
Ten Thousand Things enters its final season by examining the Asian-American experience through the lens of modern-day artifacts and personal evolution. The narrative moves beyond racial melancholy and the grief of marginalization to focus on the "weird and wild" paths toward self-actualization and communal recovery. Key stories include an artist who communes with the "awkward honesty" of metal-caged gourds and an educator who utilizes psychedelic medicine to dismantle the self-exploitation inherent in assimilation. A Cambodian boat refugee explores the weight of surviving ancestral trauma, while a poet finds liberation in the expansiveness of literary translation. These diverse accounts, ranging from the Las Vegas magic circuit to ancestral healing, illustrate how fragments of the past are reassembled into a new, whole identity. The season culminates in a celebration of curiosity and the reclamation of personal history once suppressed for the sake of fitting in.
Sign in to continue reading, translating and more.
Continue