Wednesday 29 October 2014

Family and Friends' update, Halloween 2014

Keeping in touch might not be my forte, and I can't promise about anything in the future, but here is my first vlog! I'm sure it could have been about a thousand times better, unfortunately, it isn't... Because I didn't really prepare anything, and the last time I used movie maker was for an art project in highschool, in 2009... So it's been a while. Nevertheless, here it is, my first proud video.


ps. I don't actually think the content is that great, my thoughts are scattered all over the place, and I'm not even telling you about the actual experience of teaching in Germany! What a fail of an update! *Self-critical, sarcastic laugh*
Also, I'd like to mention that despite this video seemingly showing my lack of able-ness to give a presentation, I assure you that I can give you a mighty power point presentation about Canada. :)


Friday 17 October 2014

Okay, let’s be uncomfortable now

Now, before you read this, I will say a few words. They are very important, hence the bold font. If you get easily anxious about finances, don't read this. If thinking about money stresses you out, don't read this. In this post, I am getting completely financially naked about my student loan debt. It's uncomfortable, and brutally honest. I haven't made up any numbers, this is all the absolute truth. This is an account of my experience with financing my post-secondary education.

This is a touchy subject for many newly graduated students. Student loans. I’m not writing to complain about my specific situation, though I am going to complain about the system and the environment that created the problem in the first place. I’m not one to talk much about money. Frankly, I try not too care too much about it, I rarely discuss figures, and then, they’re never mine. I’ll mention that I’m broke, once in a while, to explain why I can’t go out, or why I always cook at home, and why I go to thrift stores instead of getting a new piece of clothing. The people that are dear to me know that I have debt, and that I don’t have much money, and the conversation usually stops there. Not even my parents know the actual amount of my debt. Why is that? Because I’m ashamed. I’m so ashamed of the fact that I decided to pursue higher education, and that I didn’t know how to manage my finances. It took a brutal wake-up call between my second and third year of university to understand what a dangerous road I was on. And an even more brutal blow came about a year ago when everything I believed to be stable fell to pieces and I couldn’t even afford my rent. I had to bite through my stubbornness and ask my parents for financial help. I’ve tried desperately to be financially independent for the past few years, and I can’t. I can’t, it’s too much pressure. I can’t handle it. I can’t even understand it. I try to put it in perspective, but it simply doesn’t work. The system is broken, and I’m one out of hundreds of thousands of students trying to crawl back to safety.

I’m in debt. In fact, I have so much debt that when spread out over 15 years, or 180 months, I would need to pay 393.50 per month to get rid of it. Oh wait, that’s not including interest. What? In plain numbers, it means that this very day, my debt stands at $70 829.53. How did this monstrous figure ever creep up so high? I bet you’re feeling very uncomfortable now.
I read about students whose debt is around $30 000, and I want to cry. I hear about those who have less than $20 000, and I’m deadly jealous. I empathise with those who are in the same boat as me. A quick google search reveals that the average student loan in Canada is about $27 000. How did mine ever get so high?

Let’s break it down, shall we. Tuition comes first, at Dalhousie, it runs around $3000 a term. My very first term, I was looking at $8445 for tuition, my room in a residence, and the meal plan offered by the university. That term, I received $4589 in loans. Not enough. I had to take out a private bank loan. Since I was going to face more or less the same situation for the duration of my studies, I took a $10 000 pro annum loan, good for four years. It took me five years to get my degree, and let me tell you, I bit and scratched hard during that final year. $44 424.08, that’s what I paid for five years of full-time education, two classes at NSCAD, and a summer course that took place in the Czech Republic.

Then comes the cost of living. I’m not living in my bedroom in my parents’ house. I moved 700 km away, because nothing at the Université de Moncton, campus d’Edmundston, was able to attract my attention for more than a half second. Result, I need an apartment, electricity, heating, internet, and phone. Aside from that first year when room and board was calculated with my student fees, I had to pay for all of that on top of my already soaring high tuition. Apartments don’t come cheap in Halifax. Landlords like to take advantage of students, and charge them absolutely ridiculous amounts of money for the convenience of having a roof above their heads. Over four years, my rent fell between $500 a month, to $764 a month. The average comes to about $587 a month, so over the remaining four years of my education, it looks like $28 176, give or take a few thousand. And then there’s groceries, and bills, and bus tickets to visit my parents, and school supplies, and unexpected spending, and douchebaggery from people I thought were friends, and break ups, and moving, and so on, and so on. Life is expensive. Stating the obvious.

