So, 2014 was kind of a rough year for me. I think that goes for some others as well, so I think I can say with confidence that 2015 should be better than 2014 was. Hopefully.
I graduated from chemical engineering this past June, which means that the 6 months leading up to that fateful day were absolutely jam-packed full of stress. I had at least three group projects of varying degrees of complexity to deal with at a time, which of course also means I had a whole pile of different personalities to deal with. I had always thought of myself as someone who was easy to get along with, but that turns out is not exactly the case. I like to be in charge, as in turns out, as much as I may protest to the contrary. Giving up control is hard for me, and can make me either passive-aggressive (best-case scenario) or openly hostile (this actually happened towards the end of the bigger of the three group projects -- everyone's been there. I think).
After some reflection, I realize that I could have saved myself (and my group) a lot of heartache by communicating more and more effectively. This is the best lesson I think I ever learned from 4 years of engineering education. You cannot control people. They are their own people with their own thoughts and feelings. If you need something, tell them. That way, when they need something they'll feel like they're able to come to you for help.
So, after graduation, I had one of longest panic episodes of my life - maybe a whole week? I don't remember. I was terribly stressed about finding a job, feeling pressured by my family to work (even though I know now that there really was none - I just don't like being dependent), and feeling pretty worthless because most of my class was already working - or so I thought at the time.
In response to said panic episode, I took a job in northern Labrador for a mining company. It was a summer student position, and at the time I was happy to be able to make money (I was also happy to be able to be closer to my then-boyfriend. More on that later). It wasn't a great job, and I was strung along for over a month and a half waiting for a start date and I was terribly under-utilized but I met some great people. This past summer was probably one of the best ones I've had, at least in recent memory. However, the hours were shit, the isolation was draining and so was the travelling. I was offered the chance to stay on longer but I very politely declined due to my concerns over my mental health - I had more panic attacks during the time I worked there than I had all year.
Now I'm back in my hometown, living with my parents. This is both awesome and awful. I will not deny that the quality of the food is far superior to my life as a student, and that not having to pay for my own food or utilities while I'm not working is amazing. That said, I feel like I have no opportunity to have a social life while I'm here. I'm not really that close to many people from high school, and most of them have either moved to the city or are in their final year of university and thus too busy to hang out. I'm tutoring high school kids, but that's not exactly a steady-paying gig nor very intellectually stimulating.
Career-wise, I have no idea what I want to do. Oil is faltering at the moment, and I'm considered a flight risk in Alberta while I'm living in Ontario. Mining has turned out not to be my cup of tea (too environmentally damaging for me to want to be a part of). I'm not particularly interested in manufacturing, but that's essentially what my career has trained me for.
And yes, I do realize that I am in the incredibly privileged position of a highly educated person feeling unsure of their next step because they have essentially the whole world at their feet, but acknowledging this privilege does nothing to alleviate the stress of the indecision that I am now facing. I know that I want to be of help and of use to the world in some way, but the question is: what?
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label education. Show all posts
Monday, 19 January 2015
Sunday, 16 February 2014
My Thoughts on Science, Religion and Morality in General
I did something more or less stupid this past week: I engaged with the troll people in YouTube comments.
To be fair, it was a vlogbrothers' video, and that community tends to be more or less reasonable. Imagine my dismay to find out they actually weren't! On this topic anyway.
If you have seen the video or haven't, it doesn't really matter for my discussion. John Green discussed how most people, religious or not, are essentially nihilists that in some way or another are looking to create meaning in their lives and the lives of others. I expect that most of us can agree with this statement. He also pointed out, that to him, the existence of a higher power itself was much less important than the question "How can I make my life worthwhile?" I agree wholeheartedly with this point.
Before we can go any further with my own experience, I'll briefly get into my own world view. I am not religious, nor was my upbringing. I was baptized Roman Catholic and I did attend Catholic school up until I went to university, but largely that experience helped me lose my somewhat lackadaisical faith. I distinctly remember the day that I realized I didn't believe in a Catholic god: we were discussing the afterlife in Religion class, and my own view is that souls may go elsewhere or they may be reincarnated if whatever lesson they were meant to learn wasn't totally learned. I was told in no uncertain terms that this was wrong and against the faith. Because I have a tiny bit of a problem being told what to do, I decided screw you guys, if you can't accommodate me, I'll find someone else who can. I flirted with the concept of Hinduism and Buddhism for a while, but after taking a World Religions course, I came to the understanding that all religions teach essentially the same morals, and they should all be respected.
