Time for another long-overdue post on this barren blog. A
lot has happened since my last entry. Shortly after my post on the first
chapter of the Qur'an (and 6 months after upgrading my I.T. credentials), I
finally got a call from a potential employer. It was an American company that
needed a local tech in Toronto for an existing client of theirs that had
recently expanded its operations north of the border. I only got a call because
the phone number listed on my résumé was the local Toronto number for my
sister’s company. Otherwise, since I was still in Lahore at the time, I
probably wouldn't have heard from anyone. Realizing this, I immediately jumped
at the offer, and within two weeks, I was back in Toronto (accompanied by my
younger sister, who was just as eager to leave Pakistan and return to saner,
safer Canada), ready to resume my I.T. career.
Working downtown on Adelaide Street was fun, and the
start-up that I was supporting seemed to be pretty cool. However, within two
months, that company experienced some sort of internal shake-up, and all of a
sudden switched from expansion to cost-cutting mode. Since they had begun to
lay off their own employees, I knew that an external resource like myself
wouldn't be kept on for much longer. I didn't have to wait very long before I
was told that my services were no longer required. My employer kept me on for
another couple of months doing remote support for people in California, Georgia
and Texas, but that wasn't the kind of work I was expecting to do, and it didn't
really work out. I was living with relatives at the time, which is a situation
that doesn't exactly lend itself to a working from home. I was also the
company’s only Canadian employee, and they really didn't do a great job of
providing me with the guidance and support that (I’m assuming) their American
employees enjoyed. They finally called me on New Year’s Eve and officially laid
me off. By this time, my sister and I had moved out of our relative’s house (something
that took far too long, thanks to my abysmal, depression-impacted credit
score), and had just begun to accumulate furniture, unpack, and settle in for
the winter. Far from a stable environment.
The biggest annoyance associated with my job was purely
administrative; reporting the hours I worked each day. When your job is split
into many separate tickets for many different clients, and when your employer
asks you to keep track of the time you spend on each ticket, things can get
mighty tricky. This is especially the case when you are required to handle
multiple tickets concurrently. If I spent two hours working on three tasks at
the same time, how do I report this? To make matters worse, the ticketing
system that my employer used, Autotask, is the biggest piece of shit waste of
time I have ever seen. It made timekeeping such a frustrating experience that I
probably spent more time screwing around with calendar and time widgets than
actually doing my job. Its archaic user interface made my life particularly
miserable, and definitely compounded my job anxiety. Whatever you do, please
stay away from any company that uses Autotask in any facet of their business.
Because of my employer’s administrative fumbles, I wasn't
given any benefits like medical coverage (when I asked them about this when
they called me to let me go, they said I did
have health benefits for the next week, but taking advantage of this didn't
seem to make much sense at that point). Their unfamiliarity with Canadian
employment practices and their easy-going attitude towards setting me up as a
permanent employee meant that I didn't accumulate enough paid hours to qualify
for Employment Insurance. This was enough to nudge me into a depressive state,
and make me feel rather disillusioned with employment in general.
I had no interest in looking for another company to work for
and be mistreated by. In the following months, I eventually mustered up the
courage to forge ahead on my own. I printed off some business cards of my own,
and tried to convince people to pay me a fairly modest fee to solve their
info-tech issues. So far, I only have two clients. Aside from some preliminary
improvements to their I.T. infrastructure, their needs haven’t been huge, and
so right now, I’m making even less money than I used to make working part-time
at Staples for minimum wage back in 2010.
This sort of situation is bound to have a negative impact on
mental health, especially over such a prolonged period. My only significant
source of relief during this period was my bike. My youngest sister bought me a
used bike for my birthday in March, and since then, I have ridden over 4,000
kilometers through the streets of Toronto. I've dropped over 30 pounds along
the way, and most of the back and neck pain that plagued my sedentary existence
in Lahore has also melted away. I’m in great physical shape, and I’m pretty
sure that my legs make up more than half of my body weight right now.
My other source of joy has been the wonderful free-to-play
video game, Tribes: Ascend. I've been a Tribes player since 1997, and this most
recent incarnation of the franchise, while certainly not flawless, allowed me
to hone some long-dormant skills, and acted as a much-needed source of
dopamine. It’s a travesty how Hi-Rez Studios, the company behind the game, has
largely abandoned it (not unlike Irrational, Vivendi/Sierra and Dynamix did in
the past). No other first-person shooter on the market comes close to providing
an experience that showcases players’ sheer skill in quite the same way as
Tribes. Makes me wanna holler! Since the official North America East servers
began kicking people off after the end of every single round, player
populations have dropped drastically, and everyone is calling this the end of
the franchise. I really hope this isn't so, and would actually gladly participate
in some kind of effort to revive the game. An OpenTribes platform would make
the global game-o-sphere a much nicer place.
