6 minute read

Home is a quantum superposition

Business Manager Douglas Baird business@ubyssey.ca

Account Manager Forest Scarrwener advertising@ubyssey.ca

Advertisement

Web Developer Brittany Sampson b.sampson@ubyssey.ca

Web Developer Sam Low samuellow@ubyssey.ca

Web Developer Akshanjay Kompelli akshanjaykompelli@ubyssey.ca

Social Media Manager [Vacant] social@ubyssey.ca

President Jalen Bachra president@ubyssey.ca

CONTACT

Editorial Office: NEST 2208 604.283.2023

Business Office: NEST 2209 604.283.2024

6133 University Blvd. Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1

Website: ubyssey.ca

Twitter: @ubyssey

Instagram: @ubyssey

Facebook: @ubyssey

TikTok: @ubyssey

We wish to acknowledge that we work, learn and operate the paper upon the occupied, traditional, ancestral and unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples, including the xʷməθkʷəyəm (Musqueam), Sḵwxwú7mesh (Squamish), Stó:lō and səli lwətaɁɬ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh).

The Ubyssey is the official student newspaper of the University of British Columbia (UBC).

It is published every second Tuesday by the Ubyssey Publications Society (UPS). We are an autonomous, democratically-run student organization and all students are encouraged to participate.

Editorials are written by The Ubyssey’s editorial board and they do not necessarily reflect the views of the UPS or UBC. All editorial content appearing in The Ubyssey is the property of the UPS. Stories, opinions, photographs and artwork contained herein cannot be reproduced without the expressed, written permission of the Ubyssey Publications Society.

The Ubyssey is a founding member of Canadian University Press (CUP) and adheres to CUP’s guiding principles.

The Ubyssey accepts opinion articles on any topic related to UBC and/or topics relevant to students attending UBC. Submissions must be written by UBC students, professors, alumni or those in a suitable position (as determined by the opinion editor) to speak on UBCrelated matters. Submissions must not contain

Alan Phuong Contributor

I always believed I was someone whose life was in constant motion — at least that’s what I believed when I left Vancouver in May of last year.

And yet, seeing the familiar Vancouver grid come into view from above, I discovered a discomforting warmth arising with my arrival “home.” challenged by the fuzzy notion of “home.” On the streets, I heard the textural mosaic of languages I had almost forgotten were a fixture back home. Being witness to the global flurry of activity there mirrored a similar but miniature version I had unknowingly been a part of in Prince Rupert, my hometown. A nostalgia that I had never been aware of.

Perhaps my desire to explore some darkish mix of travelgram comes from a naive and foolish belief in clean slates, and ideals of travel as aspirational. But really, I credit my parents.

My parents — like so many who’ve settled here — came in search of greener grass, stability and an easier life for me and my sisters. By all accounts and measures, they succeeded.

That week in London passed so quickly, but the kaleidoscope of culture there left a lot for me to toil over.

As I paused in Vancouver, I restarted my old routines in a brief process of re-localization. With under 10 days before I left for the second leg of my trip, I checked in with my mom.

“I left my home to come all the way here. And now you’re the one who’s leaving your home. 哎呀.” conceived idea I’d spun — like many others over the span of those eight months — was dismantled. racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, harassment or discrimination. Authors and/ or submissions will not be precluded from publication based solely on association with particular ideologies or subject matter that some may find objectionable. Approval for publication is, however, dependent on the quality of the argument and The Ubyssey editorial board’s judgment of appropriate content. Submissions may be sent by email to opinion@ubyssey.ca ca/pages/submit-an-opinion

In its place, I found a much messier, less clearly delineated something to the notion of “home.” Much less of a quantitative anything and more of a feeling. Home is a quantum superposition.

Writing from Vancouver, what has stayed with me are the handful of gemstone conversations I had with others about identity and home. Each stone helped me piece together the self-construction of my identity.

A walk through Brussels discussing what it means to be Queer and Asian and Canadian.

Please include your student number or other proof of identification. Anonymous submissions will be accepted on extremely rare occasions.

Requests for anonymity will be granted upon agreement from four-fifths of the editorial board.

Full opinions policy may be found at ubyssey.

It is agreed by all persons placing display or classified advertising that if the UPS fails to publish an advertisement or if an error in the ad occurs the liability of the UPS will not be greater than the price paid for the ad. The UPS shall not be responsible for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value or the impact of the ads.

The constant comfort and stability I had growing up made me believe life would always be so, and that this would hold true while travelling West. When I excitedly made the decision to leave my childhood home in April last year, my mother tentatively approved. In hindsight, there was a moment of hesitation before she let me go, her tacit perception of my naivete perhaps. But, any hesitation she held was papered over for the opportunity of experience.

The iridescent adrenaline of those first few weeks abroad — juggling work, commitments to newly made friends and trying to plan trips-within-a-trip — soon dimmed into the glaring realization that life in Europe was different.

At work, I realized that the cultural dynamics I was familiar with and the things I took for granted back home were (surprise!) not the same. The culture, while beautiful and rich, was not my own. The background hum of the communities which grounded my identity dissipated into white noise as their roots didn’t extend out this far.

Three months passed. The lessons learned, memories gained and the sights seen were all so worthwhile, but I returned home.

In August, I had an extended layover in London, a city I had wanted to check off my bucket list.

Unexpectedly, I was immediately

Those 10 days flew by and I was boarding the plane. Almost immediately I was embraced by Mandarin. Equipped with the (mostly forgotten) knowledge of a third-year non-heritage Mandarin Chinese class, I mentally prepared for the linguistic environment of my next three months. “

你想吃西式早餐还是中式早

餐 ?”

Would you like the Western or Chinese breakfast?

Shit.

As soon as I clumsily replied, my broken Chinese made it known I was non-local. Like many children of immigrants understand, the awkward superposition of appearing local whilst not speaking to a fluent enough degree, once measured, reveals you to be of somewhere else.

The three months in Taiwan followed an arc I was much less surprised by this time around. That first month and a half was pure energy. Darting around on a bike, riding the MRT and long-distance rail. Only this time round, sprinkle in some language snafus. Then, as novelty faded into normalcy, and my time away from “home” was quickly coming to an end, I began to reflect.

While I felt much less othered in this environment than I did before, I learned of new dynamics there that I was not too fond of.

I had expected that my time East would connect me to a heritage I should have a claim to. That this would feel like “home.” But that pre-

Correction

An evening park bench talk in Taipei about having Asian heritage whilst growing up outside of Asia. “Home is where you’re local,” a French-Canadian with a globe-trotting childhood told me.

I came to read my own life in its full context: the cultural imprint from my family; the support and strength of my network of friends; the takeaways from conversations with people — both from those still active in my life and others who have branched off into their own paths. The abstract swirl of the above and more is part of what grounds me.

In the last few weeks before returning home, I was on a weekly check-in FaceTime with my parents. I remember feeling burnt out from the course workload. My dad had just passed the phone to my mom and I remarked that learning Chinese was hard. The never-ending homework — the grammar fluency I desired always just out of reach.

After listening, she plainly said, “Yes, learning English was hard for me too.”

Her comment created a tether through which I felt just a bit of what my mom had felt all those years ago when she first settled here. I saw that my search for identity through language roughly mirrored her struggle then.

For now, I feel at home back in Vancouver. But the truth is, “home” shifts and moves with us.

And while I’m not there yet, I’m becoming settled with the mildly discomforting understanding that “home” will not forever be where it is now. U

This article is from: