Sunday, 25 June 2017

Financial Finalities, Futurama and Forever

The word of the week is vulnerable.

June 19 – Finality

Five months from now, I'll have to make a HUGE decision about my future:

Do I go on, or do I call it quits?

Before you worry, I'll be clear: I'm talking about my financial future, and how my current ongoing situation is drastically affecting my life.

Things have been coming to a head for some time now, and my projections show that this year is the clincher, hence the decision needed as noted above.

To be blunt: I owe more than I can ever pay back, given my present income and my hopes to overcome.


Now, some people will jump on that right away with advice such as 'Get a better job!' and 'Spend less!' - both valid points, and both are pieces of advice I have already been following for years now. The better job( another $10K a year would be a minimum )is something I've already spoken about in the blog, that's not been happening and I've already redoubled my efforts earlier in 2017 to figure out why. Then do something about it.

Spending less, well... I'm as frugal a guy as I know, without being a hermit.

Looking over my calculations, if I had been a hermit for the last 5 years... I'd owe 1/3 less money. Which is still more than I can repay: I owe more than I make in a year at my present job, which adds up to significant monthly payments that creep up a little bit more with every bill.


What tipped the balance, you might ask?

It's a matter of What and When, really. Continuing depression from years ago meant I purchased things I didn't need( DVD's, video games, books, some low-cost collectibles )that added up over time, when I should have been saving for my future AND knocking down my costs incurred from moving to BC - but I couldn't see that then, like I can now.

Quitting my long-term job in 2012 and going on EI was the continuation of the downwards slide, as my income dropped by 1/3. Then I was without income for 5 months after EI ran out before I was hired for a minimum-wage job... which I stayed at for 2 years while looking for better work. My income dropped to half of what I was earning before, and the slide steepened. Despite numerous entreaties to the bank, there 'were no other options' for me, according to them - more on that in a bit. There was also a stretch in there where I didn't work for 2 months due to scheduling errors, but that was just par for the course at that point...

I should have thrown in the towel then, but I was too stubborn - still am, in some ways.

Three years ago I found a better job, and managed to halt the slide... but I didn't make progress in reducing my debt for more than a year into the job, when I managed to get someone at the bank with a conscience to admit there was a 'HelpLine' that could reduce my monthly payments by 50%. Nice of them to tell me this after asking regularly for four years, the bastards. That call was with a very nice lady, who expressed shock that I hadn't called years ago for help.

Yeah. Hindsight's no use if nobody at the bank admits there's even a window...

In any case, the numbers never lie, if you're honest about it, and I've been pretty honest with things for the last 5 years. An entire paycheque each month is going to pay my debt, and that will be unsustainable by early 2018. I've struggled to keep ahead of things and maintain my credit rating, but by this point it doesn't matter: nobody will give me a decent rate for a consolidation loan due to the amount of debt( ratios, you know )meaning that my solid credit rating does me no good whatsoever. I can fight all I want, but the end is in sight - and getting nearer by the week.

More on this in a future post -  I can't write about it any more today. 

But, I did write about it, out in the open... and that's a big step for me. Not talking about it, working out things on my own, while asking for advice as needed: none of that's worked, and so 2017 will see the end of things Fiscal for me, and perhaps a new beginning for 2018.


June 20 – Futurama LIVE!

"Good news, everyone!" said Professor Farnsworth.

I love Futurama. It's a show that rolls so many of the things I love into one program: science fiction, animation, comedy, puns, satire and so much more make the show a joy to watch almost every time.

This week was rather special: to celebrate the release of the only to-date game involving Futurama, there was a live reading of an episode online! You can watch it in its entirety below, including the post-episode questions. It's so worth it, especially to see the incredible dynamic that the cast has with one another. The fluid interactions and timing from years of practice together make the reading flow wonderfully well and is only possible with such a finely tuned set of performers - enjoy!



June 21 – Useful, or not?

For the past month, I've devoted 2 nights a week to money.

Because it was free with my Forum a few months ago, I've been attending the Land Mark Money Seminar every Wednesday, and a followup group meeting the Monday after. Tonight was Session 4 of the seminar series... and I was mighty frustrated.

Land Mark offers a 'different' approach to discovering one's relationship to money, and I had hoped that it would give me new insights into the nature of my habits with money or at least prompt me to ask questions I hadn't before.

Tonight, my question was: why am I still doing this after a month?

