Monday, June 29, 2009

my student worker job!Jul 28, '08 7:59 PM
for everyone
I am currently a grad student of electrical engineering in University of Southern California. Grad student means i am a boring, geek and non essential part of the university. The same way that we use to treat our Mtech students in undergrad. I wouldn't agree to the boring and non essential part, but certainly to the geeky part.

Here, you just can't afford to be non-geeky, unless you want to ruin your life or..ofcourse if you are a multi-tasking champion. My university has the reputation of most expensive universitiy with most number of international students intake. Well if you come here.you would see that..international here means "Indian" or perhaps "chinese". Atleast I can say that about the engineering school.

Along with the hectic study-life here, one has to earn his living himself,mostly,through their student worker jobs.these jobs can pay you from a small $8 to $20. Ofcourse $8 means you earn $640 a month after sloggin 80 hrs in a month. and this money in LA is just barely sufficient to pay your rent or bills.

My student worker job started from working in "trojan Grounds",this was the starbucks of our university. I used to make coffee and shakes for university people. In a way it was a fun job.The managers were cool, there were no timing restriction and my co-workers were just amazing. It was a whole new experience for me. I used to love talking to people coming in the cafe. I used to love giving free coffee to my friends and their friends and everybody else who had a remote connection to me.

As a student worker you don't hold much of a responsibility in a job.Neither do people expect a lot from you. The only thing they expect is punctuality and a little bit of a professionalism.
Professionalism here does matter a lot. But i agree is very different from the picture of "professionalism in US" i had in india...Bosses are bosses but they don't boss much...every co-worker is treated nicely. i like that part...and in Trojan grounds i was kind of happy...

But "trojan grounds" is closed in summer and they don't hire student workers for summer. Sad but true! I had to look for a new job for the summer as I was auditing the web-tech course and couldn't go to india. I soon found a job in the USC housing office where i was a customer service representative. The used to pay me $ 8.25 ( yeeeeeee...a hike) and i was suppose to answer the queries of people regarding thier housing assignements and etc.

This job had too many timing restictions, plus i hated doing filing.. cumon! it was like a polished peon who had to run errands, flie stuff, paste labels and aprt from these, answer phones. :) The only thing i learnt from this was how we pester the customer service people by shouting at them and calling them worthless. he he...yaaa it feels wierd to be on the other side of the phone..

Now, I earn a $11 per hour as the web developer in Department of public safety. This job is cool. My boss is super cool. and plus i am Rich.. haha atleast not bankrupt all the time!...
i get $800 a month, which is sufficient to pay my 500 dollar rent and still live lavishly...Also, My boss here is the most ideal boss you can ever have. He is nice, funny, creative, flexible and caring. What else can one ask for?

One good thing that happened to me through this job is that i have started working freelance with my friend. We design websites for people who can't really afford the big companies and yet wants a nice website for their work. IT keeps me happy as we have some xtra cash flowing in and i can keep my creative side alive by designing nice interfaces for these websites.

After all! My student worker job did pay back! Its sometimes nice to be a small non existent but yet important part of your firm. So, when a stupid HR asks me about what kind of work i like, I can honestly answer her that " No work is big or small, work is work and it needs to be done!".

Time!

The best part about the old times is that they are "old"..and thats what make you remember them with such fondness...

Now when i sit in front of my office computer, browsing through the old pictures i find my self stuck in a mire. I am stuck by this sudden nostalgia, that i thought would never come to me..But,No matter you like it or not, you still have to accept it!
That is life..Take it or leave it!

Surprisingly, I have had a great time in college..it was one hell of an experience with in numerous ups and down or rather i should say Highs n Lows...

A few good years in college can leave you with a "lifetime high" that you cherish forever and wish to have it again and again...This is a time when you understand yourself better, you get an insight of the real world and you get to learn so many things that you couldn't manage to learn in the 12 years of your schooling. The number of emotions you face and the kinds of people you meet makes you look at the world beyond books and carrier.. which by all means is usually the soul objectives of our lives in school...

Well! the things one experience in college and the effect of those things on a individual, also varies from people to people..for some the college years are the golden ones but for some its just the opposite. For them its a time that they would erase from their memories if given a chance at all!! I think these people are the ones who fell short of coping up right with the changes happening around them or didn't put enough thought into it...

Its actually not their fault!

Now, I understand the meaning of being "young" and the meaning of this term relating to my college days..and i think may be i was an infant till the 12 years of my schooling...because all I see and remember now is what I learnt in college..the philosophies I made, the situations I encountered and the ways i learnt to fight those situations, interactions i made with people around me, all the things remind me of how I was carved into what I am today...

I can easily say, I love my college days...and certainly I don't want them again...
may be I can't handle a complete personality change again and again...I love it this way!

Sunday, June 21, 2009

AM I GOOD AT TREKKING??

Well i was intrigued to answer this question by one of my chaiwala group ( a small group in USC that meets on Wednesdays for a chat over a cup of tea). When i was telling the group about my recent trip to Yosemite and how dissapointed was I with all the people in my group( because they were scared to complete the trail), One female in the group asked me if i was very experienced or good in hiking and all. Well! I paused for a second and thought in my mind, what really should be the answer to this question. With subtle humbleness and pride i said "oh yes! I have gone on some good treks back in India and here in California". She smiled and the discussion ended. But the thought kept on running through my mind," Was I really good in trekking?".

Despite of being on so many treks, I still had a doubt about this question. The reason for this doubt can be my feeling of always falling short for something or the other on every trek. Sometimes its the equipment, amount of food, too much weight, improper clothes and etc.The list continues.

