Friday, 18 September 2020
Life Challenges #3: Bookworm Challenge | Part 2: Progress update
Saturday, 15 August 2020
Kaleidoscope #4 | June Edition
Virtual travel
QR codes seen in Chinese museum exhibits. Image from Google Images. |
Here is what the Voyager function looks like in Google Earth. I chose the 48 Hours in Tokyo tour. |
A good watch: some elevator-themed mini-documentary to uplift your spirits!
The plastic crisis and a sustainable future for our world
- Shields and barriers in taxis and hawker centres
- Face masks and face shields
- Laboratory equipment
- Storage of medication, medical waste, samples, etc.
- The list goes on...
- Entire batches of them had to be discarded away once they were contaminated by food and liquid waste.
- Not all plastics can be recycled in Singapore's context. Polyvinyl chlorides (No. 3) and polystyrene (No. 6) cannot be recycled here. Biodegradable bags cannot be recycled too! Although their chemical composition is meant for them to decompose in landfill environments, they go straight to the incinerator in Singapore.
Image found from orgayana.com - Not all types of plastics have the same value. Higher value plastics, which are No. 1 (PET - polyethylene terephthalate), 2 (HDPE - high density polyethylene) and 5 (PP - polypropylene) are more likely to be recycled as they are more profitable. For the low density polyethylene (LDPE - no. 4), they are soft to the touch and are low in value. As such, recycling companies will incur costs if they recycle LDPE.
- Also, coloured plastics usually have a lower market value as they cannot be dyed flexibly and are not often recycled since they are harder to identify with automatic sorting machines.
- The most unfortunate fact of all - most plastics can only be recycled once or twice. More than that, they get downcycled and cannot be used again anymore. This is unlike aluminium, which can be recycled indefinitely.
- Do away with the ignorance!
- Spread awareness of container lending programmes, to maximise the use of reusable containers. Or even better, bring your own reusable container whenever you want to get a takeaway!
- Follow social media accounts and personalities who are very knowledgeable about recycling, and level up your recycling skills on the way! This is important because there are actually a lot of products like snack wrappers and masks that are made from composite materials (plastic combined with a lot of other things like rubber, paper, aluminium, etc), and they cannot be recycled locally as we lack the technology for this.
- Businesses and government policies can consider imposing on a plastic tax to better reflect the environmental costs of plastic use, while giving rebates / reusable containers and bags to lower income groups for them to still be able to get their daily essentials.
- Or, they can invest more in recycling research so that we can overcome all these technical and cost limitations that is stopping us from becoming a zero-waste nation.
- Delivery options can change too.
- There are already suggestions calling for delivery companies to make no cutlery and no straw as the default option for deliveries. This is important because disposable cutlery like these cannot be recycled.
- Since large group of people like families and companies are ordering so much online, maybe online retailers can allow them to order in bulk and group orders of the same kind into a single packaging. We can save on packaging costs and it is more convenient this way, as long as consumers feedback to them about wanting their deliveries to be done this way.
- Instead of ordering so many deliveries, we can explore other ways of getting food. I think during the pandemic where it is harder for people to go outside of their homes, vending machines can be a safe and convenient way of getting food and drinks.
- A more direct way to reduce the need for plastic is to pick up cooking as a skill and learn to make our own food. It is a rewarding experience, perfect for curing boredom, and is beneficial for our stomachs and the environment!
- Create your very own waste management strategy. Using what you have learnt and research online, see what needs to be reduced, reused and recycled. Make it a habit to find out more about what the things you use are made up of, and plan how to dispose of them accordingly when you are done with it. Personally, I feel that reducing our consumption is the best way to protect our environment, but we also need many more people to start reusing and recycling things in order to reduce the waste we generate and incinerate.
Friday, 14 August 2020
[Live] Raison d'être for "The Rumination" series, progress on blog posts
nounnoun: rumination; plural noun: ruminations
1.a deep or considered thought about something."philosophical ruminations about life and humanity"
- June issue: Published (16 August 2020)
- July issue: Published (will be out earliest in September)
August issue: In production- Final issue about year 2020 to summarise the events of the year
Published #4: National Day Parade 2020
In production #5: Hospitalisation and Heat-related Issues
- #2: Restarting life in another world Published
- #3: Food production Planning
- Challenge #3
- Free Frontiers story: "Escape from Ophelia's Dreams" story arc
- Story based on the "AI Dungeon" app
- Stories based on my personal experiences
Published Life Challenge #3: Bookworm Challenge | Part 3: The finale (25 October 2020)
Published Habitica Crossover #3 x Life Challenge #4: Gamification Challenge (completed posts on 7 March 2021)
Tuesday, 11 August 2020
Emotional tracking and management
As I enter adulthood, and step out from protected environments such as schools and army camps, I would be thrown into a society that can be incomprehensible and stressful. In order to survive and thrive in life, which to me involves putting myself in an ever-changing environment, having a high emotional quotient is necessary, since it will allow me to better manage my emotions and make decisions that I will not regret later on.
When I was still in schooling, I had a hard time trying to be resilient in stressful situations because I struggled to deal with the uncomfortable emotions that were building up within me. In order to help myself grow and move on from my troubles, I found Youper, a smartphone application which acts as an emotional health assistant incorporating mindfulness, meditation and cognitive behaviour therapy techniques to help me navigate through my emotions and make myself feel better.