While the group discussion sessions have been interesting and the people in them are all intelligent and pleasant, little useful insight for me has come out of them. That's not to say that the methodology is crap, because it does do some good:


The seminars themselves mainly consist of stories being shared from other attendees, none of which to date I've been able to relate to my own situation. There's precious little concrete teaching going on, either: so far, the seminar leader has yet to use the word 'budget' which I find frustrating, along with some other factors. However, some of the things they teach are useful, such as:


Problem is, I already practice doing that, and have been for years. The language they insist that one use to conceptualize their teachings isn't compatible with my mental processes. I think all the time, on many levels, about many topics, so to re-wire my thought processes just to take in lessons I already practice really isn't possible, or needed, in my case. Other people in the seminar have really benefited from the methods, as evidenced every week by their reactions and insights, but for someone like myself, who's already deeply introspective and thoughtful, the sessions have proved only that I'm on the right mental / emotional path... and that my finances aren't something that can be fixed just with thought, despite my hope for useful insights into money processes I might not know.

Next week will be the deciding factor, as the topic is 'Escaping The Money Trap' which is why I've been hanging on with the series for 5 weeks now.

If it's a rehash of what I already know, then I'm going to have to bow out: I have a novel to finish editing AND a second one to finish writing this summer!
  

June 22 – Woo Juice

It's frustrating being smart, so much of the time.

Nowhere is that more evident online( FBook )where intelligence and ignorance meet to mingle and usually shout at each other with various levels of vehemence.

I tend to chime in on conversations that involve climate change and vaccines, mainly because these are usually involve massive amounts of ignorance that are displayed by people: those who deny climate change and those who deny the effectiveness and /or safety of modern vaccines.

It's shocking how little people know about the subjects, even in this day and age of instant information available on the Internet. For example:


My response to the above would always be the point person in the right direction of factual information, but there's a problem: it's actually difficult to find good information with your standard web search, because so much garbage is shoved in the way first by people with vested interests in denying the facts for profit.

Seriously. It's mind-boggling that greed comes before facts so often these days.

Take, for example, the 'superstar' of the anti-vaccine world: David 'Avacado' Wolfe, who makes his living by denying the effectiveness of vaccines with one hand and selling his 'natural lifestyle products' with the other - a practice I find despicable, dishonest and frankly criminal given that he's been responsible for so much needless suffering through the spreading disinformation through his campaigns.

What the Avacado is doing is making is disinformation far easier to find when people who don't know any better go looking for information about the safety of vaccines. When they do, it's highly likely that they'll find dire warnings about the dangers of vaccines on the first few dozen search results they get, from 'mommy-centric' blogs and natural-health-solution sites brazenly peddling their wares.


It's frightening how easily people like the lady above are fooled. One woman responded to one of my measured statements with a massive copy-pasted list of over 100 studies 'proving' that vaccines cause harm to children. What she failed at was to actually investigate the literature, ALL of which has been debunked by the study-creators peers - someone's actually gone to the trouble at THIS site, thank goodness.

That's really what it is: a lot of back-and-forth, with ignorant statements taking massive amounts of time to refute with proper facts, and then more ignorant statements being made... all because those who are ignorant cannot find, cannot understand , or just will not look for the facts themselves because they prefer to maintain their air of 'superiority' over the experts that their echo-chamber friends online tell them to distrust.

At least until their child falls ill from a preventable disease.


June 23 – Renting Forever

Housing prices here in Victoria keep rising.

As I've mentioned before, with the rental vacancy rate under half a percent, it's next to impossible to find affordable rentals inside city limits, with one bedroom units going for well over $1000 - or more, depending if there's a bidding war or not.

The situation is even worse for people trying to purchase a home, as the average two-income couple can't afford houses that now start around $600,000 CAN for a two-bedroom detached home, usually nothing newer than places built in the 1940s. Condominium units starts at around $300,000 for a tiny one-bedroom sizes in the 600 ft.² range, which frankly isn't worth the money for the size. The story is worse in Toronto and Vancouver, where people are praying for a real-estate crash:


With the present market prices, there's absolutely no way I'll be able to afford any kind of home. Even with a 10% down payment and twice my current income, a mortgage amortized over 25 years would max out at a purchase price of $550,000 CAD, well short of the calculated costs of decent homes here in Victoria, which are running around $750,000.

I could always find housing outside of town, but that means joining the tens of thousands of people who commute daily along our jammed main highway from the smaller feeder towns of Sooke, Langford, Sidney and others. I wouldn't do that unless I had any other choice, because it also mean that I'd have to buy a car... which reduces the maximum monthly mortgage out I can afford yet again. Not to mention the hours of time lost in traffic jams...

It's discouraging, but at least I don't have a young family I'm trying to house.

