You might assume that since I didn’t have babies until after having enjoyed a big career, I’d have been immune to the women’s malady of burnout. And yet, both times after I gave birth (at ages 39 and 41), I fell into a stupor of overwork.
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It’s been such a difficult and emotional week following the murders here in Los Angeles. In my last blog post, I called for calm in the Chinese-on-Chinese hatred that some people have expressed online.
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In yesterday’s blog post, I wrote about some of the high-profile killings of Chinese by Americans over the past two decades. In today’s blog post, I want to talk about the online hatred and e-killing of Chinese by our fellow Chinese.
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Here in Los Angeles, yesterday, April 11 began with a downpour of rain, and ended with a deluge of tears over the close-range murders of USC graduate students Wu Ying and Qu Ming from China.
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Just before the event, I published the blog post “Do not settle for Mr. Wrong,” and so we had a good discussion about how to distinguish Mr. Right from Mr. Wrong. Then someone asked: “But the biggest problem facing many Chinese women is not how to find Mr. Right, but that after several years of dating him, he still doesn’t propose. How do you get a man to commit?”
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