Sadly, I began to experience crashes while using this application in recent years, so I had quit using it and tried to find my own way of managing my own emotions. That was when I remembered reading about Ekman's Atlas of Emotions, which was a map commissioned by the Dalai Lama. It details the different types of emotions and how they are categorised based on scientific research, and presents us the whole process of feeling an emotion, from its trigger, to its symptoms, then to our responses to it. It gave me a methodology to start understanding my emotions better.
I decided to incorporate my experiences with the Youper app and Ekman's Atlas into my very own dashboard for tracking and managing my emotions. It looks like this:
- It is difficult for me to address my emotions if a few different emotions were experienced at the same time due to the same trigger.
- It can take quite a bit of time to fill out all the fields in this dashboard, discouraging me from updating it consistently.
- It is hard to pinpoint what kind of intensity my emotions are, and boxing emotions into a specific set of rules and countermeasures can remove the many nuances of feeling and responding to emotions.
Friday, 31 July 2020
Life Challenges #3: Bookworm Challenge | Part 1: Challenge Rules
Thursday, 30 July 2020
My Blockheads #1 | New series, new world
- The first phase was just digging around in a systematic manner, and lighting up underground spaces using stick torchlights. The result was a gigantic grid that showed the composition of the rocks underground - limestones, marbles and stones were the most common ones. It looked cool but it was very time consuming, taking me a year before I decided to move on with something easier.
- The second phase was cave exploration, and some mining of the ores to craft out my first few metal objects, such as bronze pickaxes, tin buckets and iron cages. As the network of explored caves expanded, and as I connected and enlarged some caves by digging around, I began to run into a few problems:
- How to move my blockheads through these maze of caves efficiently?
- What do I do with the stones I dug up?
- How do I avoid losing my way?
- Thereafter, I embarked on my third phase of SUGO, which was to make underground pathways donkey-accessible. This would address the first question.
- The most difficult part about this was to domesticate enough donkeys by feeding them carrots to serve as means of transport.
- And for the rest of this phase, it involves enlarging narrow spaces so that they are at least two blocks tall, enough for a blockhead on a donkey to move through. Also, to prevent donkeys from becoming injured and enabling them to move around, large cave networks are connected via pathways to make transport quicker, and the cave structure is modified so that the donkeys can jump their way through them.
- As a vertical path through the underground space cannot be accessed by a donkey, I made a stairwell connecting the ground to the magma (the diagonal path slashing through the underground space). I named that stairwell "The Syringe" based on its appearance. For those wondering why its top part was larger, it was a remnant of some horticultural experiment to grow plants underground. The experiment ended up in failure since the trees died off quickly and required a lot of maintenance to produce much food, but the concept of riding donkeys downstairs and collecting fruit from the trees at the same time was attractively convenient.
- And for the fourth and final phase of SUGO, it was to make finding my way around these caves easier. This included making a lot of signs to direct the blockheads on the donkeys, and makeshift maps using stone and sand (the blocks of stone were to mark out other positions while the blocks of sand were to highlight the current position. Naturally, the signs would be placed on these blocks). In addition, riding the caves more frequently should help me familiarise myself with the environment.
- Note: I still have not figured out how to mark out where the ores and trade portal are with something prominent instead of relying on wooden signs which can be hard to read if you are moving around on a donkey.
- As SUGO comes to a close, there were some gaps left to close, that being what I should do with all the extra stone. That is when the second mega-project came in.
Wednesday, 29 July 2020
Story Creation Challenge Round 2 | Part 2 (End): Completion
A Stressful Day at Home
Friday, 10 July 2020
Story Creation Challenge Round 2 | Part 1: Rules of the game
Story Creation Challenge Round 1 | Part 3: Submission of entry
The process
There were 3 stages that I devised to complete the challenge.
The first was some brainstorming that I did by looking up the definitions of the keywords and their related images to find out what kind of ideas I could draw from them. This was shared in my very first story creation challenge post.
The second stage was to come up with a rough draft for whatever story I am planning in mind. It was then that I set the theme for the story to be based on a virtual reality online game in a futuristic, dystopian world. You can see the results of the draft of my first chapter here.
The difficulties
Most of the time, the actual story I am writing would turn out to be very different from my drafts. I found out that the more time I spend thinking about the story, the more new ideas I would churn out. These would add additional plot twists into my story, making it much longer than I had expected.
I realised I started with a cliffhanger, and ended this round of the challenge with a cliffhanger. I am not sure whether this would annoy the readers too much, but I just wanted to use this chance to try out new things.
The story might not be exactly coherent, grammatically sound or as excellent as writers who have more experience or are more professional than me. I tried to use a more personal writing style in order to make the story feel less dull and more relatable, but it could have been more consistent.
The decisions
Friday, 26 June 2020
Habitica Crossover #1: Introducing how I manage my life using it
What is Habitica?
My way of playing Habitica
Habits - they can become part of your motivation system instead of using it for specific tasks
Examples of how habits can serve as rewards and punishments |
Rewards - they should be reserved for something special and not be confused with breaks
Free rewards and in-game rewards to make the game feel more realistic |
Do-it-yourself - achievements and challenges
Self-made achievements |
Interaction with other players
My tip getting featured. And yes, "synitheia" is my username. It is Greek for "habit". Why Greek? Because it sounds deep and it also sounds like a legitimate name. Link to the post: https://habitica.wordpress.com/2020/06/25/use-case-spotlight-adapting-to-life-changes/ |
My progress
📌 Pinned
[Live] Raison d'être for "The Rumination" series, progress on blog posts
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