Communication Failure or Ever Had One of Those Days?

By , July 17, 2006 11:47 am

Today started off lovely. Woke up on the first alarm, had a shower, breakfast and whatnot. Left for work early, grabbed a coffee at Tim Hortons and was on my way. Shortly after arriving at work I noticed that my cell-phone was no longer on my person!

I don’t have a land-line, since I spend the bulk my days not actually at home, the expense just is not justified, since the phone works just as well there as it does outside of the home. I just take it with me and have the one phone.

I suppose the good thing is that I’m rarely on the phone, and it’s a prepaid phone time system so in terms of airtime I’ll only lose $8 if it ‘disappears’. The downside is replacing it will cost me about a hundred dollars.

OC Transpo doesn’t have a really great lost-and-found system, and I frankly have very little faith in human kindness to return a lost cell-phone in the first place. I hope I’m proven wrong, of course. I’ve sent the phone a text message giving my work phone number, and I’ve been trying the number randomly through the day with no answer. I’ve also been keeping a close eye on the account balance via Virgin’s website, so if it changes and nobody answers then I’ve been ripped off and I’ll suspend the account. If it’s not turned up by tomorrow, I’ll have to suspend it anyways. *sigh*

You Don’t Drive? Huh?

By , July 16, 2006 10:34 pm

I went into a vitriolic rant a few minutes ago which my girlfriend was the unfortunate recipient of (sorry, hon!) and it occurred to me that this was something of a sore point for me lately.

Nearly everyone I meet gives me this dumb pie-eyed look when I explain that I don’t own a car, don’t have a drivers license and frankly have no interest in obtaining either. I’ve spent the majority of the past nine years living in Ottawa, Canada’s fourth largest metropolitan city.
The bus service is adequate for my needs, despite fare increases over the past years is still vastly cheaper than an automobile, besides which it’s healthier to walk or ride a bicycle.

According to this page by the US EPA, the average passenger car emits approximately 5,400 kilograms of pollutants per year. Since most of my travels would consist of my being the sole passenger this would be squarely on my shoulders. I’ve been hard pressed to find exact data regarding how much city bus emissions per passenger are, but the estimates I did find place it at 66% less. This means that I personally am contributing at most 1,600 kilograms of pollutants from transit. I’d like to think it’s less since I walk or cycle whenever I can do so.

Let’s factor in that gasoline sells for over a dollar a liter here in Ottawa, and automobile insurance (which is mandatory) is also a few hundred dollars a month. Cars, like any mechanical device have parts which wear out and break. They need maintenance and replacement parts. Eventually the entire vehicle may require replacement. Heck, they’re at least a few thousand dollars to obtain one in working condition, and most people I know have owned several in their lifetimes. How is this device saving me time? Most of my paycheck would go to operating and maintaining it! I can ride the bus for about a day’s pay per month. Now that’s saving me time, since at the absolute minimum I’d be losing over a week’s pay per month for the ‘convenience’ of a darned car.

I don’t need to go through several levels of testing to ride the bus, and the initial investment for a bus pass is about $10 for a photo ID. Drivers licenses take years, at least three tests, and several hundred dollars to obtain.

When I travel around on the bus, I glance out the window now and again to make sure I’ve not passed my stop. If I was driving a car, I’d have to be paying constant attention to not only my vehicle and it’s speed and heading, but all others around me including pedestrians. I’d have to watch the traffic lights, street signs, random debris on the roadway and various weather conditions which change quite often here in the capital.

I’ve actually dozed off on the bus. That’s death in a car! I can sit down, let someone else worry about these annoyances, listen to music on headphones, read a book, text message on my phone, daydream, whatever.

So, in reality I’m saving time, money, effort, stress and the environment all at once. Understandably if I lived in a less urban area it would be a different situation.

But I don’t – So why ruin my life for what would amount to merely caving to peer pressure spawned by industrial marketing?

Random Lunch Break Update

By , July 12, 2006 1:43 pm

I’ll admit, I’ve been quite neglectful of my blog as of late. Working as a Market Researcher, in fact, sucked. The full-time day hours quickly vaporized to become part-time evening hours and the projects went from real surveys to thinly disguised telemarketting. They actually had me lying to respondents which weighed heavily on my conscious. I may not have always lived an altruistic lifestyle but I’m trying – and it was nerve wracking going to work every day in violation of my principals.

There is good news to be reported here, rest assured I’ve not been resting on my laurels and swallowing the bitter pill of my callous employers. Yours truly has landed a very decent position with a small company. A home-grown Canadian offshoot of an Australian company, it is a growing firm produces an ingenious product you may already have used without even realizing it. We provide the technology that allows your corner store and Canada Post to sell phone cards, Hot Spot vouchers and the like.

This is a salaried position (my first ever) and makes use of the various technological skills I’ve garnered over the years. I guess the diversity of my interests and techno-lusts that I’ve been harboring since I was first captivated by the Apple // has finally paid off. It’s nice to go to work and know that today won’t be just like yesterday, nor will it match tomorrow. I’ll even get to do some software programming, which is something I’m good at and could lose myself for hours in doing.

The product is good, and gets me excited. When people ask what I do for a living I actually feel pride in telling them now. The hours are regular, the paychecks consistent, and the commute isn’t too brutal. The pessimist in me is waiting for the bubble to burst and the downside to rear it’s ugly face. I’m confident that if any negatives do appear they will be offset by the immense positives of this new position.

Moving forward, I’m actual able to consider the future and see that I have one. To my regular reading audience, you’ll be happy to hear that I’ll once again be able to dedicate a little time to writing now.

I’d also like to take this moment to thank my girlfriend who has always been supportive of me no matter what I’ve chosen to do, and no matter how much I’ve given in to despair. It means so much to me to know that I’m not alone in this life and that I’ve got someone who won’t just turn on me the second things don’t look like they’re going so well for me. This is how someone who loves you behaves, and the more I experience it the more I realize how deluded and misled I was in the past. But the past is just that – past. I hope my girlfriend’s positive outlook and big-picture thinking rubs off on me.

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