On Usefulness

Just a quick post on something I had not intended to blog on today– usefulness. I do a lot of things on a daily basis which are not inherently “useful”; that is, they do not help me fulfil some goal or purpose. The most obvious example is Facebook checking. Now, these things are fine in small amounts, but I tend to get slightly annoyed with myself at the end of a day when I look back and realize I have not accomplished anything “useful” that day (this is not referring to today, by the way– I did accomplish quite a few useful things since waking up). That being said, it’s not that I measure EVERYTHING in terms of its usefulness (human relationships, for example, should be pursued regardless of their utility– spending time with people who make you happy can’t be either useful or useless), but it’s a good tool for moderating what one spends their time doing.

Some examples of useful things which I can do every day: work out (I can do this at home, it’s just a matter of making time), work on my portfolio site overhaul, read through the slides from that day (during the week) and take notes, clean my room/declutter, read through recommended readings for school, learn vocab and pronunciation for another spoken language, learn syntax and conventions for another programming language, make meals/meal plans for the week, take pictures with DSLR camera as practice for school, make a portfolio piece, etc. There are so many useful things I could accomplish in any given day, that it’s actually quite a miracle that some days I don’t manage to do any of them.

Is it too late to make a pseudo-resolution that I will accomplish something useful every day?

(P.S.: I got 212 unique visitors today O.O. To put that in perspective, I got 29 yesterday. I haven’t figured out yet what was responsible for the spike, but that’s pretty awesome any way you look at it).

On The Twelfth Day of Christmas…

…My life gave to me: 12 million assignments, 11 thousand hours in Maya, 10 annoying writing assignments, 9 (or more) unread Marketing chapters, 8 hours on a bus each week, 7 male roommates, 6 days in the whole semester to have a social life, 5 or less hours of sleep every night, 4 massive courses, 3 cups of coffee a day, 2 final exams, and one sorely neglected blog!*

*Numbers may be off by a little bit.

Hi all. I realize it’s definitely been quite a while since I posted here, school really ate up my time, and then some, this semester. Here’s to hoping next semester will be a little bit easier! So the purpose of this post is actually to put up my Christmas list… I’ve been making one in recent years, just because some people find it much easier to buy for me if they know exactly what I’m looking for. Also, I prefer to get gifts that I will actually enjoy/use/consume/whatever, rather than gifts which won’t get used. So here it is. You may notice that it might be a little vague; I do still like surprises, after all, so these are just guidelines. A couple of notes first:

1. I’ve been changing over all of my skin/face/hair/beauty products recently to ones which do not include parabens, aluminum, or petroleum by-products. If you are planning on getting me gifts from stores which sell these products (The Body Shop, LUSH), please check the ingredient lists before buying. Neither store’s products are 100% free of these ingredients, although they are working on it.

2. Less is more. I’m looking for quality and meaning, over quantity or price.

Alright, here is the list:

1. Some things from The Body Shop, or LUSH (please see note #1, above, for what I’m looking for)

2. Anything from Ten Thousand Villages

3. Gift cards from this list: iTunes, Tim Hortons, Second Cup, HMV, Spring, Payless ShoeSource, Co-op or Safeway (for gas), Montana’s, Amazon.ca, La Senza

4. Anything from Teaopia (loose leaf teas, ingenuiTEA maker, thermos, anything really)

5. Anything off my Amazon.ca Wishlist, with priority on the DVD/Blu-Rays and the TV boxsets (*be careful with these! I’m not sure how they prevent duplicates from being bought off the wishlist…)

6. Charity:Water merch (water bottle, t-shirt, etc.)

7. A gift certificate from YouBar (for a box of custom nutrition bars– http://www.youbars.com/gifts). This one is pricey, so if you’re buying me this, don’t get me anything else! Also, I’m not sure if the included shipping is Canadian or not, so they might have to be contacted directly… or you could just give me money towards making my own set of bars.

8. Speaking of which, money is always appreciated…

9. … However, another good gift which I will appreciate is giving a donation in my name to a charity from the following list:
- Charity:Water
- Stop the Traffik
- Restore NYC
- Equality Now!
- Calgary Food Bank
- Calgary Women’s Emergency Shelter
- Little Warriors
- MEOW Foundation

10. I am also interested in a Magic Bullet blender– this is pretty pricey though.

    Makes sense? Now, as per last year, here is a list of things I would really prefer to NOT be given:

    1. The following gift cards: clothing stores, Starbucks, furniture stores

    2. Coffee (beans, instant)… I love it, but I have a lot of it already, and I don’t go through it that fast

    3. Anything religious (excluding Christmas-themed things, obviously)– I have my own views on religion and its beliefs, and I don’t have an interest in reading/watching religious books/movies, so please refrain from giving these as gifts.

