfast (豆漿, 小籠包, 蘿蔔糕), good fashion sense, gentleness in men, genuine confidence in women, fresh and intelligent thinking.
Turn-offs:
Spitting tobacco, smoking, drinking, racism, sexism, oppressor patterns, arrogance, beer bellies, egos, inefficiency, middle class pretense, creepy men who stare at my ass.weniger sehen