I started attending university with no money. Of course, I had a part-time job for a couple of years before that. But what are 10 hours a week at $8 an hour going to do, other than cover clothes and meals out for a teenage girl? I was so proud when I bought my mini-fridge just before I moved to Halifax, it was $129, it was almost all I had in my bank account, a few weeks before starting university. I had no concept of money.

Of course I worked during the summers. My first summer, I moved back to New-Brunswick, and worked in a library, in the kids section. It was a fun job, 12 weeks of employment at 36 hours a week at minimum wage. It was a student job created by the government of New-Brunswick. Unfortunately, the apartment market is fierce in Halifax, and we had signed a May-lease for our flat. And as it was our first apartment, and no one was physically in Halifax that summer, we didn’t sublet it. Not that we could have either, everyone sublets during the summer, and the more expensive places don’t meet a great success rate at being rented out. So that summer all my government-subsidized income actually went into a greedy landlord’s pockets. The next summer I stayed in Halifax, and worked in a call centre. It was simply horrible. I made it through until the end of July before walking in one day, dropping my headset, tears streaming down my face, and quitting. The same day, I was starting a new job in the retail industry, working in one of the biggest chains in North America. I had about 20 hours a week at minimum wage during the summer, which barely covered my needs. I kept that job for a little over a year, working 20-25 hours a week while being a full time student. That was my third year. I had been denied student loans because my father retired that year, and received bonuses. That catapulted my case in the: “oh, her parents can pay for her” category. It was tough; I always worked Thursdays through Sundays, with 8 hours shifts on Saturdays and Sundays. I was always grumpy. While my roommates started drinking and partying and blasting music early on Friday nights, all I could think about was that I had be at work by 8 am on Saturdays. I couldn’t blame them either. I wanted to party with them, but I couldn’t afford to miss work because of a hangover.

That following summer, I took up a second part-time job, effectively juggling two schedules for an average of 50 hours a week, and a summer class. I worked seven days a week. I had no life. I dropped one job at the end of the summer, the one that had the least hours. I still worked close to 30 hours a week during my fourth year of university. I did receive loans that year, but as ever, they only barely covered my tuition. I kept the same job over the summer, even though I was away for one month, taking a most wonderful class about baroque culture that elated my mind and made me aware of all the things sublime that I had been oblivious to up until that point. That was one month of lost wages, and it was darn expensive to. I managed to max out my credit card with airfare and accommodations there, and returned to Canada with my last $30 in Czech Korunas. I was glad to be back at work, but business was slow during the summer, and I didn’t work as much as I had before, and so I scraped by. I eventually let go of that job too, because it was a lot of commuting, and I knew I would be overwhelmed with my last, and most intense yet, year at school. It doesn’t mean that I didn’t work. I had three part-time jobs on campus, that somehow I managed to fit into my ridiculous schedule. All in all, I would work about 12 hours a week on average, and it would jump to twice that when there were shows at the theatre, and I was required to spend my evenings dressed in black, politely asking guests for their tickets, and then sitting in the back of the theatre. It was the easiest job I’ve ever had, and I was very grateful for it too. Though ushering was sporadic, it kept me afloat. As I mentioned earlier, my bank loan was only good for four years, and by the time I started fifth year, it was all gone. My student loan was a bit more substantial that year, as a “mature” student, they no longer looked at my parents income when deciding how much lunch money they would grant me for the year. Though it’s a double-edged sword. I had to work to make ends meet, and because I worked, they decided I didn’t need help to afford life’s basic necessities that much…

Of course, I applied to bursaries. And received them steadily at a rate of one per term, starting in second year. It was only ever a few hundred dollars, but they always made me feel a little better about my situation. In November of last year, I received a bursary unexpectedly, to reward my outstanding work in costume studies. It was a life saver. I received the news during the most stressful weeks I’ve ever experienced in my life, when I had about $40 in my name, had recently moved into an overly-expensive one-bedroom apartment, to escape a very complicated situation with another even more expensive apartment… and had the course load of the overachiever that I am, with all the deadlines coming up in the same week, one after the other, like some evil mastermind had decided to make our lives a living hell.