      Feel free to make your own educated guesses based on this list and how well you know me, I’m not really picky :) . Hopefully I’ll be back soon with a real blog post, as all of my assignments are done, and I’m relaxing for the next little bit.

      Cheers!

      On Some Introspective Questions

      Good morning! I hope it will continue to be good well into the afternoon. So this week is actually my last week in Calgary before I head back to Ottawa, and as such, I’ve got lots of things on my mind– school, moving back into my place, errands which have to be run before I leave, people I have to see, etc. But I came across this interesting post on 37signals this morning, and I thought I’d put in my two cents. Here is an excerpt from that post:

      “Last week at our full-company get together, each person was asked to say two things to the group: 1. What do you want to get better at? 2. What do you want to learn?”

      In my opinion, there are tons of questions which we need to ask ourselves more frequently, and these are two of them. I think all too often, we have really vague answers to these questions, and then become dissatisfied with the way we conduct ourselves in life. If you don’t really know what you would like to get better at, how will you become better at it? Furthermore, if you don’t think about HOW to get better at something, it won’t happen. Whatever it is you would like to get better at will remain at the same level always. The same goes for learning something. If you don’t (1) know what it is that you would like to learn, and (2) HOW to learn something, it won’t be learned. For the purposes of this post, I’m not going to go into the ‘how’, just the ‘what’.

      So I’m going to answer these questions about myself. To be honest, I haven’t given these questions any great amount of thought, but I was inspired by Jason Fried’s response in the original post– he wrote that he wanted to stop being a “drive-by teacher” (as something to get better at), and that he would like to learn the technical side of something which, up until now, he has only been designing for. (As a designer + developer, I know exactly where he’s coming from– most people are inclined towards one or the other and not usually both, so the less-intuitive side needs more work constantly).

      1. What do you [I] want to get better at?

      I want to get better at following through with the plans and projects which I set up and/or start. I’m pretty bad at starting something, then running out of steam midway through, then setting the project aside for indeterminate lengths of time. Sometimes it never gets done. Sometimes I pick it up later and finish it, but this doesn’t happen very often. I’d like to see a project through from conception to completion, with no large breaks in between, even if it doesn’t turn out the way it did in my head. It’s a learning experience. And it means I’ll no longer have those half-finished projects taking up my headspace (not to mention physical space) and making me feel guilty every time I think/look at them.

      2. What do you [I] want to learn?

      If I had to pick specific things, this answer would be a mile long. I’m serious. There are just too many specific things which I would like to learn, from web languages (Ruby on Rails, HTML5) to spoken languages (Spanish, Tamil) to gesture-based languages (American Sign Language) to cooking (Indian, Greek, Italian) to practical things (manual transmission/stick shift), to artistic things (pottery, screenprinting, crochet, typesetting/typography), etc. The list goes on. But if I had to pick something general…

      …It would be that I want to learn how to properly slow down, stop worrying, and just live life as it comes. I spend too much time worrying about the future, the past, previous experiences, upcoming experiences, what people think of me, and what people might say about me. Especially during school (which is why thinking about this now is a good idea), I get very stressed out. It seems like there is never any time to just unwind and relax. For sure, Chi-Kung helps, as it is meant to (and this already goes a long way towards being able to completely unwind), but the more tired and stressed I get, the more petty things I start worrying and thinking about, which doesn’t help. I realize this is maybe not something which I can “learn”, but certainly something which I can set as a goal, and aspire to.  

      Also, in Shaolin Wahnam (which I am a member of), it is said that there are two ways of looking at everything: the negative way and the Shaolin Wahnam way– these are perceptions of reality. Here is an example of this (from the Wahnam website, in an article written by Sigung Wong Kiew Kit):

      “You can see the same principle operating in daily life though many people may not realize it. You are given a difficult job by your boss. Because you are a Shaolin Wahnam student and view everything the Shaolin Wahnam way (instead of the negative way), you perceive your difficult job as an interesting challenge and do your best. As a result you later gain a promotion – by your boss or by yourself becoming your own boss after having gone through challenging training.

      Most other people in the same situation would have different perceptions. Some would try to pass the job to someone else, like you, knowing that they would still get the same pay. Others might do the job grudgingly and produce mediocre or poor result. The reality is the same – a difficult job to be done – but due to different perceptions of the same reality, the outcome can be very different.”

