Category Archives: Involvement / Leadership

Role Models

When I was little, I didn’t really have any role models — or “idols” or “heroes”, as common parlance was then. Not consciously, anyway. Whenever we were asked to talk or write about our role models and who we wanted to be like, I’d scratch my head wondering who to talk about. “Your parents,” our teachers suggested. So I’d write about my mother who I love very very much and still do respect and admire.

But even when you’re little, you realize that your parents are not always right. Now I took their word for granted far more often then than now, but still I kind of knew they’re not perfect. I remember reading this line from Arthur Miller’s play All My Sons which we studied in Years 10 and 11 (Grades 9 and 10 here), when one of the characters has to deal with the fact that his father’s committed a crime:

I know you’re no worse than most men but I thought you were better. I never saw you as a man. I saw you as my father.

Yeah, I love this play so much I brought it back with me to Canada after this summer. But I think that reflects perfectly how we expect so much more of our parents because we want them to be “better” somehow. Except, of course, our parents are as flawed and liable to make mistakes and act rashly and make poor judgements and be as uncertain as we are.

They’re also still genuinely admirable people who have sacrificed more than we’ll ever know for us. Which is why they’re still role models, even if they’re not famous superheroes — maybe they’re heroic just because no one’s ever going to praise them and that’s not what they raised us for anyway.

Somehow I’ve managed to neglect my original inspiration for this post, which was a reflection on the speech given by James Orbinski, courtesy of the Terry Speaker Series, and of listening to other speakers in general (I’m thinking of Stephen Lewis from the 2008 Student Leadership Conference).

Listening to people who have seen and done so much is, personally, very inspirational to me — I want to emphasise it’s a very personal experience. What I say, and what you hear, and what your roommate hears, can be very different.

One of the things that struck me in Orbinski’s talk was:

Choose your priorities. Don’t juggle what you have to do, because then you’re just juggling. Choose what you do.

I probably messed it up, but that’s the gist of it. It hit home at that particular moment in time because I expend so much energy trying to do everything a lot. I always want to do more too — there are so many causes out there I would like to dedicate myself to, but truthfully, no one has that much time and energy.

So just choose one. It doesn’t matter what it is — I’ve decided that between certain causes, there isn’t one that’s more “important” than another. Global warming, women’s issues, the cure for cancer — none of these are more essential than another. They are all important; there is no grand, overarching problem that needs to be solved “first” (if that is even possible) and then everything else can be tackled one by one — they all need our attention. Don’t just sign a petition or donate a dollar and believe you’ve saved a child.

Just choose one and really give your time and dedication to it. And stand in solidarity with those who work for those other causes.

If you don’t know? Keep trying until you find the right one: really try by throwing yourself in, heart and soul. Remember, too, that “the right one” can change as well.

The world is so very much more complex and interconnected than I usually realise. Listening to people I admire and respect who have seen and done and understand more than I do brings this point home every time. The world is richer than I’ll ever imagine. Even listening to people whose opinions I may not agree with still opens my vision to other ideas I’ve never known — and often it challenges me to revisit my thinking, to revise if need be or to strengthen my own rationale. And I love this, no matter how uncomfortable it is at the time.

So I am rather sad at not attending the Terry talks this Saturday. (Alert! Open spot now!) However, I do want to spend my parents’ last day visiting Vancouver with them because I love them very much. I was looking at the speakers roster and was very excited to recognise two names. I know amazing people.

Which brings me to my last point: I admire some people more quickly than others (read: Lewis and Orbinski). But the reason why little-Lillienne didn’t have specific role models is because we all have aspects about ourselves that are admirable in some way. I may not want to be identical to you because I’m not keen on taking on your flaws in addition to my own — and where would I be if I were you? — but I can still aspire to be like you in some ways. And we all have those.

Should we try to be our own role models? Maybe.

I need a new tag.

44 Emails

I received a text message from a lovely young lady I know today that said: “Obama!” Indeed, he was the reason I did not sleep at 9 pm last night. That, and I was cramming Old English grammatical paradigms into my head.

But I did indeed receive over forty emails on Monday, not including newsletters, subscriptions and spam, mostly work or co-curricular-oriented ones requiring replies. Of those forty-plus emails, one was an acceptance into the Co-op program.

I’m happy.