Back to cycling. I was spending about 20 hours per week on
my bike, and recorded most of this activity with Strava, the nifty smartphone
app that lets you track your running and cycling activity, and participate in
challenges to compete with others around the globe. At the height of my cycling
efforts this year, I participated in their ‘Monthly Training Series’ (MTS) for
August, and wound up logging 1,386 kilometers. Often, I didn't have any money
in my pocket during these rides, and on more than a few occasions, I had to
walk my bike back home after experiencing mechanical failure of one sort or
another. Sometimes these walks were the entire 20 kilometer distance from
downtown Toronto to the west-end apartment where I live. Without enough to buy
replacement parts as I needed them, or even enough for bus fare, I treated
these walks as an opportunity to condition myself both physically and mentally.
I’d tell myself that these walks were strengthening muscle groups that aren't
used much while cycling, were allowing me to slow down and enjoy the scenery,
and if nothing else, were helping me, as they say, ‘build character’. Above all
else, these apparent annoyances taught me that while a motorist might be dead
in the water in a similar situation, a cyclist always has the option to push
his or her vehicle all the way home. Indeed, if you live on an upper floor of
your building, you can brag about carrying your vehicle up and down flights of
stairs every day.
Being marginally self-employed in the fashion I currently am
is a mixed bag. While I don’t have a ton of money (I have exactly one 5 cent
piece on my dresser, and its embossed beaver and queen take turns chuckling and
sneering at me), I have also learned to enjoy things in life that don’t require
currency. I also have more time than most people. Having more time in itself is
great, but in my situation, there are a few downsides, too. It gives a
depressed person more time to ruminate and feel horrible, whenever that mood
decides to take hold. It also makes it very clear that even my most sincere
friends don’t share the same temporal luxuries that I do, and that without the
company of people one can relate to, even an eternity can feel worthless.
Many of my university friends have dispersed since they
graduated, and now live all over the world, doing all the wonderful things that
come naturally to their wonderful selves. However, even the ones in Toronto
haven’t had a ton of time to chat. And I mean face-to-face. While textual
communication is a great thing, it can’t compare with the richness and nuance
of a live conversation. Aside from a few planned activities and get-togethers
(which are great fun, but don’t set the tone for deep, meaningful
conversations), I haven’t exactly had much opportunity to just hang out. My
friends are too busy to pay me much mind.
I currently find myself without any real destinations to
travel to. Without any money, I can’t even stop at a coffee shop or burger
joint. I go for a ride, keep going until I feel tired, and then I just ride
back home. The dopamine and physical fatigue keep me from utter despair, but
also divert my attention from most things that might improve my overall
situation.
Part of the reason that I find myself on my bike so often is
that I don’t have a lot of space or privacy at home. Since our youngest sister
moved in with my other sister and myself (along with her dog, snake, and three
cats), I haven’t been able to focus on anything worthwhile for sustained
periods. Just like Sam Roberts, it seems like inhuman beings take up all of my
time. I also have this odd sensation of not being sufficiently alone to engage
in solitary activities, and feel obligated (to some degree) to coordinate my
waking hours with my sisters. Being mindful and respectful of their space,
their work schedules, and their belongings can be taxing, especially with so
little space to go around.
Furthermore, I feel uncomfortable working on private
projects in the same room as other people I know. I think this is because of
some unconscious notion of mine that friends and family deserve more of my
attention than inert objects, no matter how valuable. Intellectually, I know
that this can’t always be true, but something in me might be recalling the
many, many times when other people have given a higher priority to their books,
notebooks, phones or computer screens than to something I was trying to tell
them about, and how horrible these instances made me feel (because (a) the
other person failed to show the same enthusiasm about what I was talking about,
(b) I appeared less important to them than something that seemed rather trivial
to me at the time, and (c) I wound up feeling like I had wasted their time and
my own). Even in adjacent rooms, I can sometimes feel (probably imaginary)
tendrils of attention creeping towards me, keeping tabs on me. The result is a
kind of voluntary paralysis that resembles sneaking back into your room at night
when your parents are asleep. Every sound feels amplified because you’re
imagining someone else listening, too.
Living on my own, however, simply isn't an option. Even if I
had enough money, I wouldn't be able to take care of myself in my current
depressed state. I also think that Pakistani men are raised (or raise
themselves, perhaps) to rely on the women in their lives in a way that seems –
Unfair? Sub-optimal? Brittle? – for both parties, and that despite my rather
non-traditional upbringing, this particular social norm has left me
underprepared for life on my own. Without the support of my family, and in
particular the two sisters I live with, I’d be much worse off today, and that’s
if I managed to survive this long at all.
