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Katherine
Wong of the sub-committee talked to Mary in November 2002 for
this interview piece.
Now
living in New York City, Mary Chan started practicing yoga 9
years ago, and has been a full time yoga teacher for 4 years,
teaching classes at studios (among which is the famous Jivamukti
Yoga Center), to corporate and private students. In 2002 she
traveled to India and participated in the production of a series
of yoga therapy videos. She was also seen modeling for last
summer's line for 'Nuala', Christy Turlington's line of yoga
wear for Puma.
Mary
remembers best her 6 years spent at DGS with happy moments spent
with her friends: making coconut sago pudding for the school
bazaar; giving teacher nicknames; hanging out during lunch breaks;
doing school projects and voluntary work together.
It was during these years that life-long friendships were cultivated.
Even though she only gets to see her school friends once or
twice a year, "they are so close to me they are like
family, the kind of trust and understanding you can only find
in people you've known for a long time."
Though
she did not keep in touch with any of my teachers, Mary is very
thankful to all of them: Mrs. Mary Chan, her computer teacher
she adores the most, Mr. Mok Chiu Yu, her EPA teacher she respect
and look up to the most - "up to this day, I am still
reading Noam Chomsky."

Having been a DGS girl has equipped her with good language and
communication skills, a fairly open and inquisitive mind, and
a somewhat grounded personality. These traits have helped her
adapt to living in different environments and interacting with
people from different cultures. After graduation she went to
the Soviet Union to teach English, then moved on to New York
to study modern dance, then to Tibet, India. "The
possibilities are endless."
All
her traveling experiences since graduating from the London School
of Economics has broadened and shaped her perspective in life
and encouraged her to keep exploring. Her inspiration came from
the people she met along the way - their kindness, generosity,
the stories of their lives.
For
this, she considers herself successful - even only by her own
standards: to be healthy, happy, to live a pretty balanced life,
and to love how she spends her time - her search continues.
"To
question, to challenge what seems to be the accepted value system
of the society. To not be complacent, to be aware, to live a
conscious life. My advice is - follow your heart, be responsible
of your own action, never regret what you did/didn't do."
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