But even though one of his life goals was to literally walk in the sky, Lam is the first one to downplay his travel ambitions.
"I'm not an adrenaline junkie or a thrill seeker," Lam tells CNN Travel. "It's more that ... it's there. This experience is out there. I just want to experience everything I can."
Still, the road from a working-class childhood in California to hanging out on the wing of a plane was not a straightforward one.
On the surface, Lam seemed to be the perfect image of the ideal American immigrant dream.
Born in a Hong Kong refugee center to parents fleeing the war in Vietnam, he grew up the oldest of four kids in the San Gabriel Valley and landed a full scholarship to the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania.
After college, he took the expected route and got a finance job. Making a six-figure salary was incredible, but Lam found himself more and more trapped by the boundaries of conventional office life.
He would start adding on extra days to work trips and saving up for a big vacation once a year.
It kept the travel bug at bay, but not forever.
"I wanted to see so many places that a few weeks a year wasn't enough," he says. Ultimately, there was only one thing to do -- quit, and take a different path.
One of Lam's now-achieved dreams was to swim with jellyfish in Palau.
Kien Lam
Up in the air
Some of Lam's travels take him to remote corners of the Earth where few others have gone. But the town of Sequim, Washington, is a relatively minimal 900 miles (1,450 kilometers) from home.
Marilyn trains wannabe wing walkers on the exact mechanics of navigating the exterior of a biplane, making sure they know which things not to step on and what they can hold onto.
It's almost like teaching someone to dance -- you rehearse the steps over and over until it feels like second nature. Out there in the clear blue eternity, it's a sort of ballet pas de deux between plane and walker.
The Masons don't use in-ear communication devices as some other small-plane pilots do. At 4,000 feet, Mike, who pilots, would "wag" the plane, indicating it was safe to get out. From there, Lam was on his own.
"I had no one talking into my ear, no one telling me what to do, just what we had talked about on the ground," Lam says.
Lam says that the wing-walking experience, which costs $1,000 per person minus travel, was worth every cent.
"I was just screaming for joy," he says. "It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience."
The making of a bucket list
The plane Lam and Mason flew in.
Initially, Lam's post-finance job plan was to travel for a year, getting the bug out of his system once and for all.
He began in London, where he visited friends, then continued onward to Paris and to a surfing trip in Portugal. From there, he went to Morocco, Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, Thailand, Indonesia and Japan, and then over to South America to explore Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Bolivia and Peru.
Once he returned home to the United States, Lam put together a time-lapse video of the experience, which went viral. Suddenly, the year turned into two, then three and then more. Now, he can't imagine life any other way.
Thanks to his successful video, he has been able to get work as a photographer and videographer, making short films and ads for destinations. The travel has become the job, and vice versa.
But for Lam, travel isn't just about ticking off boxes of which country you've been to and which attractions you've seen.
Also on the list? Buying his parents a house. Because, at heart, he's still that kid born between countries, trying to be the best son he can.
from CNN.com - RSS Channel https://cnn.it/2LYxDn3
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