The joy of cycling was interrupted towards the end of August
when my bike began to give up on me. I had to swap tires after they began
coming apart at the seams. My shifter and brake cables began to snap. The bolt
that secured the front shifter cable to my ancient front derailleur also snapped,
so I had to replace the entire derailleur. My chain had stretched way beyond
what any reasonable cyclist would allow, and that in turn caused irreparable
damage to my rear cassette. At various times during the August challenge, I was
riding my 21-speed mountain bike as a 7-speed, 3-speed, or single-speed bike. I
missed the first week of September entirely because my bike’s chain (which I
had to replace) kept coming apart mid-ride. The fools at Bikes on Wheels on
Augusta sold me a chain that was at least 3 links too short. I've finally
managed to add a few links from my old chain (not the best solution) and my
chain is holding firm for the time being, but that week without my bike had a
serious impact on my mental well-being.
During July, I had picked up third I.T. client, and had
begun working on a simple web development project for him. Communication with
him was sparse and unclear, he lived too far away, and I wasn't in the most
stable mental or financial situation either. The business relationship went
sour, and I never got paid for the last bit of work I did for him. This was
towards the end of August, so it coincided with other problems I was facing,
like having to pay for bike parts that I could barely afford. This pushed me
deeper into Depressionville. This has happened to me in the past; when faced
with a seemingly minor setback, especially one attributed to my own inaction, I
typically become more or less unresponsive. Even if it’s not true, I feel as
though I've let others down, that I have nothing of value to offer to my peers
and colleagues. I wind up feeling worthless.
That’s how I felt a couple of Fridays ago on the 5th,
and I spent that evening sharing my misery with my sisters, which I rarely do,
just so they knew how I felt. After sleeping off the fatigue associated with
this kind of uncharacteristic opening-up, I felt well enough to spend the 30
dollars I happened to earn the day before from a one-off job for a neighbor on
a new bike chain, and get my life moving again. However, when I stepped up to
my computer to figure out when the bike shop opened, I discovered that one of
the animals had chewed up the cord of my fancy gaming mouse. To me, that meant
no more Tribes.
I was livid, and I hadn't even had breakfast yet. After
letting out a moan of frustration and feeling not a lick better, I found myself
punching my bedroom wall, over and over and over again. I stopped when the pain
overtook my rage, and a few minutes later, realized that I had managed to do
some serious damage to myself. My sister took me to the hospital, and the next
couple of nights’ sleep involved some tricky business with my hands propped up
on pillows at awkward angles. Additionally, during my fit of rage, I also
managed to make my sister feel crappy (on her birthday, no less) by telling her
how her animals had destroyed my gear. If I had had something to eat at this
point in the day, or if I hadn't had a heart-to-heart with my sisters the night
before, I doubt I would have said anything to anyone. I’m the sort of person
that refrains from starting conversations that don’t seem to have much point,
and even immediately after the fact, this certainly seemed to be one of those
cases.
As I mentioned above, I eventually managed to fix my bike
chain, and I’m making do with a crappy spare mouse that I have, but I’m still
quite far from okay with my situation. I mentioned this in a Facebook status
update, and some friends showed support and pointed me to some potentially
helpful resources that my depression-addled mind has yet to gain any serious
traction with. Even so, some progress is being made, no matter how
frustratingly slow.
There was one thing, however, that inspired me to keep
trying, and that reminded me of dreams I have harbored for a number of years.
Surprisingly, it was Apple’s announcement of the iPhone 6 and Apple Watch.
While on the surface these products seem laughably insignificant in the grand
scheme of things, and perhaps they are, it’s the level of craftsmanship that
they represent that inspired me. The drive to produce something that extends
people’s ability to make real progress in the world, instead of creating
artificial demand for computer babysitters and device driver diddlers, the way
Microsoft’s half-baked product ecosystem has functioned for decades. In my
opinion, lot of I.T. jobs simply shouldn't exist, and if every computer were
designed as well as a Mac, they probably wouldn't. All of those intelligent computer
techs would be using their brilliance to solve problems that weren't so
laughably artificial. Nobody should have to troubleshoot SharePoint lists and
views for a living, or waste their time wondering why particular fonts screw up
some document layouts but not others.
The U2 album that was released at the Apple event added fuel
to my fire of hope. It’s an uplifting collection of songs. Being a long-time
fan of the band, I downloaded it as soon as I heard that it was a free release,
and listened to it non-stop for the next 3 days. If I can keep my words flowing
past this single entry, I’ll probably end up writing an entire post on the many
different ways that I find these songs to be personally meaningful.