My first trek was a day hike in Dalhousie where i went on one of my IEEE trips in First year of my undergrad. It was a nice uphill and well laid trail. As I was walking with a large group so the feeling of adventure didn't strike me on most part of the trek except when we had to jump a barbed wire on a slippery hill ( a slip from there would have landed us...may be dead..or whatever!). I remember Raghav Sehgal having a hard time crossing it as he feared that he had more chances of slipping as he was heavier then others.. It was so much fun to watch him..(and he will probably kill me if he sees this!)

The second trip was to Nainital, where our dear seniors didn't let us trek as they were so afraid..or us messing up. I remember me getting really pissed at them, but doing nothing as they were " the senoirs"..but yes! we did hike a bit till the top of the mountain to a place called snowpoint ( one can see the whole nainital from there). I remember that morning I was trying to persuade one of our senoirs "Ankur" who was leading the hike. Gathering all my courage and overcoming my introvertism,I asked him if i could please go to the trek with him and he asked me if i had good shoes. I jumped with thrill and said" yes! i have new ones and showed him how friction won't be a problem. He agreed to take me with him and yes of course! i was jumping with thrill..

In all these things, I strongly remember that i loved hiking more than looking at stupid historic monuments. It was thrilling and challenging and thankfully i never had to pursuade my friends to do it as they were all always ready for all the challenging trips that we went to later on.

Our first serious trek was a 9 km trek from chandrataal (4300 meters in the Himalayas)to kunzumpass (4551 m). It was a guided tour and all the equippment was provided by the guy we hired to take us to chandrataal and kunzum pass thereafter. He gave us camp, sleeping bags, transportation and food but still surving that night in chandratal was a real task of our lives. Our guide had by mistake got lesser number of sleeping bags then we actually were, so for all of us it was difficult to pass that one night as it was ...freaking cold!!!!. At 4 in the morning, i had a feeling i would die of cold or something especially coz i had not enough warm clothes and in the thrill of reaching there (without... a thought) I had put my feet in the cold waters of chandrataal lake, making them terribly cold. After we got through that night somehow, we were greeted with swesome breakfast, but the next day , still, was no relief, as we had to go on trekking from chandrataal to kunzumpass with an ascend of 600mts. The trek has very thin air which made it extremely difficult to breathe. We weren't carrying any luggage or backpacks..but i am thankful we didn't. With a lot of short halts we managed to finish the trek somehow.

You must be wondering, why we put ourselves to such misery. The reason is simple, the places we saw after every difficult trek were so amazingly beautiful that it can keep up the spritis of even a dying man!

After that trek i wished for going on a unguided trek. A guided one felt so lame and boring to sound... [:P].

This was kinda fulfilled on my ladhak trip where we trekked from spituk to stok la and we did almost everything on our own. We hired a guide again , but this time it was a single person as compared to a group or company in earlier case. This guide was a weird fellow and well acquinted with the area so he helped us with the way. Yes! back then I had yet on switched over to reading maps. But the trek was fun! we hiked long ditances in conditions like thin air, extreme sunlight , too much fog, no laid up trails, to many mosquitos ( eeeehhhh...) and etc. We did make mistake like not carrying a daypack to carry our little food and water for trek , so we had to coax our guide take out water from the luggage ( which he had packed firmly) .Our careless guide had lost a few rods of our camp beacuse of which our camp became distorted and we had to spend a night sturgulling with rain falling over our sleeping bags and into our tent. All these things at the height of 4600mts was a little difficult to handle. But we made through the whole trek with a good sense of accomplishment. Again, the place was unbelievable breathtaking!

The another task was to learn how to walk with our backpacks. Its easy to walk without carrying any luggage, but in real life ( :P) ...yes in real life..when you don't hire a guide everytime you go on a trek you have carry your food, camp clothes and other equipment with you, trekking with so much stuff to carry forces you to be wise with choosing everything you put in you backpack. It is a big challenge unless you do some reading or ask the already experienced hikers for tips to pack your backpack. Unfortunately , I learnt the hard way. After every trek I made, there were things I learnt. So literally, I finally learnt a lot of things after a zillion number of screw ups!

The treks in california started with a day hike from my house to griffet observatory ( 10 miles one way) . It happened because...on fine day..my friend decided to go on a long walk... :D

Well on a serious note! the first trek was a trek in grand canyon. This was the " Bright Angeles trail" and it lead us to the " indian garden campgroud" which was 1.5 miles from the plateau point. It was a 5 miles downhill trek and consisted of part of the way in snow, part of it in ice and mud and the rest of it rugged with stones and etc. So really..it was a package deal! We camped there overnight, and cooked the delicious ready to eat meals form MTR. We even had enough time to grab a drink of brandy to keep us warm. :) ( or alternatively in happy state). One of the mistakes on this trip was to not carry enough flash lights followed by a second mistake of avoiding weather casts and ignoring importance of starting early to hike up the hill. We had to pay for these mistakes by getting stuck in the snowstorm (because we avoided the weather cast) with only two torch lights for a group of 7 people ( the way was not visible coz of the storm..and uphill is risky) and walking in the dark ( as we started late)..Does it sound to you like ..we were on a suicide mission...? . Apparently...we were! The last mistake was to not carry enough water. So Literally, we were stuck in the storm, with no water or food, only two torch lights and tons of load in our backpacks. hi hi hi..yaaa it really was an experience. But i learnt tremendously in this short trip.

My last trip was to Yosemite. I wanted to trek from the valley to the Half Dome, but had to come back as my friends couldn't keep up with the extremet conditions they were put too.. may be they were looking for more luxury then i offered them ( which was none.. :P). I then missed my old group I had back in India.. :( . (Will post a pic of Half dome once i have conquored it :( )

I Still have a long way ahead of me..i still need to learn a lot of things before i call myself a professional hiker, but so far I am holding on good! I yes! with proud I can say that" I am an experienced Hiker" may be of a different sort.. :D

Labels: , , , , , ,