Hopefully by the time I'm looking for a house( sometime in my early 50's ?) the market will have adjusted and something decent will be available. In the meantime, I'll continue to rent, and continue to work on my Tiny House plan, where I might be able to actually afford something for around $200,000 - which all depends on getting the proper zoning bylaws passed as well is finding land.

But that's another story.


June 23 – Accents!

I love accents...

One has practice them every little while to fine-tune your ears, though, and some people are much better at doing that than others.

Take for example, the lady below: she's able to do over a dozen accents in less than 4 minutes, and each one is flawless... so impressive!


For myself, I've long considered getting into voice acting. While right now I'm too busy with other things, I have been doing some work( research and practice, mainly )in learning the business as well is the range of my own voice. As you may have noticed from my Futurama post above, I have a lot of respect for voice actors; a good friend of mine has just recently dived into the business and I wish him all the best at making a living in what I believe can be a fun career.

It's another option for me, I believe: I just have to talk myself into getting there.


June 25 – Gaming and Vegans

Up early again today... lots to do!

Since I cut out caffeine completely in the fall of 2016, my biorhythms have adjusted rather nicely. I'm now waking up naturally around 5:30am, giving me about two hours to get things done in the morning, including some writing.

The weekends do seem to disappear quickly though, when one plays catch-up with various tasks that need doing. Especially as my weeks have each been short several days due to the seminars I've been attending for the last five weeks.

Today I took the afternoon off, spending it with my girlfriend and my friend Chris playing Super Dungeon Explorer! It was another hot day outside, and I was grateful to be able to sit indoors under a ceiling fan to keep cool while we played at his place.

The nice thing about S.D.E. is that it's not complicated: you choose which Hero mini you want based on their powers, set up the board and go at it. Enemies spawn based on a set of rules that are randomized by card draws every turn, and when you defeat them you draw loot cards to enhance your character's abilities. There are three colors of dice of increasing potency, each color linked to more powerful items and abilities of your characters. There's some nice strategy that can be implemented without over-complication, and the game is challenging enough without being insanely difficult that you have to work to win but don't expect it... which I like.

Start on the left and Big Bad Takedown on the right - we all survived!

We finished up the three-player game in under three hours, including cleanup, and had a great time. This fall there will be an RPG expansion to the game, meaning that are characters can keep their loot between sessions, much like in a regular D&D campaign, which is excellent!

In the evening I attended a Vegan/Vegetarian potluck dinner at Government House( a stunning public-accessible place! )hosted by Vegtoria.ca with my parents. It was well-attended, with about forty people there all told. The weather was perfect, and the dining options delicious:


It reminded me that I'll have to go back to Government House a few more times this summer, as it's a 'hidden gem' of Victoria: the beautifully-kept grounds and lovely architecture are sights best beheld at leisure, which I hope to have a bit of in the next few months, now and then.

Did I mention everything was delicious? They had vegan donuts and cookies!!!!

Apologies for the heavy topics in this week's blog; I've had a lot on my mind, and it's all coming to a head this month, apparently. While I haven't had much use for what Land Mark has been presenting in their seminars, I will say that they've got my mind weighing things again, and doing so without freezing into anxiety-ridden paralysis - I got that out of the way earlier this year, so in a sense this is good timing for the exercise. I've got too much to do and too many dreams in life to dwell in logic-loops any more, so decisions will be made and Things Will Get Done this summer... I'm tired of treading water in my life.

Sunday, 18 June 2017

500th Blog Post Bonanza!

The word of the week is MILESTONE~!!!!!!

June 12 – 500 POSTS!!!!!

Here we are!





For months, I've debated about what to write for this special entry, knowing that it was coming up: a past retrospective? A guess as to the future? A summary of the present, with all its bumps layered over with a gloss of thin, shiny hope?

Well, none of those appealed to me.

Instead, I'll talk about why I started this blog in the first place: my friends and family... but mostly friends, as I tend to keep in touch with family via email or phone.

Not so with friends, and that's where this special blog entry comes into play.

One thing I've noticed over the years is that people tend to become more insular: they get set in their lives and the deviations from that centerline tend to be less as time goes on. Friendships change, some fading and some growing stronger, much the same as social circles tend to solidify based on employment: the longer you're in a job in one spot, the more roots you put down and the less likely you are to change.

For me, I've noticed my circle of friends changing, not the least because I moved away from most everyone I knew back in 2007 to try and reboot my life.

I like to think I've had some success in that area, as well as a lot of learning experiences in all aspects of my life. Which has led to change in me: mostly for the positive, I think.