I was also extremely mad when I found out that students who achieved a certain GPA were automatically awarded other bursaries when they had a full course load. I had a full course load, I was working extremely hard and getting stellar grades and praises from my profs. Why wasn’t I receiving one? Because of the NSCAD classes that I was required to take as part of my programme. As “courses from another institution”, they voided my eligibility to those bursaries. It made me sick with rage. I was fuming on the inside.

I made it through. In May my extremely expensive parchment from Dalhousie was mailed to my parents’ house in New-Brunswick. I decided not to attend convocation for two reasons: firstly, I didn’t want to go, I didn’t feel like the ceremony would change my feelings toward the university, which are sour at best, and secondly, I was at work when the ceremony took place. After all that, I still worked three jobs during the summer. I worked like a mad woman. I worked a full-time job, a part-time job, and an opera contract on top of that. I paid off my credit card, and built a little cushion to be able to move to Germany in September. I had many, many breakdowns during the summer. Graduating from university was anti-climactic, and left me with a sense of void.

It’s been almost six months since I finished university. I’ve been living in Germany for about six weeks now. My financial cushion is mostly gone, I have enough to cover my living expenses until the end of November, although I’m trying to convince myself that the 50€ in my wallet is all that I have until I get paid. Which I hope is soon. Student loan payments are supposed to start in a couple of weeks. I’m not sure what I’m going to do. I received a fixed salary here, which is enough for me to live on and travel a bit, though I need to tighten my budget a little, and monitor my expenses more closely. But it’s definitely not enough to afford $400 in payments every month. Before I left, I called the national student loan service of Canada, and explained my situation. Normally, I would be eligible for loan repayment help, because I have a very limited income, though there’s one small detail that disqualifies me from such help. I’m not currently living in Canada. Great. Because obviously I would give up the opportunity to live and work in Germany. I also applied for a programme that shaves back a few thousand dollars from student debt when post-secondary education is completed in a timely fashion. I heard of other people taking five years to obtain their bachelor’s, and qualifying for that help, and so I thought I would qualify too. Too optimistic? Of course. I was denied.

Which is what sparked this essay about my student loan debt story. I’m not writing to complain. I’m writing to expose the fact that I busted my ass off, I worked like a crazy person. I got a degree with straight A’s, even though I worked through my studies for the past three years. I’ve always had a roof over my head, always had heat to keep me warm, and food in my belly, and I can’t start expressing how grateful I am for those things. But God damn it, I’m still not out of that hell hole, and I won’t be for the next 15 years.

What happens to those poor fellows who have big dreams of university, and can’t afford to go? The government of Canada told me that my parents had to contribute $10 000 per year to my studies. Uhm, excuse me, my parents don’t have that money to just give me as they please. I have other siblings, there’s the house to fix, cars to pay for, insurance and bills. The last thing I want to be is another burden on my parents’ shoulders.


If it hadn’t been for that bank loan, I wouldn’t have been able to attend university at all. What can someone do without a degree nowadays? When will the people in charge of this great country that is Canada realize that post-secondary education should not be reserved to the elite. Post-secondary education is a right, and it is not okay to let universities spike their tuition and burden their students with more financial stress than ever. Why can’t Canada follow in the steps of some of the European countries such as France, Germany, and Sweden. Or closer to home, make a step in the same direction as Newfoundland, and eliminate student debt by converting loans into grants. If we pride ourselves in being such a great nation, maybe, just maybe we should start investing in our future. How are we supposed to fix the economy if students are crippled with debt as soon as they emerge, fresh-faced and dreamy from university? This situation is a great social injustice, and I am mad, and afraid, and unsure about the future. I am flustered as I type these words. How are we supposed to build a country in our image if we postpone our dreams and hopes in order to repay our loans? Post-secondary education is there to open our minds to the possibilities, to fine-tune our senses, to make us dream of a better future, to outfit us with the tools to build that future. But as soon as we graduate, we are faced with that wall, and we are chained to it, and there’s no escape.

This is my story, and I don’t doubt that there are thousands of similar stories out there. Of students outraged, and anxious. If we all wrote our stories, and sent them to Ottawa, do you think they would listen? Do you think they would realize what hardships we go through? Do you think they would try and rectify the situation? Do you think they would do anything?

