after_alex

What else?

Wharton MBA 2012

Filed under: Navigating Life — admin at 7:57 pm on Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Most of my cohort for the MBA program. It’s been an extremely busy couple of weeks leading into pre-term. Apparently only Wharton has a pre-term as rigorous as ours. We’re knee-deep in regressions, bond pricing, t-accounts…that’s by day. By night we drink beer…and afterwards I struggle to arrange my new apartment in Philly’s Center City…





C’est la vie. Onto the next adventure!

Oh, and I can’t forget about what a rockin’ summer I had in Vietnam. More on this later…..

Go West, My Son

Filed under: Navigating Life, Travel, Work — admin at 1:34 am on Monday, May 24, 2010

And so West is where I’m going. At this very moment im sitting on United 875, going from Seattle to Tokyo. I’ll fill you in on the plan…

After finishing up my first year at Harvard Kennedy School, I’ve moved my stuff down to Philadelphia, in preparation for next year’s start at Wharton for my MBA program. This coming year will be the second In my three year dual degree program.

Summer, however, is what’s up next, and I’m on my way to a two month research internship in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. I’ll be working at the Fulbright School, the premier public policy school in Vietnam. Not only does the school provide a uniquely legit Master in Public Policy for Vietnamese officials and industry professionals, it also remains one of the country’s most qualified and respected think tanks. While I’m there during June and July I will be conducting research on the urban development policies, real estate, and infrastructure. It should be an interesting summer, my first professional experience in a truly Vietnamese context.

But first, I’m heading to Japan. How could i go to Asia and pass up an opportunity to visit this teeming island of modernity. Or should I say post-modernity. Well the plan is to spend about 10 days here visiting friends in Tokyo, then heading out to Okinawa and Hakata (yes, Hakata RAMEN!)..for those of you who can appreciate a bowl of ramen this will be quite a pilgrimage to the Mecca of pork flavored goodness itself (pls forgive the cultural faux pas)… and maybe I’ll make it out to Hiroshima on the way back to Tokyo. Hopefully this trip will be a good experience to fill in the gaps in my earlier trips to Japan. I’ve always wanted to go to the southern islands of Japan, so now’s my chance. I can’t imagine the next opprtunity I’ll have to see both old friends and new places in Japan, so this is it.

But whats so interesting about Japan and the rest of Asia so exactly this entanglement of new and old, East and West. Growing up as a Californian, my sense of geography is ultimately twisted. My notions of
new and old, east and west, traditional and modern are all products of California’s relative geographic location. Sure, Asia is traditionally “the East”. But it’s also just a 10 hour plane ride to the West, and it’s a region that is trying to modernize as much and as fast as any other developing place on earth. Combine that with its millenias-old history, and you certainly get a sense of the multiplicity here.

So, what you get in places like Vietnam …and perhaps Japan years ago… is a race to modernity, starting from a very modest beginning. When only 15 years ago, it was almost illegal to have a telephone, normal Vietnamese now brandish their laptops and iPhones, make-do with their Vespas and Louis Vuitton, mingle with YouTube and Facebook, and have daily debates about the real estate and stock markets. Such is the face of an overt attempt to become modern. The leap to modernity, however, not without caveats. The sales and import of Apple products and laptops is heavily controlled. Luxury goods carry a 200% import tax (imagine $100k Toyotas). And censorship only grows across Vietnam’s internet (don’t be surprised if you see me disappear from Facebook soon). The real estate markets itself is in quite a situation, as economists and industry watchers warn of an over-blown asset bubble. Thus, Vietnam is a very interesting place to be. And so, I will go West…

HBS-HKS Rivalry

Filed under: Navigating Life — admin at 4:58 pm on Monday, April 5, 2010

I thought I’d just insinuate the differences between the two Harvard schools along the Charles River.





Summer 2010 is Coming!

Filed under: Economics, Navigating Life, Public Policy — admin at 10:40 pm on Monday, March 1, 2010

I know what you’re thinking. There’s still snow outside. It’s cold and rainy. You’re still planning your next ski trip. BUT…talk of summer internship is all the rage right now, and it looks like everyone has some kind of plan to get out of Cambridge and into something exciting.

What about me? It looks like I’ll be spending another summer in Vietnam! Yes. The land of Communism, cheap beer, and motorcycles. I’m not exactly sure what I will be doing in Vietnam. This will be decided in due time. But the important facts about being there and lined up. And yes, it will be bittersweet coming back to my motherland…

Last summer seems like it wasn’t that long ago at all. I took an advanced Vietnamese course funded through the Fulbright program, which was quite awesome. I barely had time to update the blog during that season, but I definitely have the pictures to prove that it happened. I hope that this time around I will be able to get a closer look at the Vietnamese economy in addition to working on my language skills.