What's really struck me in terms of change has been my involvement in my friend's lives: for the most part, I'm now a peripheral pal to most of the people that I grew up with and knew back in Niagara, whether I like to admit it or not.

That's not unexpected, considering the many distances between us now.

What fascinates me about change though, is what constitutes friendship, and I've given that a lot of thought over the last decade that I've been living in BC... probably more thought than I ever gave to the subject while I was living back in Ontario. I am extremely fortunate in that I can make friends easily, and the friendships I make tend to be lasting ones.

It takes all kinds...

What my friendships mean to me has changed as well, as I've aged:

- in my teens, I just wanted to finish high school and get on to university, where I could really start learning things. My friendships were with my close friends, and I had a busy social life, though not one with any sort of real depth, because I didn't know what I wanted.
- in my 20s, things changed when I went to university and afterwards, as I had a number of major life events. My social life changed as well, getting me out of the house quite often during the week to the local watering holes, but again I wasn't doing anything except hanging out with my friends, ad nauseum. I was suffering from general depression and spending time with friends helped ease the pit of empty I felt inside when I looked at my life.
- in my 30s, I was still directionless, having left university and started work at a job that I despised though the people I worked with were great. I formed new friendships online playing Neverwinter Nights, but again did little with my life. Then I decided to uproot things and move with my parents out to BC... because, why not? I wasn't doing anything important in Niagara, and deep down I knew I never would if I stayed rooted there.

Now, in my 40s, I've switched things up here in Victoria. The new friendships I've formed here are solid, if somewhat intermittent due to how busy we all are, but I believe that I'm worth their time, and they mine as well. We share common interests, have a good time together and can relax in one another's company, which is all that you can ask when turning strangers into friends. It's a talent that many possess, but too few appreciate, or cultivate in all the right ways, so that each friend becomes a part of you in ways you can't quite place...

It saddens me that distance has made my friendships with those back in Niagara less vibrant, but it hasn't ended those links and for that I'm extremely grateful to FBook for allowing me to peek in on their lives regularly. It also lets me keep up with friends I've never met, which astonishes me sometimes, but then I know that my ability to express myself through my writing grew in no small part thanks to my online friendships... so that's been a bright part of my life, when I realized it in recent years. 

Being online, blogging and writing and socializing, is just as important to me as being there in person, because I'm able to express myself fully either way.

I like to think that my blog lets my friends get to know the true me, in their own time... and that in writing it, it also lets me know myself better, too.


June 14 – About blogging...

I thought I would fear into the technical here for moment to answer a question:

What's it been like writing every Sunday night for close to 10 years?

For one, it's meant that I have to be disciplined in setting aside my time every week. When I first started out, I had tons of free time: being new to Victoria and not knowing anybody, I just worked and came home again with the occasional evening a week spent with my family for dinner. That meant I had plenty of time to think on what I wanted to blog about, and if you look at my earliest blog entries, I ended up writing quite a lot compared to entries over the later years, when my local social life had started to develop again.


Blogging is about creating a habit and developing it into something that you carry with you in between blog entries. For me, my blogging habit has developed from sitting down in front of the computer and wondering what I'm going to talk about into taking mental notes( and other notes )all week that I let my subconscious work on, so that I can build up bits of each week's entry as each days passes.

I think it's worked rather well, as I've seen the blog develop from massive infodumps about the MANY things I'm interested in to a more compact version that's chatty, warmer and gives far more insight into my life and thoughts than I ever thought I'd be comfortable with sharing. While not everything in my head makes into the blog, more things do than don't and I'm happy that I've been able to share as much as I have of myself.

Volume is another thing: I've written a lot in 10 years of blogging.

Quest Completed - Do I get to level up now?

Simple numbers bear this out: if each blog entry averages between 2000 and 3000 words( an essay a week! )then 500 of these entries mean I've written over 1 million words in the last decade for this blog, the equivalent of a novel a year! It's something that I'm quite proud of, as few people ever cracked 1 million words barrier in their lifetimes, at least when it comes to non-work-related word counts.

Here's to the next million!


June 14 – Seeking Counsel

Sometimes it helps to talk about your problems to those best equipped to advise you.

In the past, I've been reluctant to disclose any issues I might be wrestling with, because I had considered itthem to be weaknesses or character flaws if I couldn't deal with things myself. Now I know better, as I realize that one can't deal with things one's not equipped for, like having a toolbox with only a few basic tools...

Capes are toolbox-optional, but recommended!