Despite being more spiritual or even secular than religious, I still have an immense amount of respect for other people's faiths. Just because organized religion doesn't work for me, doesn't mean it isn't valuable to someone else. I have a lot of friends who are religious, and a lot of friends who aren't.
Now, back to why I decided to feed the trolls. Based on the video and others that are similar, the Greens have never expressed that they were religious or not. People have been trying to figure this out forever (although I can't see why -- it has no bearing on the content they put out) and have more or less concluded that they aren't religious. Someone even said, in the comments, that "they are not religious. They are smart men."
I'm sorry, but that's too far. Intelligence (and the pursuit of scientific knowledge) and faith are not mutually exclusive. You can't say that people who believe in a higher power are stupid and behind the times. There are plenty of famous scientists who were religious and made huge efforts forward. Sir Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur, Gregor Mendel, Sir Francis Bacon, Gottfried Liebniz and Michael Faraday were all religious men, just to name a few! Sir Isaac Newton is the father of classical physics and calculus (well, him and Leibniz on the calculus front). A good chunk of what we know today is due to Newton's contributions. To say that religious people are unable to contribute to the scientific world is untrue, unfair and incredibly ignorant.
The reason some people may think that science and religion have to be juxtaposed with each other is that the ordinary, perfectly reasonable religious people do not automatically come to mind. We tend to think of religious fundamentalists and those insane New Earth Creationists before we think of any of my teachers from when I was in Catholic school. Fundamentalists are not a good representation of the religious population (doubly so for Islamic jihadists - a lot of what they're doing goes against the Qu'ran, or so I've been told. Not being a Qu'ranic scholar myself, I can't say).
Science and religion do not need to be mutually exclusive at all. There is only so much that science is currently able to explain. I believe the universe was created by way of a big bang, but something had to set it off. I don't know what, but quite frankly I don't care. Like John Green said, that isn't the important question.
To be fair, it was a vlogbrothers' video, and that community tends to be more or less reasonable. Imagine my dismay to find out they actually weren't! On this topic anyway.
If you have seen the video or haven't, it doesn't really matter for my discussion. John Green discussed how most people, religious or not, are essentially nihilists that in some way or another are looking to create meaning in their lives and the lives of others. I expect that most of us can agree with this statement. He also pointed out, that to him, the existence of a higher power itself was much less important than the question "How can I make my life worthwhile?" I agree wholeheartedly with this point.
Before we can go any further with my own experience, I'll briefly get into my own world view. I am not religious, nor was my upbringing. I was baptized Roman Catholic and I did attend Catholic school up until I went to university, but largely that experience helped me lose my somewhat lackadaisical faith. I distinctly remember the day that I realized I didn't believe in a Catholic god: we were discussing the afterlife in Religion class, and my own view is that souls may go elsewhere or they may be reincarnated if whatever lesson they were meant to learn wasn't totally learned. I was told in no uncertain terms that this was wrong and against the faith. Because I have a tiny bit of a problem being told what to do, I decided screw you guys, if you can't accommodate me, I'll find someone else who can. I flirted with the concept of Hinduism and Buddhism for a while, but after taking a World Religions course, I came to the understanding that all religions teach essentially the same morals, and they should all be respected.
Despite being more spiritual or even secular than religious, I still have an immense amount of respect for other people's faiths. Just because organized religion doesn't work for me, doesn't mean it isn't valuable to someone else. I have a lot of friends who are religious, and a lot of friends who aren't.
Now, back to why I decided to feed the trolls. Based on the video and others that are similar, the Greens have never expressed that they were religious or not. People have been trying to figure this out forever (although I can't see why -- it has no bearing on the content they put out) and have more or less concluded that they aren't religious. Someone even said, in the comments, that "they are not religious. They are smart men."
I'm sorry, but that's too far. Intelligence (and the pursuit of scientific knowledge) and faith are not mutually exclusive. You can't say that people who believe in a higher power are stupid and behind the times. There are plenty of famous scientists who were religious and made huge efforts forward. Sir Isaac Newton, Louis Pasteur, Gregor Mendel, Sir Francis Bacon, Gottfried Liebniz and Michael Faraday were all religious men, just to name a few! Sir Isaac Newton is the father of classical physics and calculus (well, him and Leibniz on the calculus front). A good chunk of what we know today is due to Newton's contributions. To say that religious people are unable to contribute to the scientific world is untrue, unfair and incredibly ignorant.
