Tag: Reflection

  • My Student Debt

    My Student Debt

    Mo’ money…mo’ problems, said no one, ever.

    Another quick thought:

    I have been out of school for 3 years (completed all requirements in Dec. 2011). I wasn’t particularly careful with money during my 5 years of schooling, but I wasn’t wasteful either, and I also worked for most of that time. I amassed just over $63,000 in student debt over those 5 years.

    I’ve been in the work force for 3 years, and in that time I have spent a total of around 8 months unemployed, 2 of those voluntarily. Since January 2013, I have spent only about 9 weeks not working (of the 5 positions I’ve held, only 1 was a longer term than 6 months). I have recently passed the $20,000 mark in paying off this debt; as of this month, I only owe around $17,000 in loans.

    I like to consider myself a success story in terms of reasonably independent adults with a university education who lived away from home during their studies. I know people who are in much better financial positions than me, but I know many more who are far worse off. And I would only tangentially credit my post-secondary education for the jobs I’ve been able to get, I haven’t been paid for any chemistry-related work since I left grad school.

    The fact that so far, I am what I think people would consider a success story makes me pretty sad for our society as a whole, and our education system specifically. I would LOVE to work in Chemistry, but that takes years of experience that I cannot get outside of university, and getting that experience by staying in or returning to school would be unavoidably expensive.

    I’m fairly confident that if I apply myself, I can expect a base level of success at whatever I choose to do with my life. This inherently takes some risk, something I’m not particularly comfortable with, and something that gets exponentially more complicated the longer life goes on. I don’t want to just float through life on a base level of success in what is handed to me, I would like to do something I am passionate about and achieve real tangible, life-fulfilling levels of success, something that is very hard to do knowing I will spend 4-5 years just getting out of debt from school.

    I would love to keep learning my whole life, and I intend to, whether that education is formal or not. I want some freedom to pursue independent creative endeavours and to explore philosophical ideas without worrying about losing what I’ve been working so hard for. I just hope that money cash doesn’t rule everything around me for my entire life. I am still looking forward to starting a family soon.

  • On Memory

    On Memory

    It’s been a while since I did a good old fashioned blog post.

    I’ve been doing a lot of hard-core thinking about big ideas the last couple of years, trying to figure out the best way to explore my thoughts on things that are really important to me but are hard to talk about in everyday conversation without people not wanting to hang out with you any more.

    The brain is a beautiful thing. Don’t waste it!

    However, today’s topic should only be tangentially related to this, and has more to do with the way my memory seems to have changed over the last few years, basically since I had what I consider full adulthood.

    I have always been told I have a pretty good memory, and I do have the somewhat uncanny ability to recall random facts from way deep down in my consciousness. It’s a fun party trick, until I overdo it and come off as pedantic or weird. Fact can only be so certain, and everything is subject to logical and never-ending scrutiny.

    It’s also worth considering that memory is a muscle, and things we don’t think about or which don’t fit into the world-view or thoughts we have tend to be forgotten or dismissed pretty quickly.

    For instance, I have heard that the healthiest way to drink bottled water is to purchase a bottle, empty the water inside (because that water has been slowly getting contaminated by the plastic in the bottle), refill the bottle with purified tap water from the nearest sink, and drink the new water. I heard that from a reputable source, but there are so many factors that go into determining the validity of a fact like that, there’s no quick and easy way to prove to somebody that it’s true. We also don’t know much about contaminants in plastic and what quantities would prove dangerous, with effects that might take 10-20 years to build up enough to notice adverse health effects or cancers.

    What was I talking about again? Oh yeah, memory.

    So, memory has been fickle with me of late. I’ve been told I have a really hard time remembering things, and maybe that’s true. But more often these days, I find that what really happens to me is that my memory of something actually stores multiple similar but distinct copies of something. I’m not sure precisely why that is, but I find it very interesting. To give you an example, say I am trying to make dinner plans with a group of friends, or even just one other person to keep it simpler. I might ask “What time would you like to do dinner? 5:30, or 6 PM?”. The person responds telling me that 6 works better for them, but then 20 minutes later, they tell me that upon consideration, 5:30 would actually be more suitable.

    What happens to me and my memory in this scenario? I create a memory to store the dinner plans I’m making, and I open a mental slot in my schedule for the evening in question. When they answer 6 PM, I store that in the dinner plans memory, kind of like a sticky note, and promptly stop thinking about it. Later, when I get the news of different plans for 5:30, I have to go back, find that original memory, and what ends up happening is that I put a new mental sticky note on the original plan.