      My goal of taking life as it comes has everything to do with this perception change. If one gets mired in the negative way of looking at things, everything becomes impossible, and this mindset builds up over time into something hugely detrimental and instable. If one can see the positive in everything which happens, it becomes much easier to deal with life as it happens, without massive mental stress. Of course it is beneficial to understand both the positive and the negative, but it’s always more beneficial in the long run to believe the positive side and take the better perspective.

      There you have it. Some very introspective answers to two very simple questions. What are your answers?

      On Basic Rights

      Oh Canada, how far removed you have become from the rest of the world in your little floating bubble. I can’t even say that the U.S. is worse for this, since their economy problems have created non-first-world-like conditions in some parts of the country (like Detroit- here), and they’re fighting to keep afloat right now. Canada, on the other hand, pretty much sailed through the recession (with a few bumps, for sure, but recovery has been very fast), and now has a very pressing issue on its plate: whether or not to declare access to high-speed internet a basic human right (here– courtesy of Metro News).

      Do we seriously not have anything else to worry about right now?! How on earth did our heads get so far up our buried in the sand that we can ignore ALL of our other problems (and the world’s, for that matter), and even CONSIDER making something like high-speed internet a basic right?!

      There are people in this country who are starving. There are people in this country who are homeless. There are people in this country who are unemployed AND homeless AND starving. There are people who have jobs, but no home, and people who have a home, but no job (and will probably lose the home shortly, too). The healthcare system is broken. The welfare system is broken. The foster care system is broken. Whether or not the government is broken is a matter of opinion, but if they decide to fund initiatives to support this ludicrous idea, I will start believing that they are.

      Now that I’m done ranting (for now), let’s look at this objectively. What is a basic human right? Wikipedia defines human rights as “rights and freedoms to which all humans are entitled”. The United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights says “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.” (source).  But neither of these describes what could be defined as a “basic” right.

      In my opinion? A basic right is a human right without which humans cannot live a dignified, healthy, peaceful, and free life. I realize this is a bit of a vague definition. But for now, think about high-speed internet access. Is it essential for a dignified life? Not really. Is it essential for a healthy life? Actually, spending too much time in front of the computer is bad for you. But, it does give you access to lots of information about living healthily, so I guess that one is a tie. Is it essential for living a peaceful life? Nope (if anything, it’s very useful as a divisive wedge between groups). Is it essential for living a free life? Nope. So can we live without it? Absolutely. For sure, the internet is a very useful tool, but it is just that: a tool.

      Think on this example: What if… you met a Canadian crop farmer? What if his land was failing due to whatever reason, and he did not have enough food to feed his family or himself? What if all the water that they had to drink was polluted and full of bacteria due to flooding or sewage dumping? What if they were all very sick from the water and lack of food, and they were in over their heads in debt? What if their deaths were imminent? What would you give them first– food, clean water, and medicine, or high-speed internet access, saying that “broadband… is something that is required in order to fully participate (in society)”[source]?

      In effect, that is what we are doing. We are ignoring the more urgent problems which are plaguing Canada (lack of efficient healthcare, homelessness, unemployment, violent crime, a lax legal system, poor welfare system, etc., etc.), in favour of giving people access to a tool which will not solve the problem. Basic rights are things like access to food, clean water, medicine/healthcare, permanent shelter, a means of living independantly (money, or otherwise), and a means to a peaceful life (no wars, discriminatory violence, abuse, etc.). Internet (high-speed, or not), is at its very best, a privilege. How can we simultaneously as a country consider investing money into ensuring every Canadian has internet access while refusing to pledge more money to aid Pakistan’s citizens with the regaining of their basic rights in the aftermath of their flooding (source)? But never mind about the rest of the world– how can we sink money into unnecessary tools when our own healthcare system is rapidly approaching breaking point?

      I fail to see how anyone but the most ignorant or apathetic Canadian can support a ludicrous idea like this. Yes, Finland has already implemented high-speed internet as a basic right, but then, they were also recently ranked the world’s best country by Newsweek (here) across a comparison of health, economy, education, and politics. They’ve got the right idea– make all the important stuff work first, THEN focus on enhancing tools. For Canada (which was ranked 5th), fix the other problems in our country first– make sure ALL of our citizens and residents have ALL of their basic rights, fix the failing systems, stop cutting money from emergency services, healthcare, education, and infrastructure– and THEN consider making high-speed internet access available to all.

      You’ll notice I didn’t say “THEN consider making high-speed internet access a basic right”. It will never be a basic right as long as people are still dying from a lack of clean water/food/medicine/equality/peace anywhere in the world. We have a responsibility to help. Let Canada lead the world by example in more than just our economic status; let us be leaders in the global fight for basic rights everywhere. So what if not all of our 35 million citizens have access to high-speed internet? When almost a billion people in the world don’t have clean drinking water, I’d say that puts our “problems” in perspective somewhat. Get off your high horse, Canadians, and stop being so selfish. We have bigger fish to fry.