You may have heard about Vietnam’s latest issues. Macroeconomic troubles are on the horizon for the country…that is, if it doesn’t fix it’s financial regulatory and currency regime. It has had q number of infrastructure projects lined up…some with a great deal of trouble…and in all sorts of sectors, from transportation to nuclear power. In some optimistic scenarios, within 10 years, Vietnam will have it’s own high speed rail system (going 100+ mph), a new metro train system in Saigon, new deep water seaports, a brand new international airport in Saigon, elevated highways, nuclear power, a burdeoning healthcare and pharmacutical industry, an electronics manufacturing cluster, etc. Basically, people think that the place is goingto develop fast.

But who’s right? Are there economic troubles on the way? Or a bright future for this country that is just starting it’s climb from post-colonial, post-Communist beginnings. I think you will just have to wait and see. There are a number of people studying these issues, including the Harvard Kennedy School’s Vietnam Program and the Fulbright School in Ho Chi Minh City. The verdict is still out…

Ready back to society

Filed under: Navigating Life, Rewind: Reminiscing Home, Travel — admin at 11:14 pm on Thursday, June 4, 2009

I guess that it has taken me a while to come to this point…where I am finally at terms with being back in the US, and where I have finally re-constructed “my life.” Some people are quite good at adjusting to life back and forth from Afghanistan, but I’d say that for most like myself, the jolt of settling down can be a spin. Intentionally, however, I’ve spent the past month-and-half in Southern California in order to reclaim some of my roots and recognize what’s important for me in the future.

Last time I made my way back to the US (in 2005) after a stint in Afghanistan, I was totally culture-shocked.

This time, I was surprisingly culture-shocked again. Upon returning to the US, I rushed to my cousin’s wedding in San Jose, California. And after just 1-night of sleep I was in the middle of it — a traditional Vietnamese wedding ceremony in the suburban environs of California. I recall just staring out the window at the local park, just thinking, “man….are those kids lucky to be just rolling around at park.” Typically, kids in Kabul are working for their parents by the time they’re old enough to walk and talk. Whether they’re in the welding shop, herding goats (even on the streets of Kabul), scavenging the neighborhood trash, or just fetching drinking water from the local pump….life isn’t so simple. Still it’s kiddie-life, and I’m sure most kids look upon their younger years with yearning … no matter where they were spent.

Culture shock was accentuated this time, not just by the East/West | Islam/Christianity | Pork/Chicken divide…but by the huge chasm in technology. Being a former high-tech researcher and software manager, coming back to a world where information flies was just…IS just….amazing. Astounding. Day-by-day we can’t understand the eventual leaps in technology that we make, but with things like the new iPhone I have been simply blown away. I knew that I had to catch with almost 2 lost years of “hi-tech” so I signed up for the iPhone as fast as I could. Man…was that the right thing — and most shocking thing — to do. With this iPhone I’ve wasted away hours-days-nights (…or finally caught up with tech, depending which way you look at it)….hacking, jailbreaking, apping, and breaking this thing.

On coming back to the US, I thought that I would be able to pull out my old desktop PC and begin tinkering productively on it again…then I put my iPhone next to it…and WTF. Sure, I can put Linux on the ol’ white box and slap a bunch of cool programs on it. But pretty much the iPhone can do everything you want it to — if you are just patient enough with it. And now I’m convinced that “cloud computing” is here. To hell with it, I said. So today I dumped my beloved old white box over at Salvation Army, along with the huge 17″ Samsung Monitor that I dropped hard-earned cash on (back in 2001 of course). With my re-education with technology at least I’ve found some peace.

More importantly, however, I realize now why I wanted to spend so much time here in SoCal before moving on. California is a great place not just because it represents technology, but because it’s the home of comfort, trendy lifestyle, and great ideas. I’ve been able to do some hard meditation on “what next”…which is typically an easy deliberation for me. This time it’s different, because I feel that the US isn’t what I’ve wanted to come home to…and it’s not the core of my future…but because it’s just the platform. In reality, coming back was originally my finale for Afghanistan. No more, no less.

Now I’ve come to terms with the next few years of school at Harvard and Penn…(more on this later). Somewhere in there I’ve also found some bearing with regard to career vis-a-vis family, life aspirations, and reality’s limitations. In the years to come, it’ll be important for me to stay humble and imaginative while keeping it real. Life is at a crossroads, I suppose. And it’s an exciting time. Like my old friend Thien said, “The end of every era is the beginning of the next.” You can choose “when” you will be alive, but it’s all about choosing where and how.

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