The Sin of Not Voting

I’ve just been wandering through various comments and discussions online about the lack of voter turn-out in Canada’s recent federal elections (51%, if I remember that statistic correctly).

Enlighten me. These clues have I gathered in recent weeks (and months) about Canadian university students and staff members’ opinions regarding voting and democracy:

  • “Are you voting? Have you voted?”
    The persistent question that was asked all around campus in the weeks leading up to the election, particularly on the day. Or more tellingly, not asking at all, but saying something that simply assumed people would (and should) be voting.
  • The look of horror on someone’s face when I suggested no.
    I realized, though I was not entirely sure why, that I was being a Bad Citizen. Regardless of the fact that I still don’t identify myself as Canadian at all. Come to that, I don’t think I identify myself anywhere in particular at the moment. Another identity crisis in store.
  • That UBC-wide email sent out on the day of the elections telling us “VOTE TODAY! WITHOUT YOUR VOTE, THERE CAN BE NO DEMOCRACY!”
    OK, I admit it, even if this means I am going to be a Morally Reprehensible Citizen: the first thing that came to mind was how sickeningly alike that wording is to the various propaganda posters we used to study in GCSE and IB history. The implication that democracy is unquestionably the highest form of political systems and that every other one is somehow inferior; that the right to vote is not a choice to vote, but an imperative to vote or else.
  • People’s reactions when the words “democracy” or “communism” appear in a sentence, particularly in conjunction with one another. Wow, and we pride ourselves on being tolerant? The unfailing praise of democracy and general condemnation of communism while not seeming to have any genuine recognition of the possible flaws of democracy or the very real attraction of communism; that it may be possible for people to desire another form of political system without being written off as “wrong, just plain wrong”, in terms of their intellectual and/or political maturity. The best I have heard are people quoting ad nauseum what their teachers, the media or authorities have clearly passed on to them, and I am left with no clear sense that they really understood it themselves. Think what you like, but are these your thoughts or someone else’s? If communism is really so apparently idiotic, why did millions of people turn to it? Why did we not invent democracy millenia ago if that were so naturally the right way to go? And is someone more stupid than you because they think differently?

Actually, that last point is really quite another issue and a discussion unto itself. Before I return to the question of not voting within a democratic system, I just want to make the final disclaimer that I spent half my high school life arguing against a “communist” in one of my classes and am now busier criticizing democracy (or, I suppose, the unquestioning acceptance of it and the unempathic intolerance of other ideas). “What am I then?”

Back to the problem of not voting, though: why is it a problem? Instead of asking why not, it seems that outrage, shock and horror are the more common reactions and I get the dread sensation of having commited a great wrong. (While I’m at it, why do people not ask why someone is voting for so-and-so? People ask who you’re voting for, then never ask why, giving me the uncanny feeling they’re assuming they know why or how that person is thinking.)

I can understand why it might be a problem if someone just can’t be bothered enough to care — extended to everyone, that would be a lot of people who simply don’t care.

But not voting doesn’t necessarily translate into an attitude of not caring. At least, when I was reading about 2004 US presidential elections, there seemed to be morally acceptable reasons for not voting too. (Not having heard anyone beside myself ‘fess up to not voting, I can’t quote those reasons.)

What if you make the conscious choice not to vote? What if you don’t like any of the candidates and didn’t want to be responsible for voting someone you hate into power? What if you realize you’ve made a sickening mistake and have voted in a Hitler? And I am not being entirely glib here, because how do you live with yourself after that — how did people live with themselves after voting for Hitler and realizing what he did? Now, arguably, you might vote for the lesser of two evils if you sincerely believe that one of them is truly that much of a bad idea — but what if you think that both of them are so bad it’s going to go to hell and you don’t want to pave the way for them? Are none of these reasons for not voting good enough to at least make one a Decent Citizen?

As for myself, I didn’t have any of those reasons. I simply didn’t vote because I don’t know exactly how Canada’s political system works. “Isn’t voting the same everywhere?” someone scoffed at me. No, I don’t believe so… Perhaps I’m mistaken, but I’m a little doubtful about whether Canada’s voting system is identical to the US? And I am pretty sure it differs from place to place. When I left HK, there was this wrangle over having proportional representation or universal suffrage. Some survey found that most citizens didn’t really know how the political structure and system of the current voting method or government works. So really, people were making a lot of fuss over words that sound good but which they may not necessarily know why it sounds so good, except they’re coupled up there with “democracy” and “freedom”. I don’t want to be one of those people, I’m afraid, even if that makes me a somewhat Bad Citizen for being ignorant. I don’t know how the system works, much less know the details about who was running. I certainly didn’t know what I thought about them — I’ve heard all anti-Harper comments rather than pro-anyone-in-particular, so I wouldn’t really know who to vote for, besides which, I don’t want to be voting someone else’s opinons in. If/when I vote, it will be for someone I think is right, not what anyone else tells me.

