Samstag, Juni 21, 2008

Mission-loaded

After a tiny argument with my mum on my spendings, I've come to a conclusion that practicality needs to take a higher priority in my life again, so I can spend $ on it on things with good value for money.

Sometimes I'm just hoping I can fast-forward my life a little (or have a windfall, nah i don't bet) so that I can start applying for good stipends for my post-grad studies.

Then comes another ticking time-bomb. " Your dad and I are not working, you know. Your dad hardly has business nowadays... ". Hence you can see how important a good stipend is. The stipend will feed my whole family!

I must have been a nonsensical son buying that 500GB HDD cos it's sitting there unactivated. Lol. But i guess backing up my data and misc stuff with that thing is pretty useful. I have also tried justifying my trip to Pulau Besar as a great get-away cos I wanna chill out with the coral reefs for 3D2N.

So what should I do now?

Let's start with daily expenses now...

1. Food

NUS offers good food at really low prices and ich bin dankbar dafür. To make it even better, I should start working out a cheap but nutritious meal plan. Blame it on my metabolic rate but I really need a lot of food per day so I shall try to keep it at ... $6/day.

Tea can be made in the office. Biscuits can be requested to be bought and claimed.

2. Transport

Well, I can't cycle to school everyday can I ? Lol.


Next, the materialistic and gastronomical needs.

Well, I just talked about food, but what about good food? How should I limit it? Maybe just good hawker fare at the moment... no fine-dining whatsoever.

Materials.... I'm not v materialistic as you can see. Don't really need any new tech toy unless something breaks down. Choy.


How do I pump up my income?

1. Spam tuition websites.
2. Moonlight
3. Maybe increase the kid's tuition rates? Just $30 more but well, can have a happier meal.


Alright. I sound like a pauper now, which I can potentially be one.
Press on.

Freitag, Juni 20, 2008

Empty office and alternative channeling of diligence

The office is really empty now. I think there could only be 3 or 4 people sitting in this ~400 sq m office. Really quiet and bored. The rest of my group have left early so there's really nothing much to do except read journals again and... now calculating my expenses.

Here's a snapshot of what I spent in these 20 days of June.


The first is what I spent including the big ticket items which my mum has been nagging about:

As you can see, my spendings were rather humble except for weekends and farecard top-up days.

Stats: Avg = $25.9 +/- 15.5 ; Median = $5.9.

SD doesn't really make sense for this dataset, just for fun :)


Now let's extract away the expensive things that I bought...
Avg = $11.2 +/- 13.6
Median = $5.9


Next month's goal : Spend $6 per day :)

Dienstag, Juni 17, 2008

Wonderful Sat on Ubin!




Now this post will be complete with pictures for once cos I just uploaded them from my camera and just before i get lazy, i shall utilise them well.


I went with lyon, xiuyun, adam, his mum and uncle (who came here from Tianjin for a 2 week holiday) and we went straight to chek jawa upon touchdown at ubin cos the tide was nearing the lowest. Low tide means lots of stuff to see! But the corals still remain very elusive cos the water wasn't very clear and low.

As we reached chek jawa, we had to park our bikes outside otherwise people might just cycle it on the boardwalk and jam up the place i suppose.

Lyon spotted the 4 or 5-storey high lookout tower and I think I heard his classical comment "Awesome" echoing in his mind lol. Here are some pictures from the tower :






Adam's mum posing by the sea-ward direction (taken on another day)





Fiddler Crabs
Spot the birds and the pink pigeon!
The pink pigeon takes off






























Some weird fly that digs into sand















Now it's making a deeper tunnel. Looks like it can challenge the crabs.

















Monster Hornet, ready to blast off.















I thought it looked splendid while flying.
















Fishies lurking beneath the bridge
















Idyllic Lake















Staring at a weird ship, only one was doing it though.


















Citycab Bum Boat Driver

















BYE! :)

Montag, Juni 16, 2008

Are you passionate about your work? Are you cheaper than an assay kit?

Last week I think Dr Ong asked me if I ever felt like giving up during the course of my studies and the answer was definitely yes. And then today I had a chat with my colleague who emphasized the importance of having passion for what one researches on. If passion is lacking, then it's not worth it. An interesting example was a church friend of his who's working at XXXXXX and doing sideline as a stock broker as well. A Ph.D holder too.


So, once again just when I think I'm moving in the direction I desire, I pause for a while to ponder how to take the next few steps of my life. "Don't compare salaries", that's one important thing to bear in mind. For amount of brain juice we put in, I think we don't measure on par with the commercial sectors but we are paid to find questions to interesting questions in life (rather than working on profits) and I still hope it'll serve as the basic motivation in my future career.


Ok update : just found an interesting article on Life Scientist salaries. And I think we are really cheaper than assay kits which can easily cost a few thousand bucks to purchase.

And here are some comments by those who have gone through it... :

Those who suffered:
"We live in a world where 25 year old hedge fund analysts are paid six/seven figure sums for stuff they say is not "rocket science". At 25 I was working 14 hr days in a lab making $17,000 to get my PhD. Talented scientists and people like *********** have let themselves be exploited by the system, working for next-to-nothing for the greater "noble cause". Let me tell you, nobody cares about the Post-doc that worked on the Science or Nature paper.