Wednesday 15 October 2014

Introversion vs. Extroversion

This topic seems very current, or at least to me it is.
I don't know what it is about it, but I've been drawn to this topic lately. What with all the random posts, the quizzes, the lists, the advice being given. How do you know you are an introvert, how do you know you are an extrovert? I admit, I've done the quizzes, I've scanned the lists, I've tried to pin-point myself down to one or the other. I give up.
Those labels just don't work. They could be compared to another topic that is very current, gender identity, though I'm using this only for the comparison, to give a reference when I say that it should be treated as a spectrum.

Up until last year, I never felt the need to try to identify with one or the other. Then suddenly my life upended itself last year and I was left with reconsidering every single aspect of myself. Well, maybe it wasn't quite so dramatic, and maybe this shares more common points with a rant than anything else. I will claim no fine penmanship, nor will I say that this is a finite statement. It is simply my complete refusal of the up-until-now given definitions of the terms. If one was to believe what information is readily available, one would classify itself in one or the other. They are effectively diametrically opposites. I hate it. Maybe that's a bit harsh. I strongly dislike it. Better.

It seems to be agreed upon that it relates to where an individual draws its energy. An introvert would find social interaction draining and would need down-time to recover, whereas an extrovert would find it exhilarating. I call bullshit. It makes no sense. This is a completely subjective piece of writing, but I find that both can be equally draining or invigorating. Why? It's tricky, but I suppose it really depends on who/what/where/how. Who you are with, what you're doing, where it's taking place, how you're feeling, and so on. Let's use an example that I'm making up right now as I type. Say that you're in a bad mood, going to do an activity that you feel lukewarm about, it's going to put a damper no matter if you're by yourself or with other people. On the other hand, if you're really excited about visiting a new place, say you found some ruins a short bike ride away from town, or visiting a museum you've never been to, the experience is bound to be elating (at best) or at least inspiring, whether or not you're alone.

Obviously, sometimes you might want to explore completely by yourself, say if you want to go at your own pace, or you think that someone else wouldn't enjoy it as much, or want to wander around as long. Absolutely fair. Personally, if I'm finding that social interaction is straining, it means I'm not spending time with the right people. If I find that being alone is straining, it's because I'm not using my time in a way that is stimulating, and that pushes me forward. Maybe it's because I haven't had the leisure of free time for the past three years, and now I find that any time is sacred and should be put to good use. Maybe it's just growing up and figuring out what you find important, and investing time and energy in only a few things and people, rather than squandering your time on mediocre activities. It sounds really harsh, but this makes more sense to me than anything else I've read.

Another example, more concrete this time, and again subjective. One evening I was feeling particularly bored, and I decided to go out. I don't really know many people in Weimar, and I'm usually perfectly contempt staying in reading a book or working on my German, and so I was a little hesitant. Going out alone is definitely not something I do often, as I know that whoever I meet probably won't leave an impression beyond those few hours. At that point, I was still mildly associating with being an introvert. Anyhow, I went out to one of the bars, and lo and behold, I had a great time. With complete strangers. Actually, complete strangers with absolutely no common interests, as there happened to be a large number of PHD chemistry students in the bar... If you look at the this scenario from the intro/extro point of view, I should have found the experience draining. Which I did not. Not that I would invest any further time in any of them, but it's an interesting thought.

I think that this whole introvert/extrovert categorisation is just to give people excuses to stay in or go out. Because really, in the end, it's what you make of each individual experience that decides if you drew energy from it, or if drew energy from you. Everyone has had to go through unpleasant social situations or conversations that left them exhausted, and everyone has gone through days they spent alone, feeling even more tired than when they woke up. I really think that it is redundant to try and say that everyone falls in one category or the other. Sorry, not sorry, but it's silly to try and categorise people this way. This has been excessively annoying me, and I hope that I'm not the only weirdo out here who thinks this way.

I have been mulling over this for a while, and maybe I'm completely wrong. Actually, I'm not even entirely sure that my argument makes total sense. Maybe this is a very poorly constructed argument, or maybe I'm missing the point completely. I'm always open to different points of view and discussion. I hope this shed some light for some people, or that it sparked a few ideas, or that at least it was a well-spent five minutes.