      P.S.: Wouldn’t it be so much cooler in the future if, instead of saying “Canada is only one of three countries in the world to have high-speed internet access as a basic human right” (which is really nothing to brag about, especially to third-world countries), we could say something like “Canada is only one of three countries in the world to have a working, efficient healthcare system”? Or maybe, “Canada is one of the top three countries in the world who have given the most international aid to date”? Something to think about.

      Featured image is from Charity:Water, and belongs to them.

      On Scotiabank Annoyances

      It’s worth mentioning first that before this summer, I was a Scotiabank customer for two years, and generally fairly happy with them. I had both a chequing and savings account. This summer, however, I realized I wasn’t using the accounts enough to be able to justify the fees I was being charged (and why was I being charged fees in the first place?! I was on a Student account!), so I decided to close my accounts. My accounts were officially shut down in June, and I was pleased with the way everything had turned out. Until…

      One day in July, I received a mailing from Scotiabank– it was a brochure for a new credit card they had. I already have a credit card, and the yearly fees on this one were terrible ($39/year for only 2% CashBack? Really not worth it), so I threw the brochure out. I also received another mailing around this time for something else– insurance? I can’t remember, but it was also from Scotiabank, and I remember thinking “why are they only sending me stuff now, when I’m no longer even a client?” I never received this kind of thing in the mail when I was a client. Little did I know that things would get worse…

      I started receiving calls at 5pm once a week from an unknown 1-888 number. I don’t usually pick up my phone at this time, because I’m almost always on a bus, heading home. So one day, I called the number back, and discovered that it was a Scotiabank number. Hmm. The next week (last week), I got called by that number EVERY SINGLE WEEKDAY. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, all at 5pm. You’d think they’d wise up after a while and call at a different time? But no. Friday I was actually able to pick up, thanks to missing my bus, and did I ever have some questions for that Scotiabank representative!

      Firstly, the reason they were calling was to try and sell me that same credit card for which I’d received a brochure already. You’d also think that if you hadn’t sent back the application which was attached to the brochure, one could reasonably assume that you weren’t interested in the card, right? Apparently not. The lady on the phone went on for 5 minutes, extolling the greatness of this card, and I just stayed quiet until she was done. So then I said that I had a few questions for her, and she sounded very eager to answer them… no doubt she thought the questions were about the credit card, and that she was already thinking about her commission.

      The conversation after that went something like this:

      Me: So… I’m just wondering why I’ve been called non-stop about this credit card? I’m not even a Scotiabank customer anymore! I stopped being a customer last month.

      Her: Well… um… it sometimes takes up to 30 days for your name to be removed from our database…

      Me: Yes, but I only started getting mailings and calls AFTER I stopped giving you guys my business. Speaking of which, I already got a mailing about this card, and being called about it every day for a week is pretty annoying. You’re not going to get many people signing up if you keep doing that!
       
      Her: Err…well… It may take another 3-4 days for your name to be taken out of our system, but I can take it out right now.

      Me: Please do. I don’t want to get called every day anymore about a card I don’t even want!

      And after that, she was tripping over herself in her effort to end the call. My goodness. 30 days to remove one’s name from a database?! Cold-calling every single darn day in an effort to get me to sign up for a card I don’t even need, AFTER  already sending me a brochure about it? In fact, trying to sell me a $39/year card in the first place when the only product I ever had with Scotiabank was a STUDENT account? Really unintelligent, Scotiabank. Very, very unintelligent of you. Obviously you’re not doing so well if you have to resort to measures like these to get new signups.

      Do you, Scotiabank, honestly think that STUDENTS are going to sign up for a card that costs an exhorbitant annual fee like that, for minimal benefits? I already have a card that gives me a more than decent amount of CashBack, for no annual fee at all. We’re not stupid people, Scotiabank! And even if I was in the market for a new card, I would have been thoroughly turned off by your cold-calling skills (or lack thereof), and would have looked elsewhere. You shouldn’t have to forcibly push products like that on people… if you offer something good, people will sign up, but only if there are far more positives than negatives. Spend a little more time doing your market research, Scotiabank, and back off. If you call me again, I will be more than slightly unfriendly. Shape up.

      P.S.: The number they were calling me from was 1-888-882-3811. If you get a call (or twenty) from this number, beware– Scotiabank might be trying to push useless products on you.