I went to a top business school and am now working as a Biotechnology analyst at an investment bank. I still love the science and will always be a scientist, but not at the expense of being exploited by the system. "

"I think we need to move past the silly notion that ?passion? should drive the scientist forward. Passion doesn?t pay the bills. This is particularly true when you live in an ?ownership society? such as ours. Letting ?passion? lead every decision that you make could well lead the scientist to the wrong side of the poverty line. These are EXCUSES offered by principle investigators and the higher-ups at the NIH that contributed to the glut of post-docs. They have benefited handsomely from the logjam of post-docs that has resulted by creating high-tech sweat shops. This situation has ruined many a promising career ? when financial reality bumped up against ?passion.? It?s past time to start talking about parity ? if we don?t start we will find that our brain trust has done what I was forced to do ? abandon science for business and a decent income."


Those who loved it:
"I did postdoc for several years and now teach in private university. I thought a postdoc was the worst (job if we call it). Now, I think assistant professor is the worst. But, still happy. Why?
Financially, I am not getting paid what I am worth. However, there are big rewards that students that I taught come back and say thank you years later. My wife working in the biotech industry is getting paid more than twice. I still cherish what I am doing.
In my conclusion, it is a personal choice and preference, driven by education. I never had chances to think about other choices during my education. I do confess that I sometimes long for other professions, but for different reason from finances. My wife, on the other hand, wants to trade all financial compensation for college job.
It's hard to understand both sides at the same time."



Sometimes it would have been better if we didn't progressed so much, I think plucking coconuts for a living is much more fun than sitting in an office. We have to now wake up early, squeeze into the train, get infected by someone sick in the train or infect someone yourself (guilty), run after bus, sit down in office and tap my fingers on the keyboard, eat lunch, work, squeeze into homebound train, speak to your family for less than an hour, sleep and repeat. Maybe I should start planning an emergency exit plan someday.

Freitag, Juni 13, 2008

On Sedentary Lifestyle and Occupational Health

Well, i'm working in an occupational health department and I think it's pretty relevant to our lives cos as what it is ... we spend most of our time at office. Some even up to 10 or 12 hours. ouch.

Yamapee is quitting officially today and I just read her blog on unhealthy sedentary life. How true! One of my colleague is trying to work out a healthy lifestyle in the department by getting volunteers to climb stairs and making the stairway more enticing and attractive to climb. Pretty nice idea. The stairway is pretty stuffy and quiet *echo*, i wonder how it'll change in July. (Update : They just installed fluorescent tubes in addition to the natural sunlight. So it's quite snow bright now. :) )

After a day's work, we'll probably spend some time eating dinner and watching TV/surfing net/MSN. After that we'll sleep for another 7 hours or so. Some even shorter (which seems to be prevalent *gasps*)

So how much can one exercise/walk in a day? :)


Some call NUS the University of Stairs, which I think could be pretty good in getting our quads and calf muscles working! Of which I think the mega flight of stairs at the Sheares side of Biz takes top place.

Dienstag, Juni 10, 2008

An update of my life

Hello you!

It's been about 1 month plus since I started working at COFM (which stands for Department of Community, Occupational and Family Medicine) and it's a very pleasant place to work I muss say.

Whenever I go for lunch breaks and all, I'll bump into friends and they'll ask the same questions like, " Eh u come back for what? "

My answer would be " Oh, i'm working in the lab. "

It would be followed with certainty by " Where ? Which lab? "

I would say, " COFM. Ok it's a really long name to explain to you. It's called Community, Occupational and Family Medicine. "

*sympathetic look*



Basically now I'm planning a project with 2 poly interns and piecing up all the logistics and experimental details. The study is on the 24-hr rhythm of salivary antioxidants and we need your saliva. Interested? SMS or MSN me. :)


Other than that I'm trying hard to piece another jigsaw puzzle called the review paper which I think I'm a little too noob to be writing it. Seriously doubt I can finish before term starts. heh.


I wonder if I can cycle to work one day, my mum is utterly frightful that I'll die on my way to work or back home. But why cycle? Cos I don't like to get caught in a traffic gridlock when i'm on a bus. In the case of the latter, I can weave through the poor stuck cars easier than a motorbike and get to my destination quicker. It's also good workout before and after work!

Recently I've also contemplated on changing my 6 months old wheels for a slicker pair of touring bike wheels. This means that I can increase my traveling speed from 25-30km/h to 40km/h or even more! But it'll be quite a waste of a good pair of tires too.

My friend who's in Germany now didn't manage to get the Wise Guys CD so I've tried emailing dear Frau Verry if she can lend me hers (if she has). I haven't gotten round to confirm all the Germany modules with the UniHD lecturers. Some don't reply me at all..... but some do. We'll see. How about YOU ? :)

Ok that should be all for today. 2 hours till knockoff and bus-squeezing.