The reason some people may think that science and religion have to be juxtaposed with each other is that the ordinary, perfectly reasonable religious people do not automatically come to mind. We tend to think of religious fundamentalists and those insane New Earth Creationists before we think of any of my teachers from when I was in Catholic school. Fundamentalists are not a good representation of the religious population (doubly so for Islamic jihadists - a lot of what they're doing goes against the Qu'ran, or so I've been told. Not being a Qu'ranic scholar myself, I can't say).
Science and religion do not need to be mutually exclusive at all. There is only so much that science is currently able to explain. I believe the universe was created by way of a big bang, but something had to set it off. I don't know what, but quite frankly I don't care. Like John Green said, that isn't the important question.
Monday, 11 November 2013
Student Government Is Complete Bullshit
So, if you know me (and thus far most people that read this blog do), you know that I am completely and vehemently opposed to participating in engineering-related extracurriculars. This is mostly because I want to get away from people that think exactly like me during my down time.
It shouldn't come as a surprise then that I am usually blissfully unaware of what my student government is doing. Today, however, I was reminded of their slightly annoying existence by a survey intended to gauge interest in this year's Chemical Engineering Chemistry themed clothing. I don't usually buy into any of these things (what can I say, I'm not a joiner) but I did today for some reason.
All the designs are horrendous. There is not a single item of clothing that they have designed that I would even consider putting on my body. Some of the designs could work if they weren't so fucking fixated on their chosen colour scheme (seriously, who does black writing on black fabric. Idiots.) and putting them on sweaters. Because I'm made of money and can afford your shitty over-priced clothing with ugly designs that I had no input in, or even the opportunity to give it.
My whole problem with student government, essentially, boils down to this: it's one big clique. If you didn't get involved in first or second year, none of the members that did will give a shit about your opinion. Even with this survey, I highly doubt anyone on that committee will modify their designs given our opinions. They don't care, they'll do whatever they want instead of what the majority of the class wants.
Yes, I realize that I could have gotten involved with this whole shebang earlier if I wanted to be a part of their decision making processes. Yes, I could let my class rep or whatever know that I want things to be done differently within their organization. Ultimately though, I don't really give a shit what happens. It's just incredibly stupid, in my mind, that they completely designed this faculty clothing without consulting us first. Or even asking us what kind of colour scheme we thought would be appropriate!
Whatever, they'll do whatever they want in their little hive minds. I'm not going to buy a Chem Eng sweater this year, just as I have never bought a Chem Eng related item before. I'll just go back to my student government free bubble, where everyone is happy and doesn't wear ugly black on black crew neck sweaters.
It shouldn't come as a surprise then that I am usually blissfully unaware of what my student government is doing. Today, however, I was reminded of their slightly annoying existence by a survey intended to gauge interest in this year's Chemical Engineering Chemistry themed clothing. I don't usually buy into any of these things (what can I say, I'm not a joiner) but I did today for some reason.
All the designs are horrendous. There is not a single item of clothing that they have designed that I would even consider putting on my body. Some of the designs could work if they weren't so fucking fixated on their chosen colour scheme (seriously, who does black writing on black fabric. Idiots.) and putting them on sweaters. Because I'm made of money and can afford your shitty over-priced clothing with ugly designs that I had no input in, or even the opportunity to give it.
My whole problem with student government, essentially, boils down to this: it's one big clique. If you didn't get involved in first or second year, none of the members that did will give a shit about your opinion. Even with this survey, I highly doubt anyone on that committee will modify their designs given our opinions. They don't care, they'll do whatever they want instead of what the majority of the class wants.
Yes, I realize that I could have gotten involved with this whole shebang earlier if I wanted to be a part of their decision making processes. Yes, I could let my class rep or whatever know that I want things to be done differently within their organization. Ultimately though, I don't really give a shit what happens. It's just incredibly stupid, in my mind, that they completely designed this faculty clothing without consulting us first. Or even asking us what kind of colour scheme we thought would be appropriate!
Whatever, they'll do whatever they want in their little hive minds. I'm not going to buy a Chem Eng sweater this year, just as I have never bought a Chem Eng related item before. I'll just go back to my student government free bubble, where everyone is happy and doesn't wear ugly black on black crew neck sweaters.
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