Christmas List 2011

Well, it’s that time you’ve all been waiting for (ha ha); with only 42 days left until Christmas, here is my 2011 Christmas list (incidentally, this is also my 100th post! Woo!). And to keep the tradition I started last year of, um, modifying the Twelve Days of Christmas, this is my life this semester:

On the twelfth day of Christmas, my life gave to me: 12 million project hours, 11 thousand keyframes in Maya, 10 times the workload of last year, 9 hundred lines of code (probably more), 8 render nodes in the school’s render farm (why?!), 7 trips to see my landlady about my bug infestation, 6 weeks remaining in my internship, 5 near-all-nighters pulled so far, 4 cups of tea a day, 3 humongous classes, 2 bus trips a day on packed buses, and 1 very, very tired Tamara!

And my obligatory notes:

1. Please do not buy me cosmetics, lotions, skin care, or any products of the kind. If you want to go this route, please buy me gift cards instead (Body Shop, LUSH, Lilou, et al). I’ve become so picky about what I put on my skin that I don’t want to risk you giving me something I will absolutely not use.

2. My preference for gifts in general is towards experiences (for example, a trip to a spa… or something) and consumables (food, money, gift cards, movie passes, etc.). Despite the fact that I have rather large wishlists on various sites, tangible things which persist (DVDs, books, etc.), are second priority, especially when I will be moving again in the middle of next year and I am trying to keep the number of possessions I own to a minimum!

3. Quality over quantity. Always.


List:

- Any sort of experience (spa visit, tickets to a play, travel pass, etc.)

- Money towards new camera lenses. A new camera lens would cost me between $250 – $320 right now (going rate on Future Shop’s website)

- Anything from Ten Thousand Villages, Teaopia, Happy Goat Coffee Co., or Second Cup

- Anything off my Amazon.ca wishlist (if you are doing this, please use the “buy” buttons on the wishlist itself, this will ensure the item gets removed and no duplicate buying will occur) or ThinkGeek wishlist (for all of the above, keep it under $40… some of the items are pretty pricey).

- Gift cards or certificates off the following list: iTunes, Tim Hortons, Second Cup, HMV, Spring, Payless ShoeSource, Amazon.ca, La Senza, The Body Shop, LUSH, IKEA, Paypal (yes, you can get Paypal certificates!), Lilou Organics

- 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.

- 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
- Farm Forward
MEOW Foundation

Please do not give me any of the following:

- Gift cards to clothing stores

- Coffee (beans, instant, etc.)

- Cosmetics / lotions

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


I seem to remember having a comment from someone last year about my “do not give” list; I think someone thought it was arrogant of me to look a gift horse in the mouth, so to speak. I can see their point. But I feel it is useful to provide a list of things which won’t be useful to me, as a preventive measure. This way, the gift-giver can rest assured he/she is giving me something I want or will use, or both. So it is there again this year.

Any questions, comments, etc.? Let me know :) . And feel free to pass this list or link on to anyone who needs ideas ;) .

On Train Travel

Via Rail train routes within Canada

I don’t know if you knew this already, but I love traveling by train. I used to do it quite a lot as a kid (fares were cheap!), and now do it whenever possible… Living in Ontario has given me many more opportunities to do it in the last 4 years than I have in my lifetime. There’s just something about it that strikes a chord with me… maybe because it’s such an old-fashioned way to travel, maybe because it takes time, maybe because it’s something different… maybe because it doesn’t have the hassles of plane travel (yet, anyway). In some respects, it has quite a few advantages over planes; take this post, for example– I’m writing it and posting it from a train at the moment (somewhere between Ottawa and Toronto, just past Kingston).

If there’s one trip I’ve always wanted to do (and I actually looked at the logistics of it earlier on this trip), it’s to travel from coast-to-coast (in Canada) on a train, Vancouver to Halifax. Or Halifax to Vancouver, whichever (this is more likely if I start from Ottawa, anyway). It’d take three different train journeys (Halifax -> Montreal, Montreal -> Toronto, Toronto -> Vancouver), and would take quite a long time, but it’d be time well-spent, in my opinion.

It’s going on my bucket list.

Incidentally, if anyone wants to pitch in towards a Canrailpass (between $872 – $1003 for a high-season coast-to-coast pass), which will allow me to do this, let me know :D .

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 Personal Limitations II (Follow-Up)

As a follow-up to my first On Personal Limitations post (go and read that one first), I came across this article today on 43 Folders, which perfectly describes what I was explaining in the post.

http://www.43folders.com/2010/05/17/future-proofing-your-passion

In it, Merlin Mann writes: “By starting adult life with an autistically explicit ‘goal’ that’s never been tested against any kind of real-world experience or reality-in-context, we can paradoxically miss a thousand more useful, lucrative, or organic opportunities that just…what?…pop up. Often these are one-time chances to do amazing and even unique things—opportunities that many of us continue to reject out of hand because it’s ‘not what we do’”.

Exactly.

On Personal Limitations

So the other day, I sat down and redesigned my business cards. People in my program at school are encouraged to use them during networking events/client projects/employer opportunities, and it really is a good way to show people that yes, you are a designer and not just a programmer. Last year I threw together a batch of simple cards in a hurry, trying to get them done and printed before a big networking thing.

*Aside: my friend and I spent too much money at the Algonquin College printers to print them, and we both ended up with a stack of poorly-cut and generally botched up cards. We were told to pay a different price than what we were initially quoted, and the people there just didn’t seem to care. We learned our lesson– we won’t be getting our business cards done at Algonquin College EVER again. Her and I also wasted additional time having to go through all of our cards and weed out the good ones from the rest. We both ended up having to throw out quite a few.

Anyway. My business card from this batch (2009) had my name, year standing, school, email address, and website address on it. Pretty standard stuff. However, it also had the following: “Web designer/developer- (X)HTML, CSS, Javascript, SQL, PHP”. It is true that I do lots of webdesign, in those languages, and that it is a field in which I am looking for work. However, I can also do lots of other things– logo design, print media, software interfaces, flash design/development, photography, and other programming (Java and C++, to name a few).  Not to mention, I also enjoy traditional media like drawing and collage-making. So… why did I limit myself on my own business card to one field?

Because it’s what I know best? That’s not entirely true; I know quite a bit about other media, too. Because it’s what I’m used to? Not necessarily. I think it’s because that’s what I’ve seen myself as for a fairly long time. I got into webdesign 9 years ago, and I’ve been designing (and hopefully improving) ever since. And up until recently I even thought I was going to go into webdesign/development as a career. So I limited myself, albeit unconsciously. It was in my head as “this is the field I want to work in, so this is the only field I’ll ever find work in”. So I didn’t even want to look for other kinds of work (because I thought I’d fail at everything else), and thus my nice, narrow business card description was born.

It is this kind of unconscious conditioned mental limitation which is still following me around as I decide what I want to do as a career. I am toying with the idea of starting my own business, but what would I do? My limitations tell me that pursuing anything other than webdesign will lead to failure, or that I’ll never be good enough at anything else, or that I’ll never find work otherwise. I suspect many people have been plagued with these kinds of thoughts before, including those people who now run successful businesses, and that is a comforting thought. I think that’s the key– to replace the limitations with goals, and the negativity with optimism. One step at a time.

So when I sat down the other day to make my 2010-2011 cards, what did I put on them? “Web + Print + New Media — Designer and Developer”. Much better. The possibilities are endless :) .

*Aside #2: This time around, I wised up and used Moo for my cards. Same price, amazing quality. The only downside is you have to wait for your cards to ship (about two weeks for Canada), but it’s a small price to pay :) .