Story Collections
Explore the stories as a set or a series.
Intersections
“My best vision for the world is every single human being on the planet gets educated about sex, their bodies, and has a place that’s safe to talk about their sexuality with during their hardest times.”
“It’s so easy to be hopeless. It’s so easy to give up. We need to love one another more deeply and fiercely than this world hates us.”
“My kids are 100% Filipino and 100% Athabascan. And if people say that doesn’t make sense, we teach our kids that it doesn’t need to make sense because superpowers don’t make sense.”
“A lot of my process comes from just honoring how ridiculous whatever I’ve come up with may sound and then finding a way to get it done and putting together the right minds to get it done.”
“This is a playground if you take advantage of everything around, especially the community. And surf is free! I don’t gotta pay nobody.”
“They think I’m taking away their jobs. But I’m also helping, you know? I’m filling this teacher shortage here. If nobody will be in this position, nobody will help these kids.”
The Story When
I was around four or five when Mommy first told me about Dad. She said that they couldn't marry because he was already betrothed to someone else from birth, as is the custom among upper-class Indians. The exchange and merging of property was supposedly a done deal—there might have been some resort island involved, as a dowry.
She learned that her father had leapt out a second-story window at the back of their house. The shock of the impact somehow left him temporarily blinded and he would not have escaped without the help of another soldier who guided him to safety through back alleys as the Japanese searched their house.
Angkong preferred to cook with kitchen doors tightly shut. No one, not one of his ten children, was allowed to venture in to learn the secrets of his cooking — like how he used “Ngo Hyong,” a Chinese five-spice combination, to flavor his juicy “hong ba," his version of adobo, my Auntie Claire's favorite.
Our patriarch, Eusebio Morales, managed to keep his British wife, Frances, at his side by negotiating with the Japanese soldiers. He offered to chlorinate the water plant in Balara, Quezon City, in exchange for house arrest for Frances.
Reading through his letters, I discovered that my grandparents were wary of him because he was a “Manila boy.” One of the notes I found were addressed to them. He told them that he knew that they looked at him with suspicion as he was from Imperial Manila, but he assured them that he had good intentions with their Elma.
Workplace Ageism
“You can do things in a different way. You can create change, conversations, and meaning.“
“The internet has allowed people a lot more freedom to create jobs and titles for themselves. So at 44, I began a new career.“
“I started a company in my 20s and then in my 50s. In both cases, you do what needs doing, from sweeping the floor to developing new tech.“
“I know myself well enough now, so my style is all about who I am — even if someone thinks my choices are not always ‘appropriate.’ “
Asian American Courage
“I grieve for my Black community and my Asian community when they are impacted after an incident of racial violence. And in allowing myself to grieve, I am able to develop a habit of hope.”
“It’s so important to maintain our heritage. I am learning so much about what this means and how diverse our experiences are. In some way, these conversations have become part of my healing process as I move towards forgiving myself for my own racist past.”
John Tateishi urges us to make sure our voice is heard and to stand firm in the fight against injustice and racism.
Stories for Change
“We are deprioritized in everything, down to a lack of translated material in Arabic to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic.”
“The experiences and outcomes of LGBTQ+ young people who grew up in the system are underrepresented in advocacy.”
“Every person counts in the eyes of God and every person must count in the eyes of the government.”
A Fair Shot
”Pneumonia is an infection. When it sets in, things get worse. The kids begin to have a fever; they start panting for air. At this point, treatment requires hospitalization.”
“I don’t even know if I’ll be able to afford the pneumonia vaccine. Our house was demolished and we’re still waiting to be relocated.”