    When I revisit the original memory to remind myself what time we’re having dinner, I find the memory with two sticky notes attached. I vividly remember making dinner plans, I can recall asking about times, but for the life of me, I cannot think about the 5:30 memory and the 6:00 memory and recall which is the more recent, and therefore accurate, memory.

    I don’t think this means that I have a bad memory, and maybe it’s more to do with the WAY I store memories and think about things than anything else, but this does cause real confusion in my life, and it leads people to believe that I’m forgetful, or not paying attention, when in fact having TOO much memory tends to be the cause of my problems.

    For a long time in the history of life on Earth, there hasn’t been much reason to remember things in order temporally, unless there is a strong emotion associated with a stimulus. When humans were in real danger from animals on a regular basis, knowing that sounds of shifting grass in a field meant that a lion was about to pounce might save your life. However, in our society today, we don’t get a lot of stimulus like that, and so there isn’t a lot of opportunity to tie survival to memory.

    Most of what humans “learn” when it comes to memory these days comes from repetition, It doesn’t help much with things like remembering if dinner was at 5:30 or 6 PM, or whether you wanted to eat our at a restaurant or stay in, but it can certainly come in handy when you’re talking about exercise, eating healthy, or taking out the garbage. We’re creatures of habit, and slow and steady wins the race.

  • Feedback #2 – Songwriting

    Feedback #2 – Songwriting


    Feedback #2 – Songwriting
    Feedback is a monthly music podcast on Unwind Media with local musicians Damien and BL from Sons of Pluto. In this month’s episode, we discussed the song-writing process, and talk about some of the best and worst things about coming up with new music.
  • The iPhone and Battery Life

    The iPhone and Battery Life

    Discussion about iPhone and iPad battery life has been swirling about the tech world of late. Specifically, the idea that many Apple products are made in service to an “ideal” battery life has come up in many of the circles I follow. Jason Snell wrote a very nice piece showing how Apple “solves” for battery life in their products based on thinness and size, but I’d like to take that a little bit further.
    I read all kinds of tech news throughout my week, and most weekends talk about technology and the science behind it on +Future Chat. I also listen to hours of podcasts on subjects such as these. I hear grumblings about the iPhone and how its battery doesn’t last all day.
    There are MANY people who say that they wish they had a phone battery that lasted more than a day, or that they are heavy users and find that their batteries get them to the afternoon, but generally not much longer.
    The fact is, humans are creatures of habit. We have gotten used to plugging our phones in every single day. If you had an iPhone with twice the battery, and only needed to charge it every other day, I can guarantee that more people would have their phones run out of battery than that happens to now. The only people this wouldn’t happen to are people who would just continue to charge their phones every night regardless of its battery level at the end of the day (much like most laptop users, although that MacBook battery life on Yosemite is craaaazy). 
    Basically, the use case for a battery that lasts two days is a person who uses a larger amount of battery than average, and so they use a typical “two day” amount of power in just one day. We call these people “power users”, and Apple themselves typically haven’t served them directly by giving their phones or laptops larger batteries. What Apple does do, though, is pick and choose what they think are the best solutions for those power users, and stock them in Apple stores. Examples I’ve used (as I like to think of myself as something of a power user) include the Mophie Juice Packs and the Mophie Powerstations. These are basically cases and power bricks that let you extend the use of your phone beyond a normal day of use, and they are wonderful!
    I love the way my phone looks without a case, but when my battery gets low, I love being able to either stick it into a case or plug it in on the go, and I immediately don’t have to worry about my battery dying. For the extra $80-100, it’s a no-brainer to carry a case or battery pack around with you, along with Lightning and micro-USB cables (I have a wireless headphone fetish, some would say).
    Now, recently Apple released the iPhone 6 Plus. As Jason mentions in his post, this phone breaks the Apple mould, giving users a significant jump in battery, something closer to a tablet in usage than a phone. In effect, this release tells me that Apple hears that some power users have made enough noise that Apple is giving them an option to have a larger battery, as thus use their phones more.
    If you’re worried about battery life in your iPhone, or other mobile device because it doesn’t last days or weeks, you might be waiting a long time. Battery improvements come incrementally, and something tells me even if we do get the 10x battery power increase many stories promise for the eventual future, all we’ll get is a device with a 10x smaller battery. And that’s just fine with me!
  • 2015: A Year in Preview (The Power of a Like)

    2015: A Year in Preview (The Power of a Like)

    I fully intend to get around to writing some thoughts I had about the year that was 2014, but today is not the day for that.