So I chose not to vote. Even if that does make me bad. Though I would like to understand why I am so bad, because I thought it wasn’t such a bad idea to do things this way for this reason. Perhaps my political apathy isn’t so inconceivable when I remember I come from an ex-colony next to a supposedly-communist, ex-Maoist country and from a culture which views political activism with a great deal of skepticism, actually. How difficult to encounter the opposite. (Not saying it’s bad. Just hard.)

And yes, I do agree that I should borrow someone’s textbook on Canadian government and work that out if I really intend on staying in the country for any length of time, particularly since I am so busy taking advantage of the cheaper university fees (it’s only fair to be engaged with the other aspects, no?). I don’t know what the heck I am supposed to be doing or what is expected of me as a Canadian citizen.

Lastly, I want to point out that criticism and reasoning doesn’t necessarily force a person to care; people do things when they care, and they begin to care when they are ready for it. I don’t know how to encourage that possibility — perhaps by example? That is not to say we should stop speaking our point of view because it’s not necessarily life-changing, not by any means. Don’t we speak because we need to?

Terry Love

Thanks to the wonderful Terry project, I now have my hands on a shiny free ticket to James Orbinski’s talk on November 7th at the Chan, entitled “Creating the Space to Be Human”. He was the president of Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) when it received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1999. MSF is possibly the NGO I most respect in the world and I am unexpressibly eager for the day to arrive. I’m a little afraid of expecting too much and being disappointed, as is so often the case in life — but on the other hand, I have had reality surpass my highest hopes too. Maybe this will be one of them.

Tickets can be obtained for free from the Chan Centre Monday to Saturday from 12 noon to 5 pm (I think), two per person.

Another event I have just signed up to attend are the Terry talks. Unlike most people who talk about this event, I have never heard of the TED talks so…

Sometimes I’m not sure if it’s just my general knowledge that is severely lacking or if what little general knowledge I do have also happens to belong to the other side of the world. (Unfortunately, not being there anymore means my knowledge in that place is also dying out.) If I didn’t go to school, would I learn anything at all? I really wonder what it is I do in my spare time when other people are reading the paper or YouTubing. I don’t even YouTube, actually. How sad. Oh well — I have given up being ashamed; shame is apparently not a very effective catalyst for change with me. I comfort myself instead with saying that I am indeed utterly ill-informed and I am always happy to learn something new.

Ignoring that digression, however, I fully intend to plug getting a free ticket to the Terry talks as well. While I am almost certain I have nothing of import to add to the discussion, I am entirely greedy to hear what my other more inspirational peers have to say.

Unfortunately, I can’t make National Geographic explorer Wade Davis’s free talk next Monday (27th October). “Can’t” being a word that means “I could choose to skip class but I personally refuse to under any non-life-threatening circumstances”. But if you can make it, why not? National Geographic may be my favourite magazine in the world — unfortunately, like my lack of knowledge in general, I have a lack of exposure to magazines (my secondary school did have copies of BBC’s Good Food that I’d flip through on rare occasions because they looked yummy), so that may not be a very well-informed comment. But at the moment(!) it is my favourite magazine within my limited experience.

(No, seriously. Do I know anything at all? I think I foresee a little crisis coming on.)

VP Emerging Leaders Program 2008-09

Training for VP Peer Leaders was yesterday and I am so pumped for the rest of the year. The VP Emerging Leaders Program was one of my most favourite things to do last year and I am so glad I joined it — it really exposed me to a whole lot of leadership opportunities as well as connect with older student leaders who showed me what they were doing and got me excited enough that I’m following in some of their footsteps this year (as well as looking for my own). This year looks set to be just as fantastic, if not better, than last year, so go ahead and join it. What’s to lose? The worst thing that happens is that you find it’s not for you and you leave — but the best thing is that it will be one of the most valuable experiences you can ask for.