I was inspired, yes, but to do what? Surely I wasn't
thinking of starting a company that produces smartphones or computers. Instead,
Apple’s product launch reminded me that I was in the ‘wisdom business’, and
that wisdom is a self-driven phenomenon that centers around both individual and
collective human development. The betterment of humans and the human race is at
wisdom’s core.
While it is no secret that Apple is a corporation, and is
therefore obligated to turn a profit (which it does exceedingly well), it
doesn't appear to be an evil corporation (even without the ‘open’ stance towards
development of which Google is an exemplar). The Apple event on the 9th
explicitly positioned the company and its products as drivers of positive
change, and whether or not you believe the image that this particular company
attempted to project, a more general, underlying idea managed to make an
impression on me: good design – design whose simplicity and efficiency allows
people to accomplish more and waste less (and maybe even make their efforts
enjoyable) – is invaluable. Thoughtful product or process design that
identifies and facilitates a small number of good ways to perform a task might
appear at first to restrict users' freedom, but if the product or process is
truly well-designed, it will in fact save people from having to experiment with
all the ineffective, time-wasting ways of approaching that same task. Apple
certainly doesn't have a monopoly on good design, but good design does appear
to be its greatest strength.
What does this mean for me and my desire to cultivate and
encourage the cultivation of wisdom? In short, I have decided to forge ahead,
despite being penniless and unwell, and take as many small steps as I can
towards promoting wisdom in a concrete, lasting way. Specifically, I intend to do whatever I can to maximize
the output and collaborative efforts of academic institutions. While this
will one day, I hope, involve me making recommendations on how universities and
colleges can improve the efficiency of their administrative staff, those sorts
of activities are usually reserved for seasoned educationists. I imagine there
aren't many entry-level positions of that sort. However, there are other ways
of making significant progress that don’t require me to already be in the thick
of academic policy-making.
Initially, I intend to design and produce software that
helps post-secondary students make better, more informed decisions regarding
their academic career, help them avoid the need to retake courses or spend more
time pursuing a diploma or degree than is either necessary or desirable, and in
general, make fewer mistakes. I want to make it easy for students to know what
they need to do today, this week, this semester, and even further along their
academic journey. I want to remove unnecessary surprises that force students to
take what we euphemistically call the ‘victory lap’; an extra semester (or two,
or five), in order to take courses that they didn't realize they had to take.
The cumulative result across all students in one institution (and hopefully,
across many institutions over many years) would undoubtedly be staggering. I
expect to see lower drop-out rates, and possibly even lower incidence of mental
health issues among students. Think about the number of person-years that these
sorts of tools can save. Furthermore, this isn't just any group of people being
assisted in some mundane activity. People that attend college or university
number among the brightest and most motivated, no matter which city or country
they belong to. Helping them become the best people they can be sounds like a
particularly worthy goal to me.
In a time when evil ideologies and infectious diseases have
both become global epidemics that can render entire battalions impotent and
helpless, it is brainpower and not firepower that will get the job done in the
end. Ideas survive long after the flesh has failed, and they are also more
integral to who we are, both as individuals and as a species. Even though I am
weak today, I consider this a tiny step towards becoming something more, by
helping others do the same. In the coming months, I’ll be collecting and
reviewing a bunch of notes that I've scribbled in half a dozen notebooks over
half a dozen years, and I hope to be able to present a more cohesive, less
inchoate representation of the vision I have of the future of academic
administration. Hopefully my life circumstances will improve in tandem, riding
this wave of ambition and inspiration. If I accomplish even a tenth of what I
hope to, it will be in the service of humanity, and I can’t think of any
project more worthy of my time.
What an inspiring read Najam. Reading that was like witnessing alchemy of the human spirit. Please keep writing!
ReplyDeleteSup Najam, I read your blog. The 9th paragraph was difficult to read because I've been in the same situation. The 13th and 14th was cool because it's nice to see that others feel the exact same way about working around others. Lol. I'm carrying around my own set of problems that I'm working on. The 17th is something that I think about doing, but I'm waiting to join a gym to hit a bag. Bro, take it easy. The 22nd was motivational and it's good to see that your putting your intentions out there.
ReplyDeleteI do a lot of walking instead of biking, at night mostly because it's quiet and I don't feel like I'm stared at. I also see a lot of people doing the same thing. I would walk for a few hours. So I know what that type of exercise does for depression. I have to leave the house for at least a 15 min to 2 hour walk just to stay sane while working odd hours and being deprived of friendships outside of the work place. Customers don't count as friends, although my work would like me to talk to them like my friends, which is more annoying because the job is the reason why I'm so removed from them.
Keep writing!!
I remember my sitting with you at Visionet Systems office when you explained to me Cortical wisdom for almost half an hour. Though I think myself a very normal thinker, yet I could feel the intensity of your thoughts.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your article. Please include some photo(s) to make it more beautiful and colorful :)