Just to keep on track, I've been speaking to both career and financial counselors again this month, which have been helpful. In both areas, I've received solid feedback on what I've done to date to take control of my life in both areas: the professionals I've spoken to have been extremely positive regarding my insights into why I am where I am and what I'm doing to move myself forward. They've confirmed that I'm headed on the right roads, asking the right questions and doing the right things, that I'm being aggressive in chasing my dreams instead of worrying, assigning blame or otherwise wandering around the problems I face.

It does take time and effort though, but speaking again to counselors has allowed me to dial in what effects my efforts have been having my life, so that I don't get the feeling that I'm flailing around randomly in quicksand.

Learning to navigate the pitfalls of life should always add to your toolbox, with every one of them another tool against anxiety and worry.

Fill the box!


June 15 – Writing Progress

The finish line is in sight...!

However, I'm not going to make my June 30th deadline, for reasons I'll explain next week, which have to do with time.

For the last two months, I'm beginning up earlier and earlier every day to write, culminating in an average June wakeup-time of between 530 and 6 AM. Which has worked out rather nicely because of all the noise problems we've been having lately, including a guy who drives by every weekday at 6 AM with his howling dog... but that's hopefully been taking care of now by Animal Control.

My writing( editing, really )has been going well, albeit somewhat slowly, as more and more ideas present themselves I have to work them into the book and that slows the overall progress of finishing the fourth draft.


At this point, I hope to have it done in another month, and hit the finish line running: my first week of vacation is in the middle of July, so I should be able to wrap things up nicely with a full-on review of the draft at that point.

Once I had the fourth draft completed, I plan to print up a dozen copies to send out to beta readers for their thoughts to make any changes before I submit it to agents and/or publishers.

Then it's on to finishing Book 2 for the rest of 2017!


June 16 – Sic Transit, Vir

It continues...

Stephen Furst, another beloved cast member of Babylon 5, has passed on today. He was only 63.

In one of the B5 groups today, I found many touching set of tributes, and put a couple of the most touchingly true ones into the image below:


Above all, I loved this one in particular, as it came from a fan new to Babylon 5, yet he was immediately able to see the depth that Stephen Furst brought to the character of Vir... a depth that came from within the core of who he was as a person:


I can't think of a more fitting tribute for Stephen to be remembered by.

See you beyond the Rim, sir!


June 17 – Ignorance

Why are people so willing to ignore the facts about things like Climate Change and Vaccines?

Heck, why are people so willing to debate what a fact is, in many cases?


For one thing, ignorance has become a virtue, as Asimov has noted above - it's no longer looked down upon to be ignorant by a too-large number of people in modern society, something that scares the willies out of me if I dwell too long on it.

I've run into quite a few people in the last few years online who are... well, my words here would be far more eloquent than they deserve, let's just say that. 

Here's an example of one woman's beliefs that have led her down the path of... silliness. Read the last part:

Um, that's not how Scientific Theory and Scientific Laws work, ma'am...

Thankfully, science will still be science whether or not people believe in it or understand it. Actual science sites are fighting back against the waves of ignorance sweeping the internet, with sites offering things like Climate Change Fact Courses to prepare one to fight ignorance wherever you find it...

Understanding and truth are the best weapons when fighting ignorance, so arm yourselves!


June 18 – Dad Day

For Father's Day, my family and I had a nice brunch at Nourish, with my lovely girlfriend too!

It was really special: because we had to wait an hour for a table( I couldn't get reservations at all this week )we were able to relax in the spacious upstairs lounge area and just chat, which was great as we haven't done much of that this year. I'm always happy to see how well my girlfriend gets along with my family, all of whom adore her, and having us all together like today warms me immensely.


A little bit about my dad...

My father is a fantastic man: gentle, calm, kind, fair and above all: loving. I can't imagine having had a better father to grow up with, one that I respected, not feared, and knew that he was proud of me because he told me so, as well as ensuring I always knew I was loved. He is a rock, with a solid dependability that anchored us as a family; I rarely saw him angry or upset, either for very long. He's always been there, putting his family's needs first before his own, which is something that I've taken on as well, sometimes to my own detriment. I'm proud to say I possess many of his positive traits:  an open mind, deep generosity, a huge capacity for love and a warmth for everyone I meet.

I've been fortunate to have my father in my life from the day I was born, always there for me but never in my way. How could I not be proud to be this man's son?

Thanks, Dad... always.


I thought that writing my 500th blog post would be a joyous experience, but much of what I've felt this week has been stressful: anger at my financial situation, pressure to get my home business running at the same time as writing my books, and frustration at any time wasted for all of the above. 2017 is half over, and I've got a long way to go with so many things yet...