It’s been a special journey for me as I’ve participated in this project. I started shortly after returning from my first extended stay in Asia as an adult, and I returned to the United States with fresh eyes and a searching mind. These photos, in little ways here and there, have reflected that.
The more fellow travelers I meet, the more I realize that our journey is at once geographical as it is psychological. The wanderers I meet are searching for something. They pick up tiny somethings with each stop, and those somethings accumulate and gather with drops of meaning.  Maybe, if they’re lucky, they learn to stay still. Sometimes, if they’re lucky, they never stop searching.
I am a traveler, at least for now. As I get ready for my first extended stay in Africa, I remember that my earliest memory is on an airplane, somewhere above the Pacific Ocean. I am happiest in motion, whether the roads are paved or dirt, waterways or jet streams. I want to see new lands, breathe new air, meet new people.
My posts with the Museum of Chinese in America end here. (That sounds like the end of a Choose Your Own Adventure book, and I guess that’s fitting.) After snapping photos for this project, I still don’t know how to define the lens through which I see the world. But I know it’s my lens, and I’ll continue to take photos for as long as I have access to a camera.
Thanks for joining me these past few months.   As exhilarating as it is, travel is lonely at times, and it’s nice to bring friends with me on my journeys.  I hope we cross paths again soon.
An Xiao MinaSeptember 2011 

It’s been a special journey for me as I’ve participated in this project. I started shortly after returning from my first extended stay in Asia as an adult, and I returned to the United States with fresh eyes and a searching mind. These photos, in little ways here and there, have reflected that.

The more fellow travelers I meet, the more I realize that our journey is at once geographical as it is psychological. The wanderers I meet are searching for something. They pick up tiny somethings with each stop, and those somethings accumulate and gather with drops of meaning.  Maybe, if they’re lucky, they learn to stay still. Sometimes, if they’re lucky, they never stop searching.

I am a traveler, at least for now. As I get ready for my first extended stay in Africa, I remember that my earliest memory is on an airplane, somewhere above the Pacific Ocean. I am happiest in motion, whether the roads are paved or dirt, waterways or jet streams. I want to see new lands, breathe new air, meet new people.

My posts with the Museum of Chinese in America end here. (That sounds like the end of a Choose Your Own Adventure book, and I guess that’s fitting.) After snapping photos for this project, I still don’t know how to define the lens through which I see the world. But I know it’s my lens, and I’ll continue to take photos for as long as I have access to a camera.

Thanks for joining me these past few months.   As exhilarating as it is, travel is lonely at times, and it’s nice to bring friends with me on my journeys.  I hope we cross paths again soon.

An Xiao Mina
September 2011 

As this project winds down, I’ve been thinking more about what it means to see America through a Chinese lens, or my lens, at least.  And when I think, I like to spend time by the Pacific.  I look west, where my ancestors once looked east.
I’ve realized in the scope of the project how much of a traveller I am. It’s in my bones, in my blood. I love to see new things, explore new worlds, set foot on new journeys and adventures in this big world.  And in the social networking age, I can share what I see.
Recently, I looked out on the ocean, but then I looked up, and I saw this kite. Sometimes I wonder if the kite is me, flying free out there but tethered by the messages I send home and ping around the world.

As this project winds down, I’ve been thinking more about what it means to see America through a Chinese lens, or my lens, at least.  And when I think, I like to spend time by the Pacific.  I look west, where my ancestors once looked east.

I’ve realized in the scope of the project how much of a traveller I am. It’s in my bones, in my blood. I love to see new things, explore new worlds, set foot on new journeys and adventures in this big world.  And in the social networking age, I can share what I see.

Recently, I looked out on the ocean, but then I looked up, and I saw this kite. Sometimes I wonder if the kite is me, flying free out there but tethered by the messages I send home and ping around the world.

I am standing by the ocean, a relatively unknown portion of the California coast where tide pools reveal themselves at low tide. I like poking through tide pools, carefully navigating rocks and shallow pools in search of starfish, sea slugs, anemones and hermit crabs and the like. Then, when the tide rushes forward as the moon pulls in overhead, they disappear beneath the sea, and it’s as if they never existed.

I am standing by the ocean, a relatively unknown portion of the California coast where tide pools reveal themselves at low tide. I like poking through tide pools, carefully navigating rocks and shallow pools in search of starfish, sea slugs, anemones and hermit crabs and the like. Then, when the tide rushes forward as the moon pulls in overhead, they disappear beneath the sea, and it’s as if they never existed.

Marina del Rey, Los Angeles.

Marina del Rey, Los Angeles.

How we do.

How we do.

Sunset Blvd, Silverlake.

Sunset Blvd, Silverlake.

LA is a town of abandoned mattresses. They’re hard to take pictures of, because usually I’m zipping by in a car. I found this one in Silverlake.

LA is a town of abandoned mattresses. They’re hard to take pictures of, because usually I’m zipping by in a car. I found this one in Silverlake.

Hot pot with milk and roses. So so good and unexpected. Only in California?

Hot pot with milk and roses. So so good and unexpected. Only in California?

Cruisin’ down the Strip.

Cruisin’ down the Strip.