    Today, I am going to share some of my feelings about the world’s entertainment landscape, discuss how the rise of the internet and the last 5-10 years of pop culture are changing our behaviours, and how we entertain ourselves in today’s media-centred universe.

    North American culture is becoming a veritable minefield of television, movies, books, radio, music, podcasts, comedy specials, video games, board games, vlogs, etc. that there is simply no way for the average person to consume more than a tiny percentage of what they might find interesting or engaging.

    On the very outer fringes of this maelstrom of huge media conglomerates, independent publishing groups, and self-employed journalists and bloggers is me. In the last year or two, I have taken an extreme interest in working in media. Since I’m still in debt from the first degree I took (in Chemistry), I’ve elected to approach this in a completely self-started way.

    They say that the mark of self-improvement is that you will look back at some of the work you did in the past, and you will cringe because it is just so bad. By that measure, I have come a VERY long way in the last year.

    I am writing to you specifically, the people I know in real life, and the people who read this, because I need you the most to get where I would eventually like to end up. I tend to imagine that most people who read what I put here are friends and family, but stats tell me that at least half of my audience is in the US, which I think is awesome, as well as interesting.

    I don’t really BEG for likes on Facebook, retweets on Twitter, or +’s on Google+ when I post things, but getting those from you really is the best way for you to help me get what I do more widely seen.

    I’m sure it happens that a LOT of people who follow me don’t particularly care about all or any of what I’m working on. However, it would and does mean a great deal to me when people like or share what I put online, because it helps others see that stuff.

    If you HAVE seen something I’ve worked on in the past and maybe weren’t impressed by the quality, or didn’t have a good time listening/watching, I would like to take this chance to suggest you give me another shot. I’ve put a lot of effort into bettering what I do, and I am really proud of what I’ve been putting out lately, with my friends and colleagues. We also have some new shows you can find on UnwindMedia.com, which I’ve been really excited about.

    It only takes a second to like or retweet something you see, but it means a whole lot to me and my work that you’re helping expose it to a larger audience.

    Lastly, if you have a minute or two today or when you’re reading this, I would love to hear what you think about what I’ve been working on for almost the last year. I’ve set up a VERY short survey at http://UnwindMedia.com, which you can also fill out by going to http://bit.ly/UnwindSurvey. It will help me find out what people like and dislike about the things I’m putting online, so I can be informed about where my energy is best invested.

  • Ottawhat #32 – Ottawhat? A Year

    Ottawhat #32 – Ottawhat? A Year

    Check out this week’s episode of the Ottawhat? podcast. New every Thursday!

    This week, we looked back on 2014 in Ottawa, and had a great time going over some of our favourite new years plans in Ottawa.

    Ottawhat #32 – Ottawhat? A Year!

  • Fake It Show #6 – The Pentatoque

    Fake It Show #6 – The Pentatoque

    +Mike Attrell and +Nick Maddox from +Future Chat joined me to chat in lieu of talking about science and technology this week. We learned a little bit about the old testament, talked about where our energy goes, and shamed people who shoot vertical videos.
    6: The Pentatoque

  • Attrell Update – Back to the Future & the Instagram Experiment

    Attrell Update – Back to the Future & the Instagram Experiment

    This week on +Attrell Update, we discuss the future of the Update. I also talk about starting my Instagram experiment. You can find me there at robattrell. If you have any feedback about our videos, leave us a comment and let me know!

    If you want to keep up with these videos, click on our picture in the top right of the video and subscribe!

    Here’s Steph from earlier this week talking about her side of Attrell Update.
  • Future Chat #42 – Happy Saturnalia, Everyone!

    Future Chat #42 – Happy Saturnalia, Everyone!

    This week on +Future Chat, it’s the end of the year, Mike gets throat punched, and we discuss the usefulness of Watson beyond Jeopardy-winning.
    Future Chat #42: Happy Saturnalia, Everyone! Subscribe via RSS, on iTunes, or on Stitcher Radio to check it out.

  • Attrell Update – Gorillas, Guns and Going Nose Blind

    Attrell Update – Gorillas, Guns and Going Nose Blind

    This week on +Attrell Update, I talk about human filters, why we need to talk about important things, and ponder the future of Attrell Update!

    If you want to keep up with these videos, click on our picture in the top right of the video and subscribe!

    On Monday, Steph gave some advice on trying to find a gift for that special someone in your life.